Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 7 -- For many, the coronavirus
pandemic and the economic turmoil that has led to the collapse of the ruble are
the most important events of this week. They are certainly attracting more attention.
But for Vladimir Putin, the hearings at the Hague about the shootdown of the Malaysian
jetliner over Ukraine in 2014 are far more serious, Konstantin Eggert says.
That is because, the Russian commentator
says, the first is a natural disaster that has not yet had a major impact on
Rusisa and the second in time can be overcome. But the third threatens Putin’s version
on the conflict in Ukraine and his ability to return to the respectability in
the international community (snob.ru/entry/189881/).
Despite Moscow’s propaganda efforts
to undercut these hearings – for a useful survey of them, see petrimazepa.com/mh17_v_gaage_kak_rossiya_otvlekaet_vsekh_ot_suda – they begin
with a curt that is incorruptible and with the near universal conviction that it was a Russian missile that brought down the plane and killed 298 people.
From the Kremlin’s perspective, the situation promises only to get worse. The hearings will review 36,000 pages of documents, hear from various witnesses and
50 relatives of those who died, and will last for a year or more. And they will get attention: some 400 journalists are currently accredited with the court.
“Today,” Eggert writes, “there are fur accused: three
Russians including Igor Girkin, and a citizen of Ukraine. But others may be added” as the hearings proceed. And still more worrisome for Moscow is that the court plans to investigate “not only the issue of the guilt of those charged but
also on whose order the missile
system was on the territory of Ukraine.”
And
there is little doubt that this will lead to Moscow and to Putin personally. Whatever he does, including potentially trying to reach an agreement with the families of the victims by paying compensation without admitting responsibility
will do little to lessen the threat these hearings represent.
The
Kremlin considers that any concession at all “will become a recognition that Russia is
conducting a war against Ukraine, albeit a ‘hybrid’ one” and that “such a step would be equivalent to the conscious destruction of the foundations of Russian policy, Russian ideology and Russian propaganda.”
While
no Russian citizen is likely to end in jail as a result of this case and the term “war crimes” may not be mentioned in it, Moscow is going to suffer “very great” losses to its reputation, losses that will delay if not make impossible
Putin’s return to the ranks
of the respectable leaders of the international community.
And
despite what he and his regime say about the international system, he and it care very much about achieving that. But today, standing in their way, are “six individuals,
five judges (three basic and two reserve) plus the prsecutor. And this barrier it appears is impassable.”
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