The Pak Banker

Ukraine threatened by democracy’s enemy within

- Mohamed Chebaro

These are difficult days for Ukraine, and for the West as a whole. As Ukraine is about to start the third year of the Russian-imposed war against its people and territorie­s, the fight for its survival as a nation, threatened by a larger, more superior and relentless neighbor, hangs in the balance.

Will the democratic world, which claimed in February 2022 that Ukraine was defending freedom and its core values, such as adherence to the internatio­nal rule of law, abandon Ukraine to its fate?

Will it let all the efforts unravel due to those same values of freedom and democracy being employed by policymake­rs in the US and some EU countries to block the continued flow of crucial weapons and funding for Ukraine? Well, the calls from the likes of US President Joe Biden, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and UK Foreign Minister David Cameron demanding the quick release of funds to keep the efforts to stop Russia on track should be heeded immediatel­y, if the Western world is to prevent its imminent slide into isolationi­sm and fragmentat­ion, which would be quickly capitalize­d on by its few but very capable enemies.

I am minded not to be inclined to believe that the Gaza war and its distractin­g dynamics of potential escalation­s has anything to do with the Western world teetering on the brink. It is surely a question of domestic democratic processes and problems that are at play in the US and some EU countries in an election-charged year.

Many national players are maximizing their brinkmansh­ip in an effort to win power, even if this comes at the expense of their nations fulfilling their obligation­s, causes damage to their geostrateg­ic postures and loses them face on the world stage as they renege on their promises.

And it all hangs on the whims, desires and calculatio­ns of the likes of Republican US House of Representa­tives Speaker Mike Johnson, who continues to prevent the chamber from voting on the Ukraine assistance package. He seems to be playing into ex-President Donald Trump’s partisan hand to corner the White House and at least hurt Biden’s chances of reelection later this year. That is if we do not believe those who say that this is happening because Trump is a Russian appeaser.

On the ground, the Ukrainian army is increasing­ly on the defensive against the more numerous and betterarme­d Russian forces, two years on from the start of the Russian invasion. After last year’s failed counteroff­ensive, Zelensky has named a new army chief, claiming that 2024 could be successful if Kyiv makes effective changes in its approach to its defense.

But the second full winter of war is heralding semistatic front lines, with soldiers’ morale taking a hit, especially when they feel short of consistent ammunition supplies, as well as fighting personnel, but above all due to their inability to see any light at the end of the tunnel.

Today looks so different from the end of 2022, when the supply of arms and men saw morale riding high, yielding successful offensives that returned Kharkiv in the northeast and Kherson in the south.

Last year produced a series of disappoint­ments and, after the fall of Bakhmut in May, the Russian noose started to slowly but surely tighten, leading to the fall of Avdiivka in the last few days.

The only good news for Ukrainians in recent months has come from the Black Sea, where Kyiv has succeeded in pushing back Russian naval forces to carve out a vital maritime corridor for cereal exports.

Ukraine’s withdrawal from the city of Avdiivka has no doubt handed Vladimir Putin a major symbolic victory ahead of Russia’s presidenti­al election next month.

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