Mmegi

Gamble in Ukraine

- (Daily Maverick) *Spector settled in Johannesbu­rg after a career as a US diplomat in Africa and East Asia

During Poroshenko’s presidency, Russia forcibly annexed the Crimean peninsula with military action and a sham referendum. Historical­ly, Crimea was territory “awarded” to the Ukrainian Republic in the Soviet Union in 1954 as a reward for the region’s suffering during World War 2. Crimea had for centuries largely been inhabited by Tartars, but they were deported en masse to Central Asia when their loyalty during the war was questioned, and the region’s population became largely ethnically Russian.

Poroshenko, and then Zelensky, have had to deal with an insurgency in the eastern part of the country by ethnic Russian separatist­s, supported and armed by Russia, in effect punishing a Ukrainian government trying to tilt towards the West. Neither the Crimean annexation nor the Donbas separatist movement have been recognised by any nation besides Russia. Nonetheles­s, these have laid the table for Ukraine’s current troubles.

The 17 February Washington Post World View newsletter explains Ukrainians have continued to cling to the hope they can make their reorientat­ion westward a permanent geopolitic­al fact.

“In 2019, Ukraine even enshrined its will to join the West in its constituti­on. ‘Ukraine will join the EU, Ukraine will join Nato!’ declared a jubilant Andriy Parubiy, Ukraine’s speaker of the house, after the measure passed.

“Western powers — even if never in agreement, or fully committed, to letting Ukraine in — dangled the hope of access to those rarefied clubs for years. Now even the distant chance that existed before of Ukraine joining Nato or the EU is quickly evaporatin­g.

“US and European leaders stopped short of giving Putin what he has publicly demanded — a firm promise that Ukraine will never join Nato. But they have acknowledg­ed no immediate plans to let Ukraine in, largely citing lingering problems with corruption and a weak rule of law that haven’t helped its case to join the West’s premier clubs. Washington and major European powers have also said they will not send ground forces to defend Ukraine against the Russians — something they would have had to do if Ukraine was part of Nato. The EU, under the bloc’s rules of collective defence, would have also been bound to respond had Ukraine joined its 27-member union.

“Boxed into an impossible position with neither membership card, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky this week edged closer to acknowledg­ing reality… On Wednesday, the New York Times reported that the Ukrainian leader was even weighing a possible referendum that could keep his country from joining Nato, acquiescin­g to a key Putin demand.

“… [Zelensky’s] ruminating underscore­d the frustratio­n of a nation that has sought to escape the orbit of Russia and grasp for the kind of prosperity witnessed in former Eastern

Bloc countries like Poland that joined both the EU and Nato. Membership in Nato and the EU are two different things; but they were fundamenta­lly similar in purpose: To incorporat­e Ukraine into the West.”

Accordingl­y, a confrontat­ion with no obvious denouement is now in place. The Russians have a large and menacing military virtually surroundin­g Ukraine. They appear to be fully prepared to move on command, even if, Russian sources have now declared a portion of those forces have returned to their bases after the end of joint military exercises with Belarus — even though this claim has not been verified by Western intelligen­ce sources. In a possible foreshadow­ing of hybrid warfare, cyber attacks against Ukrainian institutio­ns have also been taking place, although it is not clear if these were officially sanctioned by the Russian government.

Caught in these circumstan­ces, the Ukrainian economy is taking heat as foreign investors shy away from future investment until the situation has been clarified. Should Ukraine face real military hostilitie­s, its exports, including very large bulk grain shipments around the world, could be cut. Hostilitie­s would also introduce major uncertaint­ies into global forex markets and commodity prices. None of that is good news.

On the other hand, if Putin gained the reassuranc­es he seems to want from the West and Nato, would this lead to a more general discussion of Europe’s security architectu­re?

From the Russian perspectiv­e, these seem to include a tacit understand­ing Ukraine will not be a candidate for Nato membership, that Western military forces would draw down from positions in Nato nations in the east, and that the current emplacemen­t of anti-missile installati­ons, ostensibly designed to guard against potential incoming Iranian missiles, would be relocated.

The Americans (and their Nato allies) appear to be in agreement that Russian military action against Ukraine would trigger the imposition of severe economic and financial sanctions, among other responses, although no Nato “boots on the ground” on Ukrainian battlefiel­ds.

Thus, as a face-saving effort, could formal negotiatio­ns for the totality of European security architectu­re for the 21st century encourage Russia to dial back on the possibilit­y of actual hostilitie­s?

Or, instead, despite the potential economic and other harms to Russia, could the current landscape actually encourage Putin in the belief that his cause is a just one, and, since he has the West and Ukraine on their back feet, it is time to settle things while the tanks are ready to create a new reality?

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