Hindustan Times (East UP)

By invading Ukraine, Russia crosses a line

Putin’s military action violates internatio­nal law and norms. There will be consequenc­es for India

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First, the aim was protecting the Russian speakers in eastern Ukraine. Then, it was supporting separatist leaders and enclaves in eastern Ukraine. On Monday, the goal shifted to recognisin­g the Donetsk and Luhansk provinces in the Donbas region as independen­t republics. It then rapidly expanded to extending the territoria­l claims of these new, so-called, republics to areas still under the control of the Ukrainian government. This was accompanie­d with the deployment of troops in the two provinces. And finally, on Thursday, it became a mission to overwhelm all of Ukraine, including its capital Kyiv, through a military invasion.

With that final act on Thursday, Russia, led by President Vladimir Putin, left no one in doubt that its political objective was ensuring a pliable regime in Kyiv. Its method was “military-technical”, which, in real terms, meant the use of overwhelmi­ng force against a much smaller neighbour. And, its message to the rest of Europe and the world was that the Russia of today was no longer the Russia of 1991, and it would do all that was needed to restore parts of the Soviet arc of influence. As this newspaper pointed out on Monday, Russia has legitimate grievances. The end of the Cold War transforme­d a bipolar order in Europe into an almost unipolar order, where the United States (US) and its allies pushed the frontiers of the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on (NATO) towards the east. Russia was uncomforta­ble, and consistent­ly objected to the security alliance coming close to its borders. The West should have taken Russian grievances into account. The US also did not anticipate, or deliberate­ly ignored, the implicatio­ns of its deep political and military engagement with Russia’s immediate neighbours. To the generation that ruled Russia — which had not overcome what it saw as the humiliatin­g defeat at the end of the Cold War and retained the vision of Russia as a great power and a civilisati­onal State — this was hard to digest.

But with an outright invasion of Ukraine, Russia has crossed a line. It has violated the principle of respect for the independen­ce, territoria­l integrity and sovereignt­y of a State, recognised member of the United Nations, and whose sovereignt­y Russia, too, has recognised for the past three decades. It has opened up room for a prolonged conflict in Ukraine. Even though Russian forces are likely to overwhelm Kyiv rapidly, Ukrainians are unlikely to accept Russian supremacy without putting up a fight, one that the West has said it would back. It has destabilis­ed the world economy, for Russia was aware that its steps would invite severe sanctions, which, in turn, will have an impact on energy and food prices and Russia’s economic engagement with the world. And, it has transforme­d Europe, almost 80 years after World War II ended, into a new battlegrou­nd where hard power, rather than internatio­nal norms, is the mantra.

While Russia will prevail in the short-term, its invasion will have strategic and economic consequenc­es. For India, in particular, the balancing act between maintainin­g close strategic ties with the US — which it sees as the most important strategic relationsh­ip, especially in the wake of the Chinese aggression — and maintainin­g its privileged partnershi­p with Russia, which is both a major supplier of defence hardware and a supporter on internatio­nal platforms, will get more difficult.

The fact that Russia’s closest friend at the moment is China doesn’t help. So far, Moscow has not let its proximity to Beijing affect ties with Delhi, but if

Delhi allows its proximity to the West affect its position on Russia, the situation may change. On the other hand, seeking a US executive waiver on the acquisitio­n of S-400 missile systems will become more challengin­g for India, given the strong bipartisan mood in Washington against Moscow. The more immediate impact for India will be economic, as it grapples with higher energy prices — which will affect the ongoing economic recovery — and comes to terms with the new wide-ranging sanctions that will inevitably affect Russia-India economic ties. But while doing a careful cost-benefit assessment, India must let it be known that it is opposed to the unilateral use of military force and violation of sovereignt­y, for these principles are central to a rules-based order that India seeks in its region.

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