The Citizen (Gauteng)

Here’s the only way of ‘negotiatin­g’ with Putin

Put real economic and military muscle behind your words, writes

- Dawie Jacobs.

The two countries did not declare war on each other. No, it is a one-sided invasion by Russia in breach of internatio­nal law. If you do not condemn the aggressor and demand withdrawal, you are in effect condoning the invasion.

During a home invasion, you cannot be neutral about the illegal act of invading someone’s property, more so if the property is vandalised and the rightful owners are injured or killed in the process. The same principle applies in the case of illegally invading a country, plundering its resources, destroying its infrastruc­ture and killing its citizens.

If you are still saying, after more than two months of a brutal war on a peaceful democratic country, that the only answer is negotiatio­n, you are out of touch.

It has been clear from the outset that Russian President Vladimir Putin has never been interested in negotiatio­ns. He only talks through the barrel of a gun while blackmaili­ng the world with threats of a nuclear response to interventi­on by other countries.

That said, one must keep all avenues open, including the door to negotiatio­n, but the only way of negotiatin­g with Putin, is to put real economic and military muscle behind your words and not to mince those words.

Power must be met with power when you are dealing with evil. Putin does not understand any other language. Humanity is not part of his vocabulary. You do not have to look further than Syria.

Today it is Ukraine, tomorrow?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa