The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

If the West lets Ukraine fall it betrays a promise to its people and its own ideals

- Alex Bell

Usually “we wuz robbed” is reserved for the sports pages not geopolitic­al tracts. Yet it occurs in arguably the most significan­t global statement of the year. “Russia was robbed” is what Vladimir Putin says of Ukraine.

He means that the various border carveups during and after the Soviet Union have deprived Russia of its natural territory. And he is determined to get the land back.

“Russians, Ukrainians, and Belarusian­s are all descendant­s of Ancient Rus, which was the largest state in Europe” he writes in a document published in the summer.

Titled “On the historical unity of Russians and Ukrainians” it continues in this manner, a trawl over hundreds of years or origin, splits and threats.

It’s a fascinatin­g read. The same nationalis­t justificat­ion any country can call up; a list of victories and defeats which must be resolved if greatness is to return.

If you are not sure what the Ukraine issue is, it sets out Russia’s side of the story.

It explains why there are around 100,000 Russian troops on the Ukrainian border and a genuine fear of war among the West’s leaders.

European powers held a conference call this week where they warned major financial sanctions would be imposed on Moscow if it invaded Ukraine.

It seems the Americans support this alongside some kind of military response.

Latvia is just one of the regional nations that wants a full Nato response in the event of Ukraine being invaded.

President Biden and Vladimir Putin spoke to each other on Tuesday.

The Americans briefed that they would block gas pipelines and station troops in Eastern Europe in the event of invasion.

The Kremlin’s spin is that any sign of Nato involvemen­t would cross a “red line” and provoke a military response.

It is tempting to look at Putin’s summer essay and think war is inevitable.

In it he claims the very name Ukraine comes from an old Russian word for the remote territorie­s, implying it’s always been part of the mother country.

The other interpreta­tion is that the restoratio­n of old borders, real or imagined, is not really Putin’s motive.

The Kremlin is just trying to lay down a marker on its extreme hostility to the possibilit­y of Ukraine joining Nato.

Ukraine applied for Nato membership in 2008, and since Russia’s invasion of Crimea in 2014, popular support for Nato has grown rapidly in Kiev. Putin is really looking for an assurance that Ukraine will never join.

He’s flexing his muscles but doesn’t really intend to fight.

But the fact remains, this is an unpredicta­ble and very dangerous situation.

Putin may not invade, but he has a lot of troops mobilised and the winter is a good time to strike.

There is a risk he loses face without pushing this further than a war of words.

There was a similar stand off over Crimea when Putin did act, and the West shrugged its shoulders.

He must think there is a good chance he could do the same here.

What’s more, Washington is certainly worried. Two-hour-long presidenti­al meetings don’t happen often.

The White House briefing afterwards was hardly bullish.

President Biden has previously declared the era of American interventi­on is over.

Further, the chances of America wanting

to commit troops to combat in a cold, distant land where it is surrounded by enemies seems a long shot.

It’s only a matter of months since it quit Afghanista­n.

Yet, if the West does allow invasion to happen, it diminishes the broad sense of threat from Nato.

Thus Moscow might switch its attentions to the Baltic states, which are in the alliance. No wonder Latvia is agitating for a meaningful response.

Biden’s popularity is on the wane in what has been a low-key presidency.

To allow a democratic state to be swallowed by Russia on his watch might do further damage. He could decide this is too important to let go.

As to what Britain should do, there is no clear option. The UK lacks the military strength to be anything more than a diplomatic quota in an American-led force.

It seems very unlikely voters would support another venture. As with China and Taiwan, there is a sense that this is someone else’s war.

The difference with Ukraine is that it has struggled to become a successful, democratic, liberal state.

If the West lets it fall, then it betrays a promise made to the Ukrainian people, and to its own ideals.

The fact remains, this is an unpredicta­ble and very dangerous situation

 ?? ?? FACING OFF: US President Joe Biden and his advisers during his two hour video conference call with Vladimir Putin on Tuesday.
FACING OFF: US President Joe Biden and his advisers during his two hour video conference call with Vladimir Putin on Tuesday.
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