The Mail on Sunday

Some cold, hard facts they don’t tell you about Ukraine

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HERE are some facts about the Ukraine crisis you may not be aware of. I have listed them to try to cool down the hot temper of so much of the debate about this issue, which threatens to widen and deepen an appalling war.

Q How long have Western countries been giving military aid to Ukraine?

A The US has been giving Ukraine generous foreign and military aid since 1991, when Ukraine became a country. In the decade after 1991, Ukraine received almost $2.6billion. In the years leading up to Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014, it was getting roughly $105million per year, including military financing, most given long before any threat of Russian invasion. The US began supplying weapons in 2018. Britain began giving military aid to Ukraine in 2014, in the form of advisers and training.

Q Did anyone ever try to solve the problem that some of Ukraine’s Russian-speaking citizens did not want to be in Ukraine – a main reason for hostility between Moscow and Kiev after 1991?

A Yes, right from the start. On August 26, 1991, two days after Kiev declared independen­ce from Moscow, the then Russian president

Boris Yeltsin said that the old Soviet borders between Russia and Ukraine would have to be redrawn to deal with this problem. He retracted this within a day, almost certainly thanks to pressure from the United States. By May 1992, 250,000 of Crimea’s roughly two million mostly Russian people had signed a petition asking for a referendum on independen­ce – enough to trigger a vote under Ukrainian law. On May 5 that year, Crimea’s parliament voted 118 to 28 to secede from Ukraine. But the Kiev government prevented a referendum from taking place.

Q Would it have been possible to change the borders of Ukraine peacefully to avoid this obvious problem?

A Yes, as European borders are not sacrosanct. The US and the UK, along with dozens of other countries (though not Ukraine), have recognised Kosovo’s breakaway from Serbia in 2008. The whole of the former Yugoslavia has been scissored into many new states, mostly recognised by the majority of nations. Ukraine, for instance, was among the earliest countries to recognise Croatia’s 1991 breakaway from Yugoslavia, then a highly controvers­ial step.

Q What is the biggest political snub in modern history?

A In March 2007, Vladimir Putin warned very specifical­ly against further expansion of Nato. Just a year later, President George W. Bush announced that he wanted Ukraine to join Nato, wholly aware that his action would infuriate Moscow. It did.

Q Is Russia alone in committing alleged atrocities in Ukraine?

A No. More than one allegation has been made, supported by apparent video evidence, of Ukrainian soldiers killing or maiming captured and helpless Russian prisoners of war. It must be stressed that these claims have not been proven. However, it is incontesta­ble that both Russian and Ukrainian forces were guilty of military actions leading to the deaths of civilians, including children, during the war which has raged since 2014 in the Donetsk and Lugansk regions.

Q Could the current war have been avoided?

A Very much so. President Volodymyr Zelensky was elected largely on a promise to seek peace, which he courageous­ly did in 2019. But political rivals and hard-Right militias both opposed him. On a visit to soldiers on the front line, he told one Rightist who lectured him: ‘You can’t issue me ultimatums. I’m the president of this country. I am 42 years old. I’m no sucker. I came here to tell you to move your weapons away from the front line.’ But in the end, Mr Zelensky gave in to the pressure, and the peace deal withered away.

Q Whatever happened to the United Nations, which is supposed to prevent or end wars such as this?

A I have no idea. It seems to have evaporated.

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