The Mercury News Weekend

NATO must make Putin pay for Russian war crimes in Ukraine

- By Trudy Rubin Trudy Rubin is a Philadelph­ia Inquirer columnist. ©2023 The Philadelph­ia Inquirer. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

When Ukraine's U.N. ambassador Sergiy Kyslytsya addressed a special Security Council session on Tuesday about the destructio­n of the Nova Kakhovka dam, he confronted his Russian counterpar­t as “the representa­tive of Putin's terrorist regime…that has detonated a bomb of mass environmen­tal destructio­n.”

That says it all.

Who can doubt that it was Moscow that unleashed the largest man-made disaster in Europe since the 1986 nuclear meltdown in Chernobyl? This massive ecological crime was deliberate.

By destroying the dam, Vladimir Putin meant to impede Ukraine's counteroff­ensive to drive Russia out of occupied Ukrainian territory, a critical undertakin­g which has just gotten started. He must not be allowed to succeed.

Ukrainian forces will now be unable to cross the flooded Dnipro River with armored vehicles in coming weeks (although this approach had not been likely) since the land on both sides has been turned into rivulets and soggy mush.

Ukrainian government­al attention, and the focus of its allies, will be taken up with a massive rescue operation, and resettling of more refugees, lessening the focus on the military front.

No doubt Russia also hopes the prospect of enormous economic and environmen­tal damage, caused by the dam's collapse, will undermine Ukrainian morale — and weaken the will of its supporters.

NATO allies must make immediatel­y clear that this is not the case.

Yes, the U.S. is reportedly still combing the intelligen­ce to clearly determine if Russia is to blame for the dam's destructio­n.

It doesn't take a rocket scientist, however, to note that the Russians have been in total control of the dam and the entire hydroelect­ric facility for more than a year. As Kyslytsya noted: “It is physically impossible to blow it up somehow from the outside by shelling. It was mined by the Russian occupiers. And they blew it up.” Experts also believe the explosion had to come from inside.

Late last year, the Kremlin was testing the internatio­nal appetite to swallow its lies if Russia destroyed the dam. At the United Nations in October, Russia falsely claimed Ukraine was about to blow up the structure and blame Moscow.

In October, Russia hesitated. But now — fearful of the Ukrainian counteroff­ensive — officials in Moscow have done what they earlier threatened, even though they are trying to obscure the deed with propaganda.

This is the common Kremlin modus operandi: Blame the victim for your crimes. Just as they claimed that it was Ukraine that destroyed Mariupol or left corpses strewn on the streets of Bucha. Just as they claim they never target civilians, when they have systematic­ally targeted civilians and civilian infrastruc­ture.

Just as they still claim their invasion is a “special military operation” aimed to eliminate “Ukrainian Nazis.”

It was especially vicious that this war crime occurred on June 6, the 79th anniversar­y of the D-Day invasion that marked the beginning of Nazi Germany's downfall. No doubt Putin got perverse pleasure out of twisting this historic day into his ugly narrative claiming Ukrainians are the Nazis. The destroyed dam shows, once again, that it is Russia now playing that genocidal role.

So it is critical that the United States assemble and declassify intelligen­ce that points the finger directly at the Russian perpetrato­r — and lay it out at the U.N. Security Council. Moscow must not be allowed to muddy its responsibi­lity for this war crime — whose lasting ecological damage will also affect Europe.

It is also crucial that NATO countries make clear to Moscow that if any similar disaster occurs at the Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear power plant, upstream from the dam and also occupied by Russia, the blame will be placed squarely on the Kremlin.

U.N. and Ukrainian experts say the dam's collapse does not pose an immediate threat to the plant's safety but will have a long term impact.

The West must offset Russia's ecological bomb, not only with immediate aid but with the specific military systems Ukraine needs to succeed in the counteroff­ensive. More air defenses, long range missiles, F-16s, everything needed to show that Putin's war crimes will not go unpunished.

And finally, the July NATO summit in Vilnius, Estonia, must offer Ukraine a path to enter the coalition and security guarantees until that happens.

Putin's war crime has shown why, for the safety of Europe and our country, Russia's president can't be allowed to succeed.

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