by Michael Hammerschlag
in Russian- PIK Ukrainian- PIK Scoop
Kiev: The Russian invasion of Georgia initially caused a
hyperbolic reaction around the world as the resurgent superpower flexed its
military muscles overtly outside its country for the first time in a
generation. Why Russia’s ferocious reaction to the Georgian invasion of S.
Ossetia was a surprise to many is mystifying- it has been itching to assert
it’s new power, infuriated over NATO overtures to Georgia and Ukraine, obsessed
with the supposed humiliation of Russians in the FSU, paranoid over the useless
US antimissile systems in Czechia and Poland, and livid over the recognition of
Kosovo (birthplace of Slavic brother Serbia). “We punched the aggressor in the
face, as all the military text books prescribe," complained Putin in a
long interview.
Every bit of hysteria on the
West’s part encouraged the Russians to drag
their heels in withdrawal- slow firm pressure
was always the best way to get Russia to
do anything. And the Western media erasure
of the initial Georgian invasion of S. Ossetia
convinced Russia that it would never be treated fairly, so it
didn't matter what it did. President Yushchenko, Orange forces, hard-liners,
and alarmed Westerners have advocated a rushed entrance into NATO to allay the
Russian threat to Ukraine. But that would provoke the exact crisis it was
designed to prevent.
I
spent all 2007 in Moscow, and it frankly
was depressing seeing the revival of
aggressive nationalism and blind Putin worship-
nonsense anti-Western
propaganda increased 3–fold in that time-
even liberals now parrot Kremlin
talking points word for word. Easily +90%
supported their actions in Georgia/S.
Ossetia, spurred on by constant evocation
of the supposed threat against
Russian speakers in the near abroad, to divert
attention from the tens of
billions being looted
by the oligarchs in the Kremlin and the pitiful state of Putin’s one-party
"democracy".
But the Russian view is that it is
being encircled by the West- against express
promises given on the breakup of SU that
NATO wouldn’t expand to their
borders. Just because you are paranoid doesn’t mean people aren’t out to get
you, and invasions by the Mongols, Poles, Swedes, Lithuanians, French, British,
and Nazis have given Russians a fine edge of paranoia. With the former
satellites of Eastern Europe, NATO membership was justified, with the
Baltics it was more marginal; but with Ukraine and especially Georgia it is a
bridge too far- dangerous, provocative, and counterproductive. NATO was and
still is a military alliance against Russia, but the horrendous reality
of actually fighting it has virtually been forgotten. The Russians haven’t
forgotten.
I’ve
long been convinced that Ukraine joining
NATO is Russia’s red line, which they
will do almost anything to prevent. Imagine
America's reaction if the Warsaw
Pact had added Canada and Mexico; and placed
missiles
near their borders - we almost destroyed the world over missiles in Cuba (which
already had, unbeknownst to anyone 162 nuclear warheads, audio-Robert
Mcnamara). Imagine the horror if Georgia was already part of NATO, as
hard-liners are immediately advocating. NATO probably wouldn’t have responded,
leading to its marginalization or collapse. Medvedev has said he would have
attacked it even if it were on a track to NATO. Would, should, or could
the West really go to battle against Russia on its southern flank?
Nobody
really wants Ukraine to join NATO, the vast
majority of its people (61% against
vs. 24% for) and most of the Rada; Europe,
which has its own energy security to
worry about and is as alarmed at the revival
of Cold War passions as they are
about Georgia; and NATO itself, for whom
the huge Russian population and
sympathies, unstable government, and presence
of the Black Sea Fleet, would be
deeply destabilizing. France + Germany have
openly defected from the Bush
expansionist effort, and Obama will have
little impetus to continue it.
Tymoshenko, despite her previous fierce anti-Russian
stands, seems to realize
the vast risks and limited benefits. It would
cause violent internal divisions
between the east and the west. Hoping MAP
will force internal reforms is a
terrible reason to join a foreign military
alliance, a view expressed by some
who hope to escape the virulent political
stalemate between Yushchenko and
Tymoshenko.
Russia,
above all, craves respect after the turmoil
and poverty of the 90’s, which
Putin has convinced them was engineered by
the West. It doesn’t want to fight
Ukraine- it thinks of it as its little brother
and fond vacationland (despite
their historical genocidal predations). They claim with some justification that they
are one people and joining a hostile military alliance will cause huge
dislocations as a real hard border separates the deeply intertwined nations,
with millions of Ukrainians working in Russia. President Yushchenko has ginned
up more bad feelings by siding completely with Georgia and issuing foolishly
impotent orders against the Russian Black Sea Fleet.
If Ukraine continues treating Russia with cautious respect, it will inexorably drift away from Russia into the European sphere, and greater independence and autonomy.. where NATO won’t be necessary, or won’t cause much uproar (although it will still be dependent on Russia energy). If it does try to join, Russia really will foment rebellion in the Crimea or Donbas, or triple the Ukrainian price of oil or gas, as they are making clear with their latest callous shutoff. One path that costs nothing will lead to gradual improvement and independence, the other will cause immediate terrible conflicts, and NATO can’t be counted on to rescue Ukraine. Russia is still a nuclear superpower that can destroy the West, and any East/West conflict on its doorstep, in the historical heart of Rus, could go nuclear… something no Western leader would risk. No matter what pandering politicians* said, We are not all Georgians now…
or Ukrainians for that matter.
Michael Hammerschlag (Hammernews.com) has spent 3 years in Russia, toured Europe + Africa for the last 8 months, and is now based in Kiev. His articles have appeared in the International Herald Tribune, Seattle Times, Providence Journal, Columbia Journalism Review, Honolulu Advertiser, Capital Times, Media Channel, Scoop; and Moscow News, Tribune, Guardian, and Times.
* McCain, after the Georgian/Russian invasions.