Mahir Ali (Counter Point) / 26 March 2014
NATO’S WARNING last Sunday that Russian troops were massing on Ukraine’s eastern border was followed by Kiev’s announcement of impending conflict, even as it sensibly ordered the withdrawal of its forces from freshly annexed Crimea. The leaders of the Group of Seven (G7), meanwhile, gathered in The Hague to thrash out a response.
The summit’s nomenclature offers a clue that something’s seriously amiss. G7 is a throwback to the days before Russia was deemed worthy of a seat at the table. Then it became G7+1 before evolving into G8. Now it’s effectively G8-1, and the minus one happens to hold the group’s rotating presidency, but the summit it expected to host in Sochi in June has now been called off — with Sergei Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, insouciant about the prospect of being excluded from the club.
It would probably be an understatement to say that uncertainty clouds the future of this and other international processes involving Moscow. Some commentators are suggesting that the post-Cold War era effectively ground to a halt this month.
That may well turn out to be the case, although alternative scenarios should not be ruled out. A great deal hinges on Russian and Western behaviour in the days and weeks ahead.Vladimir Putin has categorically denied the intention of Russian military intervention in any other part of Ukraine. Like most politicians, he doesn’t always stick to his word. But in this instance he would be well-advised to strictly abide by that promise.
The West, reeling from criticism of its initially weak response — economic sanctions against individuals, some of whom are close to Putin — may be tempted to flex its muscles. Depending on the specifics that too could backfire.
The noise factor has been high in some European Union capitals as well as on Capitol Hill, but the urge to make Putin repent and retreat has been tempered by the knowledge that any economic pain inflicted on Russia as a whole would bounce back — any interruption in Russian oil and gas supplies, for instance, would prove disastrous for a number of European countries.
Thankfully, not even the most virulent Russophobes are clamouring for any sort of direct military action, although some countries have cancelled joint exercises with Russia, and gestures have been made towards bolstering the defences of some of its neighbours. It would be judicious, however, for Nato to maintain a relatively low profile, given that from Moscow’s vantage point it is clearly part of the problem.
Although Putin deems Russia’s annexation of Crimea to have been based entirely on legal procedures, it has not explicitly been endorsed even by his closest allies in the region. There can be little doubt, though, that it has proved overwhelmingly popular within Russia.
A reasonably strong case could conceivably have been made for Crimea reverting to Russian control 60 years after Nikita Khrushchev made a gift of it to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic — but, ideally, on the basis of a process endorsed by both Moscow and Kiev, rather than a unilaterally decreed referendum that lacked a nyet option.
Doubts have inevitably been expressed about the official turnout and yes-vote figures, even though objective observers are generally willing to concede that the idea of a reunion with Russia enjoyed majority support in Crimea — and that opponents of the move, presumably including most of the Crimean Tatars who returned to the territory decades after they and their ancestors were expelled to Central Asia under Josef Stalin, tended to boycott the poll.
Putin’s remark some years ago that the dissolution of the Soviet Union was the 20th century’s biggest geo-political catastrophe is often cited as evidence of his longing to revive a comparable structure, but there is little evidence that he views this as a realistic proposition. Nor is his nostalgia for the USSR an aberration — a Gallup poll last December across 11 former Soviet republics found 51 per cent of respondents thought the break-up of the union was more harmful than beneficial to their country (the respective figures for Russia and Ukraine were 55 and 56 per cent).
But while there is little risk of the Soviet Union’s resurrection, there can be little question that poor handling by almost everyone concerned has exacerbated the Ukrainian crisis. The far-right components of the Westward-leaning interim government in Kiev ought to have given the EU pause for thought, even if Moscow’s dismissal of it as a neo-Nazi construct is neither entirely accurate nor particularly helpful, given the clamour it has catalysed among eastern Ukrainians who rely on Russian TV for their information (and propaganda).
It is, unfortunately, not too hard to envisage an escalation, with dangerously unpredictable consequences. Hopefully, cooler heads will prevail, further provocations will be avoided, Ukraine as it now stands will remain intact, the tendency to ignore or underplay Russia’s geopolitical interests will be abandoned. The alternatives are too awful to contemplate — not least in light of the fact that 100 years ago a series of unfortunate, but relatively minor, events resulted in Europe sleepwalking into a catastrophic frenzy of self-destruction.
Mahir Ali is a journalist based
in Sydney
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- Evolving human rights
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- Indian court convicts 4 for raping photojournalist
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- Women and children first as Russian forces seize base
- Minerals and Gems From the Earth
- Aziz vows balance in S. Arabia, Iran ties
- 'The Bold and the Beautiful' lands in the Emirates
- Pakistan may grant India MFN status on Friday
- Asian shares mixed, Crimea vote raises Russia tens...
- Outlook for India-Pakistan trade
- Changing oil marketing dynamics
- Address the rot within
- Wrong side of history
- Test of diplomacy ahead
- Putin’s ‘honest brokers’
- Study to test ‘chocolate’ pills for heart health
- US, EU set sanctions as Putin recognises Crimea so...
- Bill Clinton backs economic sanctions on Russia
- Islands issue to be resolved peacefully, says Murr
- Dubai companies to build Pakistan’s energy projects
- Curious contradictions
- Being partisan
- Crimea vote fully legal, Putin tells Obama
- Three choices
- 10 foods you must eat to stay healthy this summer
- Return of the Soviet Union
- Dubai Government signs $20 billion refinancing deals
- US rejects Crimea vote, cites Russian intimidation
- Shun entanglement, embrace engagement
- India wholesale inflation eases to nine-month low
- US budget deficit rises to $193.5 billion in February
- Your stars today
- Qatar must start afresh
- Moscow, Washington lock horns in gas war
- Normalising power
- Dar’s ‘dollar dream’ comes true
- Afridi’s googly and CII’s no ball
- Mere ticks in the box?
- Special Court likely to indict Pervez Musharraf today
- Visitor caught with fake dollar bills in Dubai on ...
- Iranian President Rohani seeks closer ties with ...
- Militant economics
- The case against privatisation
- GCC stock markets plunge
- Your stars today
- Dubai Internet City welcomes 181 new firms
- Wan Azizah: Younger face may replace Anwar in Pena...
- UN: Claim of captive Saudi princesses received
- SingTel launches Singapore’s first discounted mobi...
- Global economic growth seen sluggish
- Your stars today
- Thar: crime of geography?
- Crimea’s case
- Govt prepares strategy for talks with Taliban
- Ice skating diplomacy
- Commercial aviation plays key role in UAE-US ties
- 76 parliamentarians in India charged with serious ...
- Call to attract young Emiratis into tourism industry
- Crimea assembly votes for independence from Ukraine
- Arab League stresses UAE sovereignty over Iran-occ...
- Noah won’t release in the UAE, confirms National M...
- Your stars today
- Switching loyalties
- Sovereignty as joint venture
- The Indian within
- Pakistan’s new friends
- Eco-friendly mosque set to open in Dubai
- Your stars today
- Pakistani actress Sana Khan dies in road accident
- US firms keen to take part in UAE’s projects
- Economic turnaround?
- Tharparkar: A famine of facts
- Interview with chairman privatisation commission
- Learning strategies
- Pakistan’s trade strategy
- Don’t change your doctor if you want better health
- Your stars today
- Participatory democracy can easily feel like anarc...
- The economics of hair
- How we view Crimea?
- The nuclear triumph
- Taking the devil out of the devil’s advocate
- DinarStandard supports Dubai as Islamic Economy Ca...
- Between failures
- Early signs of economic recovery
- ‘US wants to sabotage talks’
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