War Returns To Europe
Yuba Nath Lamsal
After the collapse of Soviet Union, Samuel P Huntington came with the
thesis that the future wars will not be between countries but between
cultures or civilisations. In his book ‘The Clash of Civilization and
The Remaking of World Order,’ Huntington basically points out some key
civilisations -- Western civilisation, Orthodox civilisation, Chinese
civilisation, Japanese civilisation, Hindu civilisation, Islamic
civilisation, African civilisation and Latin American civilisation --
around which the conflict will revolve. Huntington’s thesis comes after
Francs Fukuyama prophesised in his book ‘The End of History and the Last
Man’ that ideological conflict came to an end with Western liberal
ideas reigning supreme over all other ideologies.
Neither
Fukuyama’s prophesy nor Huntington’s claim has come to be a reality.
With Russia and Ukraine locked in bloody war, contrary to Fukuyama’s
thesis, history has repeated. Unlike Huntington’s treatise, the war is
not between cultures but between the two sibling countries.
Resolution
As the Russia-Ukraine conflict flared
up, the United States and Albania moved a resolution in the UN Security
Council to condemn Russia for initiating war against a small neighbour
Ukraine. In the Security Council, 11 members voted in favour of the
resolution while China, India and United Arab Emirates abstained. The
resolution could not be adopted as Russia vetoed it. Similarly, a
resolution was moved in the United Nations General Assembly in which 141
countries including Nepal voted in favour, while 35 countries including
India and China abstained. Nepal made its position further clear
stating ‘it opposes the use of force against a sovereign country in any
circumstance and believes in peaceful resolution of disputes through
diplomacy and dialogue’.
With Russia initiating the war, the
world is again moving towards a new form of conflict. It has brought
back the memory of the Cold War era when the United States and Soviet
Union vied to flex muscles for projecting their influence and power.
Russia may have its own logic and argument, but attack on a sovereign
country cannot be justified. As Bertrand Russel once said ‘war does not
determine who is right - only who is left’, none wins in the war and
humanity gets defeated. In other words, war is a crime against humanity,
whoever starts.
The Russia-Ukraine conflict is not a new but a
long-running one. Right after Ukraine declared independence from Soviet
Union in 1993, friction between these two countries has continued. But
situation worsened after the present Ukrainian President Volodymy
Zelensky came to power."
Apparently the war is between Russia and
Ukraine. But the crux of the problem is not between Russia and Ukraine
alone but between Russia and the United States. Ukraine is Europe’s
geopolitical pivot of Europe. The United States wants to take Ukraine
away from the Russia’s security orbit and integrate it into the Western
camp. The United States is expanding the North Atlantic Treaty
Organisation’s (NATO) eastward. Beginning in 1999, the eastward
expansion of NATO has already incorporated Poland, Bulgaria, Romania,
Hungary, Check Republic, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia.
The US and
the West want to further expand NATO and their next target is Ukraine
and Georgia, which made Moscow more susceptible and nervous. Moscow
views Ukraine as its sphere of influence and Ukraine joining the NATO as
a direct security threat to Russia.
Until 2004, Ukraine had
maintained balanced relations with both Russia and the West. However,
Ukraine’s foreign policy equilibrium changed after the President Viktor
Andriyovych Yushchenko came to power who adopted pro-west policy and
planned to join the European Union and ultimately NATO. However, his
plans could not materialise as the then Prime Minister Viktor Fedorovych
Yanukovych pulled out of the deal to join EU. Yanukovych, too, failed
to maintain a balance between Russia and the West and earned the
reputation of being a pro- Russia man.
Yanukovych had close
personal relations with Russian President Vladimir Putin as he comes
from the Russian speaking Donetsk region. In the 2010 presidential
election, Yanukovych narrowly won but his rival candidate questioned the
validity of the election results. US often coaxed Yanukovych to join
Western alliance against Russia and abrogate the lease of strategic
Sevastopol port in the Black Sea. However, Yanukovych not only refused
to join the Western alliance but seemingly demonstrated pro-Russia
leaning and signed an agreement with Russia extending the Sevastopol
port lease.
His too pro-Russia policies annoyed the West on the
one hand while public resentment grew within the country against the
Yanukovych government, on the other, which he failed to handle properly.
The public resentment developed into mass demonstrations. In the wake
of the public protest, Ukrainian parliament impeached him. Unable to
face massive protest, he fled to Russia in 2014 paving the way for
Volodymy Oleksandrovych Zelensky to rise to power as President of
Ukraine.
Since coming to power Zelensky as president avowedly
took pro-West policy and was eager to join EU and NATO which dismayed
Russia. Already alarmed by incorporating Baltic countries and several
other east European countries into NATO, Zelensky’s hobnobbing with the
West and the US made Vladimir Putin further susceptible. The United
States wanted Ukraine to abrogate the deal with Russia concerning the
lease of strategically located Sevastopol port of Crimea and intended to
have its own naval base in Sevastopol port. In retaliation, Russia
annexed entire Crimea and Sevastopol in 2014.
The more Kyiv leans
towards West, the more Russia advances westward in Ukraine. The next
step Russia did was to recognise two Ukraine’s breakaway regions of
Donetsk and Luhansk as independent republics. Kremlin did not stop there
and went further ahead by militarily attacking Ukraine. Russia calls
President Zelenskyy as ‘Western proxy and puppet’ and has been trying to
defend the attack as an attempt to ‘free Ukraine from Nazification’.
Whatever the claim and counter claim, the core goal of Russian attack is
to control and protect its Western border and keep the NATO forces at
bay by creating Ukraine as a buffer zone.
Domestic politics
As Vladimir Lenin said ‘what
Ireland was for England, Ukraine has become for Russia’, Putin too
considers Ukraine as Russia’s backyard and the present conflict is the
outcome of this Russian mind-set. However, the domestic politics was
also partly responsible as politicians often politicised the strategic
and foreign affairs for the partisan interest being polarised into
pro-West and pro-Russian camps and failing to understand the sensitivity
of its powerful neighbour. As John F Kennedy said, ‘domestic policy can
only defeat us; foreign policy can kill us.’ Ukrainian crisis is the
mix of both domestic as well as foreign policy disaster.
(The author is former ambassador and former chief editor of this daily. lamsalyubanath@gmail.com)
Published on March 9, 2022 in The Rising Nepal. For original article, visit:
https://risingnepaldaily.com/opinion/war-returns-to-europe
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