La entidad
demográfico-geográfica conocida como “Ucrania” comienza a hacer agua por los
cuatro costados. Los nazis de Kiev están llevando inexorablemente al país al
caos: inflación, desempleo, desindustrialización, pronto default, guerra civil,
despoblamiento por emigración compulsiva, odios étnico-lingüísticos con la
región del Donbas (la Nueva Rusia), desmantelamiento de las instituciones del
estado, corrupción desenfrenada, violencia política explícita y destrucción de
la cultura común al conjunto de la población, entre otros factores. Europa, mientras tanto, mira con nerviosismo
creciente, sin atinar a hacer nada. Jódanse, chicos, se lo merecen; esto es lo que supieron conseguir. Al respecto, vale la
pena leer la siguiente nota de Alexander Mercouris para el sitio
web Russia Insider:
Título: Europeans
Staring at Total Failure in Ukraine
Epígrafe:
Increasingly frantic diplomatic efforts by European leaders show growing
desperation to settle Ukrainian crisis before failure of sanctions policy
becomes obvious.
Texto: As the
political situation in Ukraine continues to deteriorate – with the government
paralysed as a result of the power struggle between Poroshenko and Yatsenyuk –
the Europeans are becoming increasingly desperate.
They are also
becoming increasingly frustrated with the Ukrainians whose intransigence is
prolonging the crisis.
However the
Europeans have no exit strategy and are staring at total failure.
The reason is the
growing anger across Europe with the sanctions policy, and a growing sense that
the diplomatic window for finding a face saving way to end the sanctions before
European leverage completely runs out is closing fast.
The problem the
Europeans have is that they have committed themselves to maintaining the
sanctions against until the terms of Minsk II are carried out.
When they did
this the Europeans however failed to take the basic precaution of linking the
lifting of the sanctions not just to Russian adherence to Minsk II but to
Ukrainian adherence as well.
Since the
provisions of Minsk II actually require most of the action to be taken by the
Ukrainians, this failure has not only denied the Europeans leverage over the
Ukrainians. It has given the Ukrainians
a perverse incentive to renege on their commitments to carry out Minsk II,
since that way they can oblige the Europeans to continue the sanctions.
In the meantime
opposition to the sanctions policy is growing, both in northern Europe and in
southern Europe.
In northern
Europe opposition to sanctions is concentrated in small but very powerful
constituencies. In southern Europe it is
however well nigh universal.
Southern Europe
has never been much interested in Ukraine or in the conflict there and does not
support or understand the geopolitical play there.
The political
culture of southern Europe also makes southern Europeans largely immune to the
self-interested moralising that the US
and northern Europeans are given to and which has been used to mobilise support
for the Maidan movement in Ukraine.
People of neocon
views are nowhere near as influential in southern Europe as they are in
northern Europe, and southern Europeans do not feel as obsessively hostile to
Russia as many northern Europeans do.
Southern
Europeans see themselves as having been dragooned into a sanctions policy they
fundamentally don’t agree with, and which they consider counterproductive and
irrational.
The most powerful
southern European leader, Renzi of Italy, is barely bothering to hide his
disagreement with the policy, and most other southern European leaders
privately agree with him.
Southern Europe
does not however by itself have the strength to change a policy agreed on by
the most powerful European states – Germany and France.
The policy is
however now also being increasingly questioned in Germany and France, in
Germany by a large part of the German business community, and in France by the
French farmers.
The latter are a
powerful political lobby, which no French government can ignore, especially
with elections pending.
With a Presidential
election pending in France in 2017 the French government has been forced to
reassure the farmers that it is “doing all it can” to get the Russian counter
sanctions banning EU food exports to Russia lifted.
As the French
government however knows that cannot happen unless the EU sanctions are lifted
first.
That gives the
French government a strong incentive to have the sanctions lifted, which in
turn means that it has a strong incentive to achieve a settlement of the
Ukrainian conflict.
Even more
important than the steadily growing opposition to the sanctions policy is the
feeling that the window for European diplomatic influence is closing fast.
It is difficult
to know to what extent European leaders are informed about the state of the Russian
economy. However even the most
complacent amongst them must by now know that it is not going to collapse under
the weight of the sanctions, and that Russian policy towards Ukraine is not
going to change because of them.
Expectations that
the sanctions would provoke Russia’s oligarchs to force Putin out unless he
changed course – which is what the German intelligence service the BND
apparently told Merkel would happen before the EU imposed the sanctions – have
turned out to be completely wrong.
As for the
popular revolution in Russia against Putin that some expected, with Putin’s
popularity above 80% even the most delusional European leaders can no longer
believe it will happen.
It is even
possible that the better informed of the European leaders – including possibly
German Foreign Minister Steinmeier – know the dreadful truth – that the Russian
economy has not only survived the sanctions but that its recession will shortly
end.
This points to
the paradox of the sanctions. Whilst for
the Russians their cost was front loaded and is now diminishing with each month
that passes – with their overall effect proving actually beneficial – for the
Europeans the hurt is growing – both economically and politically.
For the Europeans
an economic recovery – or worse still a boom – in Russia whilst the sanctions
are in place would be a humiliating disaster.
It would show
that Russia is fundamentally immune to sanctions, exposing the total bankruptcy
of the whole sanctions policy.
It would also expose
European leaders like Angela Merkel and Francois Hollande to criticism for
imposing a sanctions policy that had ended up hurting Europe and their own
countries more than Russia.
German businesses
and French farmers who had lost business because of the sanctions would be –
rightly – furious.
It would also
strip away remaining illusions about the Europeans and their power.
In diplomacy
maintaining an appearance of power is at least as important as power
itself. A state or group of states which
lose the appearance of power risk no longer being taken seriously.
What that means
in this case is that the Europeans have to be in a position where they can at
least pretend that the sanctions still matter to Russia when they are lifted
and that the Russians are giving something back in return.
Obviously the
Europeans cannot credibly claim this if when they lift the sanctions if Russia
is in the midst of a boom .
It is because the
Europeans also need to show that the Russians are giving something in return
for the sanctions being lifted that they have linked the lifting of the
sanctions to Minsk II.
The successful
implementation of Minsk II would enable the Europeans to pretend it was brought
about through their efforts. They could
then lift the sanctions and claim victory.
Since it was the
Russians who drafted Minsk II this would have seemed like a low risk
strategy. The Russians after all would
be expected to want to implement an agreement whose terms they themselves
drafted.
What the Europeans
overlooked – or never considered – was that it might be their own Ukrainian
proteges – not the Russians – who would fail to implement Minsk II. That however is precisely the position the
Europeans are now in.
This is not
because the Ukrainian government is being held hostage by right wing militias.
It is because
Minsk II contradicts the whole ethos and purpose of the Maidan “revolution”
whose overriding objective is to create a unitary, monolingual and monocultural
Ukraine as distanced from Russia as possible.
I discussed all
this in an article Russia Insider published in January 2015 on the eve of the
battle of Debaltsevo. Here is what I
said there:
“The basic truth
about the crisis in Ukraine and why there is a war there – the one that many
people especially in the West refuse to acknowledge – is that the faction that
seized power in Ukraine through the February 2014 coup is structurally
incapable of negotiation or compromise with those it considers its opponents.
…….Briefly, the
whole purpose of the February coup was so that the faction in Ukraine that
holds power now could achieve the unrestricted dominance of Ukrainian society
which is its only way of making true its vision of a unitary, monolingual,
monocultural Ukraine that is forever distanced from Russia.
Given the
diversity of Ukrainian society, it cannot compromise with its opponents since
were it to do so that would jeopardise the entire project that is the reason
for its existence and the justification for its hold on power.
That is why it
acted in February to eliminate from Ukrainian political life the faction that
had held power in Ukraine before and why it remains committed to eliminating
its opponents in the Donbass now.”
All this remains
as true now as it was then.
It will continue
to be true whichever Maidan leader holds power in Ukraine. It doesn’t matter whether that leader is
Poroshenko, Tymosheko, Yatsenyuk, Kolomoisky, Tyagnibok, Paruby, Lyashko,
Klitschko, Yarosh or someone else. No
Ukrainian politician who owes allegiance to Maidan is capable of the sort of
compromise that Minsk II requires, and it is a fundamental error to think that
because Ukraine’s Maidan politicians engage in constant factional infighting
with each other that some of them are more “moderate” on these questions than
others.
Up to now the
Europeans have closed their eyes to this reality. It is now hitting them square in the face.
This is why –
confronted by total Ukrainian intransigence but wanting an end to the conflict
before their leverage and credibility vanishes – German Foreign Minister
Steinmeier and French Foreign Minister Ayrault are said to travel to Kiev
“completement exacerbés.”
The Europeans
have landed themselves in the same trap in which Yanukovych found himself
during the Maidan protests.
Like the
Europeans Yanukovych tried to cut deals with the Maidan leaders as if they were
reasonable people.
What Yanukovych
discovered whenever he thought he had sealed a deal was that the Maidan leaders
simply reneged on it, pocketing his concessions, continuing their protests, and
coming back with more demands.
Ukraine’s Maidan
leaders have behaved in exactly the same throughout the Ukrainian conflict.
In April 2014
they agreed to constitutional changes granting more autonomy to Ukraine’s
regions.
They reneged on
that agreement and over the course of the next few months they sought to crush
opposition in Ukraine’s eastern regions by force.
Following their
defeat in August 2014 they agreed to grant special status to the Donbass, with
negotiations to follow to achieve a political settlement (Minsk I).
They failed to
honour these commitments and in January 2015 they attacked the Donbass again.
In February 2015
– after they had been defeated once more – they again agreed to grant special
status to the Donbass. They also agreed
to negotiate directly with the Donbass leaders, to agree the terms of elections
in the Donbass with them, and to agree with them changes to Ukraine’s
constitution, which were to be followed by fresh elections held before the end
of December 2015. (Minsk II).
They again failed
to honour these commitments. In August
2015 they tried to attack Donbass again only to be warned off doing so by the
Europeans.
In October 2015
at the summit in Paris they renewed their promise to carry out the provisions
of Minsk II, this time in accordance with a new timetable drawn up by the
French, which would have resulted in the Donbass being granted special status
and holding elections this March.
They have again
failed to carry out any one of these commitments. It is now March and not one of the
commitments they made in October has been honoured. Instead reports from the Donbass speak of
renewed fighting.
It is not
surprising therefore if Steinmeier and Ayraut are “completement exacerbés.”
Confronted by
Ukrainian intransigence, the Europeans have tried to achieve what they can
pretend is “progress” by asking the Russians to water down the terms of Minsk
II so as to at least allow elections to be held in the Donbass on Ukrainian
terms in the first half of this year.
Juncker’s recent
comment that Ukraine would not join NATO or the EU for 20-25 years (which in
practice means never) should be seen in that context.
It was intended
as a sop to the Russians, making public what had already been agreed privately
in February 2015 in Moscow and Minsk, in order to get the Russians to soften
their stance on Minsk II.
The Russians
however are having none of it. As their
public statements make clear on the subject of Minsk II they are
implacable. They have rejected all
attempts to water down Minsk II. They
insist Ukraine carry out its terms to the letter.
It is impossible
to avoid the feeling that through their blind support for the Maidan movement
the Europeans have manoeuvred themselves into a trap.
An escalation of
support for Ukraine is becoming politically impossible especially given
Ukraine’s intransigence and its growing political crisis.
Retreat – which
would involve finally taking a strong public stand against Kiev by demanding
that it implement Minsk II in full with a threat of sanctions if it fails to do
so – is however politically extremely difficult, and is probably impossible
whilst Merkel remains Germany’s Chancellor given how much political capital she
has invested in Ukraine.
The alternative
however is total humiliation when whatever appearance of leverage still left is
lost, which is the prospect that is now staring the Europeans in the face.
It is probably now
only a question of months before economic recovery in Russia exposes the
Europeans’ sanctions policy – and with it their whole Ukrainian policy – as a
bluff which has been called.
That this is
starting to be understood in Western capitals has been confirmed in the most
unlikely of places – in the comments of US President Obama – the ultimate
author of the sanctions policy – in the recent interviews he has given to The
Atlantic magazine. Here is what he said:
“Ukraine is a
core Russian interest but not an American one, so Russia will always be able to
maintain escalatory dominance there.
“The fact is that
Ukraine, which is a non-Nato country, is going to be vulnerable to military
domination by Russia no matter what we do,” he said.
I asked Obama
whether his position on Ukraine was realistic or fatalistic.
“It’s realistic,”
he said. “But this is an example of where we have to be very clear about what
our core interests are and what we are willing to go to war for.””
In other words
Ukraine matters to the Russians but doesn’t to the West, and it is the Russians
who hold there the high cards (“escalatory dominance”).
That is what
Russia Insider has been saying all along.
It has taken two
years, a civil war, thousands of deaths, an economic collapse, a government
crisis, a now inevitable default, and the coming failure of the sanctions
policy for Western leaders to start to see it.
That is far too
late to avoid the humiliation which all too evidently is now coming.
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