Rome, 7th March 2014
Crimea: Is a Grand Bargain
with Putin still Possible?
This
morning, to rousing applause, Sergei Narishkine, Speaker of the Russian Duma,
welcomed a delegation of deputies from Crimea’s autonomous regional parliament
who had travelled to Moscow to present a request for readmission to the Russian
Federation. ‘We understand’, he said, ‘Crimeans’ clear and natural aspiration to
provide for their security, and the authorities’ decision to seek the opinion
of all Crimeans through the democratic procedure of a referendum.’ He said
Russia would ‘support the free and democratic choice of Crimea’s population’
and that ‘support for the Crimea’ was one of the Duma’s ‘priorities’.
According
to Mr Narishkine, Russia considered that the Crimean authorities’ decision [to
hold a referendum on secession from Ukraine] was ‘clear’ in the light of Ukraine’s
‘acute political crisis’ and ‘linked to an aspiration to safeguard the rights
and freedoms of its citizens’ as well as the ‘simple defence of human life’. Offering
an insight into Russian views on the origins and nature of the crisis, he said events
in Ukraine and Crimea had arisen out of ‘causes of a historical, spiritual and
philosophical character’.
Representatives
from all of the Duma’s various parties have already expressed their support for
Crimea’s self-determination through the free expression of the will of the
Crimean people, stating the Duma’s intention to send its own observers to the referendum
now scheduled for 16 March.
Across
the Atlantic, meanwhile, the tone couldn’t have been more different, with the White
House announcing the first visa bans for Russian officials involved in the
Russian occupation of Crimea. The United States in particular seems blind to those ‘historical, spiritual and philosophical’ issues that make Crimea for most Russians a touchstone of national identity and their country’s status as a great power.
Russia
has already invested too much prestige in Crimea to defuse the crisis on the
terms the West is demanding. Were Mr Putin still undecided about whether or not to give
satisfaction to what will surely be a vote in favour of Crimea’s reunion with
Russia, he wouldn’t have let events move so quickly. On the contrary, the fulsome support
the leaders of Crimea’s pro-Russian authorities have received in Moscow send a
clear signal that Mr Putin is ready to reassert Russian sovereignty over the
peninsula—more or less regardless of Kiev’s firm opposition and the outrage of
Western governments, above all that of the United States.
Indeed, it’s
becoming increasingly clear that two very different world views stand behind
each side’s actions. Where President Obama dismisses Crimea’s Russian-sponsored
referendum as a ‘violation of international law’, Russians routinely cite
Kosovo, which they see as the West having unilaterally detached from Serbia in
2008. To many Russians, this smacks of hypocrisy. And why was it right for the United States to help Bahrain suppress its Arab Spring, but wrong for Russia to do the same in Syria?
From
a ‘realist’ point of view, the West’s appeals to international law seem to
complicate rather than clarify the issues at stake in Crimea. Before February’s revolution, Crimea’s autonomous status recognized
its separate identity. Now that Ukraine has itself changed, why shouldn’t the
people of the Crimea determine for themselves whether they want to be a part of
the new Ukraine? The question seems less important to the West than other a
host of other matters on which it needs Russia’s help—notably, Syria and Iran.
But
the United States seems unable to see events in Ukraine from Moscow’s point of
view—and unwilling even to try. Full of shrill threats, Washington’s response has
been found wanting in form and substance, lacking both the humility to take seriously
Russia’s concerns and the expert insight that might warn that there is no
simple answer to the complex issues of history, memory and identity the crisis
has thrown up. Sanctions, visa bans and emergency NATO meetings have all taken
place before the representatives of
both governments have properly met. This has made Washington look desperate.
What’s
more, by refusing to listen to what the Russians want in this crisis, the
United States has lost an opportunity to extract cooperation from Russia where
the United States’ own national interest is more critically at stake. Instead of having the US and Russian foreign ministers shout out each other on television, why not have a trusted third party—Germany is the obvious candidate—host a summit where each side can present its own position and ensure the other party knows exactly where what is most important to it?
In the heyday of the Concert of Europe, the powers—mutatis mutandi—might have found a solution to the Crimea along
the following lines. The West agrees to recognize the result of Crimea’s
referendum, to which it sends international observers to ensure that Russian
soldiers don’t intimidate Crimea’s Tatar and Ukrainian minorities, internationally-guaranteed
protections for whose rights are then written in to Crimea’s accession
agreement with the Russian Federation. The West then calls Russia’s bluff and goes
a step further by agreeing to internationally sponsored referenda in all of
Ukraine’s eastern districts. If they vote for reunion, they go back to Moscow.
But if, as many Ukrainian commentators claim, the region’s love of Russia is
skin deep, Moscow permanently loses a stick with which to
beat future Ukrainian governments. Russia and NATO guarantee Ukraine’s borders,
but Ukrainian membership of NATO is ruled out; instead, it is agreed to give
the country the same neutral status Finland enjoys. Both the European Union and
Russia are free to go on wooing its no longer torn people with trade agreements.
In
return for all this, the West prevails on Mr
Putin to take Syrian President Bashar Assad into exile and to promise Russia’s
help in building a government of national unity—one based on the principles of
electoral democracy employed to settle Russia’s quarrel in Crimea and Ukraine.
In addition, Moscow gets to keep its naval base on the Syrian coast, but promises to continue to support Western efforts to control Iran’s nuclear
programme. Simple.
Yesterday,
the Russian Writers’ Union issued an open letter to President Vladimir Putin conveying
its dismay over the ‘crimes’ against Ukraine’s Russian-speaking minority
perpetrated by Western-supported nationalists in Kiev and expressing strong support
for Mr Putin’s tough stance in upholding their cause. To Western ears, the
letter, which attributes the February revolution in Kiev to the activities of
Western-sponsored ‘Nazis’ and compares the revolutionaries’ early decision to
revoke the Russian language’s official status in the eastern half of Ukraine to
‘book-burning in the Third Reich’, appears to have arrived from another planet.
But we would be wrong to laugh. Such rhetoric, and our inability to comprehend
what motivates it, merely reflects the gaping hole between Russia and
the West that makes cooperation an increasingly fleeting prospect—in Crimea
and everywhere else.
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