A new Cold War
>> Monday, March 10, 2014
PERRYSCOPE
Perry Diaz
Perry Diaz
In a bold and daring
move, Russian President Vladimir Putin asked the Russian Parliament to
authorize sending troops to Ukraine and Parliament approved it
unanimously. Within the hour, Russian military forces crossed the border
into Crimea. Obviously, the Russian forces were ready to roll into
Crimea and were just awaiting orders from Putin.
The Russian
invasion of Crimea is reminiscent of Germany’s invasion of Czechoslovakia in
1939 when Adolf Hitler broke the Munich Agreement and sent tanks and troops to
Czechoslovakia on March 14, 1939. Within days, the Germans took
control of the entire country… without firing a shot. All hell broke
loose and World War II began!
***
On February
5, 1994, U.S. President Bill Clinton, U.K. Prime Minister John Major, Russian
Federation President Boris Yeltsin, and Ukraine President Leonid Kuchma signed
the “Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances.” Under the memorandum,
Ukraine promised to sign the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and remove all
Soviet-era nuclear weapons and send them to disarmament facilities in
Russia. Ukraine complied with the terms of the agreement.
In return,
the U.S., U.K., and Russia promised to protect Ukraine’s borders and respect
her sovereignty and territorial integrity as an independent state. They
applied the principles of “territorial integrity and nonintervention” in the
1975 Helsinki Final Act, a Cold War-era treaty signed by the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics (USSR) and 34 other states. The U.S. and U.K. kept
their promises. But on March 1, 2014, Russia broke the 20-year-old
agreement by invading Ukraine. Within days, Russia effectively took
control of Crimea.
The
invasion caught the United States and Europe by surprise. With 150,000
Russian troops deployed near the border of Ukraine, the Ukrainian government
reacted by saying that Russia’s action was a “declaration of war.”
Ukraine
immediately placed her military on red alert and mobilized her reserves. But
with 70,000 ground troops, Ukraine is no match for Russia. However, an
attack on Ukraine could draw the 28-member North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) into the conflict… or to be more precise, nuclear war! All it
takes is for Putin – just like Hitler in 1939 – to order an attack.
The
question is: Would Putin risk a conventional or nuclear war – Heaven forbid! --
with the Western powers? And this brings to mind, what kind of a
man is Vladimir Vladimirovich
Putin?
***
Putin’s
rise to power was preceded by a 16-year stint as a KGB officer, the notorious
Soviet-era spy agency. He retired with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel in
1991 -- when the Soviet Union was dissolved – and entered politics in his
native St. Petersburg. He moved to Moscow in 1996 and joined President
Boris Yeltsin’s administration where his meteoric rise to power began.
Yeltsin
resigned unexpectedly on December 31, 1999 and Putin became Acting
President. In 2000, he ran for President and was elected. He served
as President from 2000 to 2008, Prime Minister from 2008 to 2012, and again as
President since 2012 to the present day. Last year, he announced --
rather prematurely -- that he would run for reelection in 2016, seemingly a
move to preempt any opposition.
In 2005, in
his annual state of the nation address, Putin said, “The collapse of the
Soviet Union was the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century. And for
the Russian people, it became a real drama. Tens of millions of our citizens
found themselves outside the Russian Federation.”
Putin was
alluding to ethnic Russians in Soviet republics that were once part of the
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), which ceased to exist in
1991. One of these republics was Ukraine, which arguably has the biggest
component of ethnic Russians outside the present-day Russian Federation.
A large
number of these ethnic Russians are concentrated in the Ukrainian province of
Crimea, which was once a part of the Russian Republic until 1954 when Soviet
leader Nikita Khrushchev decreed to transfer Crimea to the Ukraine Republic.
But since both the Russian Republic and Ukraine Republic were part of the USSR,
it didn’t make any difference then. But now it does.
Little did
Khrushchev realize that 37 years later the USSR would disintegrate and Crimea would
no longer have any link or association with Mother Russia. But Putin had
none of that. A few years ago, Russia started issuing passports to ethnic
Russians in Crimea. And with ethnic Russians comprising 60% of Crimea’s
population of two million, Russia can then assert hegemony over Crimea.
It is for this reason that Putin sent Russian troops to Crimea ostensibly
to protect Russian “citizens.” However, many believe that Putin has a
much bigger agenda, which is to ultimately bring Ukraine back into Russia’s
sphere of influence. Well, that is just for starters.
***
Not too
long ago, Putin started talking about a “Eurasian Union” that would bring the
former Soviet satellite states – Eastern European countries -- and Soviet
republics into one cohesive bloc not unlike the European Union (EU).
Interestingly, most of the former Soviet satellite states are now members of
the European Union and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), a fact
that Putin resents.
Although
Ukraine is not a member of EU or NATO, she is a participant of the Partnership
for Peace (PiP), a NATO program aimed at creating trust between NATO and other
states in Europe and the former Soviet Union. But this was not enough to
secure her sovereignty territorial integrity. Putin knows that; thus,
making Ukraine an easy target for Russian invasion.
And with
Russian troops in virtual control of Crimea, it would be too risky for NATO to
send tanks and troops to Ukraine, particularly Crimea, without starting a war
with Russia, which begs the question: would NATO just stand idle while Russia
was pillaging Ukraine?
Losing
Crimea would be a big blow to NATO. It would only embolden Putin to
invade Balkan states like Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, which are easy prey
to Russian expansionism. And with Putin manifesting signs of Napoleonic
complex, there is no telling which country he’d invade next. But he knows
that a nuclear war with NATO could lead to MAD; that is, mutually assured
destruction, which makes one wonder, do we have a Dr. Strangelove on the loose?
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