REALITY
CHECK
Let us try to face reality concerning Ukraine. Here’s a reality check:
Ukraine and the two Eastern-most
breakaway regions of Donetsk and Luhansk.
REALITY 1
Ukraine is a deeply divided country, torn by cultural, linguistic, geographical, historical and ethnic
differences. And yes, by different
allegiances. CHECK.
REALITY 2
Ukraine sits at a geopolitical fault line, making it a potential target for
pushing & shoving by major powers. It is no accident that her territory or parts of it have belonged to
Russia, Sweden, Poland, Austria, Lithuania, Germany and the Ottoman Empire. CHECK.
REALITY 3
Ukraine is an ugly mess. Her former
President has been deposed. Her President and the government were installed
through a coup d´état. She lost Crimea to Russia. She threw herself in the arms
of the IMF. She’s got the Russians messing with her. She’s got the Westerners
promising what they cannot or will not deliver. She is on the risk of falling
apart. And she is broke. Ukraine is, once more, in someone else’s
hands. CHECK.
REALITY 4
Russia regards Ukraine as a vital national interest for historic, religious, geostrategic and cultural reasons and so is
willing to go the extra mile to safeguard her interests there. CHECK.
REALITY 5
The West has interests in Ukraine, but they are not vital ones. Consequently, it is reluctant to take harsh measures that could evolve
towards excessive involvement and risks. Thus
the meager sanctions.
CHECK.
REALITY 6
France. For France the two
Mistral warships, at US$ 1.2 billion a piece are just too precious a deal to
forfeit in times of economic hardship, so she is selling them to Russia
come what may. CHECK.
REALITY 7
United Kingdom. The UK prizes
Russian money in the City stock market and in London’s real estate market. The
whole Ukrainian affair is most unfortunate, but business must go on. CHECK.
REALITY 8
Germany. Germany needs Russian
oil & gas and would very much like to keep her vast industrial
investments in Russia. So she goes soft and slow on sanctions. CHECK.
REALITY 9
United States. Even the US is not
too eager to escalate sanctions on Russia, well aware of the potential
economic and security consequences. CHECK.
REALITY 10
Ukraine is important to Russia and is on Russia’s backyard. Meaning
Russia finds it easy to meddle and to press and to amass 40.000 troops just
over the border.
The Ukraine is only so important to the West and it is relatively far.
No one is going to send troops, warships or aircraft to rescue Ukraine, even if
the Russians roll their tanks all the way to Kiev, Odessa, or Lvov, which is
very unlikely.
So, the most probable outcome is
that there will be no major showdown over Ukraine. A more serious conflict
is far from impossible, but the Russians will probably continue to act under
the radar, and the West is unlikely to take a tough stance. CHECK.
REALITY 11
So, everything will work out reasonably well in Ukraine? Well, probably
yes. Except if you are a Ukrainian, of course. CHECK.
FINAL REALITY
One may not like what is going on, but this is the reality of Power
Politics or, putting it more mildly, Real Politik. Countries act according to
their interests within the limits of their power. The latter being limited,
even for great powers, they have to assess the pros and cons in each situation.
That is why nobody budged in August 2008 on the Russo-Georgian War. And that is
why nobody will go too far over Ukraine despite her much bigger importance CHECK.
2 comentários:
Completo e claro. Mas para os Russos a zona de perigo para o futuro será sempre a Ucrânia, mesmo se a fronteira passa um dia a alguns km mais para oeste.
Entretanto, a Europa ,também vai, um dia, ser obrigada a rever a sua composição, porque na forma atual está provado que não e viável.
Totalmente de acordo. Para a Rússia, mais uma centenas de km é melhor, mas o que lhes interessa mesmo é a colagem da Ucrânia a Moscovo, ou no mínimo, a neutralização de Kiev.
A UE se se alargar à Ucrânia vai meter-se num sarilho sem nome, dada a situação ruinosa do país, a distância do coração da Europa e a vizinhança coma Rússia.
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