Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine: An Explainer
Responses to common questions on day one of
Putin’s war of choice.
February 24, 2022
https://jewishcurrents.org/russias-invasion-of-ukraine-an-explainer
Over the past 24 hours, after months of feverish
speculation, Russia launched a full-scale assault on Ukraine. Three days after
announcing in a televised speech that Russia would recognize the self-declared
republics of Donetsk and Luhansk in eastern Ukraine—where Moscow-backed
separatists have been mired in a geographically contained on-and-off shooting
war with the Ukrainian government since 2014—Russian President Vladimir Putin
yesterday declared a “special military operation,” ostensibly to secure the independence
of the two breakaway regions. The tens of thousands of Russian soldiers that
entered Ukraine Thursday morning, however, attacked cities in every part of the
country. Scenes of horror have ensued: Ukrainian civilians are hiding in
basements, sheltering from air raids in metro stations, and attempting to flee
to the west on jam-packed roads. Russia’s action constitutes the largest-scale
invasion Europe has seen since World War II—or that the world has seen since
the United States invaded Iraq in 2003.
Events are unfolding with stunning speed. Ukraine
has declared martial law and mandatory enlistment, while the Biden
administration and governments around the world have condemned Russia and
prepared a range of policy responses. Meanwhile, confusion about the war’s
origins and implications reigns across the ideological spectrum. For this
week’s newsletter (subscribe here),
I’ve put together an explainer and attempted to answer some common questions,
based on suggestions from my colleagues at Jewish
Currents.
Why is Russia invading Ukraine?
Many longtime observers of Russia have
expressed shock at the country’s actions: Even though Putin has telegraphed for
months his intention to invade on this scale, plenty of experts have found it
hard to believe that he would actually do so, given not only the expected human
toll in Ukraine but also the massive diplomatic and economic costs that Russia
is likely to endure. Ukraine—unlike Russia—is not especially rich in
natural resources and posed no imminent threat to Russian security. This war
is perhaps better understood as a nationalistic adventure aimed at shoring up Putin’s
flagging domestic support: Though it’s not clear that
there’s much active demand for war among the Russian public or from most
Russian elites, Putin seems to be betting that in the short term, many Russians
will rally round the flag. He has successfully used military campaigns to his
political advantage before—in eastern Ukraine
since 2014, as well as in Chechnya in
1999, Georgia in
2008, and Syria since
2015.
Putin detailed his own motivations at great length on
Monday, in a speech that
offered Russia’s one-sided view of the past century of regional history. He
emphasized that the modern Ukrainian state was actually created by the
Bolsheviks in the wake of the Russian Revolution: It was Lenin who recognized
Ukraine as a theoretically autonomous republic within the borders of the newly
constituted Soviet Union in 1922, and subsequent Soviet leaders who expanded
Ukraine’s borders to their present dimensions. What this account ignores is
that Ukrainian national identity developed in the 19th century alongside other
such identities in Eastern Europe and that the desire for a Ukrainian
nation-state was an authentic one that the Bolsheviks felt a legitimate need to
address. Putin’s narrative suggests that the Communist Party is to blame for
recognizing Ukraine as distinct from Russia in the first place, and for
allowing the Soviet Union to disintegrate into its constituent republics in
1991, granting Ukraine independence. While Western commentators have often
accused Putin of wanting to recreate the Soviet Union, this interpretation of
history actually blames the Soviet Union for Ukrainian independence and
stresses a much deeper Russian connection to Ukraine dating back to the tsars.
Either way, Putin effectively called the legitimacy of Ukraine as a sovereign
nation into question, and in particular asserted the rights of Russian-speaking
regions within Ukraine—including not only Donetsk and Luhansk but also Crimea,
which Russia unilaterally annexed in 2014—not to be governed from Kyiv. This,
of course, ignores that all three regions voted by
large margins to join an independent Ukraine in 1991.
In his speech, Putin extensively criticized NATO, the
US-led transatlantic alliance formed in 1949 to contain the Soviet Union, which
has expanded eastward in the past 30 years to include member states on or near
Russia’s borders—most dramatically in 1999 under Bill Clinton (the Czech
Republic, Hungary, and Poland) and in 2004 under George W. Bush (Bulgaria,
Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia). (It’s worth
acknowledging that the states in question actively sought NATO membership out
of an understandable fear that Russia might eventually attempt to reconquer
them.) In 2008, Bush also insisted on
opening a long-term path to NATO membership for the former Soviet republics of
Ukraine and Georgia—a decision now widely viewed as having helped trigger a war
between Russia and Georgia later that year. Bush’s decision also laid the
groundwork for the current crisis between Russia and Ukraine. In 2013,
Ukraine’s Kremlin-aligned (but duly elected) president Viktor Yanukovych
rejected an association agreement with the European Union in favor of closer
integration with Russia, leading to his ouster the following year in what
Ukrainians now call “the Revolution of Dignity.” (Russia maintains that the
overthrow was a Western-backed coup.) Putin—who fears encirclement by hostile,
US-aligned governments—responded to Ukraine’s effort to forge closer ties with
the West by annexing Crimea and backing insurgencies in the eastern Donbas
region, beginning the war that he dramatically escalated yesterday.
Putin continues to view Ukraine’s aspiration to join
NATO as an unacceptable threat to Russia’s security and regional ambitions; he
maintains that Russia should be regarded as a great power with a rightful sphere
of influence over neighboring countries. But despite Putin’s attempts to frame
the invasion in terms of Western intervention, Russia’s decision to invade is
not easily explained by anything the US, other Western governments, or Ukraine
itself have done in the past year. Although the US has declined to take the
prospect of NATO expansion off the table, it also hasn’t pushed the issue in
years. Given this, many analysts believe that something fundamental has changed
in Putin’s own mind to cause him to take such reckless steps. As the political
scientist Gleb Pavlovsky, a former Putin confidante, told The
New York Times today, “He’s become an isolated man, more isolated than
Stalin was.”
How serious a problem is the far right in
Ukraine?
In his announcement of
the invasion yesterday, Putin said Russia’s goal is the “demilitarization” and
“denazification” of Ukraine. Russia has asserted since the overthrow of
Yanukovych in 2013 that Ukraine’s government is controlled by far-right,
neo-Nazi elements. The same claim has been used as a justification for Russia’s
actions by elements of both the left and the right in
Western countries.
As with most propaganda, there is an element of truth
to this claim, but it has been greatly exaggerated. Far-right parties do exist
in Ukraine, as they do in many European countries, but their electoral
results have been
unimpressive in Ukraine’s multiparty
democratic system. Ukraine’s president since 2019, Volodymyr Zelensky, is
Jewish, as was its prime minister from 2016 to 2019, Volodymyr Groysman.
Ukraine is home to well over 100,000 Jews,
and while antisemitism is a live problem in Ukraine—as it is in Russia and many
other countries—Ukrainian Jews are integrated into the body politic and do not
welcome a Russian invasion of their country. This week, Pavel Kozlenko, the
director of the Museum of the Holocaust in the heavily Jewish port of
Odessa, told a
reporter from The New York Times a
joke that conveyed his view as a primarily Russian-speaking Ukrainian. It began
with two Jews standing on the street speaking in Yiddish. “A third comes up and
says, ‘Guys, why are you speaking in Yiddish?’” he said, “to which one of the
Yiddish-speaking men replied, ‘You know, I’m scared to speak in Russian because
if I do Putin will show up and try to liberate us.’”
Much of the focus on Ukraine’s far-right has centered
on the Azov Battalion, an extremist militia in eastern Ukraine that openly
embraces Nazi symbols and that has been involved in the fight against
Russian-backed separatists. Left-wing publications like Jacobin have sounded the
alarm about Western financial and military
support going to Azov and similar groups. This is a valid concern, but it is
unfair to the vast majority of Ukrainians to cast the Azov Battalion as
representative of their country’s political leanings or to use the existence
of a far-right group to excuse Russia’s attack on Ukrainian sovereignty.
Why have some parts of both the left and the
right in the US been slow to condemn Russia?
While the mainstream US political
establishment—including the Biden administration, leading members of both
parties, and the Washington foreign policy community—has long been critical of
Putin’s Russia, including of its military buildup against Ukraine, some voices
on both the left and the right have made statements holding the US primarily
responsible for the crisis.
Much of the left is understandably averse to war and
accurately understands the US as the leading purveyor of violence
internationally since World War II. This perspective is exemplified by a statement released
late last month by the Democratic Socialists of America’s
International Committee, which accused the US of “ongoing militarization in the
region” and condemned “a sensationalist Western media blitz drumming up
conflict in the Donbas”—descriptions that read awkwardly then, when Russia was
massing troops on Ukraine’s border, and seem even less apt today. What this
kind of left-wing analysis of the Ukraine crisis misses is that there are other
aggressive, imperialist actors in the world besides the US. In reality,
Washington has done little if anything to trigger the immediate crisis, and
there is no evidence that the Biden administration desired war. At every stage
in the leadup, Biden pursued diplomacy, offered off-ramps, demonstrated negligible
enthusiasm for further NATO expansion, and
made clear that US troops would not be deployed to Ukraine (a promise he
reiterated in a speech responding
to the invasion earlier today).
Ultimately, it is Russia that decided to mobilize for war and Russia that
decided to launch an invasion of a sovereign country, and a robust
anti-imperialist left could recognize that as a form of imperialism in its own
right. As Social Movement, a left-wing party in Ukraine, put it in a statement last
October, “the decline of American imperialism has been accompanied not by the
emergence of more democratic world order, but by the rise of other
imperialist predators, fundamentalist, and nationalist movements. Under these
circumstances, the international left, accustomed to fighting only against
Western imperialism, should reconsider its strategy.”
On the right, leading voices like Tucker Carlson, Steve Bannon,
and Donald Trump himself
have been more likely to offer actual defenses of Putin and Russia. In their
view, Putin is a strong leader asserting Russia’s legitimate sphere of
influence against a weak, corrupt, and feckless Biden administration. To a
certain extent, this stance is tied up in the scandals of the Trump
years—including Trump’s exhaustively
documented admiration for Putin, as well
as his attempt to condition US support to Ukraine on Kyiv’s agreement to
investigate the Biden family’s dealings there (a move that ultimately triggered
Trump’s impeachment). But there’s also a deeper
ideological affinity between the Western far-right
and Putin’s Russia, one that emphasizes Russia’s Christianness and whiteness,
its hostility to LGBTQ minorities, and its potential role as a bulwark
against China, which many on the right view as
21st century America’s true geopolitical rival.
Is this war contained within Ukraine, or is it
the beginning of World War III?
As of this writing, the actual violence is limited to
Ukraine itself but is far more extensive in geographic scope than many
observers predicted or hoped, with Russian incursions reported in practically
every part of the vast country, including western cities close to countries
like Poland and Romania. Russian troops are also invading Ukraine from bases in
Belarus, a former Soviet republic and close Russian ally.
Though Western countries including the US have
promised a swift and devastating response to Russia’s invasion, there is little
appetite even among longtime Russia hawks for any direct military engagement.
Still, the possibility of such engagement is real; while Ukraine is not part of
NATO, multiple countries in the immediate vicinity are, meaning that the US is
obligated by treaty to defend them against foreign threats. US troops are
already present in many of these countries—and more will likely be deployed
soon. Since the invasion, multiple Eastern European NATO allies have invoked Article
IV of the NATO charter, indicating an immediate concern that Russia’s war could
spill into NATO member countries—which, if it happened, could theoretically
trigger a much larger war drawing in Western Europe and the US. It’s no doubt
in anticipation of this that Putin, in his speech last night, threatened that
any countries that intervened in Ukraine would trigger “consequences greater
than any you have faced in history”—a reminder that Russia possesses a large
nuclear arsenal.
The economic fallout for the West could also be severe
given Russia’s vast energy resources, which supply a large share of the power
in Western Europe. A rise in global gas prices would pose a major political
problem for Biden ahead of November’s midterms—which explains why he tried to
assure the public in his remarks today that such a surge could be avoided. The
impact could be even more severe in countries like Germany that have closer
economic ties to Russia. There’s also a wider geopolitical risk that Russia
could end up embracing closer
financial and military ties with its historical rival China as it becomes more
isolated from the West—a prospect that many in Washington find concerning. The
tough multilateral sanctions Biden announced today
will also impact Russia’s political system—and its citizens, both ordinary and
elite—in ways forecasters can’t yet predict.
How are progressive lawmakers responding to the
invasion?
Progressive lawmakers like Bernie Sanders and members
of “the Squad” have already begun to weigh in on the US response. So far, these
legislators have struck a balance in their public statements between
calling for accountability for Russia and urging against further military
escalation (for instance, in the form of directly arming Ukrainians). The
cornerstone of the Western response is likely to consist of sanctions; the
Biden administration has pledged to target the so-called “oligarchs” in Putin’s
inner circle and the assets they have stored in Western financial institutions
and real estate, policies that lawmakers like Sanders have recommended for
several years now. Some foreign policy wonks are additionally suggesting broad-based
sanctions that could block the ability of ordinary Russians to engage in basic
financial transactions, but such policies have a history of causing mass
misery in countries like Iran and Venezuela
without succeeding in toppling the governments in question. In a statement released
today, Rep. llhan Omar expressed support for sanctions “that are targeted at
Putin, his oligarchs, and the Russian military, including and especially
targeted at their offshore assets.” But, she added, she will “continue to
oppose broad-based sanctions that would amount to collective punishment of a
Russian population that did not choose this.”
Even absent such sanctions, Russians are already
likely to experience economic pain: the ruble and the country’s stock market
plummeted overnight, and protests against the war have already
begun in multiple Russian cities, where police
have moved quickly to arrest demonstrators. Ultimately, it is ordinary Russians
and Ukrainians who will take the lead to end this catastrophe, but progressives
around the world can play a role in supporting them. Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna is
among the many members of Congress calling for mobilization to support the
refugees this war is already producing, who will likely number in the millions
(organizations like HIAS are
partnering with Jewish community organizations and with neighboring countries
like Poland and Moldova to assist Ukrainians displaced by the war). It’s worth
noting that previously, the Biden administration’s own approach toward refugees
has been slammed by
progressives like Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for continuing the xenophobic
policies of the Trump administration and that as she and other lawmakers call
for aid to Ukrainian refugees now, there is also an opportunity for grassroots
efforts to push Biden to reconsider immigration caps imposed on other
countries.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario