Matthew Parris writes:
‘You can’t always get what you want,’ chorused
Mick Jagger, ‘but if you try some time/You just might find/You get what you
need.’
The danger with Ukraine is that the western powers will get what they want, not what we need.
The danger with Ukraine is that the western powers will get what they want, not what we need.
I write this as one who has travelled in Ukraine,
loved the country and seen that its people (though poor) are talented and
energetic. Any reference I make to basket cases refers to the Ukrainian state,
not the country’s human resources.
What we say we want is for Russia to
withdraw from Crimea and turn away from the rest of the country too, which we
hope to take under the West’s wing.
There follow three good reasons why such an
outcome, should we get it, might not be what we need.
First (as Sir Christopher Meyer argued in the Times
this week), Russian sentiment over the Crimea runs deep: deeper than some
idle pretext for a power grab, and rooted in the Russian imagination.
As is
often remarked, Russia’s loss of this territory happened as late as 1954 and at
the time was neither intended nor interpreted as a ceding of sovereignty,
because Ukraine was then so firmly under the Soviet heel as to be essentially a
Russian possession.
It was really only after the dissolution of the USSR, when
Ukraine began to drift (marginally) away from Moscow’s control, that the full
significance of the redrawing of boundaries (for essentially administrative
reasons) was brought home to Russians within and outside Ukraine.
This year that drift looked like gathering pace.
Last month on the streets of Kiev it brought open rupture.
The fresh elections
that had been agreed (with EU involvement) only hours before what was
tantamount to a mob-instigated coup, would have brought time to negotiate the future
status of the home port of Russia’s vital Black Sea fleet and the
Russian-speaking people in Crimea. All at once, Moscow faced a fait accompli.
I submit that the response — effectively to
occupy the Crimea — has been proportionate and understandable.
For
external powers like America and the EU to try to thwart this and pressure
Moscow into a retreat would look to me (were I Russian) like an intolerable
interference. Anyway, it would fail.
Unless Moscow ends up with effective
control over Crimea, or at least rock-solid and reliable influence, we in the
West will by our stance have engendered deep and lasting resentment in Moscow
without any comparable gain for ourselves.
Secondly, I would go further than concede the
Crimea to Moscow. I would also hesitate before giving any appearance of a
readiness to take the rest of Ukraine under the wing of the West.
Politically
and economically the country is a basket case, and for Moscow an expensive one.
When I travelled about a decade ago in Ukraine I
gained the impression of a big and weighty — not to say monumental
— state superstructure resting upon the spindly props of an agricultural
sector primitive to the point (in parts) of subsistence farming; and industry,
mining and infrastructure composed of inefficient rust-belt mid-20th-century
post-Soviet monoliths that any liberal free-market government would have to
endure a couple of decades’ massive pain and protest to close down. Retail and
commerce looked stuck way back in the last century
There was little sense of
competitiveness. Millions would need to be sacked and huge disruption wreaked
upon citizens’ lives before any kind of corner was turned.
Consider what
unexpected difficulty West Germany had in digesting East Germany — and
remember that East Germany was one of the former Soviet Union’s most advanced
economies; Ukraine was (and remains) one of its least.
Britain’s brutal 1980s
Thatcherite revolution would seem a tea-party by comparison.
Western commentary has spoken sunnily about the
need to ‘secure’ the Ukrainian economy by means of loans — as if Western
help were some kind of investment, a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to buy a
stake in a potential modern European country.
But it would not be an
investment; no loan, however large or on however generous terms, would fix the
problem. Ukraine has come to rely on massive subsidy. Russia has historically
provided this. Why should we be panting to take the burden upon our own
shoulders?
The task may be onerous, the cost tremendous and
the timescale long, but idealists and neoconservatives might still argue that
if we could finally bring about the creation of a liberal, free-market
democracy in one of the world’s biggest countries, then the challenge would be
worth shouldering.
But I doubt — and this is my third argument
— that transformed national cultures can be created by external subsidy,
training or intervention.
If this is really the Ukrainian spring, we should ask
ourselves how the Arab spring, the Iraqi spring or the Syrian spring are
working out. Experience is not encouraging.
I support — we all should — those
forces in Ukraine who want to throw off autocracy and corruption and embrace
modern democracy.
But I don’t know — do you? — how strong or potentially united
they are, what parts of the Ukrainian population they represent, or what
calibre of leadership they can look to.
I didn’t easily, when I visited, see it
happening fast. If it can, if it does, I suspect this had better be home-grown,
and fought for, rather than imported.
We do an idealistic, fragmented and perhaps
immature movement for democratic values no good by adopting national postures
that seem to offer the reformists material support as well as external
cheerleading when the going gets tough.
We made that mistake after the first
Gulf war when many reformist Iraqis, encouraged to break cover, died as a
consequence.
The West should take care not to put its mouth where its money
isn’t, as we once did in Hungary.
Do we understand what we’re doing here? You know
the answer to that. I rest my case.
After Ukraine misguided surrrender of her nuclear weaponry in exchange for Western protection, can anyone imagine anyone else, menaced by nasty neighbours, giving up theirs now?
ReplyDeleteCan you imagine the laughter from, say, India or Israel if we said "give up your Bomb; we'll protect you from your Nasty Neighbour"?
Sub-student-union drivel. Which is all that the Right now is. People grow out of it. You should try.
ReplyDelete