Seems the West will do anything these days to avoid a confrontation with Vladimir Putin.
IS THERE NO ONE WHO WILL STAND UP FOR UKRAINE? |
Oleksander
Turchynov, the secretary of Ukraine's national defense council, told
the country's parliament something startling last week. He said that
there were 8,500 Russian regular troops now deployed in eastern Ukraine
and that another 52,000 were poised just on the other side of its
eastern border.
The figures are dramatic-and so much larger
than what has been reported during the months of Russian attempts to
destabilize Ukraine, while Vladimir Putin
's denials of his troops' presence continue with stubborn
ridiculousness. I asked a Western security expert if the numbers sounded
plausible.
He responded: "It would be difficult to believe
that the Ukrainians could have such hard numbers on Russian troop
presence without that also being visible to Western intelligence." A day
later, Alexander Vershbow, NATO's deputy secretary-general, described
the situation in Ukraine as deteriorating.
This once again
posed the question about what NATO, through military steadfastness, and
the European Union, by sanctions and politics, could, might or would do
(long live the conditional tense) to convince the Russians their
patience, somewhere, has limits.
The EU, it turned out, was talking at first about giving in. The talk of retreat came in disregard of Chancellor Angela Merkel
's rejection of a meeting scheduled for last Friday with Mr. Putin. She
saw no possibility of a broad Ukrainian truce because of continuing
cease-fire violations by Russia and pro-Russian separatists.
No
matter, the EU's foreign-policy chief, Federica Mogherini, proposed
that Brussels consider "a more pro-active approach" of possible
trade-offs to induce policy change, regardless of "further Russian
pressure, intimidation, and manipulation."
Look at the
maneuver like this: Ms. Mogherini, a geopolitical social worker-type,
was acting as if the EU wanted to signal its readiness to set up a
parole-board hearing for a still-at-large major criminal-notwithstanding
the objections expressed on Monday by foreign ministers on Europe's
Putin-endangered eastern periphery.
For her, it seemed like
the evidence on aggressive Russian behavior toward the West over the
past two months just didn't exist, although Moscow's military showed off
its potentially nuclear-armed Iskander missiles in Kaliningrad, the
westernmost Russian territory bordering Poland and Lithuania, and then
announced it would station combat-ready troops in Kaliningrad and Crimea
in 2015. Meanwhile, Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges, the U.S. Army commander in
Europe, pointed to the risk of a major new offensive by pro-Russian
separatists in Ukraine this spring.
Mr. Vershbow's reaction
to the EU's musings was tactful. The general view of the Allies, he told
Reuters, was to stand by its suspension of all practical cooperation
with Russia following its invasion of Crimea. "Right now," he
recommended, "it's probably not the right time to even speculate about"
so-called "forward steps."
After the Mogherini paper was
first disclosed by The Wall Street Journal, I talked with a senior NATO
official about the overall Ukraine-Russia situation.
The
official described the Alliance as being in touch with reality and
regarding Russia as acting "duplicitously." Ms. Merkel feels she had
been personally deceived, backs continuing sanctions against Russia, and
hangs tough.
A point has been reached, the official said,
where NATO "is getting ready for neo-containment. The Germans are
getting adjusted to it. Although not all of them."
Yet
considering Mr. Putin's newest success in widening critical differences
between and within the Alliance and EU, there is obviously no single
strong notion about what to do.
On one side, NATO will be
getting about 150 U.S. tanks and armored vehicles, sufficient to equip a
heavy armored brigade, for prepositioning in Eastern Europe. But
eventual supply by Washington of lethal defensive arms to Ukraine
remains chimeric.
What the Obama administration doesn't seem
to take on-or doesn't want to take on-is the great willingness of some
of its European allies to ease up on a Russia that the White House was
reported early last year as seeking to ignore into pariah-state status.
Sigmar
Gabriel, the Social Democratic vice chancellor in Ms. Merkel's
coalition, tells his countrymen that many Americans want the old
superpower rivalry "back on the ground" and ominously urges Germans to
"take note that Russia is an atomic power." French President François
Hollande, seemingly setting himself up as a go-between, says, like Mr.
Gabriel, he wants done with the Russia sanctions, although a resolved
truce is a prerequisite.
"I prefer," Mr. Hollande adds, "to position myself in a perspective of emerging from the crisis."
Mr.
Hollande might have read a response from Alexei Navalny, Russia's
leading opposition activist, now under house arrest. "Without the
sanctions, the Russian Army would be in Odessa," he told Le Monde. So
where does President Barack Obama, the West's nominal leader, stand? He
laid out his line last month: "The idea that ramping up sanctions
further and further and further and somehow Putin will change his mind
is a miscalculation.... Sometimes it's tempting to say we can go even
further, but that won't do us any good if suddenly the Europeans peel
off."
And then what? Kurt Volker, a former U.S. ambassador to
NATO under Presidents Bush and Obama, says the truth is gruesome and
must be opposed: "Everybody thinks it is more important not to be
confronting Russia than saving Ukraine. If that means giving up on
Ukraine, that's what can happen."
Source: http://en.censor.net.ua/r320739
Just like the Germans. They lie and then feel obliged to believe their own lies.
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