It is a real indicator to me of how much the world has changed when a conservative PM from the Cold War days can speak out in this way on Russian television.
'May you live in interesting times' - old Chinese curse
'US thinks rules are for inferior nations, it's in their DNA' - ex Australian PM
'May you live in interesting times' - old Chinese curse
'US thinks rules are for inferior nations, it's in their DNA' - ex Australian PM
Kosovo's
secession demonstrated that international law is only as applicable
as the force used to back it. But with Crimea now free on the wings
of that precedent, the West cries foul. Why does the Western world
fail to recognize parallels between Kosovo and Crimea? Is it a case
of double standards or the result of decades of adversarial EU and
NATO policies towards Russia? Oksana is joined by former Australian
Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser to canvass these issues.
Ukraine:
there's no way out unless the west understands its past mistakes
Western
leaders mostly paint the whole dispute as totally one-sided: it is
all Russia’s fault. But the Crimea crisis is directly related to
the misguided steps taken after the Soviet Union’s fall
Malcolm
Fraser
2
March, 2014
After
the fall of the Soviet Union, many hoped the cold war ideology could
be put behind, and that the powers could work for a more co-operative
and a better world. Nato had done its job.
There
were many ways in which the former members of the Soviet Union in
eastern Europe could have been given security for the future. Nato
chose to provide that security by moving eastward to the borders of
Russia. The then president, Gorbachev, in negotiating with secretary
of state, James Baker, had insisted that Nato should not move one
foot east – this was an area of traditional Russian influence.
President Clinton pushed to expand the Nato alliance to the very
borders of Russia. There was talk of Ukraine and Georgia being
included.
The
move east, despite the negotiations held with Gorbachev, was
provocative, unwise and a very clear signal to Russia: we are not
willing to make you a co-operative partner in the management of
European or world affairs; we will exercise the power available to us
and you will have to put up with it.
The
message was re-emphasised years later, when President Bush sought to
place elements of the anti-ballistic missile system in Poland and the
Czech Republic. America said this was aimed at Iran. Russia would not
have believed that. The west was acting as though the cold war still
persisted.
What
happened a while ago in Georgia, and what is happening now in Crimea,
grows directly from those early mistakes made by the west. The west
has been angling over the years to draw Ukraine into Nato. It has
been doing whatever it could to support a pro-European government in
the Ukraine, and to oppose or to bring down a pro-Russian government.
In
January, Seumas Milne described those fighting against the then
government. If but a small part of what he then said was correct, the
west has once again chosen some unsavoury partners and that does not
augur well for the future. Milne then described the elements then
fighting the government as pro-fascist, pro-nazi, anti-Jew.
The
west has again been flat-footed and unprepared. There is a
significant Russia minority in Ukraine; Russia would be bound to take
steps to protect that minority. In addition, if Putin thought that
the west was angling to get the Ukraine into Nato, he certainly would
have taken steps as he has to guarantee access to the Black Sea ports
in Crimea and to safeguard military establishments which could be
used to threaten that access.
To
protect assets in Crimea will always be a Russian objective. Western
leaders and western media mostly paint the whole dispute as totally
one-sided: it is all Russia’s fault, and Putin is preventing a true
democracy emerging. The steps taken in the early days after the fall
of the Soviet Union, the breach of what Gorbachev (I accept almost
certainly mistakenly) believed to be a firm agreement that Nato would
not move east, was bound to create difficulties for the future.
There
will be no way out of this, unless the history and the west’s past
mistakes are understood by those who are trying to grapple with the
present intractable, difficult and extraordinarily dangerous problem.
There
is another aspect of this which should give western powers even
greater concern for the future. The US has embarked on what many
regard as a foolish and dangerous policy in the western pacific: a
policy of containment of China. Even Joseph Nye, a former Pentagon
official, has said containment is the wrong approach to a rising
China – the US policy should be one of co-operation. There have
been discussions about possible strategic arrangements between China
and Russia. Are the mistaken policies of the US and the unfolding
drama in Ukraine going to push both Russia and China towards a
strategic partnership?
Those
who thought the cold war was over and hoped for a better world are
being proved to be wrong. Those in charge of current policy are
showing an inadequate understanding of the events unfolding before
their eyes, and an inability to work co-operatively to guide the
world more safely.
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