The West had hoped to shore up Ukraine’s economy and its democracy by associating it with the European Union. Ukraine signed a modest cooperation agreement with the EU, and looked forward to full membership in a matter of years. But some EU member states already felt that the EU had already bitten off as much as it could chew with the addition of 10 new members in May 2004.
So negotiations began for an “Association Agreement” short of membership, but bringing Ukraine closer to European standards policies, standards and political norms. A provision for Ukraine to move towards the EU on matters of security and defence stirred the Russians’ worst suspicions: they could perhaps live with Ukrainian membership of the EU; but Ukrainian involvement in the West’s defence arrangements was something else.
Egged on by the Americans, Ukraine was already involved in Nato’s schemes to groom countries for membership. But other Nato countries, notably France and Germany, even Britain, worried whether Ukrainian membership would be timely, feasible, or prudent.
They had a point. Great powers regularly betray smaller powers when circumstances change. Britain and France betrayed Czechoslovakia and Poland on the eve of the Second World War. At that war’s end, the British and Americans declined to use force to expel the Red Army from Eastern Europe. How much reason was there to believe that even the Americans would have the will or the resources to fight Russia over Ukraine in the 21st century? Was Nato’s ambiguous talk of membership not simply setting the Ukrainians up for betrayal?
The Russians were already working to keep Ukraine where they thought it belonged. In 2004, they intrigued to get their man Yanukovich elected to the Ukrainian presidency. He won, but demonstrators on the streets of Kiev, during the Orange Revolution, forced him to concede to his pro-European rival. By 2013, he had nevertheless had become president in a dubious poll. Demonstrators on Kiev’s central square, the Maidan, demanded that he sign the EU Association Agreement. Instead, he decamped for Russia. Moscow feared that all this was a trial run for renewed Western interference in Russian affairs. It was the magic of metahistory once again: not necessarily true, but a very powerful motivator.
When the Russians moved against Ukraine in 2014, the West imposed economic sanctions and deployed troops to Nato’s Eastern members, Poland and the Baltic States, who were potentially exposed to Russian pressure. The Russians and their supporters claimed that was provocative. But if Putin’s advisers didn’t warn him that this would be an inevitable reaction to his assault against Ukraine, they weren’t doing their job.
The Americans and Europeans tried negotiation. The talks stalled. The Russians continued their military pressure on Ukraine. Their efforts were counterproductive: most Ukrainians had been happy that their country should join Europe, but less keen on joining Nato, preferring to avoid any military alignment. Now three quarters of them tell the pollsters that they would probably vote to join Nato.
On our side, some claimed that our actions were equally counterproductive. They accused the West of hypocrisy: don’t we too overthrow foreigners’ governments, interfere in their elections, bomb their civilians, and occasionally assassinate their citizens?
That is irrelevant. We have to deal with a Russia determined to reassert its position in the world, with hyperactive intelligence agencies and an arsenal of nuclear weapons to match the Americans. If the Russians threaten our friends, mess with our democracy, or kill people on our streets, we are bound to respond.
So we should continue to do the obvious things: refurbish Nato, and deploy troops to support our Eastern allies. We should go on giving financial and political support, military training and equipment to the Ukrainians; though we should insist that their government pull itself together, and use our assistance wisely.
The Russians do have the geography and the military clout to influence Ukrainian decisions. But we have some cards too. Putin’s ratings are lower than before his Ukraine adventure began: as their real incomes decline, his public are losing their appetite for foreign adventure.
Our sanctions may not force him to shift. But they apply useful pressure on an economy that is underperforming; lifting them would send the wrong signal. But we need to talk to the Russians as well – quietly. Noisy denunciation may be emotionally satisfying: it doesn’t carry the business forward. The Russians need to know that we shall not abandon our support for the Ukrainians. Time is not necessarily on their side and we expect them to look for compromise. They should start by freeing the Ukrainian sailors they have captured and restoring peaceful navigation for Ukrainian vessels going about their legitimate business.
It is not a heroic policy. It will be difficult to maintain Western unity behind it for the necessary long haul. But the alternatives – unconvincing bluster or supine acquiescence – are worse.
Join the discussion
Join like minded readers that support our journalism by becoming a paid subscriber
To join the discussion in the comments, become a paid subscriber.
Join like minded readers that support our journalism, read unlimited articles and enjoy other subscriber-only benefits.
Subscribe