AP story, April 13, 2014 (Yahoo). |
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I feel more and more like a Ukrainian, stoic in the face if impending doom. What can you do? The unrest is too deep. The failures of the national government since
independence in 1991 to serve the needs of the people too mired in
corruption. The intrusions, provocations
and violence sponsored by Russia too damaging, insistent, and becoming entrenched. Russia
has mastered the art of covert disruption and intervention and Putin’s
12-step program is working. The Crimea
Scenario.
The War has begun, and there’s nothing anyone, any nation, can do about it. Who wants another war?
How can the EU or NATO impose the kinds of economic sanctions needed against Russia
when they go against Europe’s own self-interest? How will US saber-rattling,
such as re-positioning the navy, change anything? So western nations at the UN line up to condemn Putin's actions. So what? They finally see what's really going on, and can do nothing. Putin knows this, delights in it, and will
keep on implementing his 12-step program for the greater good of the Motherland.
Russia will take over Ukraine bit by bit, town by town,
oblast (county) by oblast. My closest
Ukrainian friends will be my new Russian friends.
That’s how it
looks now. The only positive thing to which I cling is that I don’t think the younger generations will stand for it
forever. But "forever" is a long time.
The Russian-induced and orchestrated crisis in Ukraine will play out, maybe past my time. One day, some day, the dreams of a United Ukraine might emerge from the ashes of Russian imperialist intervention and the dustbin of Russian history.
And it is the dustbin of Russian history that Putin is stirring up. It’s odd. Putin’s language, posturing and behavior, his way of thinking, from another time, another era. My sister Andy pointed this out. Maybe a 19th century “law of the jungle” attitude, as German chancellor Angela Merkel put it. Or a Post-World War II and 1950s Cold War mentality. All hail to Russia's "Sphere of Influence." No matter that "spheres of influence" have changed and continue to change drastically in a super-interconnected, wired world dominated by economic inter-relationships.
Even George W. Bush wondered about a man who made fun of his little dog and insisted his dog was bigger, better and stronger, a stance, Bush said, that motivated his very fine portrait of Putin. "Mine is bigger than yours."
The Russian-induced and orchestrated crisis in Ukraine will play out, maybe past my time. One day, some day, the dreams of a United Ukraine might emerge from the ashes of Russian imperialist intervention and the dustbin of Russian history.
And it is the dustbin of Russian history that Putin is stirring up. It’s odd. Putin’s language, posturing and behavior, his way of thinking, from another time, another era. My sister Andy pointed this out. Maybe a 19th century “law of the jungle” attitude, as German chancellor Angela Merkel put it. Or a Post-World War II and 1950s Cold War mentality. All hail to Russia's "Sphere of Influence." No matter that "spheres of influence" have changed and continue to change drastically in a super-interconnected, wired world dominated by economic inter-relationships.
Even George W. Bush wondered about a man who made fun of his little dog and insisted his dog was bigger, better and stronger, a stance, Bush said, that motivated his very fine portrait of Putin. "Mine is bigger than yours."
Putin’s vision is dated, like that of the old apparatchiks
that now surround him and to indict Gorbachev
for treason. Putin’s vision stands on
military might, thehingering menacing Bear not economic might for the 21st century, a concept
that China grasps instinctively and that is powering its economic growth.
Putin has an old vision, shrouded in ancient and past illusions, in perceived slights and historic offenses. He wants some form of retaliation, revenge, redress for past wrongs. Revanchism, as Robin Niblett called it in a special report to CNN (April 12, 2014). Putin's a relic of the past who is smart enough to update his old vision of Soviet might. And he is dangerous, the inventor of something called hybrid war as the path for extending Russia's power, it's military might, and its borders.
No wonder a much younger president Obama, a man of the 21st century, doesn’t understand him.
Meanwhile, the tragedy unfolds.
1 comment:
Very well-written, Fran. Thank you. Karen
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