Ukraine was invaded by Russia and has been dismembered. What happened was not an intervention or an incursion. The Kremlin’s black deeds were not a “stealth war,” nor a Cold War. It was bloodthirsty hot.
Ukraine’s Crimea has been under Russian military occupation since March. Heavy weapons fired from inside the Russian Federation have killed Ukrainian soldiers and civilians. More recently, Russian armour and aircraft attacked defending Ukrainian units. Tellingly, POWs were exchanged.
Ukraine still faces an (ex)-KGB man turned president-in-perpetuity who barks on how Kyiv ‘s government is “Nazi” even as he parades about cobbling together an ethnic Russian empire. Is “Putler,” as some Ukrainians have labelled him, demented? Even Germany’s chancellor, Angela Merkel, wondered aloud about that, confiding in President Obama that his Russian counterpart is “living in another world.” Right on – this latter-day Mussolini-from-Moscow is nuts.
We all know Ukraine is not a member of NATO. But hasn’t a democratic Ukraine earned the right to expect help in its hour of need? After all, Ukraine sent troops to help us when we were fighting in Afghanistan. Did Russia? No. Instead Putin’s Russia ‘helped out’ by empowering the murderous Assad regime in Syria. And Moscow’s men have the blood of 298 innocents, mostly Europeans (plus one Canadian) on their hands, for his stooges blew Malaysian Airlines Flight MH-17 out of the sky. Want a reference about Russia as a neighbour? Go ask Georgia, which suffered mutilation-by-Moscow in 2008. No wonder Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Poland are frightened. They’re next.
NATO’s first secretary general, Lord Ismay, famously said the alliance’s purpose was to keep the Americans in, the Russians out, and the Germans down. An admirable sentiment. Now we have a Europe with the Russians battering in, the Americans chickening out, and the Germans prancing about, a disaster for Ukraine given Deutschland’s addiction to sucking the Russian bear’s gaseous teats, ‘Great Russian’ nostalgia for resuscitating a neo-Stalinist imperium, and America’s retreat from the world stage, save in the Middle East, where Washington’s partiality has consistently proven counterproductive. Meanwhile, Ukraine’s purblind decision to give up its nuclear weapons and downsize its military, in return for American, British, not to mention, Russian, guarantees of its political sovereignty and territorial integrity, have underscored a national weakness – Ukrainians prefer fairy tales to confronting geopolitical realities. They have paid the butcher’s bill for that naïveté and for their stupidity in not pursuing NATO membership, years ago. Much worse is yet to come. The truth is that Ukraine has been sold out, betrayed, abandoned, and surrendered by the West. A time for atonement will surely come.
Countries like North Korea and Iran, Israel and Japan, to name a few, should be wary of other states speaking softly while promising to be good. That never works out. It’s always better to carry your own big stick. Putin knows this. The Russian Federation is armed to the teeth. Would that Ukraine had been.
To date Russian aggression against Ukraine hasn’t cost Putin and his Kremlin cronies much. Targeted sanctions haven’t worked because most Russians have felt no pain. Want to pinch Putin? Freeze financial transactions between all citizens of the Russian Federation and the West and stop all cultural, sporting, and academic exchanges until Russian forces and local turncoats leave Ukrainian soil, permanently. Cleansing Paris and London, Berlin and Rome, of those boorish “ugly Russians” loitering all about would be a value-added bonus. Post-Wall Europe is done for. Putin’s Russians should pay for murdering the European dream.
What Ukraine needs immediately are not just more sanctions and sanctimonious platitudes but Western military intervention. If Canada and the USA can deploy special forces as “observers” into Iraq, the future of which won’t make a fig of difference to anyone in the West, than helping save Ukraine from Russian imperialism while rescuing Europe from its own myopia should surely have a higher priority. Alas, America’s president seems to have abandoned America’s ideals.
But Canada can still punch above its weight internationally. Whether ours is a nation of warriors or peacekeepers doesn’t much matter. Let’s put Canadian troops on the ground, to monitor the cease-fire and secure the international border between the Russian Federation and Ukraine, allowing the warring parties to seek a peaceful resolution of their differences. The colour of our soldiers’ helmets shouldn’t matter. According to a recently released Nanos survey, over 75% of Canadians support our government’s stalwart position in support of Ukraine, even if doing so means jeopardizing trade with Mr Putin’s Russia. I celebrate the fact that Canada is a nation that stands on principle.
Surely Mr Putin can’t object to such a generous Canadian gesture? He has long-claimed his army was never in Ukraine, that the fighting was all between regional separatists and Kyiv. Of course, Putin is a liar but let’s pretend otherwise, for the sake of peace. So let’s have Canadian soldiers – peacemakers if you like – secure it. That would be a good deed. And good deeds are always repaid.
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Professor Lubomyr Luciuk teaches political geography at the Royal Military College of Canada. His most recent publication is Jews, Ukrainians and the Euromaidan (Kashtan Press, 2014).