16
September 2014 was a dramatic day in Ukraine’s history: the Rada
(Ukrainian Parliament) in a closed, secret vote adopts the Law on
special status of Donetsk and Luhansk separatist regions, providing for
local self-rule and amnesty to the separatists-terrorists, who in turn
are not amused and respond with the announcement that they have created
the joint army of “Novorossiya” (Putin’s term meaning “NewRussia”), while Russia, which lobbied for everything the new Law provides for, welcomes it with the Russian Defense Minister announcing that
Russia must deploy a “full-fledged and self-sufficient” army in the
Crimean direction Also today the Rada ratifies the EU Association
Agreement, but implementation of the parts of it is delayed. On top of
that, the Rada, after several failed attempts and the threat from
Speaker Turchinov to keep them locked inside until they carry out the
final vote, adopts the Law on Lustration too! One of the most odious
Rada Deputies from the Party of Regions is caught by protesters outside
the Rada and is thrown into the garbage bin, but after being extracted
by bodyguards, he has no complaints: Hey, it’s all good, no hard
feelings, Guys! As my Swiss friend says: “Well, but the Rada always
has been rather sporty!”. Blogosphere exploded and my head is spinning,
it is impossible to evaluate or predict anything anymore!
Overall
though everybody agrees that Ukraine faces two major challenges:
external and internal. The external threat has been documented and
exposed to the entire world to see, and the civilized world has been
taking increasingly serious actions. Paul Gregory in his recent Forbes column brilliantly
analyzed the latest sanctions against Russia, just right and just right
on time. Looks like it becomes mainstream opinion that Putin is kaput
in the long run, but how long is long, and how we in Ukraine survive in
the meantime? And here we come to internal challenges.
The mood
in Kiev is very confused, lots of internal problems: ATO is suspended,
but Russian Grads continue non-stop shelling of Ukrainian positions,
some battles are going on, and Ukrainian warriors are getting killed
every day. I read several first-hand accounts from members of the
regular army and volunteer battalions and they are all similar – from
the Government: no weapons, no food, no supplies, no money, no support
to the families, no information, no coordination, wrong orders,
mismanagement, corruption, total lack of responsibility (Illovaisk was a
catastrophe, some say intentional, but nobody in the top was held
responsible). There is massive volunteer assistance going on, but this
is by far not enough, and citizens are running out of money too because
the economy is so slow. Many of the volunteer fighters, the best of
them who survived, resigned and went home to support their families.
The economic reforms are not moving forward, the Government is taking
some baby steps here and there, just to be reversed later in favor of
the corrupt class.
In addition, the Rada election campaign is
starting in full swing. Many leading activists, trusted journalists,
Maidan veterans, and volunteer battalion commanders have been pulled in
different directions by politicians to enhance their party lists (I am
in favor of all of them going into the Rada, by the way, we need
battalion commanders there even more than on the suspended ATO grounds),
but they should have united instead of being pulled by political class
in different directions one by one, and being corrupted or discredited
one by one (there is black PR machine working already, for example,
against Donbass commander Semenchenko). The glimpse of good news is
that the Lviv Mayor Sadovyi is running with the new party “Selfhelp”,
which may be, just may be, would fill out the long empty niche of a
patriotic, pro-small business party. They will for sure have my vote.
Amazingly,
our rotten political class is busy with the same old game of elections
and corruption, ignoring the signs of grave danger gathering around
them; people are extremely angry and some of these people are armed and
went through the hell of ATO (antiterrorist operation). The phantom of
the third Maidan may very well materialize from what I am hearing and
reading, and if the Euromaidan was anticolonial, this one will be aimed
at elimination of our broken political system, as well as the ruling
class, I am afraid physically. Where is the leadership that can show
real progress and real action to prevent this, even out of fear? Can it
be that their greed and rotten instincts are much stronger than their
survival instinct? I saw a telling quote in comments on Internet
(sorry, it is in colloquial Russian, no time to translate, but in
essence the people now are like a predator before the attack):
“Ну, и где ассенизаторы? Петя, Петя, следующий бардак лично по твоей вине! И не думай, что лапша задержится, у народа уже уши прижались, как у хищника перед атакой! Автору 5 за системность всего дрянного, что рвёт душу и будит желание поучаствовать в расстреле!”
Another blog I
saw, from the blogger who was drafted to the regular army (rare news
coming from a regular army member and not a volunteer battalion member,
who are usually more free to talk) and came back for a short break,
warning of some imminent events originating within the regular army and
another one, with a more competent analysis of internal threats.
This
sounds scary, and the situation may get out of control pronto, but is
it under control now? And under whose control? The West is busy with
external threats and with containing Russia, which indeed should be the
top priority, but does the West understand that the key for containing
Russia and preventing the WWIII is fortifying Ukraine from within? Is
there any serious and urgent effort to firmly guide the Ukrainian
Government and the military towards real substantive reforms and
actions, towards the civilized modern system, and away from the third
Maidan explosion?
The internal situation is summarized in the most recent report from
the visit to Ukraine by the former US Ambassador to Ukraine Steven
Pifer. He concludes that if the Ukrainian ruling class does not put
their act together, “Kyiv will have a difficult time addressing the many
challenges confronting it. And it will have a much harder time securing
stronger support from the United States and Europe if the West feels
that it has seen the movie before … and already knows the unhappy
ending”. Well, if the West remains indifferent to the internal
challenges of Ukraine, this time it will not be just watching, but will
play one of the main victim characters in this horror movie. The
current mantra “it is for Ukrainians to decide, blah-blah-blah” does not
work anymore, internal problems of Ukraine today are the external
problems for the entire world. Are the Western leaders paying enough
attention? While providing a very important and justified assistance,
the West must fully engage and demand real reforms from the Government,
otherwise this demand will come much more forcefully from the people of
Ukraine, a one small actor in all these grandiose games, repeatedly
discounted by everybody, and repeatedly changing the course of history.
Ukrainians
want very simple things that the civilized world is taking for granted;
they want justice, rule of law, self-governance, easy and transparent
political and legal system and respect for human rights. They are not
at all calling for “expropriating expropriators” (the slogan of the
Bolshevik Revolution), moreover most of the activists are small or
medium entrepreneurs, who understand what it takes to run business, to
create jobs and to support their families. They are not falling into
despair or panic, but they make it very clear to the ruling class that
they will no more tolerate lack of reform, abuse by the Government and
corruption. After all the sacrifice, is this too much to ask? And, if
the ruling class fails to get it one more time, the garbage bin may seem
like a very comfortable place for them. The West must make them
understand it, make them take urgent and earnest reforms to prevent the
third Maidan, while most Ukrainians will be only too happy just to go
back to their daily jobs, understanding very well that every effort,
however small, makes a difference, and it is not the time to give up
now!
My experience in Kiev living there during the Orange Revolution period was mured by a glaring contradiction of jaded post Soviet cynicism and embarrassing corruption where justice was leveraged by knowing the right judge to buy. Unfortunately, confidence in the West is no quick-fix alternative, as few people in the West or in Ukraine even know their own history. Read Taboo Genocide: Holodomor 1933 & the Extermination of Ukraine. 2 volumes recently published ebooks, and soon in paper edition, now going to press. at www.taboogenocide.com
ReplyDeleteGet the history right.
Before the Holocaust there was the Holodomor. Estimates vary and range even up to as many as 14 million killed during the early Thirties under the man-made Terror Famine by Stalin.
thank you for Holocaust book. painful subject but also is not enough researched and published and known
ReplyDelete