Putin Declares War
Will Obama and Europe let him get away with carving up Ukraine?
March 2, 2014 10:11 a.m. ET
Vladimir Putin's Russia seized Ukraine's
Crimean peninsula by force on the weekend and now has his sights on the
rest of his Slavic neighbor. The brazen aggression brings the threat of
war to the heart of Europe for the first time since the end of the Cold
War. The question now is what President Obama and free Europe are going
to do about it.
With a swiftness and
organization that suggests the plans were hatched weeks ago, Mr. Putin
is moving to carve up Ukraine after Russia's satrap in Kiev, former
President Viktor Yanukovych, was deposed in a popular democratic
uprising. Russian troops have invaded Ukraine's territory and now
control all border crossings, ports and airports in Crimea. The
Kremlin's rubber-stamp parliament on Saturday approved Russian military
intervention anywhere in Ukraine, which is nothing less than a
declaration of war. The new government in Kiev responded by putting
forces on high alert.
***
This
is a crisis made entirely in Moscow. Speaking the day Mr. Yanukovych
fled his palace in Kiev, Mr. Putin lied to President Obama about
Russia's actions and intentions. So did his foreign minister, Sergei
Lavrov, in calls with Secretary of State John Kerry.
If the blitzkrieg succeeds, Russia's assault could end Ukraine's
22-year history as a unitary independent state. The peaceful European
order that the U.S. has paid such a high price to establish after the
collapse of the Soviet Union is also in danger.
Entering
his 15th year in power, Mr. Putin has never concealed his ambition to
recreate Russia's regional hegemony. He has replaced Soviet Marxism with
ultra-nationalism, contempt for the West and a form of crony state
capitalism. He bit off chunks of Georgia in 2008 and paid no price, but
Ukraine's 46 million people and territory on the border of NATO are a
bigger prize. His updated Brezhnev Doctrine seeks to entrench
authoritarianism in client states and prevent them from joining free
Europe.
Several hundred heavily-armed soldiers not
displaying any identifying insignia took up positions around a Ukrainian
military base walk towards their parked vehicles in Crimea on March 2.
Getty Images
By Saturday, it was clear that a
Russian-held Crimea is only stage one. The upper house of parliament in
Moscow unanimously approved the declaration of war, and thousands of
pro-Russian demonstrators turned out in the industrial cities of Kharkiv
and Donetsk in eastern Ukraine to demand Moscow's protection. As in
Crimea on Thursday, armed men stormed local government buildings and
replaced the Ukrainian flag with Russia's.
The
eastern regions of Ukraine are Russian speaking but they voted handily
for Ukrainian independence in 1991. No serious separatist movement
existed there before this weekend. The local business tycoons, who run
politics there, had dropped their support for Mr. Yanukovych and backed
the new national government. But Kiev has limited control over military
units and police, making the east a tempting target for Mr. Putin to
install his own men in power.
Ukraine
borders four of America's NATO allies, who are watching closely how the
U.S. and the rest of Europe respond. The U.S. has for more than two
decades championed Ukraine's independence as crucial to European
security. In exchange for Kiev's difficult decision in 1994 to hand over
its nuclear weapons to Russia, the U.S., along with Britain and Moscow,
promised to assure Ukraine's territorial integrity in the so-called
Budapest Memorandum. Russia is now in breach of this agreement.
Ukraine
has neglected its military, spending a little over 1% of GDP on
defense, and would be an underdog against Russia. But with some 150,000
soldiers and a million reserves, it wouldn't be a pushover. The interim
government in Kiev, which was appointed by the elected parliament last
Thursday, needs to establish control over the chain of command and
mobilize forces. Any attempt to retake Crimea would likely fail, but the
imminent threat is in the east.
Mr.
Putin spoke by telephone to President Obama for 90 minutes on Saturday
and was bluntly honest for a change. "In case of any further spread of
violence to Eastern Ukraine and Crimea, Russia retains the right to
protect its interests and the Russian-speaking population of those
areas," the Kremlin said in its readout of the conversation.
A
White House statement on the call said the U.S. "condemns" the Crimean
takeover and called it a "breach of international law." That will have
the Kremlin quaking. The only concrete U.S. action was to suspend
participation in preparations for June's G-8 summit in Sochi. Seriously?
Mr. Obama and every Western leader ought to immediately pull the plug
on that junket and oust Russia from the club of democracies.
There's
more the West can do, notwithstanding the media counsel of defeat that
it "has few options." Russia today is not the isolated Soviet Union, and
its leaders and oligarchs need access to Western markets and capital.
All trade and banking relationships with Russia ought to be
reconsidered, and the U.S. should restrict the access of Russian banks
to the global financial system. Aggressive investigations and leaks
about the money the oligarchs and Mr. Putin hold in Western banks might
raise the pressure in the Kremlin. The U.S. should also expand the list
of Russian officials on the Magnitsky Act's American visa ban and
financial assets freeze, including Mr. Putin.
The
U.S. can also deploy ships from the Europe-based Sixth Fleet into the
Black Sea, and send the newly commissioned George H.W. Bush aircraft
carrier to the eastern Mediterranean. NATO has a "distinctive
partnership" with Kiev and in 2008 promised Ukraine that it could
eventually join. It's impractical and risky to bring Ukraine in now. But
the alliance should do what it can to help Ukraine and certainly boot
the Russian mission, a well-known den of spies, from NATO headquarters
in Brussels and shut down the useless Russia-NATO Council.
Mr.
Obama and the West must act, rather than merely threaten, because it's
clear Mr. Putin believes the American President's words can't be taken
seriously. After the 2008 invasion of Georgia, President Obama pretended
the problem was Dick Cheney and tried to "reset" relations with Moscow.
Mr. Putin has defied the civilized world on Syria and Mr. Obama
rewarded him by making Russia a partner in phony peace talks. Mr. Putin
gave NSA leaker Edward Snowden asylum over U.S. objections, and he got away with that too.
***
In
the brutal world of global power politics, Ukraine is in particular a
casualty of the Mr. Obama's failure to enforce his "red line" on Syria.
When the leader of the world's only superpower issues a military
ultimatum and then blinks, others notice. Adversaries and allies in Asia
and the Middle East will be watching President Obama's response now.
China has its eyes on Japanese islands. Iran is counting on U.S.
weakness in nuclear talks.
The
Ukrainians can't be left alone to face Russia, and the Kremlin's
annexation of Crimea can't be allowed to stand. Ukraine must remain an
independent state with its current borders intact, free to follow its
democratic will to join the European Union
and NATO if it desires. The world is full of revisionist powers and bad
actors looking to exploit the opening created by Mr. Obama's retreat
from global leadership, and Mr. Putin is the leading edge of what will
quickly become a new world disorder.
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