Enemy Number One: The Maidan Effect

By Alex Cybriwsky
07.11.2014
Edited by Voices of Ukraine

The recent attacks against Maidan, and current efforts to disperse the Maidan, are an attempt to restrain Putin’s biggest fear, and that of many Ukrainian politicians and oligarchs: that is, the Maidan Effect.

It appears that neo-Nazi fascists with connections to the Interior Ministry’s Azov Battalion, as well as ex-Maidaners from the 17th Sotnya who stand guard by the Verkhovna Rada [Ukrainian Parliament], are being blamed for the recent provocations–attacks against the Self-Defense of Maidan. But who is giving the orders and paying for these armed assaults?

Putin’s number one enemy is the Maidan Effect. Putin’s main objective is to prevent the country from building a successful and democratic Ukraine. The Maidan Effect – that people will stand up and oppose corrupt politicians and oligarchs – is the most powerful antidote to his oppressive system of kleptocracy and dictatorship.

But what’s bad for Putin is just as bad for many current corrupt Ukrainian politicians and oligarchs, actually the same people who held power before the revolution, in the same system which creates and encourages corruption. And so the Maidan Effect’s power is a strong motive for the recent attacks and the Ukrainian government’s efforts to disperse and discredit Maidan.

Midnight July 6th-7th. The attackers were a neo-Nazi group of around 30 people. At least 200 well-organised fighters from Maidan opposed them, and are real heroes for fighting the fascists.

The neo-Nazi group first attacked a gay club on Zankovetska Street, throwing rocks and explosives at the door. They were screaming slogans that they were the “SS,” large Nazi tattoos could be seen, swastikas, one fascist with a massive Nazi eagle tattooed across his back. They then approached Maidan, where up to 100 Maidan Self-Defense forces were on alert for the attackers’ arrival.

A melée broke out, the attackers retreated to Schevchenka Street, chased away by Maidan forces. The neo-Nazis shot first, and so Maidan forces retreated while the fascists stormed.

In response, about 200 Maidan forces quickly mustered into formation between the Christmas tree and the stage in full battle gear, camouflage, protective equipment, shields, guns, truncheons. Orders were issued, the first row was to carry shields and the second arms. The professionalism and discipline was impressive, and it was clear these are veteran fighters. The Maidan forces split into four groups and went in different directions, but mostly back towards the side of Maidan near Schevchenka Street. Perhaps 100 shots were fired. Four injured. Maidan demonstrated its heroism in defeating the fascists. But that story will not be heard.

Instead we hear inaccurate and misleading information in the press, that the organised Self-Defense forces who bravely fought the fascists were instead just drunk and fighting amongst themselves. Does this seem at all like propaganda and a cover-up?

Both the Azov Battalion and the Interior Ministry appear to be giving inaccurate reports that would seem inconceivable to anyone who witnessed the attack. Deputy Commander Igor Mosiychuk of the Azov Battalion claims that drunk Self-Defense members attacked the Azov Battalion. Adviser to the Minister of Internal Affairs Anton Gerashchenko, says the fight started because a group broke Maidan rules by covering their faces. In any case not the most logical explanations for a mass melée and shootout involving over 200 people.

Sources on Maidan say the neo-Nazi attackers themselves were members of the Interior Ministry’s Azov Battalion, which itself is closely related to the Social-National Assembly and Patriots of Ukraine. Who paid them to carry out the attack and why?

Members of what was once the 17th Sotnya, who are paid to guard the Verkhovna Rada, attacked Maidan forces on the afternoon of July 1st with riot grenades. Two Maidan tents burned to the ground during a large tire fire started by an unknown arsonist after 2am on June 24th. Meanwhile Maidan Self-Defense forces claim they are being offered 250,000 hryvnia [approx. 21,000 USD] per tent to leave, and complain of stabbings, poisonings, even threats of arrest from the police, kidnappings and murders.

Is this an attempt to discredit Maidan and stop the Maidan Effect?

Unemployment, criminal prosecution, divorce, seizure of stolen assets, imprisonment and even death. For corrupt Ukrainian and Russian politicians and oligarchs, these are the likely outcomes of the Maidan Effect.

And so yesterday’s heroes are honoured, but only if they’re dead. The remaining crusaders who deserve government support, instead are attacked by propaganda, and physically attacked. The hope is to tarnish their image so that Ukraine’s most potent force, its mass uprisings, will seem insignificant and marginal. Politicians and the Ukrainian media repeat over and over, ‘your job is done, now go away.’

The positions of some Ukrainian politicians changed due to the revolution, but the corrupt people and system remain the same. Maidan’s continuing war to overthrow Putin and the corrupt may prove to be as intense as the Revolution, and as necessary. To Putin, to corrupt Ukrainian politicians, to the oligarchs: ‘your job is done, now go away.’

Posted in English, Maidan Diary | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Luhansk Eyewitness: Visiting the ATO Zone

By George Sajewych
07.07.2014
Edited by Voices of Ukraine

For some reason I always thought of Luhanshchyna [the region of Luhansk] as a throw-away oblast [region], with a population of people who don’t know who they are, natural settings that offer nothing worth remembering to take home with you, and an economy that lets the people survive, but just barely.

However, it’s anything but. If. If you’re judging the entire oblast by Starobilsk, a mid-sized town on the road from Luhansk to Kharkiv. The streets are clean, with few potholes, the people, like all over the rest of Ukraine, supplement their $200 average monthly salaries by raising fruits and vegetables on their small plots.

They’re rather laid back and friendly and easily switch to Ukrainian to accomodate a non-Russian speaker. But not all can, so they stay with Russian or the hybrid language known as surzhyk, which is a rather seamless amalgam of the two.

I was in this part of the Luhanska Oblast Anti-terrorist Operation (ATO) zone in order to check out how members of our Samo-oborona sotnya No. 27 were faring in Territorial Defense Battalion “Aidar” (the name of a local river). They were doing well, Starobilst being the only raion that hadn’t been under the control of the Russian surrogates. Riding from Kyiv by van, we came in well past midnight, I and three soldiers returning to the battalion and one new one recruited off Maidan. Early the next morning, thinking the assignment from my sotnyk gave me the run of the camp, I rambled about the grounds, talking to Sotnia 27 alumni whom I recognized or who recognized me. They, like the soldiers in the van, were pleasant and accomodating with me (no doubt part of that was the novelty of having a genuine American in their midst), but as soon as courtesy allowed returned to discussing soldierly things. A favorite topic was bullet-proof vests, which many still did not have, or had some Ukrainian-made vests that couldn’t stop a spitball, because the allocated funds had been diverted into someone’s pocket. (Later, back in Kyiv, I heard people say that the soldiers swore that, when the fighting was over, they would come back to Kyiv with their weapons and hunt these traitors down.

Soldiers are a tight fraternity, even if they haven’t bonded by going through fire. I took notes but thought better of taking pictures until I talked to someone about what I could shoot and what I couldn’t. The chief of staff was very friendly but I could tell by his demeanor that the issue of my remaining with the battalion was not on the agenda. He even showed a sense of humor. If I stayed and got captured by the terrorists–he said–Putin, out of gratitude, would make him minister of defense of Russia. I wouldn’t let go, pointing out that if, out of desperation, the Kremlin trotted out a 68-year old cripple (arthritic knees) as evidence of US involvement in the Ukrainian conflict, this would, in fact, be undeniable proof that there is no such involvement.

Source: George Sajewych FB 

 

Posted in Appeals, Featured, Krim, Voices of Ukraine | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

【情報レジスト・ティムチュック】 7月10日(木)のまとめ

10173325_481968728598454_1124228004_n

原文はこちら:フェイスブック情報レジストHP
7月8日の分はこちら。(7月9日は、ティムチュック氏の都合で掲載がなかった。)

和文: O.P.

※ 3月10日からウクライナで活動しているボランティア情報局、「情報レジスト」(”情報で抗議する”)リーダが発信しているその日の記録を和訳したものである。※ ======================================

■ 悪かったこと ■

(1) 「情報レジスト」は前日[9日]、ロシアが対ウクライナ国境近郊へロシア軍の戦術大隊を二つ移動させたところを発見。今日[10日]は、国家安保国防会議がロシア軍の更なる国境への集結を確認した。

プーチンがようやくウクライナ侵入へ踏み出す決心をしたとは思わない。こんなことはもう、 Continue reading

Posted in Tymchuk日本語, 日本語 | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Testimony of Mr. Edward Lucas at the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Subcommittee on European Affairs

Testimony of Mr. Edward Lucas
Senior Fellow and Contributing Editor
Center for European Policy Analysis Washington, DC

July 8, 2014
Senate Foreign Relations Committee Subcommittee on European Affairs

Good afternoon. Thank you for inviting me here today. It is an honor and a privilege to give testimony to this committee and I would like to thank Chairman Murphy and Ranking Member Johnson for this opportunity. I will give a short oral version of my written testimony and then look forward to taking questions.

I have been dealing with European security for more than thirty years, as an activist for freedom and democracy during the Cold War, as a foreign correspondent and editor for major international media outlets, and also as a senior non-resident fellow at the Centre for European Policy Analysis – CEPA – here in DC. I speak Russian, German, Polish, Czech and some other languages.

In 1989 I was the only foreign newspaperman living in Communist-era Czechoslovakia and witnessed the Velvet Revolution bring down that regime. I was the last Western journalist to be expelled from the Soviet Union, for having crossed the border with the first visa given by the new but unrecognised Lithuanian authorities. In 1992 I founded and ran the first English- language weekly in the Baltic states. In 2010 I coordinated the defence for my employer, The Economist, in a high-stakes libel action brought against us by Gennady Timchenko, a Russian energy tycoon who denied our claim that had benefited from his association with Vladimir Putin.

I am the author of two books on the regime in Russia. The first of these, “The New Cold War”, was written in 2007, at a time when most Westerners were still reluctant to face up to the threat the regime poses both to its own people, and to Russia’s neighbours. Many accused me of scaremongering. Few do that now.

Yet conventional thinking about Russia has surprisingly deep roots. Many people in Washington, Brussels, London and Berlin believe that Vladimir Putin’s Russia can be accommodated diplomatically. Money doesn’t smell. Energy is just a business. There is no need to take radical measures in response to the latest crisis in Ukraine. The danger is of a provocative over-reaction, not of appeasement.

I disagree profoundly. My views are based on my experiences over many years in in Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, the Czech Republic, Russia and other countries in the region. People there have been warning us for years of the dangerous direction of events. We have not listened to them. Instead, we have systematically patronised, belittled and ignored those who know the problem better than we do. Now they have been proved right. I hope that my voice may be heard, where theirs, still, is not.

My first point is that Russia is a revisionist power. The Kremlin not only regards the existing European security order as unfair but actively seeks to change it. It wants to weaken the Atlantic alliance, to divide NATO and to undermine the European Union’s role as a rule-setter, especially in energy policy. On issues such as the South Stream pipeline, access to gas storage, reverse flow and other issues the unsung bureaucrats of the EU Commission represent an existential threat to the Kremlin’s business model.

Russia begrudges the former captive nations of the Soviet empire their freedom, their prosperity, and particularly their independence. It maintains an old-fashioned idea of “legitimate interests” and “spheres of influence” in which the future geopolitical orientation of countries such as Ukraine and Georgia is not a matter of sovereign choice for the peoples of those nations, but a question in which Russia has, by right, a veto.

My second point is that Russia, a leading petrostate, now has the means to pursue its revisionist approach:

  • it ruthlessly uses its energy weapon against European countries, particularly in pipeline-delivered gas, where it has a substantial monopoly in the eastern half of the continent.
  • it uses money. It bolsters a self-interested commercial and financial lobby which profits from doing business with Russia and fears any cooling in political relations. Austrian banks, German industrial exporters, French defence contractors, and a slew of companies, banks and law firms in my own country, the United Kingdom, exemplify this. These energy and financial ties constrain the Western response to Russian revisionism.
  • it practises information warfare (propaganda) with a level of sophistication and intensity not seen even during the Cold War. This confuses and corrodes Western decision-making abilities.
  • it is prepared to threaten and use force.

My third point is that Russia is winning. Too much attention is paid to the ebb and flow of events in Ukraine. The big picture is bleak: Russia has successfully challenged the European security order. It has seized another country’s territory, fomented insurrection, and engaged in repeated acts of military saber-rattling, subversion and economic coercion. The response from the West has been weak and disunited. The United States is distracted by multiple urgent problems elsewhere. You rightly wonder why you should be bearing the cost of increasing European security. For their part many European countries have no appetite for confrontation with Russia.

My fourth point is that greater dangers lie ahead. Russia has mounted a bold defence of its market-abusing South Stream pipeline, signing up Austria, Hungary, Croatia, Slovenia, Bulgaria and Greece in support of a direct challenge to the EU’s rules on pipeline construction and third- party access. The Ukrainian adventure has given a big boost to the Putin regime in Russia, which had previously shown some signs of declining popularity, amid economic failure and growing discontent about corruption and poor public services. The big danger is that as the effect of seizing Crimea wears off (and as the costs of doing so bear more heavily on Russia’s sagging finances), the regime is tempted to try something else.

Our weakness over Ukraine makes that more likely. We have set the stage for another, probably more serious challenge to European security, most likely in the Baltic states. Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania are loyal American allies and NATO members. If any one of them is successfully attacked or humiliated, NATO will lose its credibility overnight, permanently and irreversibly. These are our frontline states: the safety and security that we have taken for granted since the end of the Cold War now hangs on their fate.

But geography is against them: the Baltic states form a thin, flat strip of land, lightly populated and with no natural frontier and little strategic depth. Russia knows that. NATO has only a token presence in the region. We have no hardened infrastructure, no pre-positioned military forces, weapons or munitions. Russia knows that too. Their economies are liable to Russian pressure (especially in natural gas, where they are 100% dependent on Russian supplies). Estonia and Latvia are also vulnerable to Russian interference because of their ethnic make-up (between a quarter and a third of their populations self-identify as “Russian” in some sense).

What can we do?

The first task is to see clearly what has happened. European security will not be fixed with a few deft diplomatic touches. To cope with a revisionist Russia it needs a fundamental overhaul. American and European policymakers need to explain to the public that the war in Ukraine was a game-changer.

We need to rebut the phoney Realpolitik arguments, which advise us to make the best of a bad job. We should accept the loss of Crimea, so the argument goes, do a deal with Russia over the future of Ukraine, and get used to the new realities, of a Russian droit de regard in neighbouring countries.

Such an approach would be morally wrong and strategically stupid.

Securing a Europe whole and free after 1991 has been a magnificent achievement in which the United States has played a huge part. True: we made mistakes. We declared “job done” in 2004, when 10 ex-communist countries joined NATO. That was far too early. We overlooked Russian resentment at the way Europe was evolving, and our vulnerability to Russian pushback. We neglected Ukraine, Moldova, Belarus and the countries of the Caucasus. But having made these mistakes is no reason to compound them now, by retreating into a grubby defeatism. To go back to business as usual would send a message that the kleptocratic regime in the Kremlin would understand all too well: crime pays.

Legitimizing Russia’s land-grab in Ukraine, and its attempted power-grab in the wider neighbourhood, would also fly in the face of historical justice. The Crimean Tatars—whose suffering at Soviet hands is all but unmatched—are now under the rule of their former tormentors. Are we really proposing that whole countries, which the past masters of the Kremlin occupied and despoiled, should be subject to renewed interference and manipulation?

Instead, we should make it clear that we will boost our allies and weaken our opponents. We do not want to be enemies with Russia. But if the Putin regime treats us as an enemy, we help nobody by pretending otherwise.

The most immediate priority is military. A security crisis in the Baltic region is the single most dangerous threat facing the Atlantic alliance. Reckless behaviour by Russia could face us with a choice between a full-scale military confrontation (including the potential use of nuclear weapons) or surrender, with the collapse of our most fundamental security arrangements. We must make every effort to ensure that this does not happen.

That means American and other allies prepositioning military equipment and supplies in the Baltic states. It means NATO creating a standing defence plan—one which assumes that there is a real and present danger of attack. We need to put a major NATO base in Poland, to reassure that country that it can safely deploy its forces to the Baltics as reinforcements in the event of a crisis. We need to boost the NATO presence in the Baltic states with rotating visits by naval vessels, extended air-policing, and ground forces—initially on persistent rotation, but as soon as possible on permanent deployment.

Russia will complain vigorously about this. But the fact that the Kremlin is unhappy when its neighbours are secure is telling. We should explain to the Russian authorities that when NATO expanded in 2004, we did not even draw up contingency plans for the military defence of the new members, because we assumed that Russia was a friend, not a threat. It is Russia’s behaviour which has changed that. Russia attacked Georgia in 2008. It rehearsed the invasion and occupation of the Baltic states a year later, in the Zapad-09 exercise (which concluded with a dummy nuclear strike on Warsaw). It has continued to menace the Baltic states ever since, with air-space violations, propaganda and economic warfare, and state-sponsored subversion. We take the step of securing our most vulnerable allies belatedly and reluctantly, and solely as a result of Russian policy directed towards them.

A further vital military component of security in north-eastern Europe is the closest possible integration of Sweden and Finland into NATO planning and capabilities. These countries are not members of the alliance, so they cannot formally be part of its command structure. But we should make every effort to maximise cooperation in every respect. We cannot defend the Baltic states or Poland without their help. It is commendable that the United States is selling the JASMM missile to Finland. It should continue the further sale of advanced precision and stealth weaponry on a wide scale to both countries. NATO’s summit in Wales this fall, which will have little to offer on expansion, should make a point of offering a “gold card” partnership to Sweden and Finland. The United States should take every opportunity to foster high-level political dialogue with both countries in and around NATO. Rich, well-run countries with serious military capabilities, excellent intelligence services and strong strategic cultures are in short supply in modern Europe. We should make the most of what we have.

The United States should also continue to make good on its promises of missile defence installations in the region. The administration should also consider the interim deployment of armed Patriot missiles in Poland – a promise which the Polish government believes was solemnly made by the George W Bush administration, but never honoured.

Having shored up our most vulnerable allies, the next task is stabilising Ukraine. It is hard to overstate how parlous the situation is. How much more Ukrainian territory ends up under direct or indirect Russian control is of secondary importance. Ukraine is going to be in the political and economic emergency room for years to come. That is Russia’s doing. Ukraine is suffering a world-class economic and financial crisis, which even in a stable and secure country would be far worse than anything experienced elsewhere in Europe. The economy is fundamentally uncompetitive. The main export market, Russia, is at risk of closure at any moment. Public finances are in ruins. The government subsists on a hand-to-mouth basis, relying on ad-hoc donations from wealthy oligarchs for even core spending requirements such as national defence. Even if everything else goes well, simply fixing Ukraine’s economy will take five years.

The outside world must respond generously and imaginatively. A new Marshall Plan for Ukraine should involve not only direct financial support, but the widest possible relaxation of tariffs and quotas on Ukrainian products such as steel, grain, textiles and agricultural products. The European Union has led the way with the newly signed deep and comprehensive free trade agreement, but much more remains to be done. In particular, European countries should accelerate efforts to supply Ukraine with natural gas by reversing the flow of existing pipelines. Russia has already threatened unspecified sanctions against countries which re-export Russian gas – a sign of how seriously the Kremlin treats the issue.

Second, Ukraine faces a political and constitutional crisis of a kind unseen since the end of the wars in ex-Yugoslavia. Every political institution was degraded and discredited under the previous Yanukovych regime. Decades of bad government, corruption and abysmal public services have corroded public confidence in the state—one reason for the initial public support enjoyed by the insurgents in the poorest parts of eastern Ukraine. The United States should press for early parliamentary elections, and offer support for institution-building, and especially the vexed question of relations between the center and the regions.

Third, Ukraine faces a geopolitical and security crisis which could lead to full-scale war. Here the need is twofold: First, to offer Ukraine military training, assistance, arms and equipment in order to defeat the separatist insurgents; Second, to deter the regime in Russia.

Deterring Russia, not only in Ukraine but elsewhere, is the hardest part of the task ahead. Russia is an integrated part of the world economy and of world decision-making on everything from space to sub-sea minerals. It cannot be simply isolated and ignored. But that does not mean that we cannot raise the cost of doing business for the Putin regime.

In particular, we should greatly extend the use of sanctions against individuals. The United States has commendably paved the way here with the Magnitsky Act – a move which other countries, sadly, have mostly so far failed to follow. The furious Russian reaction to the American imposition of even a handful of visa bans and asset freezes on those responsible for the death of the whistle-blowing auditor Sergei Magnitsky shows the effectiveness of this approach. The scope of such sanctions should be widened to include hundreds or even thousands of Russian decision-makers and policy-makers. It could include all members of the legislature (Duma and Federation Council), all members of the General Staff, military intelligence (GRU) domestic security (FSB), foreign intelligence (SVR), the interior ministry (MVD) and other “power agencies”, the presidential administration, and presidential property administration (and companies which represent it abroad), companies run by personalities linked to the Putin regime, and any banks or other commercial institutions involved in doing business in occupied Crimea. Such visa bans and asset freezes could also be extended to the parents, children and siblings of those involved.

This would send a direct and powerful message to the Russian elite that their own personal business in the West – where they and their families shop, study, save and socialise – will not continue as usual. The United States should make vigorous overtures to its allies to encourage them to follow suit. The more countries which adopt sanctions, and the longer the list of those affected, the more pressure we are putting on the Putin regime to back off and change course.

We can also apply much tougher money-laundering laws to keep corrupt Russian officials out of the Western payments system and capital markets. We should intensify investigations of Russian energy companies which have mysterious origins, shareholders or business models. We can tighten rules on trust and company formation agents to make it harder for corrupt Russian entities to exploit and abuse our system. It is often said that offshore financial centres are beloved by the Russian elite. But the shameful truth is that it is Britain and the United States which make life easiest for them.

We also need to improve the West’s resilience and solidarity in the face of Russian pressure. American exports of LNG will be a small but welcome addition to the global natural gas market. Lithuania has built its own floating LNG terminal, which will become operational in December of this year, with the arrival of the aptly named “Independence” a vessel constructed in South Korea. Already, Gazprom’s grip on Lithuania’s natural gas market has slackened, and Lithuania has bene able to negotiate a discount from the extortionate price – the highest in Europe – which the Russian gas giant had been charging. As energy editor of The Economist, I am sceptical of the idea that we will ever have a deep and liquid global LNG market: the technology and costs involved hinder the development of the needed supply chain. However at the margins, LNG does make a big difference, blunting the edge of any artificial emergency that Russia may try to create with selective supply interruptions.

Europe can do much more. It can build more gas storage, and liberalise the rules governing it, so that all parties have access to the facilities. It can complete the north-south gas grid, making it impossible for Russia to use supply interruptions on its four east-west export pipelines as a political weapon. Most of all, the European Commission should proceed with its complaint against Gazprom for systematic market-abuse and law-breaking. This move – in effect a prosecution – is based on the seizure of huge numbers of documents following raids on Gazprom offices and affiliates. The Commission had expected to release this complaint — in effect a charge sheet –in March. Then it was postponed until June. Many now wonder if it has been permanently shelved. The United States should urge the European Commission to enforce its laws.

I understand that the United States Justice Department is rightly suspicious of the way in which Russian companies operate in the world energy market. There are grave suspicions of price- fixing, insider trading, money-laundering and other abusive and illegal behaviour. My own researches suggest that these suspicions are amply justified, though writing about them is hampered by the costs and risks imposed by English libel law. In the course of researching the defence case in the libel case I mentioned earlier, I met several potential witnesses who were frightened for their physical safety if they cooperated with us. The more that the criminal justice system of the United States can do, through prosecution, witness protection and plea bargains, to drive the Russian gangster state out of international energy markets, the safer the world will be.

Next, we need to revive our information-warfare capability. We won the Cold War partly because Soviet media lied as a matter of course, and ours did not. They tried to close off their societies from the free flow of information. We did not. In the end, their tactics backfired.

Just as we have underestimated the potential effect of Russian energy, money and military firepower, so too have we neglected the information front. Russian propaganda channels such as the multilingual RT channel are well-financed and have made powerful inroads into our media space. They create a subtle and effective parallel narrative of world events, in which the West are the villains, mainstream thinking is inherently untrustworthy, and Russia is a victim of injustice and aggression, not its perpetrator.

Combatting this will require a major effort of time, money and willpower, involving existing media outlets, government, non-profit organisations and campaigning groups. We need to play both defense and offense. We need to begin to rebut Russian myths, lies and slanders, highlighting the factual inconsistences and elisions of the Kremlin narrative, and its dependence on fringe commentators and conspiracy theorists. We also need to start rebuilding the trust and attention we once enjoyed inside Russia. The collapse of respect and affection for the West inside Russia over the past 25 years has been a catastrophic strategic reverse, all but unnoticed in Western capitals. After the fall of communism, Russians believed we stood for freedom, justice, honesty and prosperity. Now they believe that we are hypocritical, greedy, aggressive custodians of a failing economic system.

Finally, we need to reboot the Atlantic Alliance. As memories fade of the Normandy beaches, of the Berlin Wall’s rise and fall, and the sacrifice and loyalty of past generations, we are running on empty. Without a shared sense of economic, political and cultural commonality, the Kremlin’s games of divide and rule will succeed. This will require renewed and extraordinary efforts on both sides of the Atlantic. The revelations surrounding the secret material stolen by Edward Snowden have stoked fears in Europe that America is an unaccountable and intrusive global hegemon. This year I wrote a book – “The Snowden Operation” attacking the “Snowdenistas” as I termed the NSA renegade’s unthinking defenders. I believe that our intelligence agencies as a rule function well, within the law, and to the great benefit of our nations. But much damage has been done. At a time when we need to be restoring transatlantic ties, they are withering before our eyes, especially in the vital strategic relationship with Germany. The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) offers a rare chance of a big-picture, positive project which could help revive what sometimes looks like a failing marriage.

A final footnote: whereas Russia once regarded the collapse of the Soviet Union as a liberation from communism, the regime there now pushes the line, with increasing success, that it was a humiliating geopolitical defeat. That is not only factually false; it is also a tragedy for the Russian people. They overthrew the Soviet Union, under which they had suffered more than anyone else. But they have had the fruits of victory snatched away by the kleptocratic ex-KGB regime. The bread and circuses it offers are little consolation for the prize that Russians have lost: a country governed by law, freed from the shadows of empire and totalitarianism, and at peace with itself and its neighbours.

Source: http://www.foreign.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/Lucas_Testimony1.pdf

Posted in "Voices" in English, Analytics, English, English News | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Speech by Foreign Minister Carl Bildt at the Atlantic Council

Ministry for Foreign Affairs
Speech by Foreign Minister Carl Bildt at the Atlantic Council,
8 July 2014page1image1968

Postadress
103 39 Stockholm
Besöksadress
Gustav Adolfs torg 1

Speech held at the Atlantic Council, Washington DC.

imagesIt is always a pleasure to come here to the Atlantic Council. And this time I’m doing so at a truly critical time.

New dangers and challenges seem to be rising wherever we look. In East Asia we see a more assertive China.

In Africa immediately south of the Sahara we see new areas of terrorism threatening the region as well as all of us.

And in Mesopotamia and the Levant we see an entire region engulfed by new sectarian divisions and fundamental threats to the previously existing order of States. This is happening on the very doorstep of Europe.

These are not easy times, and they call for clear-headed strategic assessment of the challenges we are facing.

And for a deep and sincere dialogue across the Atlantic on how we can and must work together in this changed, more difficult and ultimately more dangerous strategic landscape.
At the moment, of course, the EU is busy with the task of setting up its new leadership team for the next few years after the recent

European Parliament election, although our High Representative Catherine Ashton is still busy leading efforts to reach a nuclear agreement with Iran.

But I hope that soon there will be the opportunity for such a deep dialogue. In the meantime, the public debates and discussions on both sides of the Atlantic are also an important part of our efforts to understand the new landscape and shape the necessary policies.

This morning I would like to focus on one of these challenges – on the new challenge of a revisionist Russia aiming to overturn the post- Cold War order in Europe.

These days, many are looking back to the days in July 1914 when the world sleepwalked into the catastrophe that came to define the 20th century.

A hundred years ago to the day, the then Permanent Undersecretary at the FCO in London wrote to the British Ambassador in Vienna that for all the tragedy of the terrorist murder of the Archduke and his wife in Sarajevo, he was confident that the consequences would be limited to Austria.

This, as we know, turned out to be wrong.
I’m not saying that we are once again sleepwalking into disaster.

But I think the lesson of those days in 1914 should make us focus on the fundamental issues at stake in any given situation.

Europe didn’t really come out of that darkness it descended into a century ago until the wall came down in Berlin and the European empire of the then Soviet Union started to crumble.

And as that happened, the statesmen of the day sat down and tried to forge an agreement on the principles upon which a more lasting order of peace and stability in Europe could be built.

It was indeed an ambitious concept of peace that was laid down in the Charter of Paris of 1990, and later of course the present

Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe emerged out of the principles embodied in it.

There were the three famous baskets:

  • –  of key principles for States’ security;
  • –  of economic cooperation and integration;
  • –  and of democracy and respect for human rights as another foundation for lasting peace and security.

Let me focus primarily on the first.

It meant that countries should no longer use military force against each other.
It meant that borders should not be changed, at least not by force. It meant that each State had the right to choose its own future.

And it meant that any dispute should be resolved through dialogue and mediation.

The sanctity of the existing borders and boundaries was seen as fundamental to all of this.

And in the agreements on the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the Yugoslav Federation, this sanctity of the existing geographical architecture was enshrined.

The Belavezha Accords that ended the Soviet Union made it clear that all of the constituent republics of that Union had the right to independence, but independence within the existing borders between them.

And at the beginning of the profound Yugoslav crisis, the Badinter Commission set up by the European Community firmly laid down the very same principle.page4image992Independence, yes. Self-determination, yes. But borders must be respected. And any change must be agreed by everyone concerned.

There were very sound reasons for this.

The borders of Europe are more or less all drawn in blood through centuries of brutal conflict, ethnic cleansing and population movements.

Sometimes they might seem logical to the modern eye.

But there are certainly cases – many, but not all, of them in the former Soviet Union or in former Yugoslavia – where that can hardly be said to be the case.

And to open up those cases, and invite others as well, is to open up for the blood to start flowing again.

That’s why we have taken a fundamentalist line on this principle. Throughout the decade of wars in the Balkans we insisted on it.

We insisted on the territorial integrity of Croatia. We refused to contemplate the dissolution of Bosnia.

And we said that northern Kosovo should remain northern Kosovo and southern Serbia should remain southern Serbia.

There were those who suggested that we should abandon the principle and start to adjust borders and boundaries, but I remain as convinced now as I was then that this would have made everything far worse.

And let us remember that we also respected the very same principle when it came to Russia.

We were often horrified by the conduct of Moscow’s forces as they tried to put down Chechen calls for self-determination and independence.

But in spite of this we never wavered in our support for the territorial integrity of the Russian Federation.

And when Russia itself violated these principles in its war with Georgia in August 2008, we still stood firm on the principle of territorial integrity.

When, in February this year, Russia invaded, occupied and annexed the Ukrainian territory of Crimea it was a grave violation of this fundamental principle of European security.

And when we reacted strongly against it, we did so out of concern not only for the immediate fate of Crimea, but out of deep apprehensions about what this could mean for European – and indeed global – security.

I can think of only one other case in modern history when a regime suddenly militarily grabbed and annexed another State or part of a State, claiming some sort of more or less relevant historical justification.

And that was Saddam Hussein’s invasion, occupation and annexation of Kuwait in 1991.

The international reaction then was swift, strong and effective, and I believe this was very important in preventing anyone else from harbouring thoughts of similar adventures.

In much the same way, I believe it is very important that we stand very firm on what the Russian invasion, occupation and annexation of Crimea really means, and that we are clear about never accepting either its legality or its consequences.

If we should waver on this, I see a clear risk of further Crimeas further down the road.

Perhaps not tomorrow, but perhaps the day after tomorrow. Perhaps not there, but perhaps somewhere else.

If we don’t see that risk, then yes, history might well see us too as sleepwalkers at a crucial moment in history.

I stress the issue of Crimea because of the fundamental importance of the principles at stake.

But the invasion was of course part of a much bigger picture of Russia trying to deny Ukraine the right to choose its own future.

Indeed, in the midst of the crisis, some voices even started to question whether Ukraine’s secession from the Soviet Union had been legal.

When we initiated the Eastern Partnership of the European Union – an initiative by Sweden and Poland in early 2008 that was embraced by the entire Union late that year – it was intended as an answer to the demands for a deeper relationship with the EU coming from these six nations themselves.

And it has been clear all the way that we have been listening to their demands and their wishes – certainly not trying to impose something on them against their will, and also not going as far in terms of explicit EU perspectives as some of them clearly want.

Indeed, when Armenia, in autumn 2013, made a sudden U-turn and declared its wish to join the Moscow-centred Customs Union instead of the already negotiated agreement with the EU, we just took note of this fact and moved on with the other countries.

Armenia also has the right to choose its own direction.

The negotiations on the Association Agreement with Ukraine, with its Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade provisions, were concluded already in early 2012, and throughout the period of negotiations, as well as during the entire period up until late last summer, there were no signs of interest in this whatsoever from Russia.

But then everything changed, and from late summer of last year we suddenly saw a strong and concerted Russian effort to turn Ukraine away from its European choice and, preferably, have it join its Customs Union and later a Eurasian Union.

Whether we reacted sufficiently early and sufficiently strongly against this is debatable. I don’t think we did.

It took some time for a number of capitals to wake up to the new realities we were faced with. Some might still be in the process of doing so.

What happened since then is, as they say, history.

But let’s be clear about one thing: this is a crisis initiated and driven by Russia in every single respect.

By starting its large-scale trade and economic pressure on Ukraine.

By more or less forcing then President Yanukovych to turn around and refuse to sign the EU agreement that he had negotiated and endorsed.

By then encouraging him to use violence to suppress the large Maidan demonstrations that erupted as a result.

By invading, occupying and annexing Crimea as President Yanukovych, for reasons that are still not entirely clear, abandoned the February 21 agreement, his presidency and his country.

By having the Federation Council approve authorisation for invading all of Ukraine, and then massing forces along its borders.

By launching a massive information and propaganda war not only against Ukraine’s European aspirations, but also to fuel fears and encourage divisions inside the country.

And by encouraging and supporting an armed insurrection to fracture the country, obviously aiming at the setting up of a Novorossiya semi-state in its eastern and southern parts.

This was and is a destabilising strategy of an order we have not seen in our part of the world for a long time.

The consequences of this succeeding would be profound. Certainly for Ukraine, but obviously well beyond that.

The appetite grows with eating, it is often said, and there was certainly enough in the important March 18 annexation address by President Putin to fuel fundamental fears across a large part of our continent.

One could note that even Belarus President Lukashenko, not a close friend of the European Union, has sounded distinctly nervous in the last few months.

Gradually, we have forged a policy to meet this challenge of destabilisation and revisionism.

And I think we have so far been doing better than we are given credit for.

For all the discussions that have taken place on sanctions or other measures against Russia aimed at encouraging its leadership to take another path, our most important efforts have been and must continue to be focused on helping Ukraine.

Ukraine is probably the most misgoverned of all the post-Soviet States.

Former President Yanukovych left a legacy of massive corruption, inefficiency and deficits, but it must be recognised that the problems go far deeper than just his years in power.

There are probably those waiting for Ukraine to descend into deficits, disorder and dysfunctionality as a consequence of both the failure of the past decades and the strain of the measures taken by Russia during the last year.

This must clearly be prevented. And I don’t think it will happen, provided that we pursue the correct policies.

The May presidential election was a watershed.

We should recall that this was an election that Russia tried to delay and which pro-Russian separatists in some areas did their utmost to prevent.

But when Petro Poroshenko was elected President on May 25, he was so with a stronger and more unified mandate than any of his predecessors.

In every previous election, the country has been politically divided roughly along the river Dnieper.

But this time, and for the first time, every single region, including the East, delivered the same result.

The crisis and the challenge have united Ukraine in a way we have not seen before.

This will not last forever, and it is of the utmost importance that we help the Ukraine authorities to carry through the deep and comprehensive reforms that are possible during this unique window of opportunity in order to turn the country around in the years ahead.

There are many aspects of this.

The EU agreement is clearly important. Over time, it has the potential to modernise the economy and make the country a truly attractive investment location.

But it is not enough.

The reforms included in the IMF agreement and support package are critical.

While it is understandable that much of the focus now is on handling the armed separatist challenge in less than 10 per cent of the country’s territory, it is important that Kyiv also keeps a focus on the economic measures and reforms that are key to the future of the remaining 90 per cent of the country.

And here I believe the IMF needs to be attentive to the new strains on the economy imposed by the Russian-inspired separatists over the last few months. We need to help.

We also need to be ready to counter new Russian efforts to inflict economic damage on the Ukraine economy through trade measures.

Changing energy policies is an important part of this.

I don’t hesitate to describe the policies pursued by successive governments in the country in this area as insane. Subsidies for fossil fuel use amounting to 7 per cent of GDP make even Egypt look reasonable in comparison.

And in addition to these critical economic challenges, there is clearly a need for further constitutional and political reforms to meet the aspirations of all parts of the country.

Work is already underway on these issues, and I do hope it will very soon be possible to make the transition from a military to a purely political phase in the efforts to bring stability even to the easternmost parts of the country.

In all of this Ukraine will need our understanding, support and help in the critical years ahead.

Building a democratic, stable and successful Ukraine is the single most important contribution we can make to counter the revisionist danger that is now threatening in the eastern part of Europe.

But it must of course go hand in hand with our efforts to help the other countries that have embarked on this road, notably Moldova and Georgia.

Fundamentally, this is also in the interest of Russia itself, provided it remains open to the vision of free trade from Lisbon to Vladivostok that it has often spoken about in the past.

A more prosperous Ukraine is good for the economy of Russia as well.

And I vividly remember how, as recently as 2010, we discussed a partnership for modernisation with Russia that included most of the components of the agreement we now have with Ukraine.

A couple of weeks ago, however, at a Moscow Security Conference organised by the Ministry of Defence, it was proclaimed that the greatest threat to the security of Russia was the so-called ‘coloured revolutions’.

Even President Putin endorsed this idea in his message to the conference.

And it might of course be here, in addition to Russia’s efforts to build a new bastion in the form of its Eurasian Union, that we see the real motives for the aggressive and destabilising Russian policies towards Ukraine we have witnessed since late last summer.

Once upon a time it was natural to see Russia as a strategic partner to the European Union.

This does not sound entirely right these days, although there are of course important areas where we continue to seek and value cooperation with Russia.

If at some point we are to find a new relationship, it must clearly be based on respect for the fundamental principles of European security I mentioned earlier.

Russia must understand that we will never recognise the annexation of Crimea, and that it will burden our relationship for as long as it lasts.

And Russia must accept that Ukraine, like the other countries of the Eastern Partnership, truly has the right to continue on its democratic path and to choose its own European direction.

This does not mean that we ignore Russia’s fundamental interests.

The EU has been ready to have extensive talks with Russia on the economic aspects of these agreements.

And these talks have clearly refuted the propagandist claims of damage to Russia that we have heard. Further talks, on a political level, will be held in Brussels today.

We are certainly ready to take Russia’s security interests into account, as long as they don’t go against the security of other States in the region.

And if a new relationship is to be possible, it will clearly have to include important elements of cooperation and even, over time, integration.

The fact that the negotiations over a New Agreement between Russia and the EU, to replace the 1994 Partnership and Cooperation Agreement, have stalled in recent years is solely due to the reluctance of Moscow to agree to further trade liberalisation.

If we succeed in bringing stability to Ukraine, and thwarting the schemes to destabilise and fragment the country, it might well be that by the time of the next Eastern Partnership Summit in Riga in late spring next year, we can start to discuss the integration of the integrations in the wider European area.

This should be in our mutual long-term interest. We continue to have a profound interest in the modernisation and economic development of Russia.

But in the meantime we must be clear-headed on the magnitude of the challenge we are now facing and conscious of the consequences of our failing to bring stability to Ukraine.

A deep dialogue across the Atlantic on these issues is a necessity.

It is – here as elsewhere – only by acting together that we have any chance of success.page13image992

But if we do, there is no reason why we should not prevail. We did it before.
We can do it again.

Source: http://www.government.se/content/1/c6/24/36/72/e58fb0e9.pdf

Posted in "Voices" in English, English, English News, Others | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment