
by Thomas Fazi
January 06, 2025
from
ThomasFazi Website

In
the minds of British elites,
the "Great
Game"
between
Britain and Russia
never
ended...
Donald Trump's victory in the
US presidential elections of November 2024 has torn up the liberal
script for ending
the Ukraine war.
This was to offer Ukraine unconditional moral and
material support till it achieved victory, defined minimally as
recovering the invaded territories of
Crimea and
Donbass.
Even before Trump's election, the script had subtly changed into
"doing what it takes" to give Ukraine the best possible bargaining
position for peace talks with Russia.
This shift recognized that unless the level of
Western support was massively beefed up, Ukraine would be defeated.
In the face of military reverses and with no
expectation of additional military aid from the
Biden administration, president
Zelenskyy too has abandoned his maximalist position and now
pins his hopes on diplomatic pressure to induce Russia to negotiate.
Trump's second coming promises to replace
passive war policy with active peace diplomacy.
It is likely to bring about a ceasefire,
possibly by the spring.
That the peace terms remain vague is less
important than that it will stop the killing.
Once the killing engine is stopped, it will
be very hard to restart it.
I have been one of a handful of advocates in
the UK for a negotiated peace.
On March 3, 2022, I co-signed a letter to the
Financial Times with former British Foreign Secretary David
Owen which urged
NATO to put forward detailed
proposals for a new security pact with Russia.
In the House of Lords on May 19, 2022 I
called for the resumption of the "Ankara peace process", the
abortive bilateral tasks between Russia and Ukraine which took place
soon after the start of the war.
On July 10, 2024 seven signatories joined me in a
letter to the Financial Times arguing that,
"if peace based on roughly the present
division of forces in Ukraine is inevitable it is immoral not to
try now".
Such views were not attacked or censored, they
were simply "cancelled" - excluded from public discussion.
The only frontline political advocate of
peace negotiations in Britain has been Nigel Farage, the
leader of the British Reform Party.
The tormenting question remains:
Did it take hundreds of thousands of killed,
wounded and maimed to bring a compromise peace within reach?
Why didn't diplomacy kick in sooner?
All nations have their own stories to tell about
themselves.
The clash of their stories can cause or
inflame wars.
It is the traditional task of diplomacy to
adjust conflicting interests so that nations can live in peace.
Diplomacy failed signally to do this in the
run up to the war and was virtually silent in the war itself.
Why was this?
The reason is that whereas diplomacy is good
at adjusting differences of interest in a framework of shared
values, it helpless in face of a conflict of values.
Here we get to the heart of the explanation of
why this war started, why it has gone on for so long, and why the
questions of state behavior which it raises remain unresolved.
Quite simply, Ukraine has been the
battleground for two conflicting moral narratives...!
Much suffering was needed before the vista of
peace came into view.
The Russian story
Putin has given two reasons for invading Ukraine, with
different emphases at different times:
to prevent the further eastward expansion of
NATO, and to liberate the Russian population of Ukraine from the
"Nazi" Ukrainian dictatorship established in Kyiv in 2014.
Western policy and opinion makers believe these
reasons to be fraudulent, simply an excuse for Russia to regain
lands it had lost with the collapse of the Soviet Union.
But this is much too simple...
First, it ignores the fact that for
Russian policy makers national security is inseparable from the
existence of buffer states like Ukraine, Belarus and Georgia.
This is because there are no natural
obstacles - stretches of ocean, ranges of mountains - on the
historical invasion routes to Moscow.
Any military encroachment on the former
Soviet space is ipso facto a breach in Russia's own security.
The collapse of the Soviet Union gave an
opportunity of detaching Russia's thinking on national security
from the existence empire.
But this would have meant a new security
system to replace the old NATO-Warsaw Pact divide.
This was never forthcoming...
The reason was not just the surge of Western
triumphalism that followed the collapse of the Soviet Union in
1991, but the Western perception
of NATO
as a "defensive alliance," formed to deter Soviet
aggression.
Most of us simply cannot recognize in NATO
any kind of embodiment of the traditional Russian fear of the
invaders' "encircling claws" depicted in Borodin's Prince Igor.
That is why we have been largely insensitive
to the historical reflex activated by NATO's eastward expansion,
as well as specific "out of area" actions like the bombing of
Serbia in 1999 and the
American-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.
It was these aggressive deeds which made
NATO's Bucharest Declaration of 2008 that "Ukraine and
Georgia will be in NATO" dismaying and alarming to Russians.
How could we in the West, with the
notable exception of diplomats like George Kennan and
Henry Kissinger, not have understood that when Russia
had regained its strength it would set out to in one way or
other to redress the balance of security in its own favor?
The second reason given by Putin
for the invasion - to liberate Ukraine's Russian population from
Kyiv's "Nazi' rule" - strikes most Westerners as even more
phony, simply an excuse for illegally annexing parts of Ukraine.
To understand why this strand of his
propaganda resonates so strongly in Russia, we must bear in mind
the Russian interpretation of the
Maidan uprising of 2014
which overthrew the pro-Russian president Viktor Yanukovich.
What we understand as a popular rising
against a corrupt despot was interpreted by the Russians as
an American-orchestrated coup d'état against an elected
leader, which brought to power in Kyiv extreme
Ukrainian nationalists intent on demolishing Ukraine's
historic link with Russia.
Putin's repeated assertion that Ukrainian
nationalism was an alien implant reflected the widespread
Russian belief that Ukraine had no independent history, and
therefore no right to an existence separate from Russia.
The crucial hole in the Russian story is obvious:
Russia's failure to accept as valid any
nationalism in their historic "space" other than their own.
Russians were not wrong to see a Western, and
particularly American-led, plot to detach Ukraine from Russia.
But they could not explain popular support for it
in the streets of Kyiv.
The British story
Britain has been America's cheerleader in Ukraine policy, more
bellicose even than the United States.
Again history gives an explanation.
Modern Britain has never been "isolationist" in the sense that the
US was till the Second World War, because till well into the 20th
century it had a world empire which needed defending.
In 1852, the Foreign Secretary Lord Granville
outlined the British principles of foreign policy as follows:
"It is the duty and the interest of this
country, having possessions scattered over the whole world, and
priding itself on its advanced state of civilization, to
encourage moral, intellectual and physical progress among all
other nations".
When Tony Blair, Britain's prime minister,
said in Chicago in 1999 that,
"the spread of our values makes us more
secure",
...he was simply echoing Lord Granville.
Far-flung empire was gone, but not the far-flung
sense of responsibility for the good of the world, now
underpinned by American power, to which Britain could still hope to
make a modest contribution.
With the defeat of Napoleon in 1815, Russia replaced France
in British eyes as the big disturbing power, with the containment of
Russian ambitions becoming the principal aim of British foreign
policy.
This chiefly involved propping up the decaying
Ottoman Empire which controlled the strategic Dardanelles Straits,
but also, at various times, excluding Russia from Iran and
Afghanistan.
It was only at the end of the 19th
century that the rise of Germany dictated suspension of the "Great
Game" between Britain and Russia.
But the Great Game was not just a balance
of power game:
fear of Russia was also dictated by hatred of
Tsarist autocracy.
We can see in these 19th century
stereotypes the embryo of the modern Western view that democracy is
the peaceful, despotism the warlike, form of the state.
The clash of British and Russian worldviews was carried forward into
the military and political structures of the Cold War, with the US
inheriting Britain's place as world policeman and moral beacon, and
the Soviet Union seeking its own security in territorial control of
eastern Europe and the export of communism.
Britain's Labour Foreign Secretary Ernest
Bevin played a pivotal role in the creation of the NATO alliance
in 1949, which, building on Britain's wartime "special relationship"
with the United States, bound the American republic to the defense
of Western Europe against potential Soviet aggression.
Nuclear war between US and Russia was narrowly
averted in the
Cuban missile crisis of 1962.
An important further reason for current
British bellicosity is the equation of Putin and Hitler...
British foreign policy is still dominated by the
shame of the Munich Agreement of 1938, by which Britain's prime
minister Neville Chamberlain ceded the Sudetenland of
Czechoslovakia to Hitler, and thereby helped unleash the Second
World War.
When the Egyptian leader Col. Nasser
nationalized the Suez Canal in 1956, prime minister Anthony Eden
agreed with opposition leader Hugh Gaitskell that it was,
"exactly the same as we encountered from
Mussolini and Hitler before the war".
The equation of peacemaking with appeasement
helps explain the collapse of the non-interventionist tradition in
British foreign policy represented by the 19th century
free-traders.
Compare Chamberlain's defense of the Munich
Agreement in September 1938,
"How horrible, fantastic, incredible it is
that we should be digging trenches and trying out gas marks
because of a quarrel in a far-away country between people of
whom we know nothing",
...with the conviction of present British policy
and opinion makers that if Putin "got away with" with it,
Europe's freedom and security would be in jeopardy.
One answer to this is that Putin has not "got away with it".
To believe that his depleted armed forces, after
the battering they have taken in Ukraine, are poised to strike at
NATO Europe is as paranoid as the Russian fear of NATO
encirclement.
But the image of Putin as 'Hitler'
offers no escape from the stark alternative of either a Russian
or a Ukrainian victory.
That is why there has been so little appetite for
active peace diplomacy in Britain.
The coming of peace
At some point genuine
Western admiration for Ukraine's struggle for
its independence has morphed into a proxy war against Putin's
Russia, with only cursory attention to Ukraine's own best
interests.
The West's promise of unconditional support
for a Ukrainian victory has undoubtedly prolonged the war by
blinding Ukrainians to the realistic prospect of a limited
victory which nevertheless might secure them genuine
independence.
Unforgivable are British and American promises to
give Ukraine "all it takes" for victory, when they had no intention
whatsoever of doing so.
Specifically, Ukraine was diverted from pursuing
further peace talks with Russia in March 2022 by then-British prime
minister Boris Johnson, who, visiting Kyiv on April 6, 2022,
told Zelenskyy that NATO would support Ukraine to the hilt if
it went on fighting.
Which brings us back to Donald Trump...!
Both those who applaud and those who attack his
approach to international relations describe it as "transactional".
Supporters argue that it will enable Trump to
"do deals" with dictators in America's interest; opponents
deplore its lack of a moral dimension.
What both positions ignore is that peace itself
is a 'moral objective' - in Christian 'teaching',
it is the "highest good"...
Pope
Francis has frequently called
for negotiations to end the Ukraine war, most recently in his 2024
Christmas message.
It is the refusal of our hawks and their passive
camp followers to recognize the moral claims of peace which is the
biggest danger facing the world today.
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