BY
ALEXANDER J. MOTYL
Building Up Ukraine’s Military is the Counterintuitive Solution to Peace
Western policymakers who
believe the Minsk accords would work if only Ukraine made the requisite
constitutional and electoral concessions are missing a key point: that they,
and Russia, forced Ukraine to make security its priority by violating the 1994
Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances.
Russia
brazenly invaded Crimea and eastern Ukraine in complete violation of the
memorandum. But the United States and the United Kingdom were also complicit in
the breakdown of Budapest: their assurances of Ukraine’s sovereignty and
territorial integrity proved hollow. Sanctions are nice, but hardly an adequate
response to Russian imperialism.
The
violation and non-enforcement of Budapest underpins Ukraine’s approach to the
Minsk accords and, indeed, to any peace deal. As constructed, Minsk
institutionalizes Russia’s invasion and permanent meddling in Ukrainian
affairs. It doesn’t matter whether Ukrainians do or do not make constitutional
changes providing the occupied Donbas with autonomy, and it doesn’t matter whether
fair and free elections are held in the region. All that matters is that Minsk
guarantees that Russia’s proxies will remain in control of the occupied Donbas,
and that Russia will remain in control of the Russo-Ukrainian border and will
use whatever arrangement exists to infringe on Ukrainian security, stability,
and sovereignty.
Needless
to say, Ukraine cannot accept such an outcome. It’s one thing for Ukraine to
live in the shadow of Russia or to be mindful of Moscow’s security concerns—as
it was for the last twenty-five years. It’s quite another for Ukraine’s
security and survival to be permanently hostage to an imperialist power that
routinely invades its neighbors and has annexed Ukrainian territory.
Since the
failure of Budapest means that formal international security assurances are
effectively meaningless, Ukraine’s first priority has to be preserving its own
security. No one can or will guarantee it, and even if they did, Ukraine would
be crazy to believe a second Budapest.
Even if
Putin were to sign a document guaranteeing Ukraine’s security with his blood,
Ukraine could not accept his word. Mendacity has become business as usual for
Russia’s President. But neither could Ukraine accept the West’s word. Its
long-standing indifference to independent Ukraine’s security does not inspire
confidence that this time the United States and the United Kingdom will really
mean it.
Membership
in NATO won’t do the trick either, both because it’s not in the cards for
Ukraine anytime soon, and because Article 5 is squishy. The first
part sounds bold: “The Parties agree that an armed attack against one or more
of them in Europe or North America shall be considered an attack against them
all.” But the second part adds a qualifier (“as it deems necessary”) that
undermines the resoluteness of the first part: “They agree that, if such an
armed attack occurs, each of them, in exercise of the right of individual or
collective self-defense recognized by Article 51 of the Charter of the United
Nations, will assist the Party or Parties so attacked by taking forthwith,
individually and in concert with the other Parties, such action as it deems
necessary, including the use of armed force, to restore and maintain the
security of the North Atlantic area.”
In a
word, Ukraine will be secure only if it can guarantee its own security.
Since
nuclear weapons are out of the question, Ukraine’s security can be assured only
if Ukraine has the requisite armed forces to guarantee its own security.
Ukraine must have the capacity, not to defeat Russia, but to deter it from
further imperialist encroachments on Ukrainian territory.
Once
Ukraine is certain that its security is assured, all manner of negotiations and
compromises become possible. Indeed, the Minsk accords become potentially
workable. A strong and secure Ukraine might even countenance neutrality.
The
implications for the West are obvious. Only a secure Ukraine will put its name
to grand bargains crafted by Russia and the West. And a secure Ukraine can only
be a militarily strong Ukraine. No Western deal with Russia can possibly work
if it fails to take Ukraine and its justified security concerns into account.
Ukraine
has already made enormous progress since the spring of 2014 when it had no more
than 6,000 battle-ready troops to face Putin and his proxies. Even though the
very imperfect “ceasefire” mandated by Minsk is routinely violated by Russian
troops and results in daily Ukrainian deaths, it represents a tactical victory
for Ukraine’s army. Despite its defeats in several key battles, Ukraine has
actually won the war—at least thus far—by stopping Russia’s armed forces and
Putin’s 35,000 proxies.
Now
Ukraine needs to gain the capacity to stop a full-scale Russian invasion.
Although a massive land war would produce savage Ukrainian partisan resistance
and lead to enormous losses for Russia, it would be far better to deter Russia
than to embroil it in a costly quagmire. And for Ukraine to deter Russia, it
needs to have the clear ability to stop Russian air power and tanks.
Arming
Ukraine—building up its military to the point that it can defend itself, but
not threaten Russia—is the only way to secure a durable peace there. The sooner
the West learns this lesson, the sooner Budapest will fade as a bad memory—and
the sooner Minsk or its successor will have a realistic chance of resulting in
peace.
Alexander J. Motyl is a professor of political science at Rutgers
University-Newark, specializing on Ukraine, Russia, and the former USSR.
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