Firstly, a disclaimer: Russia is 100 per cent responsible
for its invasion of the Crimea, just as Germany a hundred years ago was for
responsible for invading Belgium. Nothing dilutes these facts. However, just as
historians disagree as to whether the First World War could have been avoided,
it is legitimate to look at whether a better handling of the Ukraine crisis by
the “West” generally – and the EU specifically – could have led to a different
conclusion.
We need to understand what Russia wants. It has two aims –
safeguarding its Black Sea Fleet base in Sevastopol (for emotional as well as
strategic reasons) and maintaining a friendly compliant government in Ukraine
willing to keep the border open to Russian trade and people. Under both
Timoshenko and Yanukovych, this is exactly what Russia had.
So what has caused the current crisis? Russia’s naval base
is on a lease, so for now it is protected, but Russia fears that a pro-western
Ukrainian Government, joining NATO and the EU, could jeopardise its operation.
These fears maybe overdone, but a more potentially serious threat comes to
Russia’s trade in the form of Ukraine’s potential EU membership.
The EU is a customs union, which means that its external
trade is decided collectively around an external customs wall – the crucial
difference between it and a Free Trade area. But as well as being a customs
union, the EU has become a political construction with a defence element
including a mutual defence guarantee mirroring that of NATO – inserted via the
Lisbon Treaty. So from a Russian point of view the EU no longer an economic
club, but more a political and defence power block synonymous with NATO.
Indeed, Russia is so impressed by the EU as a power block it has sought to
imitate it in its own Eurasian Customs Union – which it had hoped Ukraine would
join.
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EU and candidates and Eurasia and its candidates |
Ukraine is therefore caught between two opposing power
blocks. For many years, Ukraine managed to balance the competing interests and
different aspirations of both its Russian and Ukrainian speakers. From Moscow’s
point of view, it was working: Ukraine had leaders who accepted Russian largess
in exchange for influence, renewed their lease on Sevastopol, kept trade moving
and allowed Russians and Ukrainians to travel visa free – something that
Ukrainian EU membership could put in danger.
It should therefore have been possible to predict that
Russia would react badly to further moves by Ukraine towards the EU. Despite
this, no effort seems to have been made either to dampen Russian influence by
shoring up Ukraine’s finances, thus enabling them to make the jump, or
alternatively to mollify and reassure Russia. We were left to watch as an EU
deal with no immediate cash offering was outbid by hard Russian cash with a
bankrupt Ukrainian President taking his country swerving to the east. The
reaction in western Ukraine was predictable, as was the Russian reaction when
protesters hostile to the Russia seemed to take control.
Even at that point, not all was lost for Russia. Ruslan
Pukov, a graduate of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, points out in the New York Times that Tymoshenko was originally
Russia’s favoured candidate, that her re-election in an early poll would for
Russia have been a reasonable outcome – and for that pro-Russian electors from
Crimea within a united Ukraine would help. Speeding up the signing of the EU’s
Ukrainian Association Agreement and the pronouncements of some EU foreign
ministers about Ukraine’s EU membership potential (however genuine or not)
have, however, fanned the fears of those in Russia who feel that Ukraine is on
route to being “lost” into an opposing and not necessarily friendly power
block. Russia’s preferred option would be a pro-Russian Ukraine. If Russia
annexes Crimea, it may look like a Russian victory but in reality would be an
admittance of a wider failure.
It is for Ukraine to decide whether it should join the EU.
If that is their settled wish, we should not shut the door just to appease
Russian sensibilities. Nor should we confuse justifiable anger at corruption
(often linked to Russia) with a genuine love of EU integration shared by all
Ukrainians. For now, we should help Ukraine improve its standard of government,
help it strengthen its economic independence (one way could be through shale gas development) and do what
we can, through sanctions, to dissuade Russian aggression. But we should be
aware that the makeup of the EU, the nature of its integration and enlargement,
combined with ‘all or nothing’ decisions being forced on the Ukraine by both
the EU and Russia, have polarised Ukrainian politics and are having
consequences.
In the longer term, it is time for the EU to rethink how it
deals with its neighbouring states. Those that have chosen not to join the EU
or border the EU but will never join deserve better than the imposition of a
hard frontier dividing them from historic partners. If the price of EU
integration within is division without, someone will pay the price. If the EU
was not so rigid, did not require conformity with everything and offered a
genuine partnership status that could work for Ukraine without antagonising its
other neighbours, it might be a form of membership that others could take up –
including, someday, even Russia.