Let's see now . . . Vladimir
Putin couldn't wait until May 25 for a scheduled referendum that probably would
have paved a peaceful and fairly acceptable way for the Crimean
Peninsula to leave Ukraine and
return to Mother Russia, its home for much of modern history. For reasons
unclear, Putin decided to strong arm his way in with a show of military force
to back a puppet Crimean Premier who obligingly rushed a vote with predictable
results.
A solid majority of residents of Crimea
are ethnic Russians who speak Russian. Most of the minority Tatars and
Ukrainians refused to vote as a protest of the Russian power play. The vote was
overwhelmingly pro-Russia. Surprise! The process of incorporating the peninsula
into the Russian Federation
has begun.
It is unlikely that Ukraine will
make any military response. Crimea has provided bases for Russia 's Black
Sea Fleet for
200 years. A recent estimate put the force at 24 warships, two
submarines, and 16,000 sailors and marines. On top of that,
Meanwhile, Barack Obama
informed the world that if what has happened were to happen, Russia would
face "serious consequences." Lots of people, apparently including
Putin, aren't taking that message very seriously. So far, the consequences have
been freezing bank accounts of a few dozen individuals who promoted the Crimean
spectacle. The U.S.
seized some assets, the European Union froze more.
What more-serious actions are
likely to take place? Not many. The parties involved are entirely too much
involved in the world of business to take a dive into the world of war. They
depend on each other.
Nearly two thirds of Russian
exports are gas and oil, and about half of that is sold to European Union
countries. France
has lucrative contracts to build Russian ships. Germans have some $22 billion
invested in assets within Russia .
British bankers profit handsomely by serving as a financial center away from
home for Russian billionaires. The
unhealthiest U.S.
symbol, the Golden Arches, appears across the Russian landscape, as do other
American corporate logos.
It looks like a classic
standoff. It probably will stay that way unless the few observers who think
Putin has lost his mind are right. Could it be world leaders finally will act
with wisdom rather than playground bravado that in the past has escalated into
wars bringing misery to millions? Lets hope they continue to fire off
sanctions, not missiles.
7 comments:
I think at this point it's what we call a fait accompli.
Regardless of how we choose to interpret or analyze the actions and reactions surrounding the Crimea crisis, for many of us it is pretty much a "Déjà vu" moment if you lived through the Cold War. These type events have always been disconcerting because supposition and logic will never bring peace of mind or define an outcome. The game has begun and now it "will" play out to its unknown conclusion.
I'm afraid Crimea is only the beginning. Putin wants to restore the glory of the Russian empire. Apparently he's figured out that if he keeps taking back little pieces one at a time, no one will move to stop him. (Georgia wasn't worth starting a war over; Crimea isn't worth it. Etc.) Certainly our leaders waving their fingers and declaring there will be "costs" and "consequences" is not going to keep him awake nights.
Sadly, Pied, more Putin land grabs could be in the future. That course of action would not be rational. It ultimately would lead to a war with the West, which Russia could not win. However, it would not be the first time an over-reaching dictator turned into a madman.
Kazakhstan among other places is at risk. Half the pop of K is Russian, and unlike the Baltic states K is not a NATO partner.
Dick:
Take a look at my poem, "The dogs of war: 1914." It was inspired by Putin.
Regards,
Marc
dick
;
I just got back from Vietnam and saw how the country appears to be faring. I thought we were supposed to have been saving them from communism. That was why so many of our young men were sent there to fight. What I saw was a country that appears to be doing well and also quite capitalist as well.
I'm hoping and hoping we use sanctions and stay out of another conflict.
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