I've reposted below a excellent article from Code Pink, which documents the underlying issues behind the war in Ukraine. No need to comment or edit. Code Pink is a women-led grassroots organization working to end U.S. wars and militarism, support peace and human rights initiatives, and redirect our tax dollars into healthcare, education, green jobs and other life-affirming programs. It emerged out of a deep desire by a group of American women to stop the United States from invading Iraq. Check it out at https://www.codepink.org/
The Ukraine crisis is a classic ‘security dilemma’ –
Media Benjamin and Nicholas J. S. Davies
On December 27 2022, both Russia and Ukraine issued calls for ending the war in Ukraine, but only on non-negotiable terms that they each know the other side will reject.
Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Kuleba proposed a “peace
summit” in February to be chaired by UN Secretary General Guterres, but with
the precondition that Russia must first face prosecution for war crimes in an international court.
On the other side, Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov issued a chilling ultimatum that Ukraine must accept Russia’s terms for
peace or “the issue will be decided by the Russian
Army.”
But what if there were a way of understanding this
conflict and possible solutions that encompassed the views of all sides and
could take us beyond one-sided narratives and proposals that serve only to fuel
and escalate the war? The crisis in Ukraine is in fact a classic case of what
International Relations scholars call a “security
dilemma,” and this provides a more objective way of looking at it.
A security dilemma is a situation in which countries on
each side take actions for their own defense that countries on the other side
then see as a threat. Since offensive and defensive weapons and forces are
often indistinguishable, one side’s defensive build-up can easily be seen as an
offensive build-up by the other side. As each side responds to the actions of
the other, the net result is a spiral of militarization and escalation, even
though both sides insist, and may even believe, that their own actions are
defensive.
In the case of Ukraine, this has happened on different
levels, both between Russia and national and regional governments in Ukraine,
but also on a larger geopolitical scale between Russia and the United
States/NATO.
The very essence of a security dilemma is the lack of
trust between the parties. In the Cold War between the United States and the
Soviet Union, the Cuban Missile Crisis served as an alarm bell that forced both
sides to start negotiating arms control treaties and safeguard mechanisms that
would limit escalation, even as deep levels of mistrust remained. Both sides
recognized that the other was not hell-bent on destroying the world, and this
provided the necessary minimum basis for negotiations and safeguards to try to
ensure that this did not come to pass.
After the end of the Cold War, both sides cooperated with
major reductions in their nuclear arsenals, but the United States gradually withdrew
from a succession of arms control treaties, violated its promises not to expand NATO into Eastern Europe, and
used military force in ways that directly violated the
UN Charter’s prohibition against the “threat or use of force.” U.S. leaders
claimed that the conjunction of terrorism and the existence of nuclear,
chemical and biological weapons gave them a new right to wage “preemptive
war,” but neither the UN nor any other country ever agreed to that.
U.S. aggression in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere was
alarming to people all over the world, and even to many Americans, so it was no
wonder that Russian leaders were especially worried by America’s renewed
post-Cold War militarism. As NATO incorporated more and more countries in
Eastern Europe, a classic security dilemma began to play out.
President Putin, who was elected in 2000, began to
use international fora to challenge NATO expansion and
U.S. war-making, insisting that new diplomacy was needed to ensure the security
of all countries in Europe, not only those invited to join NATO.
The former Communist countries in Eastern Europe joined
NATO out of defensive concerns about possible Russian aggression, but this also
exacerbated Russia’s security concerns about the ambitious and aggressive
military alliance gathering around its borders, especially as the United States
and NATO refused to address those concerns.
In this context, broken promises on NATO expansion, U.S.
serial aggression in the greater Middle East and elsewhere, and absurd claims
that U.S. missile defense batteries in Poland and Romania were to protect
Europe from Iran, not Russia, set alarm bells ringing in Moscow.
The U.S. withdrawal from nuclear arms control treaties
and its refusal to alter its nuclear first strike policy raised even greater
fears that a new generation of U.S. nuclear weapons were being designed to give the United States a nuclear first
strike capability against Russia.
On the other side, Russia’s increasing assertiveness on
the world stage, including its military actions to defend Russian enclaves in
Georgia and its intervention in Syria to defend its ally the Assad government,
raised security concerns in other former Soviet republics and allies, including
new NATO members. Where might Russia intervene next?
As the United States refused to diplomatically address
Russia’s security concerns, each side took actions that ratcheted up the
security dilemma. The United States backed the violent overthrow of President
Yanukovych in Ukraine in 2014, which led to rebellions against the post-coup
government in Crimea and Donbas. Russia responded by annexing Crimea and
supporting the breakaway “people’s republics” of Donetsk and Luhansk.
Even if all sides were acting in good faith and out of
defensive concerns, in the absence of effective diplomacy they all assumed the
worst about each other’s motives as the crisis spun further out of control,
exactly as the “security dilemma” model predicts that nations will do amid such
rising tensions.
Of course, since mutual mistrust lies at the heart of any security dilemma, the
situation is further complicated when any of the parties is seen to act in bad
faith. Former German Chancellor Angela Merkel recently admitted that Western
leaders had no intention of enforcing Ukraine’s compliance with the terms of
the Minsk II agreement in 2015, and only agreed to it to buy time to build up
Ukraine militarily.
The breakdown of the Minsk II peace agreement and the
continuing diplomatic impasse in the larger geopolitical conflict between the
United States, NATO and Russia plunged relations into a deepening crisis and
led to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Officials on all sides must have
recognized the dynamics of the underlying security dilemma, and yet they failed
to take the necessary diplomatic initiatives to resolve the crisis.
Peaceful, diplomatic alternatives have always been
available if the parties chose to pursue them, but they did not. Does that mean
that all sides deliberately chose war over peace? They would all deny
that.
Yet all sides apparently now see advantages in a
prolonged conflict, despite the relentless daily slaughter, dreadful and
deteriorating conditions for millions of civilians, and the unthinkable dangers of full-scale war between NATO and
Russia. All sides have convinced themselves they can or must win, and so they
keep escalating the war, along with all its impacts and the risks that it will
spin out of control.
President Biden came to office promising a new era of
American diplomacy, but has instead led the United States and the world to the
brink of World War III.
Clearly, the only solution to a security dilemma like
this is a cease-fire and peace agreement to stop the carnage, followed by the
kind of diplomacy that took place between the United States and the Soviet
Union in the decades that followed the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962, which led
to the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty in 1963 and successive arms control
treaties. Former UN official Alfred de Zayas has also called for
UN-administered referenda to determine the wishes of the people of
Crimea, Donetsk and Luhansk.
It is not an endorsement of an adversary’s conduct or
position to negotiate a path to peaceful coexistence. We are witnessing the
absolutist alternative in Ukraine today. There is no moral high ground in
relentless, open-ended mass slaughter, managed, directed and in fact
perpetrated by people in smart suits and military uniforms in imperial capitals
thousands of miles from the crashing of shells, the cries of the wounded and
the stench of death.
If proposals for peace talks are to be more than PR
exercises, they must be firmly grounded in an understanding of the security
needs of all sides, and a willingness to compromise to see that those needs are
met and that all the underlying conflicts are addressed.
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