Agreeing to Disagee : With Prejudice
"I'm the president of Ukraine, I'm based here and I think I know the details deeper than any other president.""Do we have tanks on the streets? They go around saying 'War starts tomorrow'.""It creates panic. Panic in the financial sector. It costs Ukraine a lot."Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky"Compared to the document we received from NATO, the U.S. response could almost be called a paragon of diplomatic politesse.""If it depends on Russia, there will be no war. We don't want wars. But we also won't allow our interests to be rudely trampled, to be ignored."Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov"[Russia has massed enough forces to launch a full-scale invasion -- of Ukraine -- with] little warning.""[The Russian buildup is] larger in scale and scope than anything we've seen in recent memory."U.S. General Mark Milley, chairman, U.S. joint chiefs of staff
Ukraine's
president feels as though he and his country are being pushed around.
Not only by his country's former nemesis and its current incarnation,
but also by the very countries that have stepped into the breach of
threatening standoff, and in their eagerness to promote their version of
what may be expected to occur, and when, creating an indelible internal
aura of stress and panic. Whereas President Zelensky would prefer
projecting an air of confidence over a situation that would have grave
consequences for the sovereign right of his country, putting up a brave
facade while appealing to the West to exert pressure on Moscow, he hears
stark predictions of impending disaster.
Predictions
that seem to him premature, that all diplomatic overtures have not been
fully employed to de-escalate; rather than exacerbate tensions, those
who claim to be committed to Ukraine's salvation as a securely
independent member of the international community of nations are being
unnecessarily provocative and heating up their exchanges in volumes of
threats and repercussions.
The
White House, he publicly complained was "amplifying" the risk Ukraine
is facing, an alarmist attitude too extreme to reflect the current
situation which, he emphases, represents a "mistake in my opinion",
a surprising rebuke to the rash statements of approaching doom
expressed by the White House. The comments emerged following a telephone
call with President Biden, a call that a Ukrainian official described
as one that "did not go well".
"On
the one hand, [Zelensky] wants assistance. But on the other, he has to
assure his people he has the situation under control. That's a tricky
balance", observed a White House official. The sense
of swiftly impending collision between NATO, the United States, Ukraine
and Russia has been heightened by a new revelation that the military
buildup of Russian troops and equipment on the border with Ukraine has
expanded to the inclusion of blood supplies required for anticipated
casualties in the event of an imminent conflict.
In
communications with France's President Macron, Mr. Putin spoke of the
West having "ignored" security concerns expressed by Russia over its
perception of NATO expansion into Russia's near-abroad, a geography that
Vladimir Putin regards as Russia's diplomatic-political domain into
which a Western presence has become a destabilizing feature and a threat
to Russia's relationships with its near neighbours. According to a
French official, Mr. Putin indicated "very clearly that he did not want confrontation".
And
nor would Beijing -- Moscow's great good friend and collegial partner
in defending joint interests against Western interference -- appreciate
violent confrontation. At least not right now. It would be most
inconvenient, most unsuitable in view of their warm relations, for
Russia to embark on an incendiary war situation that would surely spread
and absorb the world's attention at the very time that China is hosting
the Winter Olympics.
A
White House official notes that Russia'a protestations of having no
intention of invading its neighbour is welcome, but it would be far more
convincing for it to withdraw its troops from Ukraine's border. Mr.
Putin has been accused by the U.S. ambassador in Moscow of "putting a gun on the table and saying 'I come in peace'."
Russia
has been given assurances from the U.S. that such a withdrawal would
entitle it in exchange to have a delegation of Russian inspectors visit
missile sites entrenched by the U.S. in Poland and Romania to reduce its
fears that the missiles are aimed at Russia, and not as claimed, in the
direction of Iran. In the relentless standoff, the U.S. now considers
an action independent of NATO to itself and the U.K. in a "coalition of
the willing" to include other allies, moving troops closer to Russia to
deter Putin's plans.
Labels: Demands, Diplomacy, Invasion, NATO, Russia, Ukraine, United States
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