The Courage of His Convictions
Boris Bondarev via AP |
"I couldn't take it any longer. I should have done it at the start but not everyone is a hero."
"What's the point in our work when the Russian president is the only 'diplomat' in this country and he 'knows better'? All diplomats should have asked themselves that and maybe quit.""For 20 years of my diplomatic career I have seen different turns of our foreign policy, but never have I been so ashamed of my country as on February 24 of this year. The aggressive war unleashed by Putin against Ukraine, and in fact against the entire Western world, is not only a crime against the Ukrainian people, but also perhaps, the most serious crime against the people of Russia."Boris Bondarev, counsellor, Russian permanent mission, United Nations, Geneva
A
graduate of the elite Moscow university specializing in the training of
Russian diplomats, Boris Bondarev was employed at the Russian foreign
ministry for twenty years, until he handed over his letter of
resignation on Monday. As he did so, sharing his move on social media,
he urged his diplomatic colleagues to do the same. He resigned his post
in a furious denunciation of Russian President Vladimir Putin, for
assigning a criminal mission in the military invasion of Ukraine, to
Russia.
This
seasoned diplomat's very public resignation along with the heat of his
condemnation of a president not known to take dissent or accusations of
personal misconduct lightly, represents the first high-profile defection
yet linked to the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the resulting high
civilian death numbers alongside the wanton destruction of Ukraine's
towns, villages and cities. He acted as he did, he said out of moral
conviction, to take a stand against the Putin regime.
As
he now becomes a pariah in Russian government circles, he insists he
has no fear for his own safety. He was simply motivated by 'disgust'
that his position as a diplomat was that of representing Russia abroad
in view of the criminal nature of Russia's invasion of a neighbouring
state. And nor did it sit well with him, that an article about "crimes against humanity"
purportedly committed by the government of Ukraine within Ukraine's
east, is the leading official propaganda posted on Russia's mission to
the UN's website.
Former
diplomat Bondarev's specialty was nuclear non-proliferation for most of
the last ten years. He feels horrified at this juncture by how
superficially and carelessly Russian officialdom now raise the prospect
of deploying nuclear weapons: "It really is chilling",
he avows. A number of his professional acquaintances quietly left their
positions at the ministry since the invasion began, Bondarev explained,
in reflection of some Russian diplomats being privately appalled by the
war brought to Ukraine.
That
the Russian Foreign Ministry issues supportive declarations for war
crimes obvious in their nature to the outside world, Russian diplomats
exonerate their military and their government as being embroiled in a
war of necessity, to rid the geography of the presence of sinister and
stability-threatening fascists in Ukraine. That President Putin is
himself exercising the fascist in his role as Russian tyrant represents a
misunderstanding by a West seeking to destabilize Russia and by
extension, eastern Europe.
Sergey
Lavrov, Russia's current minister of foreign affairs, at one time
represented a role model for generations of Russian diplomats whose
admiration of his skilled craft of diplomacy and outstanding good
manners attracted emulation. Until a mysterious transformation took
place, a "deplorable evolution to become a person who spurts out utter nonsense", said the former counsellor.
The
invasion of Ukraine by Russian troops has resulted in a wave of antiwar
protests, sending thousands of Russian dissidents into exile. Among
them some of Russia's best-known artists, singers and filmmakers who
have spoken out publicly against their president's aggression and were
then blacklisted or threatened with criminal charges which would lead to
prison sentences.
There
is an undercurrent of speculation within Russian media, of senior
figures in the government inclusive of liberal-leaning officials, such
as the chief of the Central Bank, privately criticizing the invasion,
none yet having taken a public stand. The former counsellor, who lives
in Geneva. appears not to be concerned over the backlash he can expect
should he return to Russia.
UN building in Geneva AP Photo/Markus Schreiber, File |
Labels: Courage of Convictions, Criticism of Putin, Resignation, Russian Diplomat
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