December 16, 2019 "
Information
Clearing House" -
After Ukraine’s president Volodymyr
Zelensky finished multilateral peace
talks in Paris, the emphatic media
message was that “no red lines had been
crossed” in negotiations with Russian
leader Vladimir Putin. It sounded like
Zelensky was far more concerned with
trying to reassure observers he hadn’t
“capitulated” to Putin, rather than
engaging in a genuine dialogue to
resolve his country’s conflict.
The
so-called Normandy Four format of
France, Germany, Russia and Ukraine is
scheduled to meet again in four months.
The meeting in Paris on December 9 was
the first time leaders had convened
after nearly a three-year hiatus. It is
to be welcomed that President Zelensky,
who was elected in April, shows a
willingness to engage with Russia,
unlike predecessor Petro Poroshenko, in
order to bring peace to eastern Ukraine.
The region has been mired in nearly six
years of civil war.
During the Paris talks, there was
agreement to uphold a ceasefire in
Ukraine’s Donbas region, and to extend
deconfliction zones by withdrawing
troops and artillery. There was also
agreement on the exchange of all
prisoners between Ukraine government
forces and the pro-Russia rebels in
Donbas. All very good. But what about
the full implementation of the Minsk
Accord signed back in 2015?
That accord obliges the government in
Kiev to permit elections and regional
autonomy in the Donbas. It also obliges
a full amnesty for rebels who took up
arms against the Kiev administration,
which came to power through an illegal
US-backed coup in February 2014. The
Kiev power grab ushered in an
ultra-nationalist Russophobic regime
intent on dominating the pro-Russian
eastern region. The dramatic shift in
power in Kiev towards Neo-Nazi
demagogues and paramilitaries was the
decisive factor in Donbas taking up arms
and also in pro-Russia Crimea seceding
in March 2014 and joining the Russian
Federation.
Regrettably, President Zelensky
appears unwilling to implement the Minsk
deal which his predecessor signed up to.
In fact, at the concluding press
conference jointly held by the four
leaders at the Paris talks, Zelensky was
given to trying to re-write Minsk. He
insisted on “security issues” being
settled before political issues. That
suggests he wants rebels in Donbas to
disarm without Kiev recognizing the
region’s autonomy. Zelensky also
insisted on “not giving up Donbas and
Crimea”, and of regaining control over
all of Ukraine’s borders, including
those adjacent to Russia.
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The Minsk deal – which France,
Germany and Russia are in concurrence on
as being the only viable way forward to
peace – does not say anything about
Crimea “being returned” to Ukraine. The
accord does not precondition autonomy in
the Donbas on a prior disarmament.
In other words, Zelensky is going off
script on the Minsk terms for finding a
peace settlement. His position is still
not adhering to the obligations his
government signed up to. Perhaps over
the coming months, the Ukrainian
president may come round to fulfilling
responsibilities as stipulated by the
Minsk accord.
But there are, unfortunately, reasons
to be skeptical. That’s because the
relentless Russophobia residing in
Washington leaves Zelensky with little
room for maneuver. The shaky Kiev regime
is totally reliant on Washington’s
patronage for its IMF financial
life-line, as well as for military
support. Zelensky is the president of a
vassal state. Washington calls the tune
and the tributes.
As could be seen more than ever
during the recent impeachment hearings
on President Trump, the consensus in
Washington is that Ukraine is “at war
with Russia”. American politicians and
media are convinced in their Cold War
delusions that Russia has invaded
Ukraine and is the “aggressor” against a
“freedom-loving nation”. That propaganda
narrative, of course, reinforces the
delusions of the Russia-hating
ultra-nationalists in Ukraine who have
threatened Zelensky’s life if he
“surrenders” to Russia.
Hence, the conflict in Ukraine is not
being addressed as the internal one that
it really is. Instead, it is being
viewed through the Russophobic lens as
an external problem, allegedly created
by Russian aggression. That means the
“solution” is about standing up to
Russia with lots more US military aid,
rather than addressing the core issues
of Kiev’s toxic politics and policies
towards its separatist regions.
Russia is a guarantor of Minsk, just
like France and Germany are. It is not a
party with obligations to fulfill. Those
obligations are on the politicians in
Kiev and the rebels in eastern Ukraine.
With Washington pressing Zelensky to
stand up to non-existing “Russian
aggression” that means the search for
peace in Ukraine will remain elusive.
Peace will only come to Ukraine when
Washington stops kicking Kiev around
like a political football to gratify its
Cold War hostility towards Russia.
That’s unlikely to happen in the near
future.
When Zelensky seeks to reassure that
“no red lines” have been crossed, his
mind is not on genuine peace
negotiations. Rather, he is seeking to
placate Ukraine’s hostage-takers in
Washington.
Finian Cunningham
has written extensively on international
affairs, with articles published in
several languages. He is a Master’s
graduate in Agricultural Chemistry and
worked as a scientific editor for the
Royal Society of Chemistry, Cambridge,
England, before pursuing a career in
newspaper journalism. He is also a
musician and songwriter. For nearly 20
years, he worked as an editor and writer
in major news media organisations,
including The Mirror, Irish Times and
Independent.
This article was originally
published by "Strategic
Culture Foundation "
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