Four Years after Enslaving
Crimea, Russia Still Flouts Free World
Unexpectedly and hours after Winter Olympic flame was
snuffed in Sochi, Russia, Russian soldiers landed on the Ukrainian Crimea peninsula,
seized the entire territory, and annexed it after a fabricated referendum thus
turning it into an enslaved land.
The invasion and occupation immediately violated numerous
international covenants and the UN Charter. Russia’s belligerence has been
condemned by the United States, Canada, Great Britain and other free world
countries. Sanctions have been enacted and renewed against Russian leaders and
oligarchs. The latest round, including travel restrictions and asset freezes
against 150 people and 38 companies, would be extended until September 15, the
European Council said.
Has Putin been swayed to change his ways? In reply to such a
question, the Russian fuhrer basically said “hell, no.”
Putin declared in a two-hour documentary “Putin” aired on
March 18 that under no circumstances would he give Crimea back to Ukraine.
“What, have you gone mad?” he told a journalist who asked
him if there were any circumstances under which the Russian leader would be
ready to give up Crimea.
“There are no such circumstances and never will be,” he
declared obnoxiously.
As for liberal-minded Russians, unsuccessful presidential
candidate Ksenia Sobchak, who wanted to campaign during last weekend’s
presidential campaign in occupied Crimea, said the Ukrainian peninsula remains
a difficult problem for Russia and will have to be dealt with by the upcoming
generation of Russians. However, since Russian youth favor Putin and his
despotism, it would be folly to depend on that demographic for any resolution.
So much for liberal-minded Russians.
Despite President Trump’s tepid support for Ukraine, his
cabinet remains committed to Ukraine and has asserted that sanctions will
remain as long as Russian soldiers occupy the peninsula.
US Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch said Washington will
not recognize the Russian presidential elections in annexed Crimea.
“I think [it will be the same] as with all the elections in
the Crimea…the way we treated these elections in the past is that we did not
recognize them,” Yovanovitch said.
The State Department reaffirmed last week that the US continues
to consider the Crimean peninsula as a part of Ukraine, not Russia.
Acting Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public
Affairs and spokesperson Heather Nauert condemned a political rally Russian
President Vladimir Putin held in Crimea where he claimed Crimea to be a part of
Russia. Nauert blasted the 2014 referendum in Crimea as to whether the region
should join Russia. The “staged referendum,” as Nauert called it, remains
controversial as Russian troops were occupying the peninsula at the time and
few international observers were present.
“In light of Putin’s remarks, it is important to call
attention to the illegitimacy of the staged ‘referendum,’ but also to the
tremendous human costs the Russian government has imposed on the people of
Crimea,” Nauert said in a statement.
The Department official said during the past four years, Russia
has engaged in a campaign of coercion and violence, targeting anyone opposed to
its attempted annexation. She said Russian occupation authorities have
subjected Crimean Tatars, ethnic Ukrainians, pro-Ukrainian activists, civil
society members, and independent journalists to politically motivated
prosecution and ongoing repression, while methodically suppressing
nongovernmental organizations and independent media outlets.
The global wave of condemnation against Russia continues to
grow. The EUObserver published a column titled “Four years on – but we will not
forget illegally-occupied Crimea” written by eight foreign ministers, namely
Anders Samuelsen of Denmark, Sven Mikser of Estonia, Edgars Rinkevics of
Latvia, Linas Linkevicius of Lithuania, Jacek Czaputowicz of Poland,
Teodor-Viorel Melescanu of Romania, Margot Wallstroem of Sweden, and Pavlo
Klimkin of Ukraine.
“Four years ago, on March 18, 2014, Russia took the final
step to illegally occupy Crimea, a part of Ukraine’s sovereign territory that
Russia had recognized as such in several international treaties. The Russian
takeover comprised a series of equally illegal actions: from using disguised
Russian elite troops to the hasty organization – in breach of Ukrainian and
international law – of an illegitimate ‘referendum,” they wrote.
On March 1, the Ukrainian parliament called on the UN
Security Council and the General Assembly, as well as the OSCE, the European
Union, NATO, international organizations, and foreign parliaments and
governments, not to recognize the legitimacy of the Russian elections in the
Crimea.
As for Putin’s so-called reelection, the United States and
European countries have not yet congratulated the victor.
Ukrainian Ambassador to the United Nations Volodymyr
Yelchenko in a letter to the UN Secretary-General, President of the Security
Council and UN membership pointed out that Russian presidential elections in
the occupied Crimea violate the UN Charter. The outcome of such illegal
elections will be null and void, he said.
The issue of Russian aggression against Ukraine, be it in
the Crimean peninsula or the eastern oblasts, remains to be addressed fully by
the free world. Will it be content with ineffective but welcome condemnations
and sanctions? Hopefully not. Procrastination will only give Russia time and
opportunities to increase its military capabilities to expand its aggression
against other regions.
The free world must also seriously take into consideration
Moscow’s efforts to deploy nuclear weapons in Crimea. Deputy Head of Ukraine's
Ministry of Foreign Affairs Olena Zerkal has said Russia continues to upgrade
military infrastructure in occupied Crimea to deploy nuclear weapons on the
peninsula.
“We are seeing an accelerated pace of modernization in
Crimea, which has already changed the balance of security in the region,” she
said at a special meeting of the UN Security Council on the situation in Crimea
on March 15. “Russia has more than doubled its armed forces on the peninsula
and is taking further steps to upgrade Crimean-based military infrastructure to
deploy nuclear weapons.”
The free world, led by the United States, Canada, Great
Britain and other likeminded countries, must increase efforts to isolate Russia
for its unabashed aggression.
Two years ago The United Nations officially condemned
Russia, a member of the UN Security Council, as an “occupier” of foreign lands
just like Nazi Germany and other tyrannical empires were.
What is significant about this resolution is that while
Ukraine, the United States and a few other countries favorably inclined toward
Ukraine have condemned Russia for its illegal annexation of Crimea, the UN
resolution casts a different light on this crime. Just like the albatross in
“The Rime of the Ancient Mariner,” Russia, the Kremlin and Vladimir Putin have
been publically stigmatized as global lawbreakers for current and future
generations to see.
The international community must also appreciate that an
occupier is a state that has crossed international frontiers without
consideration of laws, invaded a foreign land, and willfully seized land that
didn’t belong to it.
This resolution sends a clear message to Russia and Putin
that as “occupying authorities” they are responsible for the persecutions and
violations of the human rights of the residents of Crimea and will be brought
to justice.
The free world is honor bound to take action to fix the
situation. This resolution also gives it the basis upon which to further
isolate Russia and ban it from global events until it changes it belligerence
behavior.
Ukraine has appealed to the European Union to recognize the
Russian Federation an aggressor state, strengthen Russia sanctions, and take up
a key role in deploying a UN peacekeeping mission in Donbas, according to a draft
by the Ukrainian side ahead of the EU Foreign Affairs Council scheduled for
March 19 where the Ukraine issue will be on the agenda.
In the draft, which was presented to UNIAN and circulated in
Brussels ahead of the EU foreign ministers’ meeting, Kyiv has proposed a number
of proposals for the bloc in case Brussels is committed to strengthening its
support for Ukraine to counter Russian aggression. After four years of Russian
aggression against Ukraine, Kyiv expects that the EU “will recognize Russia as
an aggressor country and an occupation power. The EU will significantly
strengthen the restrictive measures of individual and economic nature against
Russia, including preventing EU companies from cooperating with Russia in
the military sphere. The EU sanctions should be leveled up to the US
sanctions to form the integral transatlantic sanctions regime. They must be
kept until sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine is fully restored,
including Crimea.”
The only way, short of a joint military campaign, to force
Russia into withdrawing from Crimea and Donbas and abandoning its campaign for
global domination is for the free world unite behind Kyiv’s efforts to suspend
commerce with it, expel all of its diplomats and businessmen and declare Moscow
a pariah, outcast, and criminal country.
Otherwise, be prepared to encounter Russian troops on your doorsteps.
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