Good Time to Force Russia to Accept Ukraine’s Peace Terms
After 50 months of observing with trepidation a “neighborhood”
war launched by Russia against Ukraine, European nations are finally feeling realistically
anxious though not because they could become collateral damage for Moscow. Consequently, they have asked Ukraine to pause its highly successful drone attacks against Russian
oil refineries.
The logical question is why?
Apparently, the purse strings that stretch from Ukraine to
Russia then to Iran, Israel and the Persian Gulf and finally across Europe are
causing real pain as consumers in those countries and are forced to pay a lot
more for gasoline and other petroleum-based products than they did earlier this
year.
According to Presidential Office Head Kyrylo Budanov, Ukraine’s
foreign allies have asked Kyiv to pause its attacks as the US-Israeli war in
Iran drives up fuel prices worldwide, he said in an interview published April 4
by Bloomberg.
Oil prices have skyrocketed amid the escalating war in Iran,
which is in its sixth week. Energy facilities in the Middle East have
been targeted throughout the conflict, while Iran has also shut down the Strait
of Hormuz — a key waterway through which roughly one-fifth of the world's
oil supply transits.
Budanov told Bloomberg that Ukraine has received
requests from its allies to stop its regular campaign of strikes on enemy oil
refineries in Russia due to the price surge.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy confirmed that
Ukraine’s allies, who have been very supportive of Ukraine in its time of great
need, have urged him to scale back attacks on Russia’s energy infrastructure
amid the ongoing global fuel crisis – but that they would only end if Russia
stopped targeting Ukraine’s first.
Aggressor Russia has been attacking Ukraine’s energy infrastructure
since start of the war in February 2022. In the ensuing months, Ukraine’s
military-industrial complex has developed enviable skills in building its own
brand of deadly drones. Its efforts have hit Russian bulls’ eyes enough to
cause significant pain to anyone buying Russian and Persian petroleum products.
Zelenskyy told journalists in a WhatsApp voice message that,
by launching attacks on Russia’s energy system, Ukraine was only responding in
kind.
Zelenskyy’s comments come amid a string of long-range
Ukrainian strikes on Russia’s energy sector, including the key oil export
terminal at the port of Ust-Luga outside St. Petersburg.
“We have received messages from some of our partners asking
about how our responses against Russia’s oil sector – the energy sector – can
be reduced,” Zelenskyy said in the voice message. “If Russia is ready not to strike
Ukraine's energy, then we’ll respond by not attacking theirs.”
So why Ukraine should listen to cries of “stop” and show
mercy to its enemy’s energy lifeline? It seems to me that this could be the useful
mechanism that could solve two problems. Yes, given the right circumstances,
Kyiv could consider retargeting its drones to hit other Russian targets rather
than its oil refineries. But that should be only half of Ukraine’s demand.
In return for such a favorable accommodation, Kyiv should
insist that all countries that are suffering the pain of high gasoline prices
and other petroleum-based products must put their collective heels on Russia’s
throat and demand that it immediately and forever not only stop attacking
Ukrainian cities and killing innocent civilians but also pack up and leave
Ukraine with appropriate NATO security guarantees.
If not, what has Ukraine got to lose? In the past week
Russia has continued to strike its favorite targets of Kyiv, Kharkiv, Odesa,
Mariupol, Zaporizhzhia, Chornobyl, and other towns along with commuter trains,
leaving death and destruction in its wake.
No matter how you slice and dice the wasteful Witkof-Kushner
negotiations, a cessation of hostilities on Ukraine’s terms would be a win for
Ukraine and Europe.