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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, December 3, 2018
Bleak See on the Black Sea

Historically speaking, the process of Christianization of Europe that was used as the justification tool to (either intimidate or corrupt, so to say to) pacify the invading tribes, which demolished the Roman Empire and brought to an end the Antique age, was running parallel on two tracks.
( December 1, 2018, Vienna, Sri Lanka Guardian) Following
the latest events in the Black Sea two old questions are reappearing.
Both are inviting us for a repeated elaboration:
If a Monroe doctrine (about the hemispheric security exclusivity) is
recognised at one corner of the globe, do we have a moral right or legal
ground to negate it at the other corner?
Clearly, the ‘might-makes-right’ as a conduct in international relations
cannot be selectively accepted. Either it is acknowledged to all who
can effectively self-prescribe such a monopoly of coercion, or it is
absolutely condemned as contrary to behaviour among the civilised
nations.
Next to the first question is a right of pre-emption.
It is apparent that within the Black Sea theatre, Russia acts in a
pre-emptive and defensive mood. For the last 25 years, all the NATO
interventions were outside its membership zone; none of the few Russian
interventions over the same period was outside the parameter of former
USSR.
Before closing, let’s take a closer look on the problem from a larger historical perspective.
Una hysteria Importante
Historically speaking, the process of Christianization of Europe that
was used as the justification tool to (either intimidate or corrupt, so
to say to) pacify the invading tribes, which demolished the Roman Empire
and brought to an end the Antique age, was running parallel on two
tracks. The Roman Curia/Vatican conducted one of them by its hammer: the
Holy Roman Empire. The second was run by the cluster of Rusophone
Slavic Kaganates, who receiving (the orthodox or true/authentic,
so-called Eastern version of) Christianity from Byzantium, and past its
collapse, have taken over a mission of Christianization, while forming
its first state of Kiev Russia (and thereafter, its first historic
empire). Thus, to the eastern edge of Europe, Russophones have lived in
an intact, nearly a hermetic world of universalism for centuries: one
empire, one Tsar, one religion and one language.[1]
Everything in between Central Europe and Russia is Eastern Europe,
rather a historic novelty on the political map of Europe. Very formation
of the Atlantic Europe’s present shape dates back to 14th–15th century, of Central Europe to the mid-late 19th century,
while a contemporary Eastern Europe only started emerging between the
end of WWI and the collapse of the Soviet Union – meaning, less than 100
years at best, slightly over two decades in the most cases. No wonder
that the dominant political culture of the Eastern Europeans resonates
residual fears and reflects deeply insecure small nations. Captive and
restive, they are short in territorial depth, in demographic projection,
in natural resources and in a direct access to open (warm) seas. After
all, these are short in historio-cultural verticals, and in the bigger
picture-driven long-term policies. Eastern Europeans are exercising the
nationhood and sovereignty from quite a recently, thus, too often
uncertain over the side and page of history. Therefore, they are often
dismissive, hectic and suspectful, nearly neuralgic and xenophobic, with
frequent overtones.
Years of Useful Idiot
The latest loss of Russophone Europe in its geopolitical and ideological
confrontation with the West meant colossal changes in Eastern Europe.
One may look into geopolitical surrounding of at the-time largest
eastern European state, Poland, as an illustration of how dramatic was
it.[2] All
three land neighbors of Poland; Eastern Germany (as the only country to
join the EU without any accession procedure, but by pure act of Anschluss),
Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union have disappeared overnight. At
present, Polish border countries are a two-decade-old novelty on the
European political map. Further on, if we wish to compare the number of
dissolutions of states worldwide over the last 50 years, the Old
continent suffered as many as all other continents combined: American
continent – none, Asia – one (Indonesia/ East Timor), Africa – two
(Sudan/South Sudan and Ethiopia/Eritrea), and Europe – three.
Interestingly, each and every dissolution in Europe was primarily
related to Slavs (Slavic peo-ples) living in multiethnic and
multi-linguistic (not in the Atlantic Europe’s conscripted pure
single-nation) state. Additionally, all three European fragmentations –
meaning, every second dissolution in the world – were situated
exclusively and only in Eastern Europe. That region has witnessed a
total dissolution of Czechoslovakia (western Slavs) and Yugoslavia
(southern Slavs, in 3 waves), while one state disappeared from Eastern
Europe (DDR) as to strengthen and enlarge the front of Central Europe
(Western Germany). Finally, countless centripetal turbulences severely
affected Eastern Europe following the dissolution of the Soviet Union
(eastern Slavs) on its frontiers.
Irredentism in the UK, Spain, Belgium, France and Italy, or Denmark
(over Faroe Islands and Greenland) is far elder, stronger and deeper.
However, all dissolutions in Eastern Europe took place irreversibly and
overnight, while Atlantic Europe remained intact, with Central Europe
even enlarging territorially and expanding economically.
Deindustrialized, incapacitated, demoralized, over-indebted, re-feudalized, rarified and de-Slavicized
Finally, East is sharply aged and depopulated –the worst of its kind
ever– which in return will make any future prospect of a full and
decisive generational interval simply impossible. Honduras-izationof
Eastern Europe is full and complete. Hence, is it safe to say that if
the post-WWII Soviet occupation of Eastern Europe was overt and brutal,
this one is subtle but subversive and deeply corrosive?
The key (nonintentional) consequence of the Soviet occupation was that
the Eastern European states –as a sort of their tacit, firm but
low-tempered rebellion – preserved their sense of nationhood. However,
they had essential means at disposal to do so: the right to work was
highly illuminated in and protected by the national constitutions, so
were other socio-economic rights such as the right to culture, language,
arts and similar segments of collective nation’s memory. Today’s East,
deprived and deceived, silently witnesses the progressive metastasis of
its national tissue.
Ergo, euphemisms such as countries in transition or new Europe cannot
hide a disconsolate fact that Eastern Europe has been treated for 25
years as defeated belligerent, as spoils of war which the West won in
its war against communist Russia.
It concludes that (self-)fragmented, deindustrialized and re-feudalized,
rapidly aged rarified and depopulated, (and de-Slavicized) Eastern
Europe is probably the least influential region of the world – one of
the very few underachievers. Obediently submissive and therefore, rigid
in dynamic environment of the promising 21st century,
Eastern Europeans are among last remaining passive downloaders and
slow-receivers on the otherwise blossoming stage of the world’s
creativity, politics and economy. Seems, Europe still despises its own
victims…
Terra nullius
Admittedly, by the early 1990s, the ‘security hole’– Eastern Europe, has
been approached in multifold fashion: Besides the (pre-Maastricht EC
and post-Maastricht) EU and NATO, there was the Council of Europe, the
CSCE (after the 1993 Budapest summit, OSCE), the EBRD and EIB. All of
them were sending the political, economic, human dimension, commercial
signals, assistance and expertise. These moves were making both sides
very nervous; Russia becoming assertive (on its former peripheries) and
Eastern Europe defiantly dismissive.[3] Until
this very day, each of them is portraying the NATO enterprise as the
central security consideration: One as a must-go, and another as a
no-go.
No wonder that the absolute pivot of Eastern Europe, and the second
largest of all Slavic states – Ukraine, is a grand hostage of that very
dilemma: Between the eastern pan-Slavic hegemony and western
‘imperialism of free market’.[4] Additionally, the country suffers from the consolidated Klepto-corporate takeover as well as the rapid re-Nazification.
For Ukraine, Russia is a geographic, socio-historic, cultural and
linguistic reality. Presently, this reality is far less reflected upon
than the seducing, but rather distant Euro-Atlantic club. Ukraine for
Russia; it represents more than a lame western-flank’ geopolitical
pivot, or to say, the first collateral in the infamous policy of
containment that the West had continuously pursued against Russia ever
since the 18th century.[5]
For Moscow, Kiev is an emotional place – an indispensable bond of
historio-civilizational attachment – something that makes and sustains
Russia both Christian and European. Putin clearly redlined it: Sudden
annexation of Crimea (return to its pre-1954 status) was an unpleasant
and humiliating surprise that brought a lot of foreign policy hangover
for both the NATO and EU.[6]
Nevertheless, for the Atlantist alarmists (incl. the Partition studies participants and those working for the Hate industry),
military lobbyists and other cold-war mentality ‘deep-state’ structures
on all sides, this situation offers a perfect raison d’etre.
Thus drifting chopped off and away, a failed state beyond rehabilitation,[7] Ukraine
itself is a prisoner of this domesticated security drama. Yet again,
the false dilemma so tragically imploded within this blue state, of a
50:50 polarized and deterritorialized population, over the question
where the country belongs – in space, time and side of history.
Conclusively, Eastern Europe is further twisting, while gradually
combusted between Ukrainization and Pakistanization.[8] The
rest of Europe is already shifting the costs of its own foreign policy
journey by ‘fracking’ its households with a considerably (politically)
higher energy bills.
Author
is chairperson and professor in international law and global political
studies, Vienna, Austria. He has authored six books (for American and
European publishers) and numerous articles on, mainly, geopolitics
energy and technology. For the past decades, he has over 1,200 hours of
teaching on the subject International Law and Relations (including
lecturing in both Kiev and Moscow universities and Diplomatic Academy).
[1] Annotated
from one of my earlier writings, it states as following: “…Early
Russian state has ever since expanded north/ northeast and eastward,
reaching the physical limits of its outreach by crossing the Bering
straits (and the sale of Russian Alaska to the USA in 1867). By the late
17th and early 18th century,
Russia had begun to draw systematically into European politico-military
theatre. (…) In the meantime, Europe’s universalistic empire dissolved.
It was contested by the challengers (like the Richelieu’s France and
others–geopolitical, or the Lutheran/Protestant – ideological), and
fragmented into the cluster of confronted monarchies, desperately trying
to achieve an equilibrium through dynamic balancing. Similar political
process will affect Russian universal empire only by late 20th century,
following the Soviet dissolution. (…) Not fully accepted into the
European collective system before the Metternich’s Holy Alliance, even
had its access into the post-Versailles system denied, Russia was still
not ignored like other peripheral European power. The Ottomans,
conversely, were negated from all of the security systems until the very
creation of the NATO (Republic of Turkey). Through the pre-emptive
partition of Poland in the eve of WWII, and successful campaigns
elsewhere in Eastern Europe, Bolshevik Russia expanded both its
territory and its influence westwards. (…) An early Soviet period of
Russia was characterized by isolated bilateral security arangements,
e.g. with Germans, Fins, Japanese, etc. The post WWII days have brought
the regional collective system of Warsaw Pact into existence, as to
maintain the communist gains in Europe and to effectively oppose
geopolitically and ideologically the similar, earlier formed, US-led
block. Besides Nixon’s reapproachment towards China, the collapse of the
Soviet Union was the final stage in the progressive fragmentation of
the vast Sino-Soviet Communist block (that dominated the Euroasian land
mass with its massive size and centrality), letting Russia emerge as the
successor. The sudden ideological and territorial Soviet break-up,
however, was followed by the cultural shock and civil disorder, painful
economic and demographic crisis and rapidly widening disparities. All
this coupled with the humiliating wars in Caucasus and elsewhere, since
the centripetal and centrifugal forces of integration or fragmentations
came into the oscillatory play. Between 1989 and 1991, communist rule
ended in country after country and the Warsaw Pact officially dissolved.
Subsequently, the Gorbachev-Jeltsin Russia experienced the greatest
geopolitical contraction of any major power in the modern era and one of
the fastest ever in history. Still, Gorbachev-Jeltsin tandem managed to
(re-)brand themselves domestically and internationally – each got its
own label of vodka…” (Verticalization of Historical Experiences: Europe’s and Asia’s Security Structures – Structural Similarities and Differences, Crossroads – the Macedonian Foreign Policy Journal, 4 (1), page 111-112, M-MFA 2008)
[2] Ethnically,
linguistically and religiously one of the most homogenous countries of
Europe, Poland in its post-communist concepts reinvigorates the faith
(as being, past the days of Tadeusz Mazowiecki, massively
de-Slavicized). No wonder as the Polish-born Karol Józef Wojtyła served
the Roman Curia as Pontifex Maximus from
1978, to be replaced by the German-born Joseph Ratzinger in 2005.
Prizing Roman-Catholicism over ethnic and linguistic roots, even harshly
denouncing any Slavic sentiment as a dangerous roter russischer Panslawismus,
‘fortress’ Poland effectively isolates itself on a long-run as none of
its neighbors is Catholic. To the contrary, the four fifths of its
land-borders are shared with other Slavic states. To externally
mobilize, the elites (in any Eastern European state) would need an
appealing intellectual case – not a mare ethno-religious chauvinism. One
of the leading Croatian thinkers, Domagoj Nikolic says: “Austrian
Catholicism is not anti-Germanic, but Polish is anti-Slavic. Belgian
Catholicism is neither antifascism dismissive nor anti-Francophonic, but
our Croatian Catholicism is very anti-Slavic and is antifascism
trivializing… That undeniably leads us to conclude that (Slavic) Eastern
Europe suffers the authenticity deficit…Only the immature nations can
suffer such a historical disorientation.”
[3] Since
the end of WWII in the Old Continent, there was no other external
military interventions but to the Europe’s East. To be accurate, in the
NATO history (nearly as double longer than the history of the Warsaw
pact), the only two interventions of that Block ever conducted in Europe
were both taking place solely on Eastern European soil. While the two
Russian (covert) interventions since the end of the Cold War aimed at
its strategic neighborhood (former Soviet republics, heavily inhabited
by ethnic Russian; Abkhazia-South Ossetia and Crimea-East Ukraine), and
were (unsuccessfully) justified as the encirclement preemption, the
US-led NATO intervened overtly. In both NATO cases (Bosnia and
Serbia-Kosovo), it was well beyond any membership territory, and short
of any UN-endorsed mandate, meaning without a real international
legitimacy. “Humanitarian intervention in Kosovo was never exactly what
it appeared… It was a use of imperial power to support a
self-determination claim by a national minority”– wrote Michael
Ignatieff about the 1990s Balkans events, as fresh and accurate as if
reporting was from Sevastopol in spring 2014.
[4] This is further burdened by the imperialism in a hurry –
an inflammable mix of the Lithuanian-Polish past traumas and German
‘manifest destiny’ of being historically yet again ill-fated; impatient for quick results – simply, unable to capitalize on its previous successes.
[5] Does
the declining big power of a lost ideological grip, demoralized, with a
disfranchised, ageing and rarified population, of the
primary-commodities export driven, but shrinking economy need to be
contained? Hence, what is the origin of anxity: facts or confrontational
nostaligia? The chief American chief Sovietologies grip, ory-comodity
driven economy Sovietologist, George Kennan warned about the NATO
expansion already in 1998: “I think it is a tragic mistake. Russians
will gradually react quite adversely and it will affect their policies”.
In that very interview, Kennan predicted that the NATO Eastern
enlargement will provoke a major crisis in Europe with a hawks than
‘arguing’ a self-fulfilling prophecy “you see, we always told you that
is how the Russian are”. Apparently, the Russian red-red line is Georgia
and Ukraine. Kremlin kept stressing that calmly, but repeatedly for
nearly 20 past years. Eventually, Georgia was territorially and
politico-economically wrecked as a functioning, viable state before it
was allowed to become a Western stronghold in Russia’s backyard. Georgia
of that 2008. is an indication enough of how Ukraine – which is even a
front-yard for Russia – might end up beyond 2014.
[6] Putin’s
“project is national, not imperial…to modernize Russia which, like any
other state, has security concerns…” – fairly admits former French
Minister of Defense Jean-Pierre Chevènement and confesses: “The pursuit
of this conflict may turn Ukraine into a lasting source of conflict
between the EU and Russia. Through a widely echoed ideological crusade,
the US is attempting both to isolate Russia and to tighten its control
over the rest of Europe”. /Chevènement, J-P. (2015), No Need for this Cold War, Le Monde diplomatique July 2015 (page 18)/
[7] By
the most scholarly accounts, Ukraine is the world champion in the
re-feudalisation of its society. It goes well beyond pure income levels
and its rampant systematic distribution inequality (inequality
extraction ratio). Unfortunatelly, Ukraine is the world champion in
other endemic disproportionality, too – in an asymmetry of wealth
disposal and in a speed of acquiring it. The combined wealth of
Ukraine’s 50 riches oligarchs equalled 85% of Ukraine’s (pre-war) GDP.
Oligarhs needed only 16 years to accumulate it (1991-2007). Even the Economist (a
well-informed magazine of a wealthy class-tolerant, neoliberal
orientation) questioned these practices, as stretching far beneath a
classical criminal activity and representing – in fact – a warfare of
elites against its own population (undeclared gerila war). The Magazine concluded: ‘Ukraine today is as our western societies would be without checks-and-balances mechanism’.
[8] Ukrainization could be attributed to eastern and western Slavs– who are fighting distinctions without significant difference. Pakistanization itself
should describe the southern Slavs’ scenery: In lieu of truth and
reconciliation, guilt is offered as a control mechanism, following the
period of an unchecked escalation, ranging from a
hysteria-of-a-small-difference to a crime -of-otherness purge. Both
models share about the same ending result: a self-trivialization,
barbarization and re-feudalization.
