Image courtesy of Wikimedia and United Nations Cartography Division |
The recent political crisis
in Ukraine is likely to test the limits of the U.S.’s relationship with Russia.
Signs of mounting tension surfaced when earlier this week CNN reported earlier
that Secretary of State Kerry asked the Russians to refrain from using military force in
Ukraine.
The last time a major
political crisis erupted in a former Soviet republic with a large Russian
speaking population, Russia rolled out the tanks to “protect” Russians in the
South Ossetia region of Georgia. There was a lot of international diplomatic
hand wringing back in 2008, but six years later the Russian military is still
present in South Ossetia, although it is authorized through a bi-lateral agreement. Not that Georgia
had a lot of bargaining power during the treaty negotiations.
Today the AP and Reuters are
reporting that Putin is putting the Russian military forces in
western and central Russia on alert.
Ukraine is a physical buffer
between Eastern Europe and Russia. It is also a political and cultural buffer.
The western half of Ukraine looks to Europe and yearns to integrate and share
in its economic success. The Ukrainian-speaking majority considers their
homeland traditionally part of Europe. The eastern half of Ukraine is
predominantly Russian speaking and looks to Russia with a nostalgia for empire.
Ukraine has been in the Russian orbit for most of the past 300 years.
The cool eyes of Vladimir
Putin match the gaze of the Ukrainian Russians and share their nostalgia for
empire. Former Ukrainian president, Viktor Yushchenko, recently forced from
power, was Putin’s man. Putin does not trust the pro-European forces sure to
take over Ukraine, and he seems to have a special dislike for previously
jailed, but recently freed, opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko.
The worry of many in Europe
and the United States is that Russia will use the turmoil in its neighbor to
intervene and force a split between the Russian and Ukrainian halves of the
country. Russia could either absorb the Russian speaking provinces of Ukraine
into Russia, or set up a puppet state, harkening back to the Cold War. Either
way the Russians would be able to move its military forces closer to Europe.
What is not known is how
much influence the U.S, has or is willing to exert in the crisis. The U.S. has
to balance its need for Russian cooperation in Syria, Iran and North Korea with
its other strategic objections to wider expansion of Russian power into Europe.
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Jason McBride is the creator of the Intellectual Ninja and the Scourge of Scoundrels series. He is also the author of Watch Out For Sneaker Waves. He is currently hard at work on his first book of fiction, available Spring 2014.
He is the proud father of four amazing children and the happy husband of one wife. He aspires to be an extreme sleeper.
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