In occupying Ukraine’s southernmost province, the Autonomous Republic
of Crimea, Russian President Vladimir Putin has simultaneously invaded a
neighboring country that poses no security threat to Russia,
unilaterally declared that he has a carte blanche to invade any country
with a Russian population and even invited rogue states to develop
nuclear weapons.
This new Putin Doctrine threatens to undermine the entire global
order. His insistence that he is entitled to violate international law
for the pursuit of his own ends is nothing less than a megalomaniacal
claim that could, if implemented systematically, produce a world war.
Putin justified his invasion of democratic Ukraine on two counts.
First, he claimed that Russians were being threatened by Ukrainian
extremists and that their lives were in danger. There is no shred of
evidence of such a threat. Quite to the contrary, Ukraine’s Russians
have repeatedly stated that they do not need Putin’s protection. Indeed,
even Putin’s own Human Rights Council
concluded on March 2 that there “were no victims and wounded among the civilian population and soldiers” of Crimea.
Perhaps because the grounds for an intervention were preposterous, Russia then
argued
on March 3 that it intervened because Viktor Yanukovich, Ukraine’s
former president, requested that it do so. Russia continues to recognize
Yanukovich, even though he lost all his legitimacy in the course of
four years of mercilessly exploiting Ukraine and its population (the
Ukrainian Treasury is empty, and the country is bankrupt, thanks to
Yanukovich), committed crimes against humanity during the mass violence
against the demonstrators in Kiev (almost 100 civilians were killed) and
abandoned his office when he fled the country.
Even more destabilizing than the invasion of Crimea was Putin’s claim
that he had the right to march into “the territory of Ukraine” in
defense of Russian citizens. Here’s the entire
statement of his request to Russia’s Council of the Federation, which immediately granted him his wishes:
In connection with the extraordinary situation that has developed in Ukraine and the threat to citizens of the Russian Federation, our compatriots,
the personnel of the military contingent of the Russian Federation
Armed Forces deployed on the territory of Ukraine (Autonomous Republic
of Crimea) in accordance with international agreement; pursuant to
Article 102.1 (d) of the constitution of the Russian Federation, I
hereby appeal to the Council of Federation of the Federal Assembly of
the Russian Federation to use the armed forces of the Russian
Federation on the territory of Ukraine until the social and political
situation in that country is normalized. (emphasis added)
The logic at the base of this extraordinary claim, which stands in
violation of every international norm, enables Putin to invade not just
Ukraine but any state with a Russian population. And since it is up to
Putin to define a “threat” to Russians and to determine when the
“situation” is “normalized,” he has in effect given himself a carte
blanche to send troops to Georgia (where he intervened in 2008 on behalf
of South Ossetia and Abkhazia), Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Belarus,
Moldova, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, and
Tajikistan — in other words, into any country of the former Soviet
space. Small wonder that Estonian officials have reacted with special
alarm. They know their country, with a Russian population that accounts
for almost a third of the total population, could easily be next.
Finally, by invading and occupying Ukraine, in violation of the 1994
Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances, Putin has signaled to rogue
states with nuclear ambitions that they are free to develop them in
violation of international norms. In that agreement, Ukraine gave up its
nuclear weapons in exchange for guarantees of its territorial integrity
by the United States, the United Kingdom and Russia. By violating
Ukraine’s territorial integrity, Russia has effectively denounced the
Budapest Memorandum and its broader message that the nuclear powers will
protect states that willfully disarm. As a result, there is no reason
that a rogue states with nuclear aspirations should take the threats or
assurances of nuclear states seriously.
The Putin Doctrine places Russia and Russia’s interests above those
of the international community and world peace. In effect, it has
transformed Putin’s Russia into a rogue state that should be treated
accordingly. Every state near or bordering Russia must recognize that
its security and integrity could be on the line if Putin gets away with
his assault on Ukraine. By the same token, the international community
must recognize that the structure of international relations could
collapse if Putin succeeds. If the international community fails to act,
it will be inviting further expansion, further aggression, and quite
possibly war — by Russia and by states emboldened by Putin’s impudence.
Russia’s violations of the international order should be of particular
concern to the post-colonial states of Africa and Asia, which, like
Ukraine, suffered decades of imperial rule and understand quite well the
importance — as well as the fragility — of internationally accepted
principles of nonaggression, sovereignty and inviolability of borders.
Although the Security Council cannot take forceful measures due to
the certainty of a Russian veto, the United Nations General Assembly has
the authority to act. As Humboldt University’s Christian Tomuschat
points out:
On 3 November 1950, the General Assembly
adopted resolution 377 A (V), which was given the title “Uniting for
Peace” … The most important part of resolution 377 A (V) is section A
which states that where the Security Council, because of lack of
unanimity of the permanent members, fails to exercise its primary
responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security,
the General Assembly shall seize itself of the matter … To date, 10
emergency special sessions have been convened. The first one took place
on the occasion of the 1956 war between Israel and Egypt and the
British-French attack on the Suez Canal zone; the 10th emergency special
session, dealing with the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territory,
started in 1997 and has not yet come to its end …
As Tomuschat notes, the resolution empowers Third World states:
The seventh emergency special session on
Palestine (1980–1982) was in fact initiated by Senegal, the eighth
emergency special session on Namibia (1981) goes back to a request by
Zimbabwe, and the 10th emergency special session was solicited by Qatar
as the chair of the Group of Arab States at the United Nations. It
stands to reason that in such instances the overwhelming weight of Third
World countries can manifest itself to its full extent.
In other words, the international community need not sit idly on the
sidelines and watch Putin destroy the foundations of international
order. It can consider taking important measures within the U.N.
framework to stop Russian aggression before the crisis leads to war in
Ukraine, resulting in thousands of dead, and before Russian land grabs
in the former Soviet republics destabilize Eurasia.
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