I.P.O. Information Service |
News Release, 23 September 2022
INSTITUTE FOR CULTURAL DIPLOMACY
Washington DC / Berlin
Grave
Escalation in the Russia-Ukraine Conflict: from “Grain Diplomacy” to
an All-Out War
5 Questions to Prof. Dr. Hans Köchler
Vienna; 23rd September 2022
Mark Donfried: This week President Vladimir Putin has made
a public speech (in delay of one day) where he informed the world that
Russia will now partially mobilize the reserve military forces and
former soldiers to engage in the conflict in the Ukraine. At the same
time, it was announced that a referendum would be made in several
regions of the occupied Ukraine with the question if the citizens are
asking to be annexed to the Russian Federation. With regards to that,
President Vladimir Putin mentioned that the Russian Military Forces
would protect Russian territory by all means available to them,
implying that this would include also nuclear weapons. He added, it is
not a bluff. The Former President Dmitry Medvedev reiterated this
speech and repeated the threats.
In regards to these serious
developments, we would like to ask Prof. Dr. Hans Köchler the
following 5 questions:
Mark Donfried: Q1. What do these developments mean for
Ukraine, for Europe and for the International Community?
Dr. Hans Köchler: For the people in Ukraine, the developments
mean a further acceleration of the spiral of violence, with even more
loss of life and incalculable risks for the territorial integrity and
the very survival of the country. For Ukraine and Europe together, the
threat of nuclear war – and, with it, the end of prosperity and good
life, which all of us in the West had so long taken for granted – has
suddenly become more than a distant vision of horror. As regards the
International Community, the developments have profoundly destabilized
an already fragile global order. The Russian invasion of Ukraine is
not the first illegal use of force by a permanent member of the United
Nations. Since the foundation of the world organization after World
War II, powerful states have on numerous occasions blatantly violated
international law, invaded countries, occupied or annexed their
territory, or changed their regime. Accordingly, the war of aggression
in Ukraine is nothing new for the International Community, not even as
far as Europe is concerned (if we recall the events of 1999 in
Yugoslavia). However, what is new for the International Community is
the more than hypothetical threat of a global nuclear war – of World
War III. This is the first such constellation since the Cuban Missile
Crisis of 1962.
Mark Donfried: Q2. What should be the reaction of the West
to these developments in the short term and in the long term?
Dr. Hans Köchler: It is not easy to give any meaningful
advice. What seems to be required, first and foremost, is sober,
responsible statesmanship on all sides – and definitely not mass
hysteria of the kind we have seen at the beginning of World War I.
What, under textbook circumstances, could be seen as an act of
collective self-defense of Ukraine with the support of Western
countries, according to Article 51 of the UN Charter, actually has
become a proxy war between the “collective West” and Russia. The
nuclear threat is the direct result of this constellation; it would
not exist if this was a merely bilateral conflict between Russia and
Ukraine. Because of the wider regional and geopolitical implications
of the conflict, the leaders of the Western world are well advised not
to exclusively act along a Manichaean good-evil dichotomy. Fiat
justitia, pereat mundus (“Let there be justice, though the world
perishes”) is not the right maxim in a situation where global peace
may be at stake. If I may allude to the famous distinction of Max
Weber: Gesinnungsethik (ethics of conscience) needs to be
complemented by Verantwortungsethik (ethics of responsibility).
The West should have heeded the advice of an experienced statesman
such as former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, who early on
said that the West should not be swept up in the mood of the moment
and should encourage Ukraine to accept negotiations about a return to
a status quo ante. In Kissinger’s words (May 2022): “Pursuing
the war beyond that point would not be about the freedom of Ukraine,
but a new war against Russia itself.” Unfortunately, the point of no
return may have been reached with the new and rapid escalation on both
sides. The Minsk II agreement of 2015 could have served as basis for a
permanent solution of the conflict. Unfortunately, over seven long
years, the Western mediators (Germany, France) did not do enough to
encourage Ukraine to undertake constitutional reforms and implement
the measures for meaningful autonomy, laid out in Minsk II, in the
Russian-speaking Donbas region. If the only short-term reaction of the
West to the new developments is the imposition of new sanctions plus
additional massive arms shipments, I am afraid the conflict may
quickly get out of control. As Russia will always be the neighbor of
Ukraine and a part of geographical Europe, the West will need to seek
a compromise and should try to convince Ukraine of the need for
a negotiated settlement. This is the only viable long-term perspective
– unless gambling with the fate of the Ukrainian people and the fate
of Europe is seen as an acceptable strategy.
Mark Donfried: Q3. What are the chances that Russia will
use in some capacity, even small capacity, its nuclear arsenal, and if
they decide to use it, what will happen next?
Dr. Hans Köchler: I can only answer the first part of your
question. The second part would be a question for the Oracle of
Delphi. I prefer not to speculate. – Concerning the first part: Russia
has repeatedly said that, according to its nuclear doctrine, it will
use nuclear arms only as a last resort – when it is under nuclear
attack or the very existence of the Russian state is at stake. As
recently as in January this year, President Putin joined the other
leaders of the nuclear-weapon states in the Security Council in
declaring, “that a nuclear war cannot be won and must never by fought”
and “that nuclear weapons … should serve defensive purposes, deter
aggression, and prevent war.” However, this statement – agreed upon
with the US, China, UK, and France – leaves the door open to the
employment of nuclear arms in cases where a state determines that its
very existence is at stake. The Advisory Opinion of the International
Court of Justice on the Legality of the Threat or Use of Nuclear
Weapons (1996) points in the same direction, stating that the Court
cannot definitively say whether the use of nuclear arms “in an extreme
circumstance of self-defence” would be lawful or not. In view of this
ambiguity, and because of the rapid escalation of the conflict in
Ukraine, it is all the more important the nuclear powers of the West,
first and foremost the United States, take seriously the sober warning
of President John F. Kennedy in his famous “Peace Speech” of June
1963: “Above all, (…) nuclear powers must avert those confrontations
which bring an adversary to a choice of either a humiliating retreat
or a nuclear war. To adopt that kind of course in the nuclear age
would be evidence only of the bankruptcy of our policy – or of a
collective death-wish for the world.” This describes exactly the risk
the world is faced with right now, when, instead of pursuing a
negotiated settlement, and encouraging Ukraine to resume the Istanbul
negotiations, Western strategy seems to be to end the conflict by
total military defeat of Russia, and to convince Ukraine that this is
a realistic prospect. Having gone through the experience of the Cuban
Missile Crisis in 1962, President Kennedy knew what he was speaking
about, and understood the importance of Verantwortungsethik
(ethics of responsibility) in situations where the common good of
humankind is at stake.
Mark Donfried: Q4. We are hearing contradictory messages
in Western countries of those who said the conflict should continue as
it is important that Russia will lose, while at the same time, other
voices are calling for the West to act and impose on Ukraine a
compromise through a dialogue with Russia. What is, to your opinion,
the way forward?
Dr. Hans
Köchler: In view of the frightening alternative of all-out war, the
only responsible strategy will be to resume negotiations. I would not
say that the West should “impose” a compromise on Ukraine, the
country under attack. Instead of “promising” Ukraine victory by defeat
of the adversary, thus pushing the country further into the abyss of
war, with no end in sight, the West should do its utmost to
convince Ukraine – a sovereign state that is understandably
disillusioned about the totally ineffective security guarantees of the
“Budapest Memorandum” of 1994 – of the merits of a diplomatically
negotiated solution. Unfortunately, after the escalation of the last
few days, of which Henry Kissinger has warned early on in the
conflict, negotiations will be infinitely more difficult than they
were at the time when negotiations stalled after the Istanbul meeting.
It is to be hoped that both parties, Russia and Ukraine, listen to the
plea of the President of Turkey, Recep Tayyep Erdoğan, at the United
Nations General Assembly earlier this week: “We need a dignified way
out of the crisis. And that can be possible through a diplomatic
solution which is rational, which is fair, and which is applicable.”
That the Turkish President is to be taken seriously in matters of
diplomacy under conditions of war he has convincingly demonstrated in
his facilitating of the grain deal between Ukraine and Russia, and of
yesterday’s prisoner exchange between the two warring parties.
Mark Donfried: Q5. Despite the fact that thousands of
people were killed and wounded in this conflict already and the
enormous damage to infrastructure and housing that was inflicted on
Ukraine, while simultaneously the Western sanctions caused enormous
damage to the Russian economy and its reputation; what can and should
be done diplomatically in order to de-escalate this conflict and to
enable a bridge to a future diplomatic solution?
Dr. Hans Köchler: The two successful agreements I just
mentioned give a hint as to the way forward. While the war was
prosecuted with great vigor on both sides, Turkey was nonetheless able
to bring both parties together for a deal on the export of food from
Ukrainian ports. This was a very complex operation in terms of
diplomacy and logistics. “Grain diplomacy” proved the first – and
remarkable – success story in terms of bringing the adversaries
together for a constructive, namely humanitarian, purpose. So far, the
agreement under UN and Turkish auspices appears to be holding.
Similarly, right during major military escalation this week, the
mediation of Turkey and Saudi-Arabia made it possible to finalize a
highly complex prisoner exchange – almost 300 hundred persons from
both sides – between Ukraine and Russia. This also included the
release of five leaders of the Azov Regiment who will now be in
Turkish custody until the end of the war, with full guarantees by
President Erdoğan. On his Facebook page, President Zelenskyy expressed
his “sincere gratitude to Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, President of Turkey,
for the leading role in this process.” These successful efforts by
states that were able to keep channels of communication open with both
sides have demonstrated that even in times of war deals on the most
sensitive issues are possible on the basis of a rational
assessment of the interests of both parties, i.e. by pursuing
realpolitik – instead of giving in to the emotions of the moment.
It is to be hoped that more leaders will be inspired by the example of
the Turkish President and adopt a balanced attitude that gives them
credibility vis-à-vis both sides of the conflict. One major measure of
de-escalation on the Western side would be to give up its
comprehensive sanctions policy, which many in the targeted country
perceive as collective punishment, and which is increasingly unpopular
also in EU member states because of its backfiring effect. Another
important measure would be to end the boycott of activities and
cooperation in the fields of culture, art and academic activities,
which has unnecessarily poisoned the climate and totally undermined
cultural diplomacy. Culture must not be politicized; it must not
become a tool in the arsenal of hybrid war. When states are involved
in conflict, it is civil society that can build bridges across the
divide. Herein lies the virtue of citizen diplomacy. States should not
interfere in this domain. First and foremost,
however, de-escalation could be achieved by toning down the rhetoric
and propaganda on all sides. As long as the conflict is portrayed as
battle between good and evil, it risks acquiring an end-of-times aura
that must be avoided at all cost. As we have seen in earlier periods
of history, war hysteria of this kind may easily trigger emotions that
can quickly get out of control. Finally, the focus should be shifted
from a proxy war between the collective West and Russia to those core
issues that were at stake between Ukraine and Russia during the
negotiations in Minsk. In their own self-interest, the countries of
Europe should return to the constructive role their representatives –
Germany and France – played as mediators between the two conflicting
parties. The fate of an entire people must not be determined by a
struggle for geopolitical dominance. |
International Progress
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