The Rise of the Victim-State

T. Belman.   Retired Swiss Military-Intelligence Officer: ‘Is it Possible to Actually Know What Has Been And is Going on in Ukraine?’ I sent this very important article to my friend Alex Markovsky. as I thought he would be very interested in it. He holds degrees in economics and political science from the University of Marxism-Leninism in Moscow

He wrote back to inform me that he wrote a very similar sentiment five years ago.

His article reminded me of the satirical movie, The Mouse  That Roared. In it, a small principality, in dire financial straits, decided to declare war on the United States, then surrender, taking advantage of American largesse toward its defeated enemies to rebuild the defeated nation’s economy.

By Alexander G. Markovsky, AM THINKER     Mar 26, 2017

The future of American-Russian relations and the balance of power in Europe will – at least in the short run – depend on a resolution of the Ukrainian conflict.

While  President Trump expresses the desire to have good relations with Russia, his UN envoy Nikki Haley stated, “The United States continues to condemn and call for an immediate end to the Russian occupation of Crimea.” She added, “Crimea is a part of Ukraine. Our Crimea-related sanctions will remain in place until Russia returns control over the peninsula to Ukraine”– the administration unaware, apparently, that the historical experience of “return” is hardly a Russian specialty.

Impervious to political reality, the Trump administration refuses to recognize that Crimea has   turned its clocks to Moscow time, both literally and figuratively. It has joined Russia, and regardless of Western sanctions and condemnations, there is no turning back of this historic clock; Crimea is irreversible and non-negotiable. But the Eastern Ukraine is open to negotiations and an amicable resolution.

This is one of many ethnic conflicts that have become increasingly common in the Post-Cold War period. For many countries arbitrarily created after the Second Word War the unifying principle was the power of the state that forced citizens to tolerate a plethora of incompatibilities. Proliferations of democratic principles resulted in weakening or overturn of the authoritarian regimes and absence of enforcement gave rise to nationalistic aspirations that challenge the cohesiveness of the established order, in some instances, to the point of no order at all.

In Ukraine, which prior to the disintegration of the Soviet Union had never set up an independent government, resentments and grievances suppressed by the power of the Soviet state broke out into a civil war.

Usually in conflicts, each side is pursuing an outcome incompatible with the strategic ambition of its adversary, but the Ukrainian saga has an interesting twist to it. President Obama, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande, totally ignorant of how this Eastern European game is played, were deceived by both their “sworn friend” Petro Poroshenko and their professed adversary Vladimir Putin. Despite their differences, Poroshenko and Putin converge on one important aspect: neither of them wants Eastern Ukraine. Putin could occupy Eastern Ukraine within 48 hours and face no resistance. Poroshenko could accept a limited autonomy for the belligerent East, which it demanded from the outset, and avoid a bloody conflict altogether.

But the rulers in Kiev are not motivated by “one country, one destiny”; they are not motivated by concern for the stability and integrity of Ukraine; rather, they are moved by billions in financial aid. The aspiration of Poroshenko and his associates is to become in some sense the Palestinians of Europe, victims of Russian aggression, just as the actual Palestinians are perceived as being victims of Israel. Defeated by superior force, they want the EU to adopt them and make Ukraine a black hole for billions of dollars and euros, with no end in sight.

The fact is that despite international support, Kiev lacks the means to preserve Ukraine as a unitary state. Therefore, Poroshenko’s survival is predicated on defeat. Just as in the case of the Palestinians, whose every defeat functions as a catalyst to attract worldwide sympathy and international donors, the continuation of hostilities, for Poroshenko, is an inevitable necessity.

To paraphrase Winston Churchill, Poroshenko almost is asking, “What is our aim? It is defeat, defeat at all costs.” The more that Eastern Ukrainian cities are turned into Aleppos and civilians are killed, the less likely it is that Eastern Ukraine will accept any kind of reconciliation with Kiev. The greater the territorial losses, the more Ukrainian soldiers killed, the more victimized Ukrainians are perceived, the better for Poroshenko politically. With little subtlety, he is inciting and manipulating the rivalries between Russia and the United States on behalf of his own agenda.

Putin does not want a devastated Eastern Ukraine as part of Russia either; nor can he afford it. Although two million Eastern Ukrainians have already voted against Kiev with their feet, seeking refuge in Russia, unlike predominantly Russian Crimea, which voted overwhelmingly to join Russia, the binational population of Eastern Ukraine will be hesitant to replace the Ukrainian mess with the uncertainty of joining the Russians’ bedlam and the inevitability of a military draft of their sons into the Russian army. Therefore, integration of Eastern Ukraine into the Russian Federation may be costly and problematic.

Within this context, if the West accepts Crimea as part of Russia and recognizes the independence of Eastern Ukraine, paradoxically, all sides will achieve their respective objectives. The populations of Crimea and Eastern Ukraine will acquire national identity; no more Ukrainian language taught in schools, no more Russian movies translated into Ukrainian and no more worthless Ukrainian hryvnia used as legal tender. Putin gets the United States as a powerful ally in the war against radical Islam. Western Ukraine becomes an orphan of Europe, and Poroshenko and his cronies, who provoked the conflict by declaring their intent to join the EU and NATO, get their payoff – and the EU has to adopt a much smaller country.

Woodrow Wilson would have no difficulty endorsing this approach. Wilsonian principles of national self-determination should apply to Ukraine just as they were applied to Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, Scotland, the Falkland Islands and Cyprus, where, in a very similar situation, restoration of the status quo ante proved to be impossible. Nevertheless, the peaceful coexistence of Greeks and Turks was achieved by partitioning the island. So, the central question in the current situation becomes why do we care if there are two Ukraines – or even three or four?

The West should be open to a genuine reconciliation with Russia as it prepares to play a major  role in the global balance of power. Whether that role is constructive or destructive will depend on whether the vanquished enemy is finally accepted into the family of nations or continues to be treated as the heir to the Soviet Union.

Alexander G. Markovsky (www.alexmarkovsky.com), author of “Liberal Bolshevism: America Did Not Defeat Communism, She Adopted It,” was born and educated in the Soviet Union and now lives in Houston, Texas. He holds degrees in economics and political science from the University of Marxism-Leninism. He is a contributor to FamilySecurityMatters.org and New York Daily News, his work also appears on American Thinker, The Hill, RedState.com, Israpundit.com and WorldNetDaily.com.

April 20, 2022 | 3 Comments »

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  1. This article is complete b____sh______. There was no “civil war” in Ukraine after the fall of the Soviet Union. There were massive public expressions of joy throughout Ukraine when it declared its independence from Russia and the Russian government of the time, headed by Boris Yeltsin, recognized its independence. Porushenko certainly never invited Russian troops into eastern Ukraine. The Ukrainian army fought the Donbass separatists under Porushenko just as they have continued to do so under Zelensky. The separatists, backed by Russian troops made no headway outside of an area about one-third of of the two Donbass provinces, while the Ukrainians controlled two-thirds of these provinces.

    If the people of eastern Ukraine want to be ‘independent” of Ukraine, how can you explain their fierce and determined resistance to the Russian invasion forces in Ukraine? The People of the eastern provinces, including Mariupol, the capital of Donetsk province claimed by the separatists, and Kharkiv? Thr people of eastern Ukraine have definitely not welcomed the Russian invaders, and have shown no interest in being “independent” of “Ukraine,” or much the less being incorporated into Russia.

    Putin’s declared objectives, made explicit in numerous speeches and published articles over the past six months, is not the “independence” of “eastern Ukraine,” as Markovsky claims, but the reincoropatation of all of Ukraine, and all three of the now-independent Balkan states, as well as the a Russian reoccupation of the former Russian satellite states in eastern Europe, that are now members of NATO. Also, a “neutral” Germany that would not be part of NATO.

    I have long suspected that this Markovsky is a Kremlin agent. Israel is one of the few countries allied with the U.S. where Russian agents face no danger of arrest, because the Israeli government is terrified of offending the Russians. So there must be numerous Russian agents operating freely in Israel , which is something they cannot do in Europe, outside of Russia and Byelorussia.

    Ted, Markovsky has been a terrible influence on you. He has persuaded you to believe the falsehood that Russia is Israel’s best friend. This has always been b____sh_____. I hope that some day you will see through this.

  2. Alex Markovsky provides an excellent analysis of the profitability of victimhood. The rise of the victim state is parallel to the rise of the victim citizen in the US. The more “victimized” the claims become, the more competition for victim status, the more accepted the “victims” desired collectivist solution: the transfer of wealth to the declared victim. It is the Hegelian dialectic on steroids. Whether it is countries, groups (BLM), or individual citizens competing for victim status, the problem remains the same. Victimhood by definition is a state of powerlessness. So, by declaring oneself a vicim, one accepts the role of powerlessness and dependency – precisely the objective of the globalists seeking one world government.

    It is an upside-down aspiration to compete for victim status – but the entire Great Reset is an upside-down return to the Old World Order and binary feudal system of rulers and ruled. The globalists play both sides of every war and conflict they foment including the Palestinian/Israeli conflicts, and including the Russia/Ukraine debacle. My only question is what is in it for Putin?

    There is so much disinformation it is hard to tell. But it is my opinion that Putin is a KGB pragmatist who does whatever is in his own self-interest. He participates in the WEF making Moscow the Center for the Fourth Revolution in Russia:
    https://www.weforum.org/press/2021/10/russia-joins-centre-for-the-fourth-industrial-revolution-network/
    Russia Joins Centre for the Fourth Industrial Revolution Network, October 13, 2021

    Then Putin invades Ukraine and his first target is the incriminating US bio-labs – how convenient for Biden/Obama/Clinton. And Zelensky, a tool of the WEF, eliminates the opposing political parties in Ukraine and declares itself Russia’s victim?? I don’t think so, Alex. I think we are looking at more globalist performances of Wag the Dog, with the globalists playing both sides of the Russia/Ukraine conflict. The likely payoff for Putin is the reunification of the USSR under his control – at least temporarily – when the world is carved up into feudal territories.

    Time will tell.