Weekly Opinion Editorial
UKRAINE EXPLAINED
by Steve Fair
Ukraine is a country in eastern Europe. It is slightly smaller than Texas in land
mass and has a population of 41 million people.
It borders Russia to the east and Poland and Hungary to the west. Ukraine was a part of the USSR, but gained its
independence in 1991, following the dissolution of the Soviet Union. Ukraine is the poorest country in Europe and
suffers from a high poverty rate with wide spread corruption.
Ukraine maintained a friendly relationship
with Russia until 2014, when Russia, under Vladimir Putin, ‘annexed’ Crimea, a
peninsula along the northern coast of the Black Sea and a part of Ukraine. Crimea has a population of 2.4 million, made
up of mostly ethnic Russians and Ukrainians.
After the Crimea invasion, Ukrainians hearts
hardened against Russia and Putin. They
became friendlier to NATO and the western world. Why does Putin want Ukraine? Three reasons:
First, it’s about geography. Moscow needs warm water open sea lanes. Russia’s inability to have direct access to
the oceans have long been a weakness.
Ukraine, with eighteen sea ports, has the most powerful sea port
potential among all countries of the Black Sea. In the event of a war, the Russian navy currently
can’t get to the Baltic Sea because NATO controls the Skagerrak Strait. In many ways, Russia is land locked and Putin
needs Ukraine for military and commercial shipping reasons.
Second, it’s about natural resources. Ukraine has high concentrations of coal,
iron, oil, natural gas, manganese, graphite, titanium, nickel, and timber. For
centuries, Ukraine has been known as the ‘breadbasket of Europe.’ It is home to twenty five percent of the
world’s super-fertile or black soil. An
area larger than Italy is currently cultivated.
Ukraine is among the top three grain exporters in the world. Ukraine is
one of the top three exporters of organic products to the EU. In the past 30 years they have struggled
getting their products to other countries, but that is changing. Putin needs Ukraine to feed Russia and to provide
oil/gas and other resources to Russia.
Third, Putin believes Ukraine is a part of
Russian. “As
the wall that has emerged in recent years between Russia and Ukraine, between
the parts of what is essentially the same historical and spiritual space, to my
mind is our great common misfortune and tragedy. These are, first and foremost,
the consequences of our own mistakes made at different periods of time. But
these are also the result of deliberate efforts by those forces that have
always sought to undermine our unity,” Putin wrote last year. He has called Ukraine the ‘crown jewel of
Russia.’ Putin believes it is his
duty to reunite the old USSR. He wants
that as his legacy and he certainly doesn’t want a member of NATO on his border
(Ukraine is not a member of NATO yet).
If Putin invades Ukraine, it will not be a
cake walk. Ukraine has the largest
military force in Europe- over 200,000 soldiers—and they have vowed to
fight. “Do
not doubt, the Armed Forces are absolutely ready to fight back and will not
give up the Ukrainian lands!” Ukrainian
Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov said. Putin faces
opposition at home on the planned seizing of Ukraine. Back in 2014, he faced opposition when he
annexed Crimea.
Unfortunately, public opinion doesn’t mean
much in a totalitarian, authoritarian, repressive form of government where elections
are rigged, leaders don’t follow founding documents and do what they want. Americans are learning to relate.
No comments:
Post a Comment