UKRAINE CEASEFIRE IS A LULL
BY VIKAS KHANNA
Diplomatic efforts by Germany and France to stave-off
spiraling crisis in eastern Ukraine have paved way for a ceasefire, but nobody
is sure how long this truce will last. The ceasefire, agreed to by Russia and
Ukraine after a prolonged 16-hour of talks nudged by Germany and France in
Belarus’ capital Minsk, is a lull and is not a guarantee for a secure future.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s comments after the meeting that there is now
a “glimmer of hope” but big hurdles remain speak volumes about the fragility of
the truce. If the Minsk ceasefire collapsed last September, what is the
guarantee that it would succeed this time? How different is the present deal
from the ceasefire agreed to in September? In a nutshell, the crisis has been
averted and not resolved.
The deal, which comes into effect from this Sunday, proposes
a ceasefire between government forces of Ukraine and rebels, resulting in
withdrawal of heavy weaponry from the frontline. The two sides also agreed to
constitutional reforms which would ensure greater autonomy in eastern
Ukraine.
The new ceasefire line that has been agreed to by Russia,
Ukraine and rebels is the same as the old one. Pro-Russian rebels will lose
some of the territory that they gained recently. So will the government forces.
Not only will they have to withdraw from
the current front line, they will have to let go of the territory that they
lost since January. The key sticking points remain unresolved. What about the
status of Debaltseve, a government-held town encircled by the rebels, and which
was the epicenter of renewed violence. Nineteen soldiers were killed in a
deadly attack by rebels this week. It
has been proposed that further talks will be held on self-rule in parts of
Donetsk and Luhansk held by rebels. Ukraine will get its eastern border back
only if elections are held in Donetsk and Luhansk. But what is the guarantee
that the rebels will accept the verdict as elections are to be held under
Ukrainian law?
It is a deal, which can go wrong, as has happened in the
past.
Germany and France should be commended for their week-long
diplomatic efforts for helping seal the agreement. European leaders were skeptical of the efforts
of German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Holland
wanting to prevent escalation of the conflict which threatened to blow into a
full-scale war. Clashes between government forces and rebels have left more
than 5,350 killed and over 12,000 wounded in eastern Ukraine.
The deal also offers relief to US President Barack Obama,
who was under tremendous pressure back home and from NATO to act more
resolutely after western sanctions failed to act as deterrent. NATO military commander U. S. General Philip
Breedlove’s comments last week that the West should use “all the tools in the
tool bag” had created a flutter as several European leaders were opposed to
sending heavy weaponry to Ukraine.
The proposed move to arm Ukraine’s military had also exposed
a rift between the US and its European allies who were of the opinion that such
a move would not only be counter-productive but lead to escalation of the
conflict.
The truce is also a major relief for President Vladimir
Putin, who, otherwise, faced major sanctions later this week had the talks
failed. Russian economy is in the
crosshairs. Russian GDP is expected to contract by around four percent this
year, making it the worst economy of the big four emerging markets. The western
sanctions coupled with plunging oil prices have weakened the ruble, pushing up
the rate of inflation. The Russian currency has fallen around 46 percent
against the dollar in the last six months.
The relations between Russia and the West have reached to a
post-Cold War low with western countries accusing President Putin of arming and
funding pro-Russian rebels who have launched a major offensive in January this
year. Moscow denies West’s charges. The
rebels have made major advances in Ukraine since then holding on to large
swathes of territory in Donetsk and Luhansk. A further build-up of Russian
troops on the shared border in April sparked concern in the West of another
annexation after Russia seized Crimea last year.
The chances of a breakthrough depend largely on a durable
ceasefire. And that is possible if Russia and the West succeed in bridging the
trust deficit. As finer points emerge from the meeting, it appears that the
intention was not to find a permanent solution to the crisis but to see that
the situation does not escalate further.
The end result of the four-party meeting is nothing but a messy
status-quo.
One would recall that exactly 100 years ago, events in
Eastern Europe triggered the First World War. None at that time thought that
crisis would lead to war. A century later, the focus is again on Eastern
Europe, the site of a regional conflict that threatens to entangle the world’s
leading powers. As the world is observing the hundred years of the First World
War, it is incumbent upon everybody to see that history does not get repeated.
(ENDS)
:Those who forget history are condemned to repeat it"
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