THE RATIONAL ARGUMENTATOR |
Ukraine’s “Territorial Integrity” is Not Worth a Single
Human Life |
"Who likes it when a nation
shoots at its own people? We weren’t against being part of
Ukraine, but after the latest events, we’ve changed our
minds." ~Natalia Vasilieva, Retiree in Donetsk
On May 11, 2014, residents of
the Donetsk and Luhansk regions voted in favor of
independence from Ukraine. Irrespective of questions
regarding the legality of this referendum (which can
similarly be raised regarding the legality of Ukraine’s
current completely unelected interim government)
and the possibly biased sample of voters who turned out as
compared to the general population of the regions, two facts
are undeniable: (1) the turnout was massive, as any glimpse
at the many images and videos of the referendum would show,
and (2) the voters were overwhelmingly peaceful civilians,
merely seeking to express their points of view. A third fact
must also confront any reasonable observer of these events
in the West: while the voters behaved peacefully, the
interim government of President Oleksandr Turchynov and
Prime Minister Arseniy Yatseniuk sent troops who fired on
crowds of civilians.
NBC News—no propaganda outlet
of the Putin regime—reported that soldiers from the Ukrainian “national
guard” fired on crowds of peaceful voters in Krasnoarmeisk,
Ukraine, and at least two people were observed killed.
Irrespective of whether or not a referendum has legitimacy,
the act of voting is the act of marking a piece of paper
with one’s choice. Casting a ballot, in a valid election or
not, is purely an act of free speech. How could casting a
vote even remotely be equated to aggression? How could it
justify the taking of a human life in any sane, rational
person’s mind? How is it that Western politicians fail to
denounce the Turchynov/Yatseniuk government’s brazen use of
force in reaction to a peaceful, civil action? Has the
concept of free speech lost all sanctity for Western leaders
as well?
Moreover, how is the attack on
crowds of civilians by the Ukrainian “national guard”
morally different from the Viktor Yanukovych regime’s
attacks on peaceful protesters during its last days? The
crowds in Krasnoarmeisk consisted entirely of unarmed
civilians trying to cast their ballots. Irrespective of
whether or not some of the separatists in the Donetsk and
Luhansk region are agents of Vladimir Putin’s regime—as
has been alleged—can gatherings of thousands of civilians
be said to consist entirely or even largely
of Russian special agents or their peons? Or is it
likelier that Natalia Vasilieva is right and these crowds
are made up of ordinary civilians who originally were not
averse to remaining aligned with Ukraine—until the
Ukrainian government sent troops, including recruited “civil
activists” from known fascist and neo-Nazi groups such as
Right Sector (some of whose high-ranking members
are also officials in this interim government, as I have
written earlier), to kill them and raze their homes?
Indeed, as reported by the
New York Times, it was a unit staffed by Right Sector “activists,”
the Dnepr Brigade (or Dnieper Brigade or Dnieper Battalion),
that opened fire on voters in Krasnoarmeisk.
It was also Right Sector
“activists” who
trapped tens of initially peaceful pro-Russian
protesters in the House of Trade Unions in Odessa on May 2,
2014, and threw grenades and Molotov cocktails inside to set
it on fire, burning 40 protesters alive—not the
same protesters who initially attacked a Ukrainian unity
march that day. The Turchynov/Yatseniuk government’s
shameful subsequent report on the event blamed the
victims, alleging that one of the building’s occupants had
dropped a Molotov cocktail onto the roof, thereby setting
off the blaze. Even if this happened, how does it
remotely excuse the murderous intentions and behaviors of
the Right Sector thugs who were
caught on video, throwing fiery projectiles at the
building? If an armed assailant repeatedly fires at and
injures his intended victim, but fails to kill him because
the victim dies of a slip and fall in the meantime, does
this excuse the assailant from the charge of murder?
Turchynov and Yatseniuk are
resorting to forming military units consisting of Right
Sector thugs, because sane, reasonable people refuse to
fight for them. This is also why the Turchynov/Yatseniuk
regime undid Viktor Yanukovych’s sole good action and
reinstituted military conscription for young men aged 18
to 25. As I
wrote earlier, any government that treats its people as
disposable cannon fodder against their will is an evil
government that is not worth fighting for.
Conscription is murder by lottery, and civilized people
can only hope that Ukraine’s young men will engage in mass
civil disobedience and dodge this draft in the hopes of
preserving their lives and moral innocence. Those Ukrainians
who do join the military would do well to follow the example
of earlier armored columns that were sent to the Eastern
regions and were stopped in their tracks by outraged
civilians telling them to lay down their arms and go home.
Many of these initial waves of soldiers—the ones sent
before the Right Sector units were deployed—saw the folly
of fighting their own people and relented.
To all Ukrainians who respect
peace and civilization, I say: withdraw from all military
operations, refuse to obey your criminal government, and
pursue peaceful commerce and amicable daily interactions
with your fellow humans—no matter what their language,
ethnicity, or spoken political beliefs! No “territorial
integrity” is worth the sacrifice of moral integrity, and
certainly not the life of a single actual living human
being. If a “united Ukraine” can only be preserved through
conflagrations and rivers of blood, then it is not worth
preserving! What is a set of boundaries drawn on a map
ordained by the United Nations (which in many cases does not
correspond to de facto political control in any
event), compared to a conscious, reasoning being with a rich
and irreplaceable internal universe? Borders have been drawn
and redrawn time and again throughout history, but a life,
once lost, can never be regained.
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“To all Ukrainians who respect
peace and civilization, I say: withdraw from all military
operations, refuse to obey your criminal government, and
pursue peaceful commerce and amicable daily interactions
with your fellow humans—no matter what their language,
ethnicity, or political beliefs!” |
In the West, all too many
leaders and pundits—even some libertarians!—would cast
Vladimir Putin’s regime as the antagonist and the culprit
for the entirety of the violence that is transpiring in
Ukraine. While I have few kind words for Putin, and there is
much to condemn about Putin’s own violations of the rights
of Russian citizens, it does not appear that the blame
placed on him for this crisis corresponds to his actual
offenses. As Ron Paul
points out, “The US demanded that Russian President
Putin stop eastern Ukraine from voting on autonomy, and last
week the Russian president did just that: he said that the
vote should not be held as scheduled. The eastern Ukrainians
ignored him and said they would hold the vote anyway. So
much for the US claims that Russia controls the opposition
in Ukraine.”
And yet Western leaders continue to threaten
Russia with escalating economic sanctions over the outcome
of the referendum, even though Putin expressly urged
delaying it! Even from a sheer pragmatic standpoint, this is
an exceedingly unwise tactic; Putin might come to recognize
that even his attempts at defusing the situation or
disentangling Russia from it would not affect the West’s
response, and he would see no reason not to
escalate the crisis, if de-escalation does not alleviate any
of the punishments that Western governments have in store
for him.
Without the resounding
endorsements and material support—economic bailouts and
shipments of physical resources, paid for by Western
taxpayers’ dollars—from the governments of the United
States and the countries of the European Union, the
Turchynov/Yatseniuk regime would not be able to sustain its
crackdowns on its own people. Why do the United States and
the European Union support this criminally negligent,
civilian-killing government? While I was sympathetic to the
deserved overthrow of Viktor Yanukovych, I am deeply ashamed
of the US government for aiding the thugs who unfortunately
replaced him.
Turchynov and Yatseniuk are doing to the
population of Eastern Ukraine exactly what Yanukovych did to
the Euromaidan protesters who disagreed with his decision to
abandon a proposed trade agreement with the European Union.
This time, however, the Western governments have taken the
side of the oppressors, just because they are perceived to
be on “our” side rather than “their” side—“they” being the
Russians in the eyes of all those who have not realized that
the Cold War is long over and that Cold War thinking must be
resolutely abandoned if we are to avoid a hot war that could
engulf all of humankind and spoil our chances at achieving
radical abundance and unparalleled health and prosperity
through technological progress during the next several
decades.
To ensure that the progress of
human civilization continues without catastrophic setbacks,
the crisis in Ukraine must remain localized. Only continued
intervention by Western powers would allow it to spread
beyond Ukraine’s current borders. It is true that, without
American and EU support, the Turchynov/Yatseniuk regime will
probably fall—but this will largely be achieved by
Ukrainians themselves. Putin might sweep in later and occupy
Eastern Ukraine—either annexing it as he did with Crimea (even
though he has denied any intent to do so), or treating it
much like the autonomous regions of South Ossetia, Abkhazia,
and Transdniestria, which broke away from Georgia and
Moldova and are currently occupied by Russian troops.
If the aftermath of the Crimean annexation is an indicator, this
might actually result in fewer civilian deaths than
a continuation of the status quo. Also, it need not affect
life in the West, or continued efforts by civilians in the
West to innovate technologically and raise human standards
of living, by one iota. Why does anyone need to lose sleep
over the existence of quasi-independent republics named
Donetsk, Luhansk, or even
Novorossiya? Are they any more threatening to Americans—of whom
five-sixths cannot point Ukraine out on a map anyway—than South Ossetia, Abkhazia, and Transdniestria are today?
What is threatening to Americans is their own
government’s foreign policy, intervening in Ukraine
apparently just to oppose any potential expansion of Putin’s
power and Russia’s sphere of influence, without any
compelling argument for American “national security” to be
made under any remotely credible interpretation of that
nebulous concept.
A month ago, I
wrote that the worst scenario in Ukraine would be an
escalation of military conflict, which was unfortunately
beginning to occur at the time as the “anti-terrorist”
operation was being launched by the Turchynov/Yatseniuk
government. At present we clearly see the bloody results of
this ongoing operation, as more civilians perish by the day.
Of course, unleashing the Ukrainian military and
ultra-nationalists within the Donetsk and Luhansk region
could not be confined to dislodging armed separatists, and
it has turned into a war against the civilians of Eastern
Ukraine. Perhaps Turchynov and Yatseniuk did not want this,
but they are now desperate, just like Yanukovych was in
February 2014, and they see no other way to remain in power.
They know that, if they lose, their fates will be at least
as unpleasant as that of Yanukovych, and so they are willing
to sacrifice the entire country to protect their hold on
power.
The Western governments need to cut off the lifeline
they have given to this criminal regime. While the result
would not be optimal from the standpoint of any cosmic
justice, any local “solution” to this crisis would certainly
be no worse than any “solution” that could be achieved
through Western intervention. Furthermore, the effect of
complete non-intervention at confining the Ukrainian crisis
to a local one would be incalculably beneficial in avoiding
the risk of a broader war. Let us look upward to technology
and human ingenuity as the path to solving humankind’s
problems, and avoid getting bogged down in the sordid muck
of Ukraine’s crisis. A bright future requires and demands
peace today.
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From the same author |
▪
War is the Worst Choice for Ukraine and the World
(no
321 – April 15, 2014)
▪
Liberty or Death: Why Libertarians Should Proclaim
That Death is Wrong
(no
320 – March 15, 2014)
▪
Putting Innovation to a Vote? Majoritarian Processes
versus Open Playing Fields
(no
319 – February 15, 2014)
▪
Cryptocurrencies as a Single Pool of Wealth: Thoughts
on the Purchasing Power of Decentralized Electronic Money
(no
318 – January 15, 2014)
▪
Meaningful and Vacuous “Privilege”
(no
317 – December 15, 2013)
▪
More...
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On the same
subject |
▪
War is the Worst Choice for Ukraine and the World
(no
321 – April 15, 2014)
▪
No Excuses for Militant Barbarism in Ukraine—But the West
Should Stay Out
(no
322 – May 15, 2014)
▪
Military Conscription Shows the Evil of Ukraine’s Government
(no
322 – May 15, 2014)
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First written appearance of the
word 'liberty,' circa 2300 B.C. |
Le Québécois Libre
Promoting individual liberty, free markets and voluntary
cooperation since 1998.
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