COMMENTARY
A "heretic's" view on the twisting of Ukraine on arms
by Frank Gaffney Jr.
Arguably, among the most important of the many bits of unfinished foreign policy business Bill Clinton will inherit from George Bush is the question of relations with Ukraine. If the incoming administration follows the lead of the outgoing one in this area, however, chances are bilateral ties will become dangerously strained. If so, the principal beneficiary will the ascendant hard-liners in Moscow.
The Bush administration is currently using intense diplomatic, financial and political pressure to try to coerce Ukraine to turn over to Russia strategic nuclear weapons Kyyiv inherited with the break-up of the old Soviet empire. The reasons for such heavy-handedness are said to include concerns that:
Are these concerns well-grounded? Do they justify the kind of knee-breaking the Bush team is engaged in? And, more to the point, if the present U.S. approach ultimately succeeds, will this country's long-term strategic interests be advanced - or will they actually be disserved?
My own heretical view is that the answer to each of these questions may be "No." At the very least, the assumptions that have prompted the Bush administration to answer them in the affirmative should be analyzed and debated more carefully than they have been to date - certainly before the Clinton administration starts shaping policies predicated upon them, too.
For starters, Ukraine is one of the most important countries of the "post-Cold War" Europe. Its geographic size (equivalent to France), its rich agricultural potential, large (if, as with all of Soviet industry) overly militarized industrial base and its well-educated and reasonably productive population would make Ukraine a significant player even without nuclear weapons. What is more, Ukraine also has, at present, physical control over the world's third largest inventory of strategic arms.
Incredibly, despite these factors, U.S. policy toward Ukraine has not changed appreciably from the days when it was a vassal state of the Soviet empire. This policy was best characterized - even caricatured - by President Bush's notorious "Chicken Kiev" speech in July 1991, a month before the coup in Moscow.
On that occasion, he questioned the sanity of Ukrainians who yearned for independence from Moscow and strenuously urged that Ukraine give up its nationalist aspirations and remain part of the Soviet Union. Seemingly spiteful at having been proven wrong, the Bush administration has scarcely deviated in the post-Gorbachev period from its Moscow-centric approach. When Ukraine is considered at all, it appears to be as an afterthought - or, worse, as a nasty impediment to smooth relations with the Kremlin.
This attitude has not been improved by Kyyiv's mounting unease over political developments in Russia. Washington has been infuriated that its own dubious arms control agenda might be jeopardized by Ukrainians challenging the wisdom of surrendering their stockpile of powerful nuclear arms to a historical enemy - particularly one increasingly dominated by the sorts of people who have previously used military power to enslave Ukraine.
Whether the United States likes it or not, Ukraine has serious and, to a considerable extent, legitimate concerns about Russia's future course. Particularly with the ascendancy of enemies of structural reform in Moscow, Ukrainians have ample grounds for adopting a cautious attitude toward Western-promoted policies that may, at best, reduce Kyyiv's negotiating leverage and, at worst, put its sovereignty at risk.
The time has come to challenge the assumption that U.S. and Western interests will necessarily be best served by insisting that Ukraine turn over all remaining, longer-range nuclear weapons to Russia. An independent, strong Ukraine may in fact prove to be the best bulwark against revanchism from Moscow - something we have as much to fear as do the Ukrainians. Kyyiv's continued physical control of nuclear arms may prove a deterrent to renascent aggressiveness in Russian foreign policy.
At the very least, before a new U.S. administration takes up the Bush team's cudgel against Kyyiv, it must demonstrate that the strategic implications of disarming Ukraine have been thought through. If it does so, the conclusions just may be that renewed militarism is on the rise in Russia - whether Ukraine retains its nuclear weapons or not, that the reductions called for in START I and II are not likely to assure the desired stability or U.S. deterrent capability in the face of those developments in Moscow, and that the proliferation of nuclear weapons is a function of the appetites and resourcefulness of people like Saddam Hussein or Kim Il-Sung - forces not appreciably influenced by ineffectual, unverifiable treaties or well-intentioned breast-beating from Washington.
Frank J. Gaffney Jr. is the director of the Center for Security Policy and a columnist for The Washington Times, where this commentary was first published. It is reprinted in The Weekly with the author's permission.
(Editor's note: The spelling of the capital city of Ukraine was changed in this column to Kyyiv to reflect The Weekly's transliteration policy.)
Copyright © The Ukrainian Weekly, January 17, 1993, No. 3, Vol. LXI
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