The Russian invasion of Ukraine is the second defining moment of the New Cold War in which the world has been plunged since the turn of the century as a result of the US decision to expand NATO. The first defining moment was the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. It ended in complete failure to achieve US imperialist goals. The price that Iraq paid – and is still paying along with neighbouring countries – has been enormous, but the propensity of US imperialism to invade other countries has been severely curtailed, as confirmed by the recent US withdrawal from Afghanistan.
The fate of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will determine the propensity of all other countries for aggression. If it fails in turn, the effect on all global and regional powers will be one of powerful deterrence. If it succeeds, that is if Russia manages to “pacify” Ukraine under Russian boots, the effect will be a major slide of the global situation toward unrestrained law of the jungle, emboldening US imperialism itself and its allies to resume their own aggressive stances.
For now, the heroic resistance of the Ukrainian people has thrown into disarray the whole spectrum of reactionary admirers of Vladimir Putin, from the global hard right and far-right to pseudo-left supporters of Russian imperialism. A victory for Putin in Ukraine would tremendously bolster this range of reactionary politics.
Beyond general condemnation of the Russian invasion, there has also been some confusion in the ranks of the true anti-imperialists about the specific position to take on issues related to the ongoing war. It is important to clarify these issues.
1. It is not enough to call for Russia to stop its attacks and to call for “an immediate ceasefire and a return to the negotiating table”. We did not use such UN-like language when the United States invaded Iraq but demanded the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of the aggressors, as we have done in every instance of invasion of one country by another. Likewise, we should demand not only the cessation of the aggression but also the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of Russian troops from Ukraine.
2. The demand of Russian withdrawal applies to every inch of Ukraine’s territory – including the territory invaded by Russia in 2014. When there is a dispute on the belonging of any territory anywhere in the world – such as Crimea or provinces in Eastern Ukraine, in this instance – we never accept that it be solved by naked force and the law of might, but always only through the free exercise by the people concerned of their right to democratic self-determination.
3. We are against calls for direct military intervention of one imperial force against another, be it with boots on the ground or the imposition of a No-Fly Zone from a distance. As a matter of general principle, we are against direct military intervention by any imperialist force anywhere. Asking for one of them to clash with another is tantamount to wishing for a world war between nuclear powers. Moreover, there is no way that such an intervention could be effectuated within the boundaries of international law since most major imperialist powers have a veto right at the UN Security Council. Even if one can easily understand that Ukrainian victims of the aggression may make such calls out of despair, they are nevertheless irresponsible demands.
4. We are in favour of the delivery of defensive weapons to the victims of aggression with no strings attached – in this case to the Ukrainian state fighting the Russian invasion of its territory. No responsible anti-imperialist did call for the USSR or China to enter the war in Vietnam against the US invasion, but all radical anti-imperialists were in favour of increased arms deliveries by Moscow and Beijing to the Vietnamese resistance. To give those who are fighting a just war the means to fight against a much more powerful aggressor is an elementary internationalist duty. Blank opposition to such deliveries is contradictory with basic solidarity with the victims.
5. We have no general attitude on sanctions in principle. We were in favour of sanctions targeting the South-African Apartheid state and we are in favour of sanctions targeting the Israeli settler-colonial occupation. We were against the sanctions imposed on the Iraqi state after it had been destroyed by war in 1991, for they were murderous sanctions serving no just cause but only the subjugation of a state to US imperialism at a quasi-genocidal cost for its population. Western powers have decided a whole set of new sanctions against the Russian state for its invasion of Ukraine. Some of these may indeed curtail the ability of Putin’s autocratic regime to fund its war machine, others may be harmful to the Russian population without much affecting the regime or its oligarchic cronies. Our opposition to the Russian aggression combined with our mistrust of Western imperialist governments means that we should neither support the latter’s sanctions, nor demand that they be lifted.
6. Finally, the most obvious and straightforward issue of all from a progressive perspective is the demand that all borders be opened to the Ukrainian refugees, as they should be for all refugees fleeing war and persecution from whichever part of the world they come. The duty of welcoming and accommodating refugees and the cost of this must be equitably shared by all rich countries. Urgent humanitarian aid should also be provided to the internally displaced persons within Ukraine’s borders.
Solidarity with the Ukrainian people!
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Thank you, thank you, thank you for writing this. While the Ukrainian people are furiously resisting naked Russian imperialism and so many people and countries are taking genuine risks to rally behind them, far too many leftists seem to see trashing NATO as their main priority. Ukraine needs more than our solidarity and marches. It needs arms and supplies; it needs to be able to defeat Putin’s fascism. You have expressed the true anti-imperialist position better than I ever could have.
Thanks for a succient and excellent analysis Gilbert, which hits the nail on the head. May the wider left listen to such voices of reason
This article is off the wall. There is no comparison between Iraq and Ukraine. the former was a naked imperialist attempt to reconfigure the Middle East. Russia’s attack on the Ukraine is a defensive war. Yet it is wrong and a mistake but not to see it in the context of NATO’s aggressive expansion is absurd.
It isn’t Putin who is expanding to the border of NATO states but the other way around.
As for Donbas and Luhansk, it is for their people to decide their future arranagements not the UN. The UN is a gang of thieves it is not a neutral body. Or has GIlbert forgotten the name of Patrice Lumumba?
This is a neo-imperialist article that puts an = sign between the aggressors and their victims because Russia is a victim of US imperialism.
As for sanctions. there is simply no comparison between BDS in Palestine and South Africa and the Ukraine. In the latter sanctions are war by another means.
This article is so disappointing but then Gilbert supported NATO intervention in Libya too. There is no beneficient side to US imperialism. And incidentally what has happened has strengthened Putin within Russia
Tony Greenstein, nowhere are you mentioning what is happening to Ukrainians (you seem preoccupied with Donbas and Luhansk). Nor are you mentioning the opposition to the war in Russia, which has already resulted in 4000+ arrests. Please don’t use neologisms like “neo-imperialist” – that is not the way for the Left to engage with people. I agree with you to some extent that NATO actions prior to the war were aggressive and that the sanctions announced go far beyond BDS and South Africa – but then Achar does mention that we should not support sanctions because they are indiscriminate.
However, I don’t think sanctions will strengthen Putin in Russia at all – you provide no evidence for such an implausible generalisation. The only way out for Putin at this stage that I can see is to withdraw behind an enlarged Donetsk-Luhansk and turn to China for economic support. China will exact a high price for that support and (in typically ‘neo-imperialist’ fashion) want to turn Russia into a hinterland to supply raw materials for its industries. If Putin is not willing to go along with this, he may be replaced by a more pliant bureaucrat.
Sadly, in the article there is no mention of NATO’s expansion towards Russia. The only country between the Nato and Russia is Ukraine. Hungary, Rumania, Poland are in the NATO.
I am no fan of PUTIN, of course not, but the anti-Putin and anti-Russian hostility from everywhere in the world is stomach-turning. Not only have Russian artists been rejected from their international jobs but now the opera house in Warshaw took of Mussorgski’s opera Boris Godunov from their planned schedule.
Thanks for this, we share your view and it’s refreshing to see something so clear.
https://independentleft.ie/statement_ukraine/