Europe’s self-imposed blindness toward Russia

2014/7/21 22:07:50

This is not the time to give Putin more time. European leaders have been making that mistake repeatedly since Russia annexed Crimea in March. Not only have most European leaders de facto accepted the annexation of Crimea, they have encouraged Russia to meddle and destabilize eastern Ukraine even further—precisely because the European response has been weak and divided and the two rounds of sanctions were simply insufficient to change Putin’s mind.

 

Editor's Note: Dempsey is one of the best-informed and most incisive writers working today. We recommend you make her full text your MUST READ of the day.


By JUDY DEMPSEY for Carnegie’s Strategic Europe, July 21, 2014

 

The way in which armed, pro-Russian rebels have prevented investigators from visiting the crash site of Malaysia Airlines flight 17 is shocking.

 

It’s shocking not only for the families of those who died in this terrible tragedy. They have had to endure television footage of the wreckage without being able to claim the bodies. They have also had to face a stream of propaganda coming out of Russia’s state-controlled media and from Ukraine as well.

 

Above all, it’s shocking because European leaders, five days after the tragedy, can only threaten Russian President Vladimir Putin with more sanctions. As if they didn’t have the chance to impose much tougher sanctions weeks ago.

 

 Over the weekend, leaders from Europe, the United States, Australia, and Malaysia have had blunt phone conversations with Putin. They have asked him to use his influence on the pro-Russian rebels in Ukraine to allow investigators unhindered access to the site of the wreckage. Putin, finally, agreed to fully cooperate and called for a robust investigation.

But when? Is this yet another delaying tactic to preempt sanctions? And if Putin insists that the rebels did not shoot down MH17, then what has he to hide when it comes to ordering the rebels to hand over the flight’s black box? It is all too clear that the longer the rebels and Russian intelligence experts have access to the site, the more the evidence will be contaminated. This is a damning indictment of Putin’s worldview.

 

This is not the time to give Putin more time. European leaders have been making that mistake repeatedly since Russia annexed Crimea in March. Not only have most European leaders de facto accepted the annexation of Crimea, they have encouraged Russia to meddle and destabilize eastern Ukraine even further—precisely because the European response has been weak and divided and the two rounds of sanctions were simply insufficient to change Putin’s mind.

 

For the complete text, link here: http://carnegieeurope.eu/strategiceurope/?fa=56202

 

*Judy Dempsey is a Non-Resident Senior Associate of Carnegie Europe and editor-in-chief of Strategic Europe. She is also the author of the book The Merkel Phenomenon (Das Phänomen Merkel, Körber-Stiftung Edition, 2013). For more on Dempsey’s lengthy career and accomplishments, link to: http://carnegieendowment.org/experts/?fa=693

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