A Failed Attempt of Peace Communique Between Russia-Ukraine
By Hanan Salim
August 6, 2024
The present Russia-Ukraine conflict has long historical roots and cold-war geopolitical interests—Ukraine’s inclination towards integration with NATO-led to strained relations with Russia. The Russian Federation considers Ukraine’s integration into the EU and NATO a direct threat to its geopolitical and national interests in the Eurasian region. Under President Putin’s leadership, Russia adopted an aggressive foreign policy towards Ukraine which resulted in the annexation of Crimea in 2014. Consequently, since 2022 Russia declared war on Ukraine to oppose its inclination towards NATO and in particular towards the US.
One of the recent events involved four employees of Russia’s Ministry of Défense being injured due to Ukraine shelling in the Donetsk region, while a Russian missile to the Southeastern part of Ukraine left seven civilians dead including three children and multiple casualties. Two years into war both nations find it hard to find common ground for peaceful negotiations and engagement. Ukraine has maintained its image internationally by centring the argument around sovereignty and territorial integrity, while Russia’s assertive policies have invited the wrath of organisations like the EU and NATO.
The 15th and 16th of June 2024 marked a new beginning for hope as sovereign states and international organisations came together in Switzerland to discuss and pave the way for peace towards the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Almost 100 countries participated in the communique, while a few states like India, Saudi Arabia and South Africa abstained from signing the document. India and Saudi Arabia, represented by their respective foreign ministers, voiced their unhappiness over the absence of Russia. On the other hand, South Africa voiced their denial of signing due to the presence of Israel in the peace communique as Israel currently has multiple human rights violation allegations in the ongoing conflict with Palestine. Similarly, three countries including Rwanda, Iraq and Jordan backed out of the Ukraine Peace Communique Treaty without further clarification. The Global South is still vigilant of Ukraine playing its victim card with the US’s support, after its continued stance in support of Israel.
Ukrainian President, Volodymyr Zelenskyy stated that the conference was the first step towards peace and the document was prepared in hopes of promoting ‘territorial integrity’. Finally, almost 80 countries signed the document, which focuses on three important themes including nuclear safety, food security and prisoner’s exchange. The three problems addressed in the communiqué were:
1. All applications of nuclear energy and infrastructure must be safe and considerate of the environment. The Zaporizhzhya nuclear power plant and other nuclear power facilities in Ukraine must run safely in compliance with IAEA guidelines. It is unethical to use or threaten to use nuclear weapons in the ongoing conflict with Ukraine.
2. Food production and supply must continue uninterrupted to ensure global food security. In this context, access to the seaports of the Black and Azov Seas together with unrestricted, complete and secure merchant shipping is essential. It is intolerable to launch attacks on commerce ships at ports and along the route, as well as against civilian ports and their infrastructure.
3. In complete exchange, all prisoners of war must be released. All illegally held civilians from Ukraine including children must be returned together with all deported and displaced Ukrainians.
The peace communique granted Ukraine a $50 billion loan approved by the G7 and military support from NATO, which exposed the vested interests of the US towards Russia. However, Russia condemned the communique as it represents private interests and claimed it would be ready for negotiations if NATO withdrew its troops from the Russian-occupied Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions. The failure of the summit has brought Ukraine to the realisation that actual peace can be gained only by furthering dialogue with Russia.
As peacekeeping efforts failed, the question of ending the war will remain unanswered. Nonetheless, the world must unite to stop this war through diplomatic conversations and negotiations to avoid such conflicts in the future. The peace communique is a right step forward in peacekeeping. There should be a joint peace declaration under international norms which defend Ukraine’s sovereignty and protect Russia’s interests. It should emphasise the value of a coordinated strategy for achieving peace and reflect a common outlook for a safe and stable future for both Ukraine and Russia.
US-Ukraine-Russian War: It’s About the Money
Well, “the cat is out of the bag, now.” Thanks to US Senator Lindsey Graham, everyone knows one of the more compelling reasons behind the Ukraine war with Russia. And it has little to do with Kiev’s “agency,” “democracy,” and “liberalism.” The latter are merely ‘talking points’ for public consumption – what Noam Chomsky and Ed Hermann called ‘manufactured consent’ in their 1988 seminal work on propaganda, Manufacturing Consent.
Lindsey Graham voiced out loud part of an agenda that is usually hidden from public view or the media – it isn’t talked about (admitted) openly. It’s a veritable “gold mine,” Graham confessed, and America can’t afford to lose control of it. Here’s the translation of Graham’s admission:
It’s About the Money.
Our reliably hawkish Republican Senator is well known for provocative statements. As early as 2022 (at the beginning of the Ukraine war) Graham was all in for regime change in Russia, when everyone else in the West was trying to downplay such a prospect. Moreover, he is quoted as saying at a press conference with Zylensky that “Russians are dying” in the war, while US aid was the “best money we’ve ever spent.”
But with the panache and subtlety of a train wreck the good senator created another stir recently, admitting on CBS’s “Face the Nation,” why Russia must not be allowed to prevail in Ukraine. The latter possesses $10 to $12 trillion worth of rich deposits of critical minerals.
Here are Senator Graham’s reasons justifying the necessity of Kiev (i.e. Washington) winning its fight with Moscow. First, the Kremlin’s access to these deposits would enrich Russia and allow via the Kremlin, China’s participation. Second, if Ukraine retains control over the minerals, it could be “the richest country in all of Europe” and “the best business partner we ever dreamed of.” Third, the outcome of the war in Ukraine is a “very big deal” for the US from an economic standpoint. Thus, Graham is saying that Ukraine’s war is “a war we can’t afford to lose.”
Credit Business Today for reporting early in the war the “real reason why the US is aiding Ukraine.” As it turns out, commercial, strategic and therefore hegemonic motives play a major role in the need for a Ukrainian victory. So much for all that babel about Kiev’s “right to self-determination,” “democracy,” and “freedom.”
The country’s strategic location, critical minerals and enormous acreage of rich arable soil is (from the US’s view) what gives Ukraine its value. Unfortunately, but not surprisingly, no one seems to care much about the Ukrainian people – which gives Ukraine its greatest value.
Graham seems rather sanguine about Russians “dying,” but plenty of Ukrainians have and will continue to die as well. If one is in any way a student of history (especially in a political context), one must acknowledge that there is nothing surprising or unique here in Senator Graham’s admissions.
But one comment should be mentioned here – there is no doubt that the senator believes he has America’s best interest at heart. He has served his country faithfully in the military and 21 years in the Senate. That much must be said about the intentions of the good senator from South Carolina.
The senator is right; Ukraine has substantial reserves of critical minerals, and there is no doubt that these raw materials are of great significance. At the same time, the global supply of many critical minerals is complicated because they are concentrated in limited locations, which makes them objects of geopolitics. In some ways the situation correlates with the global concerns over oil since the 1970s.
The US Department of Energy has created a Critical Minerals List of which some 50 of the most strategic and in short supply are found in Ukraine. The EU (in its efforts to reduce its reliance on China) has also shown great interest in Ukraine’s critical mineral deposits. The Ukrainian Geological Survey has since 2022 worked with the European Bank of Reconstruction and Development to catalog Ukrainian deposits for the purpose of attracting Western investors. Everyone seems to be waiting for the payoff.
Despite the war continuing, Western investors have been queuing up, even from such distances as the Pacific Rim – Australia and Japan, especially. And it is the American – Ukrainian collaboration, the BGV Group, “that has the largest and most diverse stake in Ukraine’s critical minerals.”
In the past two years, the US and the UK especially have continued to undermine the opportunities and efforts of Russia and Ukraine to resume direct dialogue, creating pressure on Europe and even the world under which people must choose sides. But these initiatives are not generated spontaneously; rather, they derive from a decades long, ill-conceived American foreign policy.
Lack of historical reflection is often the main reason why many countries frequently make mistakes in major policy decisions. The West is representative of this malady, but they are not alone in this distinction (e.g. the divisive issues between China and India).
Rather than continuing to fight the Cold War (35 years after it ended), the US might want to rethink its foreign policy initiatives to better coincide with its goals. If America seeks to maintain its economic and political hegemony, it needs to no longer pursue foreign policy initiatives employing either/or logic.
Engaging a potential adversary need not be distilled into a choice of “either victory or appeasement.” To do so is to remain trapped in a WWII or Cold War mindset where the considered choices (when nuclear weapons are now involved) can no longer be either war or appeasement – the consequences for civilization are too great.
The concept of striving for cooperation among major powers rather than through divisive camp confrontation is not new to us. From this orientation the League of Nations and the United Nations were born. Yes, their implementation was flawed and regrettably conflicts remain. But the overall premise behind their creation and existence today remains sound – that of building “peace without victory.” The idea is to foster cooperation among major powers (rather than the camp confrontation we have seen before – and we have today) to deal with difficult diplomatic issues – before the missiles start flying. Not only was this idea not pursued in Ukraine, it was orchestrated otherwise for political and economic reasons. (But that’s another essay.)
Regrettably, the Biden administration and its allies have ignored the painful lessons of war in the 20th century – they have trampled on the warnings of their predecessors and put us all at risk, needlessly.
This is a capitulation of US diplomacy. But this is what happens when a great country like the United States allows decades of mediocre leadership to develop foreign policy initiatives inconsistent with what is in the best interest of itself and its people (Vietnam, Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan, Ukraine.) Unfortunately, we inherit the results of such folly: a strategically important but poorly developed and implemented foreign policy which does not accomplish its implied goal:
To foster America’s economic and political hegemony through strategic leadership not bombs and bombast.
Given the peril which comes from the destabilizing actions of geopolitical agendas in the world today, America’s continued position of leadership in it is pivotal if peace and stability are to ever have a chance to prosper. America needs a foreign policy to sustain that – today, that does not exist.
Rhetoric like that of the good senator from South Carolina is not a solution – it tends to undermine what is in America’s best interest.
Looks like the sanctions were about the money after all.
I am Director of The Fulcrum Institute, a new organization of current and former scholars in the Humanities, Foreign Affairs and Philosophy, Situated in Houston, Texas, USA. The “Institute” focuses on the foreign policy initiatives of Europe as it relates to the economic and foreign policy initiatives of the US, UK, China and Russia. Our primary interest is in working towards an economic and political world in which more voices and fewer bombs are heard. (The website-URL will be live by late fall of 2024. The web address will be http://www.thefulcruminstitute.org.).
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