Expert Analysis

Strange War: Battlefield of the Non-Existent Ukrainian War

War or not war? You might ask yourself that when watching what is happening in Ukraine. If it isn’t the war then why are planes over Ukraine being shot down? If it is a war, then who is fighting whom? On one side we have Ukraine, for sure, but what about the other side? Media call them “separatists,” but I don’t know such a nation. Definitely they are not Ukrainians, so who are they?

Is Russia such an unselfish country that it would support fighters who are indifferent to them? When you look at the history of similar conflicts, a pattern in which Russia launches its war machine to protect some minority or support a new, puppet government emerges. The best example is Afghanistan, where in 1987 the Communist government adopted a policy of tight cooperation with the Soviet Union ,and which ended in the invasion by the Soviet Union and a very long war.

History likes to repeat itself, so there is no reason why the recent annexation of Crimea might not happen again with other eastern parts of Ukraine. Russia showed many times that human loss is not really that important and an individual is nothing compared to the greater public good, even if by an individual Russia means thousands. From this perspective shooting down the Malaysian plane is just a small mistake for Russians in this nonexistent war. Russians are cunning players, repeating their tactics from Crimea and covering up what’s happing in that region today. Who’s going to remember Crimea, anyways, right?

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War or not war? You might ask yourself that when watching what is happening in Ukraine. If it isn’t the war then why are planes over Ukraine being shot down? If it is a war, then who is fighting whom? On one side we have Ukraine, for sure, but what about the other side? Media call them “separatists,” but I don’t know such a nation. Definitely they are not Ukrainians, so who are they?

Is Russia such an unselfish country that it would support fighters who are indifferent to them? When you look at the history of similar conflicts, a pattern in which Russia launches its war machine to protect some minority or support a new, puppet government emerges. The best example is Afghanistan, where in 1987 the Communist government adopted a policy of tight cooperation with the Soviet Union ,and which ended in the invasion by the Soviet Union and a very long war.

History likes to repeat itself, so there is no reason why the recent annexation of Crimea might not happen again with other eastern parts of Ukraine. Russia showed many times that human loss is not really that important and an individual is nothing compared to the greater public good, even if by an individual Russia means thousands. From this perspective shooting down the Malaysian plane is just a small mistake for Russians in this nonexistent war. Russians are cunning players, repeating their tactics from Crimea and covering up what’s happing in that region today. Who’s going to remember Crimea, anyways, right?

Even Ukrainians apparently have gotten over the loss of that part of the country. Having problems with holding the state together in the Eastern part of the country, they seem to have forgotten this bitter lesson from just a few months ago.

Today, Russians have a chance to put to the test an entirely new type of conflict. It is leading war without any occupation. What’s more, Russia is waging war without even sending military units. For the wide public the message is clear: in this war it’s the Ukrainian soldiers, civilians and separatists that get killed. There is no mentioning the Russians.

In my opinion, Russia was almost winning this; unfortunately for the 298 victims of the plane crash, Europe and the rest of the world saw the bodies of their loved ones on the battlefield of the nonexistent Ukrainian war.

Thanks for listening.

Naval

About Naval Polska View All Posts

Naval served in GROM, the Polish Special Forces unit for fourteen years as an operator in a combat unit. Most of his time in the unit he spent on foreign missions. He was decorated with the highest combat medals awarded in Poland for personal valor, including the Knight’s Cross of the Military Cross, granted for outstanding military merits, and the Commander’s Cross of the Military

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