Another day, another calculated oversimplification festooned in highfalutin trash talk:
The European Union took the lead in diplomacy, with results approaching Neville Chamberlain’s moment in the spotlight at Munich: a ceasefire that failed to mention Georgia’s territorial integrity, and that all but gave Russia permission to continue its military operations as a “peacekeeping” force anywhere in Georgia. More troubling, over the long term, was that the EU saw its task as being mediator – its favourite role in the world – between Georgia and Russia, rather than an advocate for the victim of aggression.
Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. John Bolton.
No surprise there. What is a surprise, or at least beggars the imagination, is that no one in the anti-Russia lobby seems to care (though I am sure they secretly understand) that the status of the Sudetenland and the status of Abkhazia and South Ossetia bore absolutely no resemblance that would merit a comparison of this long week's events to Munich.
Imagine that the independence of Czechoslovakia from Austria had been accompanied by brutal wars of secession along the Sudeten fringe which resulted in military and political autonomy -- sovereignty in all but name -- for the Germanic Sudetens, who then received German passports and one day received a snap Czech invasion for their trouble more than a decade after wresting away their autonomy. Then imagine that Munich happened. Different story, eh, Mr. Bolton? But Mr. Bolton does not want reckonings like these to Obscure Moral Clarity. That would be cowardly.
But wait. There's more. As it happens, the Germans who wound up under Czech domination in the wake of the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire actually
did try to
join Germany in 1918. And they actually
were denied this opportunity, and here, as has so often been the case in Europe, fundamental instability was hardwired into the 'territorial integrity' of the sovereign state system for no better reason than to punish the Germans. Once again, in Europe, the efforts of ethnonationalists and counterethnonationalists to climb the greasy pole of advantage and protection wound up proving viciously counterproductive and inimical to any sane concept of sovereignty and independence.
Throwing the Czechs to Hitler was obviously bad; pretending that Europe has not been perpetually hamstrung by deep structural problems within almost every nation-state on the Continent is bad in a different but no lighter way, and the bottom line narrative in European history is that often only wars of ethnic sorting and suppression have been able, until very recently, and perhaps even not then, to close the chapter on unsolved questions of sovereign borders.
Yes, for a time some multiethnic nations have been able to live quite at internal peace, and often it's bad leaders who engineer wars that are ginned up to seem like the products of 'age-old hatreds.' But there is simply no denying that the most likely claim Georgia has to being a part of Europe is in fact its preponderance of intractable ethnonationalist fracture lines. This sort of recognition militates conclusively against the kind of rhetoric of denial practiced above by Bolton and all over the mainstream press by other charter members of the anti-Russia lobby, hung up as they are on a series of convenient phantoms -- the 'integrity' of a Georgian state that never corresponded to reality; the 'innocence' of a Georgian regime that flagrantly flouted the plainest warnings our own government deigned to provide. Enough!
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