“Victory Plan” As A Tool To Realize Ethnocratic Fantasy In Ukraine

“Victory Plan” As A Tool To Realize Ethnocratic Fantasy In Ukraine

Click to see the full-size image

Written by Uriel Araujo, PhD, anthropology researcher with a focus on international and ethnic conflicts

The Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky failed to gather much support from European allies last week but he nonetheless announced his quite grandiose “Victory Plan” yesterday during his delivery to Ukraine’s Parliament.

“The future for Ukraine is, without a doubt, to be a strong part of the global world, to stand as equals with all leading nations, to be a full-fledged member of the European Union and NATO”, he said.

The whole thing of course largely depends on Western willingness to help implement it, thereby dragging the Atlantic Alliance into the conflict, as he reiterated over and over: “For us, it is entirely legitimate to turn to our partners for support in this battle”. Much is being said about the 5 points Zelensky presented, but is worth analyzing the ethno-national premises behind this idea of the “glory of Ukraine” which makes it worth to sacrifice so much and to face (and to impose) the risk of a NATO-Russian conflict:

Claiming that “Russia must lose the war against Ukraine. And this is not a ‘freeze’. And it is not trading Ukraine’s territory or sovereignty”, the Ukrainian leader in his Victory Plan speech said quite eloquently that his country seeks “to live independently, to live freely, sovereignly, on its own land and by its own laws.”

This last bit sounds fair enough and of course normally any state will defend its territorial sovereignty. But it is also true that over the course of history territorial transformations, with gains and losses, take place. And it is also true that today’s Ukraine is a kind of inflated state, territory-wise, due to well-known Soviet policies. Parallelly, Russia has lost lots of its territory.

In fact, in post-Soviet Eastern Europe and the Caucasus region (just as in post-colonial Africa), the overall situation with borders is far from being a settled matter, and is still a kind of unresolved issue, with a number of frozen conflicts and unrecognized countries and/or states who have disputed or limited recognition. Suffice it to mention the cases of (none of them having direct Russian involvement in terms of claims) Transnistria (claimed by Moldova), South Ossetia and Abkhazia (both claimed by Georgia), the Armenian exclave of Nagorno-Karabakh or Artsakh (recently occupied by Azerbaijan).

So Ukraine, within this larger post-soviet context, is not at all alone in that matter, and Crimea and Donbass have been a hot topic for decades. One must keep in mind the fact that the Ukrainian state has been bombing the Donbass region, in what was (until 2022) often described as Europe’s “forgotten war” – one can only imagine what it would do with that region and its inhabitants in a Kyiv victory scenario.

Moreover, consider this: in a survey taken six months before the 2022 conflict erupted, over 40 percent of Ukrainians nationwide, “and nearly two-thirds in the east and south”, agreed with Putin that Ukrainians and Russians are “one people.” For centuries, Ukrainian identity has really been part of a larger Russian identity, and to this day, millions of Ukrainians think of the categories “Russian” and “Ukrainian” as being somehow aligned and compatible – and not fully separated.

Writing in 1994, political scientist Ian Bremmer, predicting the Donbass war, warned that if Kyiv’s nation-building policies alienated too much the country’s “ethnic Russians”, there was potential for internal conflict. Today Nicolai N. Petro (a professor of political science at the University of Rhode Island) warns about minority civil rights problems in the country that “relegate Russian speakers to permanent second-class status.”

And this is part of the core of the issue. In his 2023 academic article called “On peoples, history, and sovereignty”, Chris Hann (a Director Emeritus at the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology in Halle)  makes a distinction between “historical” and “non-historical” peoples – this does not imply, it should be stressed, any kind of “inferiority”: “historical nations” would be merely those that possess a long tradition of statehood and clearly defined national identity. The ethnologist is far from being a “Putin supporter”, but he emphasized that “much of the international coverage of the Ukrainian case naturalizes a Ukrainian people/nation”.

Whether one likes Putin or not, when he talks about the relative novelty of the independent Ukrainian state, he is just stating historical facts. In the early nineties, Mark von Hagen, in a paper titled: “Does Ukraine Have a History?”, wrote the following: “today’s Ukraine is a very modern creation, with little firmly established precedent in the national past.” He wrote about the risk of an “overemphasis on [Ukrainian] nationalism and ethnicity to compensate for previous underemphasis.”

Similarly, Kataryna Wolczuk, in chapter two of her 2001 book “The Moulding of Ukraine” writes that:

“Ukraine’s history does not lend itself to configuration as linear national history… Post-soviet Ukraine lacks the ‘historical legitimacy’ derived from distinct and ‘identifiable’ institutional traditions and stable territorial boundaries.”

This has been the country’s political elite project in the making since the nineties – and this took a sharper turn in 2014. The problem is that the ethnocratic manner this nation is imagined is problematic to say the least and it is being built in a way that potentially (according to  Nicolai N. Petro, writing for Foreign Policy) simply  alienates and excludes a large part of its population – not to mention neighboring allies such as Poland.

In any case, objectively speaking, whether one likes him or not, Zelensky simply does not seem to be up for the task of being a great statesman. He is rather the inexperienced politician (the “comedian-turned President”), and a de facto dictator who has banned all opposition – and yet at the same time a weak leader who is hostage to armed ultra-nationalists and neo-fascists. For that reason, Ted Snider, writing for Responsible Statecraft, argues quite convincingly he is in no place to negotiate peace either.

All things considered, with today’s Ukrainian leadership and state of affairs, the task of nation-founding with all its territorial ambitions for a Greater Ukraine does not seem to be achievable. And if somehow such a goal were to come through (the way it is envisioned today) it would not really be a desirable outcome in terms of local security and stability or the human rights of a large part of the population of Ukraine and its disputed territories. Without addressing these ethnopolitical issues and the dangers of NATO enlargement, there  is little hope for peace in the region.

MORE ON THE TOPIC:

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
24 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Snow Den

zelensky represents no country other than the global cabal. as for ukrainians, they have always been “strange” people. nobody has to teach them nazism. in fact, ss units came to ukraine only to find out that bandera had already killed all jews, poles, hungarians and other “untermensch” on his own. after the collapse of the ussr, ukraine stole, cheated and did sh*t. first they stole gas from russia, now they stole money from the west. such a fcking country.

hash
hashed
Snow Den 2

i think putin has many flaws, but perhaps his strategy to roast ukraine slowly and steadily to the extinction was the best solution from the bad ones. it’s interesting how the ukrainian sh*t is attracted to the global sh*t. what an incredible understanding there is between them. they don’t even mind that on one side there are nazis and on the other side there are jeeews. when it comes to stealing, world domination and bullying, minor ideological differences are immediately put aside

Last edited 1 month ago by Snow Den 2
Anonymous

you’re a fruit cake

Pin the Tail on the Donkey

takes one to know one.

the poll vaulter

if he ran for president today, he’d get 2% of the vote.

Anonymous

are you actually that silly you believe in elections.look at kueer starmer he’s in with only 20 % of the vote.

Last edited 1 month ago by Anonymous
Pin the Tail on the Donkey

it’s the catholic lobby with orders directly from the pope to install him.

ps: watch out when in public toilets, esp. if there’s a catholic behind you.

The Court Jester

that’s it. frog boy just passed the red line of certifiable psychopathy. the only thing his western allies will be sending now are the men with the butterfly nets.

Last edited 1 month ago by The Court Jester
Anonymous

rubbish england’s government king charles s government have already publicly stated that they are prepared to fund ukraine for 100 years. putins going to be irrelevant, zelensky irrelevant, us all irrelevant to their plans.

Last edited 1 month ago by Anonymous
Pin the Tail on the Donkey

your big british octopus had its tentacles fried and served on a beachfront trattoria in positano long ago.

ps: that bojo bozo always wanted to be a churchil 2.0. he never said it would be through his gallipoli moment though.

Anonymous

all i want to know is, was he on acid when he wrote that plan?

Anonymous

grow up people arent a leader

Benedetto

il piano della vittoria dell’ucraina è semplice ha le bombe atomiche sporche e le lancerà fra non molto tempo. saluti

hash
hashed
Name

khazar empire v2.

hash
hashed
Jewish pimp

they do not need no more gypsies in eu, one romania is enough.

hash
hashed
the poll vaulter

that’s a double negative and means you think they need more. you must be a politician.

Anonymous

no he’s just illiterate

Anonymous

although that does seem to be a handy requirement and that’s not a joke

williebrennan

could russia just kill this little jew faggot please?

this shitstain reminds me of hillary clinton. everytime you think she’s finally faded into obscurity, she pops up running her mouth again. just fuckin’ die already bitch…lol

hash
hashed
Pin the Tail on the Donkey

russians are smart. they’d rather have the banderites or the cia do it for them.

Anonymous

omg could intentions be any clearer isn’t king chatless government saying that they’re prepared to fund ukraine for 100 years enough evidence for you? can’t you reason?

hash
hashed
Joseph Day

victory plan, nato help.

hash
hashed
Anonymous

nato plan from decades ago zelensky help.

Wallter

the victory plan is the plan of a deranged mind and nothing much to it, laughable. the western state that keeps the idiot with airplanes for his panhandling around the world should just stop making its plane available. it might force the idiot to come up with something new, like peace negotiations!