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Daily-current-affairs / 16 Nov 2022

A Long War and an Opportunity : Daily Current Affairs

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Date: 17/11/2022

Relevance: GS-2: Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests; Important International institutions, agencies and fora their structure, mandate.

Key Phrases: Russia Ukraine conflict, North South Divergence over the crisis, The UNSC and its resolution, The Group of 20.

Context:

  • The voices emerging from the G20 summit confirm the North-South divergence between support for continued war in Ukraine and immediate cessation of hostilities accompanied by genuine negotiations.

Background

  • Ukraine and Russia share hundreds of years of cultural and linguistic ties. As part of the Soviet Union, Ukraine was the second-most powerful republic after Russia.
  • Ukraine is a crucial buffer between Russia and the West and hence its bid for NATO membership and Russian interests in the Black Sea accompanied by the protests in Ukraine.
  • These are the major causes of the ongoing conflict between Russia and Ukraine.

The Conflict

  • The ongoing conflict is considered as the largest attack by one state on another in Europe since the Second World War.
  • Nine months after the hostilities began, the war of attrition in Ukraine remains stalemated at the high tables of global diplomacy.
  • The front in eastern Ukraine moves as the NATO-backed forces of Ukraine succeed in pushing the Russians back.
  • But new fronts open at sea, in air, cyber space and in random bombardment of targets far away from the actual fighting.

Incompatible Objectives

  • Russian Objectives are to neutralize Ukraine and make it a buffer between NATO and its own territory, protect the interests of the Russian minorities of Ukraine have morphed into territorial annexation.
  • Ukrainian Objectives are total defeat of Russia, war reparations to be paid by it (as Germany had to after the Second World War) and regime change in Moscow.
  • The two objectives are totally incompatible. This forecloses any scope for negotiation.

UNSC resolutions

  • The Security Council, where tit-for-tat resolutions by the belligerents keep getting stuck in the intricacies of superpower rivalry, stays paralysed.
  • The latest evidence of its failure to arrive at any form of concerted action was the Russia-sponsored draft resolution on Ukraine’s alleged bio weapons.
  • It failed to get adopted as only two veto-wielding Council members — Russia and China — voted in its favor, while the other permanent members, US, UK and France, voted against it.
  • India was among four countries that abstained on a draft resolution at the UNSC condemning the referenda organized by Russia in Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Luhansk and Donetsk.
  • The UNSC resolution, sponsored by the US and Albania, failed to pass the 15-member Council, despite winning 10 supporting votes, after Russia used a veto to block it.
  • While the UNSC remains paralysed, the risk of a wider war between NATO and Russia is rising by the day.

United Nations Security Council

  • UNSC was established by the UN Charter in 1945. It is one of the six principal organs of the United Nations.
  • Its primary responsibility is to work to maintain international peace and security.
  • The council is headquartered in New York.
  • The council has 15 members, the five permanent members (the US, Russia, France, China and the UK) and ten non-permanent members elected for two-year terms.
  • Each member has one vote and decisions are made by an affirmative vote of nine members including the concurring votes of the permanent members.

The G20

  • It was formed in 1999 in the backdrop of the financial crisis of the late 1990s that hit East Asia and Southeast Asia in particular.
  • It aims to secure global financial stability by involving middle-income countries.
  • Together, the G20 countries include 60% of the world’s population, 80% of global GDP, and 75% of global trade.
  • Members: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Republic of Korea, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Turkey, the United Kingdom, the United States and the EU.
  • The presidency of the G20 rotates every year among members.
  • India is hosting the G-20 leaders’ summit in New Delhi next year in 2023.

Emerging questions

  • Two questions emerge as salient from this stalemated conflict.
  • Why has war in Ukraine become protracted?
  • And what price is the restoration of akhand Ukraine — restoring the country to its 2014 borders and regaining the Crimea peninsula, currently under Russian occupation?
  • The causes that account for the protracted nature of the war in Ukraine resemble those of the Second World War which lasted four years and led to between 40 to 50 million deaths.
  • Long drawn-out wars are caused by strategic depth of the belligerents, diffuse targets, moving and incompatible war objectives, and the induction of third parties with a stake in keeping hostilities alive.
  • These factors at work in prolonging hostilities in the Second World War are eerily similar to the persisting conflict in Ukraine. The additional factor that weighs in to make the conflict even more protracted is the nuclear option, available to both sides.
  • Provocative actions such as the assassination of Daria Dugina or attack on the bridge connecting Crimea with mainland Russia, could widen the conflict, or even trigger a nuclear war.

Who pays the cost of protracted war?

  • Vast sums of tax-payers money are being diverted into the military-industrial complex and proxy war of NATO.
  • The steep rise in prices of essential commodities and inflation have hit all across the globe but their impact is asymmetric as the poor suffer relatively more.
  • Despite the pro-war propaganda, the presence of six million refugees from Ukraine, who have remained in that ravaged country, queuing up for essential commodities such as water are the real victims of war.

The Indian position

  • India stands for an immediate cessation of hostilities and the start of negotiations. It has been consistent throughout but has had little impact on Western policies or public opinion.
  • India, from the outset, has reiterated the country’s commitment to global governance and struck a delicate balance between the belligerents.
  • India is also a valuable ally for the West in the QUAD — an Indo-Pacific alliance aimed at China — and a lucrative market. India’s neutrality is thus accepted grudgingly in western capitals.

An opportunity for Global South

  • The costly, protracted war in Ukraine can be an opportunity for the Global South whose leaders have long questioned Western hegemony over global politics.
  • Currently, though far from the actual theatre of fighting, they nevertheless face the consequences of the Western failure to bring hostilities to an end.
  • The Ukraine imbroglio can give the Global South an opportunity to claim a place at the high table of global diplomacy.
  • An initiative by the South, possibly led by Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, working jointly with Turkey, and with the implicit support of India and China, can offer to broker a deal between the belligerents.
  • As the lethal European winter approaches and the risks of a widening conflict grow, the window of opportunity that is still open, might close. The time for the Global South to act is now.
  • Our Prime Minister's message to the Russian President that “now is not the era for war”, and his call for immediate cessation of hostilities at the G20 reiterate the Indian position.

Source: Indian Express

Mains Question:

  • Q. The economic repercussions of the Russia-Ukraine war has wider implications for the present world order. Discuss. [150 Words]