This is the title of
Mikheil Saakashvili’s statement published by The Wall Street Journal. ‘’The
television-news coverage of Ukrainians protesting in the streets of Kiev might
prompt viewers to think they're flicking past just another outbreak of unrest
in an overall restless world. The usual paraphernalia is there—the street
rallies, Molotov cocktails and police crackdowns. But these demonstrations are
unlike those in other countries, where people are seeking social rights or
protesting against a corrupt ruler. What we have been witnessing in Ukraine,
with protests that began in November and have gained a volatile intensity in
recent days, is the first geopolitical revolution of the 21st century.
The
burning dividing line between the hundreds of thousands of protesters in cities
across the country and the Yanukovych regime's police lies between two
ideologies, two visions of the world and two choices of life: independent,
Western democracy or Vladimir Putin's Russia.
President
Putin has been emboldened in recent years by the perception that the United
States and Europe are overwhelmed by other crises elsewhere. And he has been
empowered by his successes in Armenian and Georgian politics, as well as in
Ukraine itself—in 2010 he engineered the ouster of the government formed after
the 2004 Orange Revolution that he despised. He seemed convinced that he
finally was squeezing the West from the post-Soviet region that he thinks is
his natural domain.
Everything
was going well for Mr. Putin, even the Ukraine government's last-minute refusal
in November to sign an association agreement with the European Union initially
seemed a triumph of his geopolitical gamesmanship. But an unexpected factor
came into play: Ukrainians' longing to live in a democratic, open and European
society run by a clean government.
What
Mr. Putin has come to embody—for Russia and for its neighboring states—finds
its origins in the old KGB, a much more powerful force in Russia than any other
political group or party. The KGB's power was based on deceit, violence and
cynicism, which are now hallmarks of the current Russian regime. From the
Kremlin's perspective, Russia has no borders; it just has peripheries that are
bound to be forever corrupt, chaotic, failing and incapable of creating their
own functioning democratic states. So, as inefficient as Russia is itself, the
Kremlin thinking goes, still only Russia can govern them.
The
Ukrainian national anthem, which the protesters fervently sing these days,
includes this line: "Let's prove to everyone that we can be masters of our
own fate." That is what Ukrainians seem to have been doing for these past
weeks, in the record freezing temperatures of the Eastern European winter.
What
they are seeking is the freedom to choose their way of life. When I was in Kiev
last month, I met with the main opposition leader, Vitali Klitschko. We sat up
a whole night talking, focusing not so much on the rallies surrounding us as
the actual future of Ukraine. Mr. Klitschko wanted to learn from the example of
Georgia, where I was president from 2004 until last fall, about how to stem
corruption and nepotism, about how to reform state institutions and build the
Ukraine of his dreams.
Having
known him for many years, I can testify that Vitali Klitschko—a former world
heavyweight-boxing champion—is also a reflective and fast-learning politician.
What's more important is that he's clean, which is a rare commodity in
Ukrainian politics. When we met in December, I was particularly impressed by
his broader vision for Ukraine, a vision that reflects the wider aspirations of
protesters across the country.
In
Kiev, the future is being decided. A triumph for the protesters would mark the
end of Mr. Putin's dream of a restored Russian empire. Their defeat would mean
a huge rollback of European influence and values. The credibility of the U.S.,
already eroding in the region, would vanish. Mr. Putin knows it. Brave citizens
of Ukraine know it.
That's
why, unlike in the Orange Revolution of 2004, this time there is blood in the
streets. The police have killed protesters and openly committed torture.
Disappearances of activists are regularly reported. The expression of concern
by Western governments is not enough. I know Vladimir Putin well enough to
understand that he is behind the crackdown in Kiev, just as his hand is at work
in Bashar al-Assad's massacres of Syrians and in the Iranian nuclear-weapons
program. The time has come to hold the godfather responsible, not just the
members of his clan. The Kremlin is a nerve center of the troubles that bedevil
the West.
The
other day, the head of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Filaret, spoke
powerfully of one incident that hit the world's television screens. A Ukrainian
Cossack protester was captured by the riot police, beaten up, stripped of his
clothes and taunted as he was forced to stand naked on the street in freezing
temperatures. According to Patriarch Filaret, this naked Cossack symbolizes Ukraine:
naked, tortured but holding his head high and not surrendering to brutal force.
The
democratic world must not leave this Cossack out in the cold. The time to act
is now. What can be done? Western governments have already denounced the
Yanukovych regime's brutal crackdown. Mere words aren't enough. The U.S. and
the EU should sanction those in the Ukrainian leadership and their supporting
oligarchs—no matter where they may be—who are responsible for the crackdown.
Such sanctions should include visa bans and freezing personal overseas bank
accounts. Protest leaders, including Mr. Klitschko, should be invited to
Washington or another Western capital for high-level meetings, and Moscow
should directly be warned to stop meddling in Ukraine's affairs.
In August
1991, President George H.W. Bush told Ukrainians and other Soviet Republics, in
a speech quickly dubbed "Chicken Kiev," not to seek independence and
integration with the West. Now, more than two decades later, the West must not
send a similar message to people who have shown so much commitment to freedom.
Too much is at stake. Let's hope Washington, Paris, Brussels, Berlin and London
grasp that fact before it's too late.
Mr.
Saakashvili, president of Georgia from January 2004 to November 2013, is senior
statesman at Tufts University's Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy’’, says
Saakashvili’s stamen.