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Home » Projects & Assignments » Political activity, political impact of social problems and war effects (15.05- 16.06)

Political activity, political impact of social problems and war effects (15.05- 16.06)

The two-day inaugural Peace Summit, which brought together more than 100 states and organizations, ended in Switzerland. The international meeting initiated by Ukraine called to unite supporters of the Peace Formula and to bring a diplomatic end to the war closer.. At the end of the second day of the Summit, it became known that the number of countries that have signed the open document is 80 participating countries. The delegations of 80 countries and 4 organizations left their signatures under the joint communique following the results of the world summit in Switzerland, despite the fact that 101 delegations took part in the event. Countries such as Saudi Arabia, Thailand, India, Mexico, South Africa, Brazil and the United Arab Emirates have not signed the document. Moreover, in a few hours it became known that Iraq and Jordan had withdrawn their signatures to the communiqué of the Global Peace Summit. The reasons for the signatures of these two countries are currently unknown. https://war.obozrevatel.com/ukr/yaki-kraini-ne-pidpisali-deklaratsiyu-za-pidsumkami-samitu-svitu-i-pro-yakij-kompromis-zagovorila-saudivska-araviya.htm

key regional powers including Brazil, India, South Africa and Saudi Arabia failed to sign up to a joint communique issued at the end of a Ukraine peace conference https://www.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/jun/16/key-global-powers-fail-to-sign-ukraines-peace-summit-communique

Now we will focus on three points – on what is useful to everyone in the world – without exception. The first point is radiation and nuclear safety. The second is food security. The third is the release of prisoners and deportees, adults and children, military and civilians whose lives have been broken by war. https://www.president.gov.ua/news/uchasniki-globalnogo-samitu-miru-u-shvejcariyi-pidpisali-spi-91589

 

That diplomatic push, rather than patching up cracks in global sympathy for Ukraine, has exposed them. At a Group of Seven summit in Italy this week, leaders of large advanced democracies offered money and rhetoric for Ukraine but only a weak facsimile of the security guarantees that Zelensky sought. The Ukrainian president, who invited Chinese leader Xi Jinping to attend the Swiss conference, has since publicly feuded with China, which he says has discouraged other nations from attending. The weekend summit’s attendance list is striking for who isn’t on it. Xi will neither attend nor send an official, diplomats said. Saudi Arabia, Brazil and South Africa said they want to help broker an end to the war. But Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman declined to attend, and while the Saudis are sending their foreign minister, the other two countries aren’t expected to send top officials. (The Wall Street Journal Weekend, June 15).

reaching peace requires the involvement of and dialogue between all parties. We, therefore, decided to undertake concrete steps in the future in the above-mentioned areas with further engagement of the representatives of all parties. The United Nations Charter, including the principles of respect for the territorial integrity and sovereignty of all states, can and will serve as a basis in achieving a comprehensive, just and lasting peace in Ukraine. https://www.eda.admin.ch/eda/en/fdfa/fdfa/aktuell/dossiers/konferenz-zum-frieden-ukraine/Summit-on-Peace-in-ukraine-joint-communique-on-a-peace-framework.html

 

Putin said Friday that “without Russia’s participation, without an honest and responsible dialogue with us, it is impossible to reach a peaceful solution in Ukraine. (The Guardian, June 15, 2024)

Because if Russia was interested in peace, there would be no war. We must decide together what a just peace means for the world and how it can be achieved in a truly lasting way. The UN Charter is the basis for us. And then, when the action plan is on the table, agreed by all, and transparent for the peoples, – then it will be communicated to the representatives of Russia. And so that at the Second Peace Summit we can fix the real end of the war. Now we are starting this path. Together, we must prove that the united world is a world of peace, a world that knows how to act correctly. https://www.president.gov.ua/en/news/sogodni-den-koli-svit-pochinaye-nablizhati-spravedlivij-mir-91561

On 14 June, the day before the summit was held, Russian President Vladimir Putin presented a proposal in which Ukraine had to “begin the actual withdrawal of troops from the territories of Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia oblasts within the administrative borders.”[17] These borders had to be “as they existed at the time of their accession to Ukraine.”[17][nb 1] Additionally, Ukraine had to “officially announce the abandonment of plans to join NATO.” After these conditions had been met “from our side, immediately, literally at that same moment, the order to cease fire and begin negotiations will be issued. I repeat, we will do this immediately.”[17] Putin stated that the essence of the proposal “is not about a temporary truce. It is not about freezing the conflict but about its final resolution.”Putin listed Ukraine’s neutral and non-nuclear status and lifting sanctions against Russia as additional conditions for peaceful resolution” https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c033eyyr20do

The European politician said this at a press conference following the results of the first World Summit in Switzerland on June 16. Von der Leyen called on the Kremlin to listen to the call of the international community to respect the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Ukraine, end violence and return deported Ukrainian children. Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission, reveals the reality of Putin’s stance on Ukraine at the “Path to Peace” conference in Switzerland. She states that Putin’s demands for capitulation, territory cession, and disarmament are unacceptable and hinder true peace negotiations. Freezing conflict is not an answer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i_cfIRsCuBA

Since early this year, Russia has set out to finish the job it failed to complete in early 2023—the destruction of Ukraine’s civilian energy sector, especially the power plants that provide light and heat for millions of Ukrainians. Especially as a result of the last two big attacks, in early May and early June, Ukraine has had to ration electricity for industrial and residential consumers, leaving many with power for only short periods of time; some cities, such as Kharkiv, on the country’s eastern front line are virtually powerless. Russia’s assaults, which the U.K. ambassador to the United Nations has argued are in part an attempt to terrorize civilians, are even a subject for the U.N. Security Council. As bad as Russia’s attacks have been so far, they could get worse. Russia has already hit some of Ukraine’s natural gas storage facilities—underground bunkers that are used to store fuel both for domestic needs and to backstop European consumption. Russia’s renewed and much broader assault on Ukraine’s energy sector this spring, which has now destroyed roughly half of the country’s electricity generation capacity, represents an explosive blow to Kyiv’s resilience, civilian morale, and industrial production. The undeniable success of this year’s Russian assault is a sharp contrast to its ultimately failed bid in the first winter of the war to freeze Ukraine into submission. Russia has thrown more ordnance at more vulnerable targets this time around, leading to longer-lasting damage that will be far costlier to repair. Only after the big strikes in early May did Ukraine have to start rationing power to residential and industrial consumers. There is concern among big industry, such as the country’s once-vaunted steel and iron industry, that the power outages could kneecap what appeared to be a miraculous wartime recovery of industrial output. “The difference is that before they mainly targeted transmission lines and substations and now they are destroying power generation plants. What’s worse, the ongoing Russian attacks on the vulnerable energy system offer few prospects of a quick fix that could right the situation before Ukraine enters its third winter of the war.  https://foreignpolicy.com/2024/06/11/russia-attacks-ukraine-energy-infrastructure-power-plants-electricity/

According to “The Economist” a new Russian offensive can be expected early in the summer. Although the latest American package is going to increase Ukraine’s defense capabilities, it will not  provide an opportunity to launch an offensive to liberate the territories captured by Russia since the start of the full-scale invasion in 2022 (The Economist, April 27 – May 3, 2024).

The Western military aid might allow to hamper the upcoming Russian offensive, it will not provide Ukraine with resources necessary to seize the initiative and counterattack. Russia will maintain its air  and artillery superiority, while Ukrainian front-line air defense will remain inadequate. Most importantly, Ukraine’s manpower shortage is certain to become more severe, because the government has neither public support nor political will to carry out the major mobilization.

However, due to political reasons Zelensky will not confine Ukrainian military operations to active defense and will attempt to launch an offensive. In his interview with AFP  Zelensky anticipated the resumption of offensive operations. He expects that the prospects for a new counter-offensive would appear if the situation at the front is stabilized.

 

Before the Ukrainian offensive was launched last year, Zelensky had promised that it would have become the turning point in the course of the war, resulting in the liberation of most of the occupied territories. The offensive turned out to be a total disaster. It didn’t deliver results, becoming a   failure from a military point of view, and led to huge losses, depletion of resources, debilitation of  troops, which affected behavior of potential recruits.  If Zelensky is provided with the opportunity to make new attempts of offensive operations to compensate the current defeats, the military and social consequences of  these actions will be even more disastrous.

Morale of troops on the front-line has dramatically decreased, and eligible would-be recruits are trying to avoid the draft and leave the country illegally (if they have enough money for that).  Ukraine’s political leaders acknowledged that the people are becoming tired  of the war and public spirits are sagging https://www.politico.eu/article/why-ukraine-losing-russia-war/

The inevitable fall of the strategically important town of Chasiv Yar will jeopardize Ukraine’s last stronghold in the Donetsk region. The upcoming Russian assault on poorly prepared positions of Ukrainian troops can result in defense-lines collapsing. In anticipation of that, the Ukrainian government is seeking the way to make the Ukrainian society to accept new territorial losses and huge casualties. Due to that, there is there is good reason for apprehension that the Summit on Peace in Ukraine, which is to be held on June 15-16 will at the Bürgenstock Resort near Lucerne, will be primarily used by Kyiv to convince the domestic audience that there is no other solution but to hold on until Russia is coerced to accept “Ukraine’s peace formula”.

An international approval to the peace proposals might compel China and other Russian partners to use their influence to establish of a long-lasting truce. However, this idea cannot be implemented if the Kremlin is presented with a plan, which can be regarded as an obvious defeat of Putin’s regime.

 

Currently, the Chinese opinion on international problems seems to be of great importance to Russia, and Chinese influence is most required to convince Russia to end the hostilities on the conditions, which can secure a lasting truce. The Chinese approach to peace process should be taken into consideration by the Ukrainian government. Otherwise, the Summit on Peace in Ukraine would only help Russia to persuade its partners that the war can come to an end only after obvious military defeat of Ukraine.

 Zelensky’s formula, which entails an actual capitulation of Russia, will not be recognized by Beijing as an acceptable set of conditions for peace and reconciliation. Xi Jinping stressed at the joint meeting with the press with Emmanuel Macron that China will support peace plan recognized by both Russia and Ukraine. China also wants to ensure the equal participation of all parties in the elaboration of the peace plan.  https://www.mfa.gov.cn/eng/zxxx_662805/202405/t20240507_11293718.html

 Zelensky, who wants the Ukrainian public to believe that the  “Ukraine’s Peace Formula” is considered to be the only basis for an internationally approved peace process, will try to avoid any discussion of truce conditions at the Summit on Peace in Ukraine. He declared at the meeting with cadets of the Academy of the State Border Service that Ukraine wants discussion at the summit to be focused on the issues of energy and nuclear security, free navigation, exchange of prisoners of war and return of Ukrainian children who were illegally deported or forcibly transferred to Russia. https://www.slovoidilo.ua/2024/05/03/novyna/polityka/zelenskyj-rozpoviv-yakyx-pytannya-planuye-zoseredytysya-ukrayina-samitu-myru

 In such a case, the Summit on Peace in Ukraine will have no effect on the continuation of hostilities, but it will give the Ukrainian government a pretext to continue the hostilities and will make the Ukrainian public accept a prolongation of the war. It should be noted that Ukrainian military leaders appear to realize that in the present situation Ukraine cannot defeat Russia and liberate occupied territories.

 Vadym Skibicki, the deputy head of Ukrainian military intelligence (HUR), confessed that he does not see the possibility of ending the war with Russia solely through victory on the battlefield. https://www.economist.com/europe/2024/05/02/a-fresh-russian-push-will-test-ukraine-severely-says-a-senior-general

The Economist reported that the high-ranking officers questioned by the magazine do not believe that Ukraine has the resources to get back to its 1991 borders (The Economist, May 11-17, 2024). However, political leaders of Ukraine require the continuation of hostilities to have a justification for postponing elections, which can be lost by Zelensky, whose presidential term has already come to an end.

 

It should be kept in mind that the situation on the battlefield is destined to deteriorate to the shortage of fortifications, which were not built on schedule. According to Ukrainian political analyst Alexander Kochetkov, this non-fulfilment of effective defense requirements cannot be righted, because it is impossible to build appropriate front-line fortifications under enemy fire.  Pictures of  fortifications of the second echelon, which were publish on social media, arouse suspicion that they do not meet the necessary conditions. The other major failure, which has been silenced by the government, is the lack of dense minefields, which were not laid, though they proved their effectiveness  in 2023, when they were used by Russian troops to thwart Ukrainian offensive. https://opinions.glavred.net/novaya-taktika-rossiyan-na-harkovshchine-chto-stoit-znat-10564748.html

In Kharkiv region, where Russian advance is especially dangerous, most of the state funding for the construction of fortifications seem to have been stolen. The money were provided to shell companies, which have not fulfilled their contractual obligations. The legal owners of such companies are people without any assets and often with a criminal past. The funds, which were transferred to these companies, cannot be recovered. https://parlament.ua/ru/news/groshi-pishli-lyudyam-z-kriminalnim-minulim-sotni-miljoniv-griven-mogli-vkrasti-na-budivnicztvi-fortifikaczij-na-harkivshhini/

Martyna Bohuslavets, the head of anti-corruption NGO “Mezha” (“Network”), stated that “the owners” of the companies, which were supposed to be involved in construction of fortifications, are unaware of their existence.  https://www.pravda.com.ua/columns/2024/05/13/7455571/

It was noted, that telegram channels associated with the Kharkiv regional administration removed Zelensky’s statement made at the end of the last year that fortifications built in Kharkiv region could be called “powerful”. https://t.me/MediaKiller2021/12625

Shocking ineptitude displayed by high ranking officials in the past months has been combined with a gradual concentration of power in the hands  of Andriy Yermak, the head of the presidential office, who became friends with Zelensky in 2011. https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2024/05/18/andriy-yermak-power-chief-ukraine

 

Yermak gained benefits from the reshuffle of the presidential office at the end of March, when there were dismissals of several advisors, who had started working at the President’s Office before Yermak was appointed. https://english.nv.ua/nation/zelenskyy-s-administrative-reshuffle-and-its-risks-expert-interview-50406266.html

In early May, Yermak got an opportunity to get rid of two influential ministers, who were not controlled by him.

On April 25, Mykola Solskyi, the Minister of Agricultural Policy of Ukraine, made the decision to resign, because he was accused of participating in a swindling scheme. On May 9, the Ukrainian parliament dismissed Solsky from his post. https://www.eurointegration.com.ua/news/2024/05/13/7185842/

Polish Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Michał Kołodziejczak, stated in his interview with “Dziennik Gazeta Prawna” that talks with Kiev concerning restrictions on the Ukrainian food exports were suspended because the Polish government did not want to negotiate with people who were charged with corruption. https://wiadomosci.dziennik.pl/wydarzenia/artykuly/9505808,rozgrywki-polityczne-zamiast-marszu-kolodziejczak-protestow-prawdziw.html

It should be mentioned that Solskyi was considered to be completely independent of  Yermak and as a minister, who controls extremely important economic activity, had his own circle of influence.

On May 9. the Verkhovna Rada also dismissed Oleksandr Kubrakov from the post of Deputy Prime Minister for Reconstruction – Minister of Community Development, Territories and Infrastructure.

According to the resolution, Kubrakov was laid off because his office were divided into two separate ministries: one for infrastructure and one for regional development. Consequently, one of the most important positions in the Ukrainian government was closed down and the most influential  independent official was removed.

 

After his dismissal, Kubrakov stated that he had not been properly informed of the changes resulted in his ousting. Regardless of his “openness to dialogue”  that decision was not discussed with him and he was not invited to the meeting of the pro-presidential party faction and the relevant committee. https://www.kyivpost.com/post/32370

Kubrakov was considered to be acting in opposition to Yermak and antagonizing him by having his own connections with the Western governments and particularly the US administration. Forcing Kubrakov to resign, Yermak destroyed one of the most significant alternative centers of influence.       He also showed that those, who are trying to establish relationships with the US and the European officials over his head, just endanger their own positions. It is rumored that the representatives of the US administration made attempts to prevent Kubrakov’s dismissal, but the presidential office simply ignored them.

Most likely, Kubrakov will be held responsible for the destruction of a significant part of Ukrainian infrastructure, which the ministry headed by him was legally obliged to protect. The relevant allegations have already appeared on the media. Besides, Maryana Bezuhla, a member of parliament, who had called for the discharge of former Commander-in-Chief Valerii Zaluzhnyi, started disparaging incumbent Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrskyi. According to Bezugla, Syrskyi ignores “critical issues”, and Ukrainian high-ranking generals under his command have been squandering Ukraine’s chances for victory. https://parlament.ua/news/nardep-bezugla-pochala-rizko-kritikuvati-sirskogo-ta-jogo-pidleglih-generaliv/

The Ukrainian government appears to be preparing for political and military challenges, which Ukraine will encounter in the near future. In a critical situation, the government might face difficulties in dealing with mass frustration due to the crisis of presidential legitimacy, which can arise in consequence of inevitable decline of public confidence in the president. Zelensky stated in his interview with Reuters that his presidential term is not going to expire until martial law remains in effect. However, in time of crisis such justification might not be considered as reasonable. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PEvBASh78PE

 

Forecast of further development of the conflict

 

In the current situation, Ukraine cannot count on a successful continuation of hostilities. It will not be able to overcome a shortage of manpower and ammunition. The challenges ahead seem to be insurmountable. Russia has a rapidly growing weapons and ammunition production and has created conditions for launching a successful offensive. If Moscow is able to achieve significant success in the summer, Ukraine will face social unrest, which will be difficult to manage partly because of legitimation crisis. Russia is trying to create a threat of cutting lines of communication with troops, which are defending Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second largest city. The Ukrainian army has to concentrate efforts on preventing the possible blockade of  Kharkiv, weakening other directions in spite of the danger that they will be chosen for major offensive operations. It is becoming urgent to compel Russia to agree on cessation of hostilities, using the tools of international pressure. The Summit on Peace in Ukraine can play a major role in formulating an internationally supported truce plan. Therefore, the Ukrainian government should not be allowed to turn the Summit in the event  aimed to justify the protraction of the war in the eyes of Ukrainian public.

The government’s inability to accomplish the construction of fortifications in Kharkiv region indicates a deep crisis in the Ukrainian governance system. Though Western financial and military assistance can mitigate the consequences of this crisis, it will inevitably give rise to new risks and dangers, undermining Ukraine’s military capabilities and affecting outcomes of combat operations.

Yermak will keep on concentrating power in the hands of presidential office and destroying alternative centers of influence. Until the termination of hostilities and conduction of new elections, this process can only be hindered by building direct connections between Western official and independent political actors in Ukraine.

 

Recommendations for the European institutions and organizations:

 

Compelling Russia to negotiate on truce seem to be especially difficult. There is an urgent need for collaboration between major non-Western states (especially, China, Brazil and Turkey) and the EU countries in creating tools of international pressure on Russia. Before the Summit on Peace in Ukraine it should be made clear that non-Western leaders can benefit from taking active part in the peace process and the EU countries will take into consideration their needs and proposals. Ukrainian supporters of truce should be given a chance to express publicly their opinion.