Alphen, Netherlands. 13
February. “Peace in our time”. Those hollow words came to define British Prime
Minister Neville Chamberlain and the appeasement of Nazi Germany in the wake of
the signing of the Munich Pact on 29 September, 1939. A day after the signing of yet another Minsk
agreement it looks on the face of it as if the illiberal Realpolitik have once again trumped liberal naivety in an effort to
bring ‘peace’ to Ukraine. Indeed, several
commentators have alluded to the similarities between the Munich Pact and the
Minsk Agreement. So, are there
similarities and differences between Munich and Minsk?
First, I must issue a
disclaimer. I am an Oxford historian who
has studied the causes of World War Two in great depth. In spite of Russia’s blatant aggression in
Ukraine I am still not prepared to equate modern Russia with Nazi Germany or
President Putin with Adolf Hitler. This
blog as ever is about hard analysis not gratuitous offence. Given the heroic struggle
of the Russian people during The Great
Patriotic War and indeed my respect for them I am simply not prepared to
cross that all-too-easy line simply to make a point. However, there are some political similarities
between Munich and Minsk that cannot be ignored:
1.
Munich and Minsk both resulted from
aggression against a third state by rapidly rearming, illiberal great powers
dissatisfied by their place in the European order facing liberal powers
weakened by economic crisis. In Germany’s
case it was the rejection of the 1919 Treaty of Versailles and in Russia’s case
it is rejection of the post-Cold War European order.
2.
Munich and Minsk both rewarded aggression
by in effect confirming the ‘principle’ that might is right. Russia in effect now controls much of Eastern
Ukraine just as 1938 Germany gained control over the Sudeten territory of a then
Czechoslovakia that it was going to occupy in any case. Neither conflict would have existed but for
great power aggression.
3.
Munich and Minsk both established a de
facto principle linking ‘sovereignty’ to ethnicity. Indeed, by confirming the
ceasefire line as in effect the extent of respective ethnicity-based sovereignty
Russia may well have re-established a dangerous precedent for interference in
any state where sizeable Russian minorities exist. Prior to the September 1939 invasion of
Poland that is exactly the principle 1938 Germany used to justify expansionism.
4.
Munich and Minsk both revealed the
weakness and division of the liberal powers and who then strove to mask that
weakness by wrapping the respective agreements in a veil of empty legalism,
such as international commissions and meaningless plebiscites. By so doing the
liberal powers conferred some sense of legitimacy upon naked power.
5.
Munich and Minsk both ignored previous
breaches of international law in the hope that a line in the sand could be
drawn and that no further expansion would be sought. Munich ignored both Germany’s 1936 occupation
of the Saarland and the 1938 occupation of Austria. Minsk ignored Russia’s 2014 occupation of
Crimea and thus confirmed it.
6.
Munich and Minsk both reflected a
culture of appeasement in that the liberal negotiating powers Germany and France
rejected out-of-hand any military ‘solution’.
No-one sensible is suggesting a force-on-force conflict between Russian
and Western forces over Ukraine, but to reject a role for military force when
such force is central to the strategy of the adversary smacks all-too-readily of
Stanley Baldwin and Neville Chamberlain.
There may be no military ‘solution’ per
se but that must no mean that the credible ability to apply force if needs
be and in some form has no utility in the process towards a secure solution. It is that point which most clearly divides
the US from Germany and France.
However, there are also very profound differences
between Munich and Minsk:
1.
Munich and Minsk both involved a weak France.
However, in 1938 Germany was the aggressor, revisionist power whereas in 2015 Germany
is the status quo lead power. Britain
was in the ‘lead’ in 1938, whereas in 2015 Britain is a foreign policy
irrelevance, a small power, domestically-divided with small leaders stuck at
the edge of influence.
2.
Munich did not involve either the
European Union which did not then exist, or the United States, which was then
an isolationist power. The involvement
of both means the liberal powers now have many more coercive tools at their
disposal short of war to persuade Russia to honour agreements. No such tools existed for Britain and France
in 1938.
3.
Munich also took place in a Europe in
which there was no NATO, no ultimate and credible guarantee against further aggression.
Therefore, on balance one should be careful about glibly
citing historical comparisons because the Europe of 2015 is very different from
the Europe of 1938. Equally, one should
be equally aware of the consequences of failure. In March 1939 German forces occupied the rest
of Czechoslovakia and thus made World War Two inevitable. Were Russia to move on the rest of Ukraine
Europe would be but one step from war and any historian knows what that could
mean.
Seventy years ago today some 722 Royal Air Force
Lancaster bomber crews were being briefed.
Several hours later they took off from bases across Eastern England in
two enormous “bomber streams”. Over the next two days the German city of
Dresden was systematically-reduced to rubble and twenty-five thousand of its
citizens lay dead. The true appeasement is
to lack the imagination to realise the implications of what is happening in
Ukraine.
Muninsk?
Julian Lindley-French
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