Getting Ukraine’s History Right Is Crucial for Anti-Imperialist Politics | 
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Getting Ukraine’s History Right Is Crucial for Anti-Imperialist Politics
Ten years after Ukraine’s Maidan Revolution, what should the left make of it?
This month marks the 10th anniversary of the 2014 Maidan Revolution in Ukraine, 
which ousted President Viktor Yanukovych and in turn prompted the Russian 
seizure of Crimea and the Russian-backed secessionist movement in the Donbas. 
It also marks the second anniversary of the Russian invasion eight years later.
Western anti-imperialists have correctly recognized a number of provocative 
actions and other missteps by the United States and NATO which are a necessary 
part of the context for the ongoing tragedy. However, it is essential for us to 
get our criticisms right if we are going to build a progressive, 
internationalist alternative. To begin, it is not accurate to characterize the 
popular uprising as a “U.S. coup.” During the Cold War, the United States 
actively supported and even initiated coups in Latin America and elsewhere, 
which involved supporting top-ranking military officers using troops under 
their command to seize control of governmental institutions by force. The 
Maidan uprising, by contrast, included upwards of 800,000 protesters in Kyiv 
and hundreds of thousands elsewhere in the country. Based on my interviews with 
participants in the uprising and my study of the members of the resistance 
coalition, which did include some right-wing nationalists but was 
overwhelmingly dominated by a range of democratic parties, it is clear to me 
that the vast majority of the Maidan uprising were liberal democrats who 
engaged in legitimate acts of nonviolent resistance against severe government 
repression. Many of them spent months in freezing temperatures in a struggle 
for a better Ukraine dominated by neither Russia nor the West. To label 
participants in the Maidan uprising as puppets of Washington is as unfair as 
labeling peasant revolutionaries in El Salvador during the 1980s as puppets of 
Moscow.
There were some neo-fascists in the protests who engaged in weeks of street 
fighting. In addition, some armed far right groups seized government buildings 
in the final hours of the uprising, but this was after Yanukovych fled Kyiv and 
those buildings were emptied after government workers joined the general strike 
against his regime. The inclusion of some of their members in the 2014 
provisional government led by Arseniy Yatsenyuk was disturbing, but they were 
gone within months and have not been in any governments since. Indeed, far 
right parties have not received any more than 3 percent of the vote in 
subsequent elections.
Get our free emailsEmail*[email protected] that the United States spent over 
$5 billion to finance regime change in Ukraine, often attributed to the 
then-Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Victoria 
Nuland, need to be assessed in terms of their context. That figure represents 
the total amount of money provided to Ukraine up to that time since its 
independence in 1991 and included aid to pro-Western Ukrainian administrations 
(which the United States presumably would not have wanted to destabilize). Like 
most U.S. foreign aid, it was calibrated to bring the recipient country closer 
to the United States (just as Russian aid to Ukraine was used to promote its 
influence) and, also like most foreign aid, some of it was for legitimate 
support for liberal democracy and development and some of it less so. There was 
also some funding through the National Endowment for Democracy and other 
organizations to some opposition groups that were involved in the 2014 
uprising, but this was in the millions of dollars, nothing remotely close to $5 
billion. This aid went primarily to centrist democratic groups, not the far 
right, so claims that the United States directly and intentionally supported 
fascists in Ukraine appear ungrounded. And the “democracy funding” went to 
civic education, election monitoring and related activities, not a massive 
grassroots civil resistance campaign, which the State Department is not capable 
of forging.
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Lindsay Koshgarian , TRUTHOUTJanuary 11, 2024The limited amount of U.S. funding 
of opposition groups did not “cause” the Maidan uprising any more than the 
Soviets providing arms to leftist movements caused revolutions in Central 
America, Southern Africa or Southeast Asia. The world is not shaped solely by 
the machinations of empires and without the agency of ordinary people. The 
United States can’t just send in the CIA and instantaneously cause a change of 
government. It’s one thing to get some generals to stage a coup, which arguably 
is what happened in Guatemala, Iran, Chile and Brazil. Getting millions of 
people out onto the streets is something different entirely.
There are certainly other legitimate criticisms about the Maidan uprising, 
including the opposition’s refusal to abide by the compromise agreement of 
February 21, 2014, which called for early elections and limited presidential 
powers, and to instead seize power directly, which fed Kremlin accusations that 
it was some kind of coup. Whether for good or for ill, however, and despite 
whatever attempts Western powers may have made to influence the outcome, the 
change of government was ultimately the outcome of choices made independently 
by the Ukrainian opposition.
This is not to say there aren’t legitimate criticisms of U.S. and NATO policy 
toward Ukraine and Russia.
To label participants in the Maidan uprising as puppets of Washington is as 
unfair as labeling peasant revolutionaries in El Salvador during the 1980s as 
puppets of Moscow.
The triumphalism following the Cold War, which included the facilitation of 
neoliberalism in post-Soviet Russia and the eastward expansion of NATO to 
include former Warsaw Pact countries and three former Soviet Baltic Republics 
certainly contributed to the rise of Putin’s reactionary ultranationalism, 
militarism and imperial designs toward Ukraine and elsewhere. This was 
compounded by the Western refusal to consider a neutral status for Ukraine. 
Expanding a military alliance when Russia — which had been invaded from the 
West on no less than four occasions during the previous 200 years — was at its 
weakest no doubt fed Russian fears that NATO was not about defending Europe but 
extending U.S. hegemony.
At the same time, given Putin’s insistence that Ukraine has no right to exist 
as its own nation and that it is inherently part of Russia, it is unfair to 
claim that the Russian invasion of Ukraine is therefore solely NATO’s fault. 
While it is important to acknowledge how Western hubris has contributed to the 
tragedy, the responsibility for the invasion rests on the Russian government. 
Indeed, the argument that the invasion is justified by the U.S.’s military 
alliances with Russia’s near neighbors is as dubious as the charges that 
Moscow’s efforts during the Cold War to establish security ties with Cuba, 
Grenada, Nicaragua, or other near neighbors justifies U.S. sanctions and 
military intervention.
We must also reject the argument that the Russian invasion was trying to 
protect the Russian-speaking minority in Eastern Ukraine from genocide. While 
there were many hundreds of civilian casualties on both sides from the 
low-level civil war in 2014 and 2022, there was no deliberate campaign to 
annihilate Russian speakers. The International Court of Justice, which — in a 
near-unanimous ruling — noted that the preliminary evidence strongly suggests 
that Israel is violating the Genocide Treaty, also recognized that Russia’s 
charges of genocide against Ukraine were without merit. And the 2022 
“referendum” on the region joining Russia, like the referendum in Crimea soon 
after the Russian seizure of that territory in 2014, was not free and fair. 
There were no international observers, opponents were not allowed to campaign, 
and the occupying forces claimed outrageously inflated results in terms of the 
turnout and voting.
Volodymyr Zelenskyy, an ethnic Russian, was elected president of Ukraine in a 
free and fair election in 2019 with 74 percent of the vote and promised to 
clean up the corruption riddling both the pro-Russian bloc and the main 
pro-Western bloc. Facing entrenched opposition, he had made little progress at 
the time of Russia’s 2022 invasion, but it seemed that in many ways Ukraine was 
stumbling toward a more functional government and economy that could eventually 
transform it into a modern European Union state. Just as the United States 
could not tolerate what Noam Chomsky has called “the threat of a good example” 
in the form of successful socialist models in the Western hemisphere, Putin may 
similarly have been troubled by the prospects of a successful liberal 
democratic alternative among a people with such close geographical, cultural 
and historical ties.
There are very good reasons, though, to question Biden’s motivations in 
supporting Ukraine. Biden supported the invasion of Iraq, which — like the 
Russian invasion — was an illegal war of aggression. His administration 
recognizes Israel’s illegal annexation of Syria’s Golan Heights and Morocco’s 
illegal annexation of the entire nation of Western Sahara, both of which — like 
Russia’s annexation of Crimea and the Donbas region — constitute an illegal 
expansion of territories seized by military force. He supports Israel’s ongoing 
war on Gaza in the face of the broad international consensus for an immediate 
ceasefire despite widespread attacks on civilian population centers, which — 
like Russia’s bombing of civilian areas of Ukrainian cities — constitute 
serious violations of international humanitarian law. His administration 
provides arms to 57 percent of the world’s dictatorial regimes which — like 
Russia — engage in widespread repression and deny basic freedoms to their 
peoples, raising serious questions about his claim that U.S. support for 
Ukraine is rooted in U.S. support for democracy against authoritarianism.
It would be strategically misguided for anti-imperialists to insist that the 
United States has to be consistent in its principles before taking action 
against aggressors or that a government can’t do the right thing for the wrong 
reasons. However, it would be naïve to deny that Biden’s stance toward Russia 
and Ukraine is more about geopolitics than principles. The task of 
anti-imperialists today is to be clear about how to navigate these tensions.
Reasonable people can disagree about Western policy toward the conflict at this 
point. Some progressives argue that this is a rare case where arms transfers 
actually serve a legitimate purpose in defending a democratic country against 
an authoritarian invader threatening to destroy it. Other progressives, while 
recognizing the illegitimacy of Russia’s aggression and Ukraine’s right to 
defend itself, question whether additional arms will simply prolong a war of 
attrition and that the human, financial, environmental costs — combined the 
risks of a wider war (including even the possibility, however remote, of a 
nuclear exchange) — is worth Ukraine recovering the 17 percent of its territory 
under Russian occupation.
Indeed, the U.S. insistence that Syria give up the Golan region to Israel, the 
Western Saharans give up their entire nation to Morocco and the Palestinians 
give up large swathes of the West Bank and East Jerusalem to illegal Israeli 
settlements illustrates that the United States has no real interest in 
upholding the inviolability of internationally recognized borders as a matter 
of principle.
There is a strong case for demanding more attention on nonviolent alternatives 
to weaken Moscow’s campaign in Ukraine. For example, if the United States and 
the Europeans were willing to offer temporary asylum to Russian Army deserters, 
draft resisters and their families, it would undermine Moscow’s military 
offensive quicker and with far fewer human and financial costs than by 
providing additional weapons to Ukraine.
Still, in questioning U.S. policy, we must be continually wary of any lines of 
argumentation that justify Russia’s actions or misrepresent Ukrainian history 
and politics.
Indeed, those of us in the international left need to recognize that the 
leading adversaries of Western imperialism today are not what they were during 
the Cold War. While the national liberation struggles we supported back then 
may have been more militaristic and authoritarian than our ideal, there was no 
question that, compared to the right-wing dictatorships and the 
colonial/neocolonial forces backed by Washington at the time, they were the 
progressive alternatives. Today, many of the dominant challenges to the West 
are reactionary — Salafi Islamist groups like al-Qaeda and ISIS, the Iranian 
regime and its allies, and Putin’s Russia. And it’s critical to recognize that 
Moscow also has imperialist ambitions and engages in imperialist wars.
This does not mean we pull back on our opposition to U.S. imperialism or that 
we don’t point out ways that U.S. policy has helped give rise to such 
reactionary forces or international conflict. However, neither should we defend 
these forces or repeat their lies to justify their aggression. To do so not 
only harms our credibility in terms of winning allies in ongoing 
anti-imperialist struggles elsewhere but also undermines the moral necessity of 
rejecting all forms of national chauvinism and imperialism, regardless of their 
source.
Stephen Zunes
    


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