Canada’s Commitments to
Ukraine will benefit the World
By Oksana Bashuk Hepburn
from The Ottawa Citizen Special – June 24, 2008
There are
global lessons in the recent visit by Ukraine’s President Victor
Yushchenko to Canada. He came looking for a
friend and found one. During the visit, Canada recognized the
starvation of some 10 million Ukrainian landowners by the Soviet government [in
1932-33] as an act of genocide, and Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Canada will support Ukraine’s bid for NATO
membership.
These commitments are important not just to Ukraine but to the entire global
community because the underpinning values are universal. It astonishes many
that this was not done before and continues to be opposed by Ukraine’s large and domineering
neighbour, the Russian Federation.
The key lesson from the Famine, Holodomor, is
this: if the genocide of one dictator goes unpunished and not atoned for, it
becomes a model to follow. Evil engenders evil. Despite the immensity of
Communism’s atrocity in 1932-33, world leaders were silent while “useful
idiots,” as Joseph Stalin called Soviet apologists, worked to cover up the
crime against humanity by furthering myths of a “people’s paradise.”
Walter Duranty’s fraudulent articles in The
New York Times earned him a Pulitzer Prize in journalism, led to the
recognitions of the USSR as a state, and ensured
Stalin a Time Magazine Man of the Year Award. To no surprise,
this genocide was copied some 10 years later by another dictator.
As a global human rights leader, Canada stands
firm by the principle that elimination of any people is heinous -- Ukrainian,
Chinese, Jewish, Cambodian -- although it is significant that Communist
dictators are responsible for some 120 million dead around the world in the
last century. This is a grotesque record. Canada’s recognition of the
Soviet-generated 1932-33 Famine puts it on the map and in proper context in the
history of genocides. There’s also a message here for the soon to be built Canadian Museum of Human Rights. It
ought to teach prominently the lesson: genocides of the 20th Century were
disproportionately committed by Communist regimes. And that in Ukraine’s case, they almost got
away with it. Canadians have a right to know that genocides are not unique
aberrations, but consequences to unchallenged or covered-up evil.
What is shocking about Prime Minister Harper’s
laudable recognition of the genocide in Ukraine is that it could be
opposed by anyone, yet official Russia does.
The prime minister’s support for Ukraine’s membership in NATO
offers another lesson: the dangers of appeasement. Consider this. After years
of Russian domination, sovereign and independent Ukraine emerged from the ruins
of the USSR with 90-per-cent plus
support. Yet the West continued to view its needs through a pro-Russia prism.
In the 1990s, there were threats to withhold aid if Ukraine refused to forfeit
components of the formidable Soviet nuclear arsenal exclusively into Russia’s hands. Now Europe et
al, live in fear while Russia’s presidents -- former
and current -- hiss threats about pointing warheads at neighbours.
When NATO support was pushing 70 per cent in Ukraine - Europe’s second largest
country, by the way -- membership was dismissed on grounds that it failed to
meet standards. But let’s face it, NATO’s rejection of Ukraine in Bucharest, led by Germany and France, was about placating Russia.
A history lesson - appeasement policies tend not
to end well. Despite our Cold War victory, Russia is wealthier, has its
people in strategic Western institutions, its finger on the nuclear button and,
its latest weapon, energy, hanging over Europe. And regrettably, Russia’s aggression - cutting
off gas supplies, selling arms and developing nuclear capabilities in rogue
states, dismissing national sovereignty - does not indicate a state moving
toward democratic capitalist values.
Indeed, its belligerence gives Canada little reason to trust
it close to home. We may yet find ourselves with more to fear for our
unoccupied and unprotected North and its natural wealth than Russia’s recent words and
underwater explorations, the Law of the Sea protecting our claim,
notwithstanding.
It’s very much in Canada’s and the world’s
interest to support Ukraine’s struggle to turn
itself into a democratic state and join likeminded communities. Regrettably,
Vladimir Putin and his replacement as Russian President, Dmitry Medvedev, are
storming in opposition. Canada’s principled support of Ukraine provides a needed
counterweight to such regressive thinking and, to Russia pandering.
Oksana Bashuk Hepburn is the president of U*CAN
Ukraine Canada Relations Inc. and former director of communications with the
Canadian Human Rights Commission.