Ukrainian Protestors Unlikely To Stage A Successful Revolution
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- Tens of thousands of protesters are flooding the streets of Ukraine,
blocking access to government offices and threatening to start what the media is
largely (and preemptively, if not mistakenly) referring to as a "revolution."
All this over the pro-Russian Ukraine leadership's decision to renounce a
free-trade agreement with Europe that would have represented a shift away from
the Russian sphere of influence.
Except that this is no revolution, at least not yet, and people around the world
seem to have forgotten what that word actually means. Like so much else these
days, it seems that the very meaning of the word has become so diluted as to be
virtually meaningless.
If you're a self-styled revolutionary, please study the poster boy for such
things: Che Guevara. I don't much care for Che or his ideology, but he wasn't in
his basement making protest posters and figuring out how he was going to get
pizza delivered while he spent days camping out on Wall Street with his pals.
Today's protesters, wherever they happen to be in the world, seem to think that
they can execute Che-like coups on superpower-backed governments with the same
effort it takes to click a "like" button on a Facebook page that translates as "EuroMaidan"
-- a hat tip to the Maidan Nezalezhnosti central square in Kiev -- as more than
126,000 people have done to date. That won't even score you a victory in a
government no-confidence vote, as we're seeing in Ukraine.
Governments, particularly those with support from superpowers, can't be ousted
unless the opposition has two things working its favor: support from the state
military (or at least a large faction of it), and an expanded Overton window,
defined as the range of ideas and outcomes deemed acceptable by the public.
The Ukraine protesters seem to be looking for a peaceful Berlin Wall dismantling
kind of moment -- minus the fall of the Soviet empire that provided the impetus
for that historic opportunity. Popular, or "color," revolutions against
governments don't work unless they're backed by superpowers -- and typically not
without an electoral event that would provide adequate opportunity and
democratically acceptable cover for government removal.
The widely accepted blueprint for color revolutions is Yugoslavia's "Bulldozer
Revolution," which overthrew Slobodan Milosevic in 2000. The planning and
strategy for that revolution was tethered to an election cycle, as was Ukraine's
2004 "Orange Revolution." But now the country doesn't have presidential
elections scheduled until 2015. Nor is there any galvanizing opposition leader
(at least not one who isn't currently in prison), or any obvious Ukrainian
military support for a coup d'état.
Ukrainians who aren't interested in living in a Kremlin proxy state have valid
concerns. They only have to look to Belarus -- a nation that Russian President
Vladimir Putin managed to seduce away from International Monetary Fund
assistance in favor of his neo-Soviet-style Eurasian Union bloc -- to see the
perils of overdependence on Russia.
How has that worked out for Belarus? Well, in 2007, Russia fiddled with its
natural gas tap that runs across Belarus and into Europe, forcing Belarus to pay
more for the privilege of being a Russian middleman. Belarus could have recently
gained some independence from the Russian sphere had it managed to qualify for
loans from the International Monetary Fund in 2012, but because it couldn't get
its act together and was rebuffed by the IMF, Belarus was forced to climb aboard
Russia's Eurasian Union. The latest IMF assessment of Belarus, issued in
October, states that "the account is deteriorating more sharply this year than
earlier envisaged, against a background of slow growth and declining but still
high inflation."
Like Belarus before it, Ukraine is at a critical junction, with a shot at
diversifying its economy by striking a better balance between Russia and the
West. Ukraine has signed an oil and gas deal with Italy's Eni and France's EDF
that could be worth up to $4 billion, and earlier it had agreed to a $10 billion
shale gas deal with American company Chevron. Such deals could help Ukraine
become an energy supplier rather than a Russian middleman or client. And Russia
really doesn't like it when other countries date around and play the field.
Which explains why if you Google "shale gas" in the English-language Russian
media, you would think that it was about the worst thing in the world.
But revolution is about more than just watching "How to Start a Revolution," the
critically acclaimed documentary about nonviolent-revolution expert Gene Sharp,
on YouTube. As the oft-cited military saying goes, "Amateurs talk tactics;
professionals talk logistics." Ukrainian protestors probably won't be able to
meet the logistical requirements for a successful revolution. At least not now.
COPYRIGHT 2013 RACHEL MARSDEN