Why Would Any Foreign Government Trust America?
18th March 2014
Mark Steyn is not afraid to ask the hard questions.
Speaking of “secession”, it is possible to have an honest difference of opinion about Moscow’s claims upon the Crimea, which was transferred from Russia to the Ukraine in 1954 as little more than a bit of internal housekeeping within the Soviet Union. But it is not possible if one is the Government of the United States or the United Kingdom. London, Washington and Moscow signed something called “the Budapest Agreement” in 1994, guaranteeing Ukraine’s sovereignty in return for the newly independent nation giving up its nuclear weapons. By “guaranteeing”, I mean that Russia agreed to respect Ukraine’s sovereignty, and Britain and America committed themselves to seeing that Russia did so. It was shortly after the USSR went out of business and in the heyday of all that talk about the new “unipolar” world. The agreement wasn’t a big news story at the time, and one can argue that there was no reason for London or Washington to get mixed up in the redefined relationships of a hastily deSovietized empire. But the fact is they did sign it, and great powers should not give their word unless they intend to keep their word.
They have now broken it, as Vladimir Putin knew they would.