If you think so you need to reconsider.
The initial endeavor of newsmen is to tell all". Except when the gathering of information imperils the journalists life that is the easy part. Alas the bare facts get the public bored. By the time the crucial meaning pours in the interest has ebbed.
Through its extensions the Crimean crisis will haunt the future. Solutions through unconcern will not spare us the consequences. The fault is not Putins but that of the comfort-spending politician. Past crises that got worse through neglect reveal that the culture in which the bacteria multiplied has been a mixture of neglect and the illusion of immunity.
In the crime of the Crimea" the accusing finger does not point to Russia alone but it also identifies those that had encouragingly miss-reacted to the mischief.
Prior to the emergence of the Kremlins solution through applied might" your correspondent had planned a piece about a multiethnic Ukraine and of Europes comparable entities. It was the expected charge that his ethnic outlook motivated the writing that hindered its execution.
An imperial past relying on diverse ideologies has shaped Europe. The Ottoman Empire the Habsburg Empire the Third Reich and the Communist and Czarist versions of Russias systems had something in common. Besides retarding and distorting their domains development they moved peoples in a ways that ignored historic ethnicities. The general peace treaties following the conflicts the empires created ignored historic or ethnic rights. Some of this reminds us of the colonial and post-colonial order in Africa and the near/middle East.
If we pursue a stable world order we must crave one made of components that prevail internally and in their relationships without the resort to power. This can be achieved if the participating entities are democratic and if changes whether internal or involving state relations unfold through a consensual process. A system that accepts change only as an expression of power or one that is said to be unalterable by a dominant guarantor makes lawlessness into the tool of the ruthless.
Since it is the fate of the Crimea that prompted the foregoing remarks we may connect that crisis to our generalizations.
Let us commence by defining to whom the Crimea should belong. Here the rod we use determines the result. The question is which conquest marks the scale. The Tartars replacing the Greeks were the original" settlers of the peninsula. Czarist Russias expansion imposed new rulers. Then Stalin deported the natives to the USSRs ample East". By now the GULAGs survivors have returned to their land without regaining what they had left behind in 1944. Meanwhile migration created a Russian majority. Finally while a part of the USSR the isthmus was transferred from Russia to the Ukraine.
Following the dissolution of the USSR Russia and the Ukraine became successor states. Kiev allowed Moscow to station its Navy on the peninsula that by then housed 60 ethnic Russians; the rest being Ukrainians and Tartars. In exchange for her nuclear weapons an international treaty guaranteed the integrity of the Ukraine.
Putting the principle of self-determination before states rights and history after the dissolution of the Red Empire the Crimea should have been returned to Russia. Regardless of the complicated details a mutually accepted plebiscite should have determined the capes fate. Whether and when a stabilized Ukraine and a consolidated Russia would have felt sufficiently strong to conclude such a mutually acceptable deal has become a moot question by conditions created through fiat.
What we can be certain of is that Moscows unilateral action has created an enemy on its doorstep. Future state relations will not reflect the moral weight of commitments but shall remain a question of relative power. Thereby the rule of mutually accepted law will be superseded by the relative might of the involved parties. Even for Russia this is a negative even if presently she can deliver the hardest punch.
In a free election for good reasons or led by illusions the Crimeas majority would have chosen to belong to Russia. This would have brought satisfaction with the least amount of inequity for those minorities that could not be explicitly protected. Perfect solutions do not exist in comparable situations. Therefore neither the Tartars nor the large Ukrainian minority would have embraced the outcome without reservations.
Had the Kremlin waited a settlement in its favor would have been achievable. In this case Russias reputation the rules of the international game treaty commitments would have been served. Additionally the disquiet of countries that have recently been freed from Soviet domination would not have been activated. Thus NATO would have continued the slumber that the alliances Western Europeans quietly welcomed. A derivate would have been a trust to deepen institutional NATO-Russia ties. Lastly through the EUs nudge the areas Russians autonomy (along with the rights of other minorities) within the Ukraine would have been assured.
Here a matter that goes beyond the Kiev-Moscow dispute needs to be mentioned. Europe has a long-standing ailment. It is fed by territories in nation states that are inhabited by ethnics that have a state of their own beyond the border. Since there is likely to be a minority within the minority secession followed by annexation (as in the Crimea) is seldom the best solution. Autonomy; the free use of language in administration and schooling is the right that is the possibilitist" response.
Eventually Putin could have had the Crimea. That would have taken time and it would have been incremental. By virtue of its nature the process would not have been dramatic. Instead Putin to cover up the weakness that flows from retarded development opted for the glory of conquest. The achieved triumph serves to stabilize his power. However interstate relations became murky. That means that an era approaches in which global politics become complicated by new tensions. There are consequences in this for the ability of Russia to develop a modern economy and a matching society and to raise beyond the level the seller of natural resources. The conditions into which Russia becomes locked in mean more autocracy and that implies the preservation of the developmental lag.