ID | 130861 |
Title Proper | Ukraine |
Other Title Information | seeking an elusive new normal |
Language | ENG |
Author | Charap, Samuel |
Publication | 2014. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The ugly truth is that Moscow can still undermine any Western plan for Ukraine's future. The crisis is likely to lead to a period of sustained disequilibrium and instability. As Ukraine's winter of domestic discord transformed into a spring of territorial partition and instability, European and American officials seemed to be speaking from an agreed set of talking points in their public remarks on the crisis. While hopeful transatlanticists sought to construe this remarkable consistency as a demonstration of a new seriousness of purpose in the West, the litany of warnings, threats and prescriptions for resolution (inevitably characterised as either an 'off-ramp' or 'de-escalation') spoke more to the desperation of those uttering them to quickly find a new, stable equilibrium for Ukraine, Russia and the international system. Yet the talking points and buzzwords, no matter how many times they are repeated, do not in fact describe either a sustainable equilibrium or an end point to the crisis. Instead, the disequilibrium and instability of the Ukrainian crisis seem likely to endure for some time: the search for a 'new normal' promises to be long, costly and highly disruptive of both individuals' lives and the international order. |
`In' analytical Note | Survival : the IISS Quarterly Vol.56, No.3; June-July2014: p.85-94 |
Journal Source | Survival : the IISS Quarterly Vol.56, No.3; June-July2014: p.85-94 |
Key Words | Russia ; Ukraine ; Foreign Policy ; Civil Conflict ; Intervention ; Territorial Disputes ; Ukraine crisis ; Russia - US Relations ; Russia - EU Relations ; Russia - Ukraine Relations ; International Relations - IR ; European Union - EU ; International Crisis ; Crimea Crisis ; European Allies ; International Strategy ; International Order ; Disequilibrium and Instability |