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Ukraine Ex-president Kravchuk: Sanctions Not Enough, Must Negotiate for Peace


Former Ukrainian President Leonid Kravchuk says his nation must find a peaceful solution to the conflict in the east.
Former Ukrainian President Leonid Kravchuk says his nation must find a peaceful solution to the conflict in the east.

Ukraine's first president, who helped usher in the peaceful dissolution of the Soviet Union 25 years ago, said Ukraine's leaders today must find a similarly peaceful resolution of the separatist conflict in the east.

"We heeded our peoples then and signed the [dissolution] accords, and so why can't the country leaders today tap a solution consonant with the aspirations of their nations, which don't want a war?" Leonid Kravchuk said at an Atlantic Council event in Washington on November 18.

While Kravchuk said the West must keep up economic pressure on Russia by maintaining sanctions until it agrees to stop its aggression in Ukraine, he added that "you will not achieve order in the world only through sanctions."

Ukraine's only option in the end is to negotiate peace, he said.

FILE - Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko addresses parliament during the opening ceremony parliamentary session in Kiyv, Ukraine, Tuesday, Sept. 6, 2016.
FILE - Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko addresses parliament during the opening ceremony parliamentary session in Kiyv, Ukraine, Tuesday, Sept. 6, 2016.

"We have only one prospect ahead of us, and it implies dialogue and agreements,” Kravchuk said. “Other prospects are nonexistent...I'm confident Ukraine has no other pathway than that of peace."

Kravchuk has previously said that while he is ready to take up arms to defend his country, he believes Russia would quickly defeat Ukraine if an all-out war broke out between them.

Kravchuk has also said previously that Ukraine might have to accept Russia's 2014 annexation of the Ukrainian Black Sea region of Crimea in order to regain control over territory in the east that is held by Russia-backed separatists as part of a peace settlement.

"Donbas will return without fail, and we will not have to wait long," he told TASS in August. "As for Crimea, we will have to wait for a long time...Crimea was drawn into Moscow's orbit, so it is already part of the Russian federal system."

In August, he called on Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko to ditch the Minsk peace process sponsored by Germany and France, which has been stalled, and instead try to negotiate a settlement directly with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Russia maintains that it is not a party to the conflict in eastern Ukraine, although Moscow provides military, political, and economic support to the separatist movements. The International Criminal Court (ICC) earlier this month determined the conflict in Ukraine to be "an international armed conflict between Ukraine and the Russian Federation."

FILE - Gennady Burbulis speaks to The Associated Press in Moscow, Russia, July 1, 2011. Burbulis said Friday the West's harsh line against Russia has been ineffective at bringing about peace in Ukraine.
FILE - Gennady Burbulis speaks to The Associated Press in Moscow, Russia, July 1, 2011. Burbulis said Friday the West's harsh line against Russia has been ineffective at bringing about peace in Ukraine.

Also speaking at the Atlantic Council event, Gennady Burbulis, a close aide of the late Russian President Boris Yeltsin, who signed the 1991 agreement that dissolved the Soviet Union, said the West's harsh line against Russia has been ineffective at bringing about peace in Ukraine.

Burbulis, who said the Soviet Union was doomed to fail, called for a softer, more nuanced dialogue with today's Kremlin.

"There is no other way than consensus, but consensus implies a different understanding of politics, a different culture of relations, not guided by the principle, 'I am stronger and you are poorer,'" he said.

Stanislav Shushkevich, who in 1991 was head of the Belarusian parliament and who also signed the agreement dissolving the Soviet Union with Yeltsin and Kravchuk, said that despite the success of the peaceful transition to a post-Soviet world back then, stubborn ethnic and territorial disputes have emerged and not all the old Soviet ways have disappeared.

"A whole range of symbols of the old Soviet Union have been resurrected because the mentality of Soviet people has been preserved," he said.

This report contains material from AP and Tass.

Activists burn flares during a protest against the extension of police authority and power in central Kyiv, Ukraine, Nov. 14, 2016.
Activists burn flares during a protest against the extension of police authority and power in central Kyiv, Ukraine, Nov. 14, 2016.

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