http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304179704579459202661974202?mod=WSJ_Opinion_BelowLEFTSecond&mg=reno64-wsj
Putin’s seizure of Crimea gets an assist from foreign policy realists and postmodern liberals.
Russia is a big country. In case you didn’t know.
A flight from New York to St. Petersburg will cover the same distance as one from St. Petersburg to Vladivostok. There are 22 Russians for every Russian square mile, a population density only slightly exceeded by Mali. Exclude all of Russia east of the Urals, and the European portion of the country is still about the size of India and Turkey put together.
This is not exactly a state needing greater Lebensraum.
The point needs making in the face of an undercurrent of Western apology for Vladimir Putin’s seizure of Crimea. It’s an argument that goes roughly as follows:
• Yes, Russia’s seizure of the peninsula was provocative and illegal. But look at it from Moscow’s point of view. “To Russia,” writes Henry Kissinger in the Washington Post, “Ukraine can never be just a foreign country.” Defining events in Russian history—Mr. Kissinger cites the 1709 battle of Poltava—took place on (current) Ukrainian soil, and Ukraine has been independent for just 23 years. Crimea itself is ethnically Russian and only passed into Ukrainian hands through a Soviet bureaucratic maneuver in the mid-1950s.
• As for provocation, how could any Russian leader be indifferent to a Ukraine that sought to join NATO or the European Union, much less sit still as demonstrators in Kiev paralyzed the country and brought about the downfall of its democratically elected leader?