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FOCUS: Russia-Ukraine War

Just Let Them Have Crimea! On The Risks Of Russian "Resentment" — And Ukraine's Too

Russian-born, Kyiv-based writer Michael Sheitelman writes that while everybody is afraid of Russia's bitter wrath should it be forced to relinquish Crimea, the same should go for Ukraine. Imagine that scenario now...

Photo of a big letter Z in steel, overlooking the Kerch bridge that links Crimea to mainland Russia

The letter Z has become a war symbol for Russia, overlooking the Kerch bridge that links Crimea to mainland Russia

Michael Sheitelman

-OpEd-

For several months now, we have been getting trickles of news from Crimea, the big dab of white-out on the geopolitical map of Ukraine and this war.

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Since its annexation in 2014, the peninsula has been isolated not only from Ukraine, but also by the rest of the world. Russian security services and Putin-appointed local authorities have arrested or forced Ukrainian and Crimean Tatar activists to leave. There are no Ukrainian or international journalists on the territory of Crimea, and all Russian media news about what is happening in Crimea is censored.

What we do know is that the military and naval bases in Crimea and the peninsula are used for the transfer, treatment and training of military personnel before they are sent to the front in Ukraine. It is also where the most iconic military diversions since early 2022 have taken place: the bombing of the Crimean bridge, the attack on military airbases, and the sinking of the pride of the Russia's Black Sea fleet, the Moskva cruiser.

Crimea remains a hot spot and a non-negotiable goal of liberation for the Ukrainian side. Only with the return of Crimea, say Ukrainians, will this war end.


Russian-born, Kyiv-based writer Michael Sheitelman offers a different perspective about what's at stake in the peninsula's murky future:

Moscow think-tank thinking

No, my friends, you can't call shit-deal a peace deal. I've read the much-discussed Washington Post article this week about Crimea. To start with, I found the article was suspiciously pulling "parachute straps" from Moscow.

The publication quotes Nikolai Petrov, presented as an analyst for a respected London think tank. But neither the first nor last name of this Londoner look British: It turns out this Petrov works in Moscow at the so-called "Higher School of Economics," and is a proxy of Vladimir Putin's associate Alexei Kudrin, whose new position at Russian internet giant Yandex allows him to help the Kremlin track what's happening online.

And so this certain Mr. Petrov declares to The Washington Post that: "The creation of the Crimean platform and the West's permission to play this card began a dangerous game that eventually led to war."

In other words, according to Petrov, the war began because Ukraine and the world's other civilized countries were peacefully discussing exactly how to return Crimea. It would be good to check if he is still allowed to go to London, and then let him stay in Moscow.

Waiting in Sevastopol, Crimea

In Sevastopol, Crimea

Michal Burza/ZUMA

Battle of bitterness

But now to the more pertinent and current point made in the article — about the future.

The worry is expressed from an anonymous Western politician cited in the article, asking rhetorically: If "Ukraine takes Crimea by force, Russia may use nuclear weapons. Wouldn't it be better to just let Russia have Crimea?"

The answer is that it could be possible to force Ukraine to sign such an agreement. But have you heard the French word "ressentiment"? Everybody, for some reason, is afraid of Russia's ressentiment (resentment, rancor, bitterness) at the end of the war, when it will return to the borders of 1991, get rid of nuclear weapons and pay reparations to the victims.

But shouldn't we also be talking about Ukrainian resentment? What would that look like if Crimea was gone for good from Ukraine? Ukrainians would be left with only one objective as a nation: to vanquish Russia. Ukraine will build its own nuclear weapons, along with more and more squadrons of drones and cruise missiles.

Moreover, unlike intellectually and technologically degraded Russia, Ukraine has everything it needs to achieve this: an educated population and experience with modern technology. And, of course, every Ukrainian woman will be ready to give birth to three children for the cause. And then, no one will be able to stop Ukraine.

Now, wouldn't it be better to let Ukraine have Crimea back?

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Economy

Globalization Takes A New Turn, Away From China

China is still a manufacturing juggernaut and a growing power, but companies are looking for alternatives as Chinese labor costs continue to rise — as do geopolitical tensions with Beijing.

Photo of a woman working at a motorbike factory in China's Yunnan Province.

A woman works at a motorbike factory in China's Yunnan Province.

Pierre Haski

-Analysis-

PARIS — What were the representatives of dozens of large American companies doing in Vietnam these past few days?

A few days earlier, a delegation of foreign company chiefs currently based in China were being welcomed by business and government leaders in Mexico.

Then there was Foxconn, Apple's Taiwanese subcontractor, which signed an investment deal in the Indian state of Telangana, enabling the creation of 100,000 jobs. You read that right: 100,000 jobs.

What these three examples have in common is the frantic search for production sites — other than China!

For the past quarter century, China has borne the crown of the "world's factory," manufacturing the parts and products that the rest of the planet needs. Billionaire Jack Ma's Alibaba.com platform is based on this principle: if you are a manufacturer and you are looking for cheap ball bearings, or if you are looking for the cheapest way to produce socks or computers, Alibaba will provide you with a solution among the jungle of factories in Shenzhen or Dongguan, in southern China.

All of this is still not over, but the ebb is well underway.

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