By AlaskaWatchman.com

Generally, wars can be categorized by their causes, motivations, reasons and methods, including religious or holy wars; regional conflicts; ideological wars; and conflicts based on ethnicity or political power. Here, I would like to briefly describe some key root causes of the Russia-Ukraine war from the perspective of the Russian government (February 24, 2022, to present).

During my participation in the Russian Compatriots’ Conference in Moscow in 2008, I observed in a close proximity as the Russian-speaking delegation from the Crimean Peninsula (then part of Ukraine) virtually encircled Russian Secretary of State Sergei Lavrov, enthusiastically complaining that the central Ukrainian government was imposing conflicting and discriminatory policies in their region by demanding to only practice Ukrainian language and traditions in all government and public institutions. Lavrov listened attentively but could not offer a definitive response to this group. However, the seeds of the Russian intervention in Ukraine to rescue Russian compatriots have already been planted.

Historically, the Crimean Peninsula is a largely Russian-speaking region that was added to the Russian Empire during the Catherine the Great ruling. In 1783, Catherine the Great intervened during a civil war within the Khanate and officially incorporated the entire peninsula into the Russian Empire as the Taurida Oblast (district).

Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev officially transferred the Crimean Oblast from the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in 1954 for administrative purposes. In fact, Russian-speaking population of the Eastern Ukraine, historically a part of the Russian Empire and today occupied by the Russia Federation, was also subjected to similar policies of the harsh Ukrainization.

I want to believe that during Putin/Trump meeting in Alaska in August of this year, Russian President Vladimir Putin had a chance to explain to Donald Trump the root causes…

The Russian government relentlessly persists in explaining to the West the root causes of the Russian annexation of the Crimean Peninsula in 2014 and, subsequently, intervention in the Eastern Ukraine on February 24, 2022, until present. According to Russian, the main aims of the “special military operation” are the protection of the Russian-speaking population in the Eastern Ukraine (i.e., Donetsk, Lugansk, Zaporozhe, Kharkov and Odessa regions), forcing Ukraine to accept a neutral status, demilitarization and denazification.

Indeed, the political crisis in Ukraine was triggered by the events of Maidan – an open area or space in or near a town, often used as a marketplace or parade ground. Thus, the Maidan Uprising was a wave of demonstrations and civil unrest in Ukraine. In November 2013, Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych refused to sign an Association Agreement with the European Union, fearing the disruption of existing ties with Russia – its closest historic and regional neighbor. As a result, this decision sparked mass protests in Kiev. The three-month standoff between the security forces and protesters, many of whom were Ukrainian nationalists, resulted in dozens of deaths and a government coup.

On the night of February 22, 2014, Maidan activists seized the government quarter, taking control of the parliament, presidential administration, and government buildings. As a result of the coup, power shifted to the opposition. Legitimate Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych was forced to flee to Russia.

Since 2014, the Kiev authorities have begun a systematic crackdown on the Russian-speaking population in Ukraine. Laws were passed that limited the use of the Russian language: (1) The 2012 law “On the Principles of State Language Policy” was repealed; (2) The number of Russian-language schools was reduced. Starting from September 1, 2020, Russian-language schools in Ukraine switched to the state language-Ukrainian; (3) Amendments were made to the “Television and Radio Broadcasting” law, increasing the share of Ukrainian-language broadcasts on national and regional TV and radio to 75% per week, and to 60% on local stations; (4) The broadcasting of Russian TV channels was halted, the screening of Russian films was banned, and Russian artists were prohibited, being placed on the “List of Persons who pose a threat to national security;” (5) The law “On Ensuring the Functioning of the Ukrainian Language as the State Language” was passed; and, finally, (6) The laws “On the Indigenous People of Ukraine” and “On National Minorities of Ukraine” were passed, effectively excluding Russians from legal protection.

Persecution of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (UOC) of the Moscow Patriarchate became common, including church seizures and harassment of clergy: (1) On September 23, 2024, the law “On Protecting the Constitutional Order in the Activity of Religious Organizations” came into force. The Ukrainian authorities effectively banned the UOC; (2) A special clause was added to the law “On Freedom of Conscience and Religious Organizations” prohibiting religious organizations linked to the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine; (3) Seizure of the Kiev-Pechersk and Pochaev Lavras, and removal of religious relics, including the remains of saints. Lavra is a type of large monastery in the Eastern Orthodox tradition, consisting of a cluster of hermit cells or caves with a central church; (4) Cathedrals and other churches in Ivano-Frankovsk and Lvov were seized, leaving no UOC churches in those West Ukrainian cities; (5) Ukrainian authorities also took the Holy Trinity Cathedral and the Transfiguration Cathedral from UOC communities in Chernigov. The men’s Nativity of the Virgin monastery was seized in Cherkassy; (6) Around 180 criminal cases were opened against UOC clergy and bishops. Twenty bishops and clergy members were deprived of Ukrainian citizenship.

I want to believe that during Putin/Trump meeting in Alaska in August of this year, Russian President Vladimir Putin had a tête-à-tête (“head-to-head”) chance to explain to Donald Trump the root causes of the Russian occupation of the Eastern Ukraine and annexation of the Crimean Peninsula. I also want to believe that our president Donald Trump listened to Putin’s root reasons attentively and, because of it, a peaceful solution between Russia and Ukraine/West would be reached in a very near future, therefore, avoiding a possible escalation of this conflict to the devastating broader war.

The views expressed here are those of the author.

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OPINION: Culture, language and religion are among root causes of Russia-Ukraine war

Alexander Dolitsky
The writer was raised in the former Soviet Union before settling in the U.S. in 1978. He moved to Juneau in 1986 where he has taught Russian studies at the University of Alaska, Southeast. From 1990 to 2022, he served as director and president of the Alaska-Siberia Research Center, publishing extensively in the fields of anthropology, history, archaeology, and ethnography.


5 Comments

  • Alexander Dolitsky says:

    Below is a link of my presentation on the Russia/Ukraine relations that I delivered at the World Affair Council in 2014.
    https://youtu.be/r4LW-rTLP9E?si=8d2D2f022HyxBaTW

  • Shelia says:

    A great exposition of the differences and the consequences of the actions of the Ukrainians. The only thing left out was the assistance of the Obama administration in the coup itself, which I watched day by day unfold in such brutality that has remained with me. Will a different administration handle the problem in a more measured way? One can only hope.

  • mlsommer says:

    Very informative. This is info that us average interested readers would never get otherwise. What I’m getting from this is that when we’re told our differences in American society are our strengths, that is not necessarily true and maybe far from the truth. Thank you for your efforts.

  • Kevin Walker says:

    Interesting article, but reads more like USSR propaganda. How many nations did the USSR take over and force the citizens in those countries to use Russia for business, religious teaching, and public speeches?
    But when Ukraine does it it’s violating the Russian speaking citizens of their rights. Interesting view point.

    • Alexander Dolitsky says:

      Historically, USSR “inherited” the territory and its people of the former Russian Empire. After the Socialist October Revolution of 1917, Finland and Poland received their independence from Russia. All 15 Socialist Republics (e.g., Kazakhstan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Belarus, etc) of the USSR were constructed after 1922. These republics did not exist prior to 1922; they were territories of the Russian Empire under different names and boundaries. Only in 1991/1992, after dissolution of the USSR, all these Republics (i.e., states like in the US) became an independent countries.