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Opinion
The following is presented as part of The Columbian’s Opinion content, which offers a point of view in order to provoke thought and debate of civic issues. Opinions represent the viewpoint of the author. Unsigned editorials represent the consensus opinion of The Columbian’s editorial board, which operates independently of the news department.
News / Opinion / Columns

Rubin: Ukraine’s fight for independence matters to U.S.

By Trudy Rubin
Published: August 28, 2023, 6:01am

On a recent trip to Ukraine, I met with a friend who is now a commander on the front line, someone I highly respect and have known since before Russia invaded last year. He posed a question I think Americans should ponder.

“Why don’t Americans have optimism about Ukraine?” he asked me in a darkened restaurant in a frontline city. “Americans fought for independence against the most powerful empire at that time, the British, who had the world’s best military. Many of the American fighters were farmers. Yet you won. So why don’t you believe in our fight?”

Of course, many Americans do support Ukraine. But too many fail to understand that Ukraine is battling a dictator, Vladimir Putin, who longs to restore the Russian empire. Putin has declared that Ukraine has no right to exist as a sovereign nation. He already claims to have “annexed” four Ukrainian provinces, giving him control of the country’s seacoast.

Ukraine is not, as many critics would have it, fighting NATO’s war on behalf of Washington. It is fighting its own war of independence. And contrary to the claims of many MAGA Americans and even some progressives, this struggle is important to the United States.

Of course, there are considerable historical differences between our war for independence and Ukraine’s fight for survival.

Russia has a massive superiority in murderous weaponry that was unimaginable in the 18th century, including nukes. (Kyiv gave away its nuclear weapons to Russia in 1994 in return for the Kremlin’s promise to respect its sovereignty.) However, Moscow’s brutish strengths underline the David vs. Goliath nature of the struggle, not unlike the unbelievable chutzpah it took for America’s ragtag patriots to take on the Brits.

Moreover, just as colonial American patriots were a different breed from the Brits, despite a shared history, most Ukrainians are very different from Russians.

Those differences have enabled the Ukrainians to advance as far as they have.

Russians are mostly fighting because they have to or for money. Ukrainians are fighting for their country’s freedom from imperial domination. Unlike the passive Russians, Ukrainian civilians are deeply engaged in the war, volunteering at every level — from delivering food to old folks in half-destroyed villages to raising funds that purchase drones for the military units.

Ukrainians are from Europe, part of the democratic orbit that the United States is still (albeit limpingly) leading. As one soldier told me near Zaporizhzhia, “We are the boundary between Europe and Russia.” He meant the boundary between the democratic West and the authoritarian East.

Will Putin be allowed to dominate and destroy a sovereign, democratic nation? Will he be allowed to take military control of international Black Sea waters even though he has no legal right to do so? Will he be allowed to commit the most heinous war crimes with no repercussions?

If the answer is yes, we are in a new era, an era in which Putin feels free to further disrupt Europe and the U.S. So when my Ukrainian friend asks, “Why don’t you believe in our fight?” my reply is that we ignore Kyiv’s struggle because we misread history and fail to foresee the future.

President Joe Biden’s reluctance to expedite the delivery of weapons systems such as ATACMS long-range missiles and F-16s becomes even more inexplicable.

We should support Ukraine’s victory not just because there are historical parallels between their struggle for freedom and our own. We should support them because the parallels continue today: Kyiv is fighting authoritarianism now, so we don’t have to further down the line.

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