The purpose of this blog is to provide analytical commentary on formal and informal labour organisations and their attempts to resist ever more brutal forms of exploitation in today’s neo-liberal, global capitalism.

Wednesday, 5 March 2025

The Betrayal of Ukraine

When the betrayal came, it was swift and brutal. Donald Trump, having barely started his second presidency, phoned up Vladimir Putin, President of Russia, on Wednesday 12 February and paved the way towards negotiations to end the war without consulting Ukraine itself (BBC, 13 February 2025). When only a week later, high-ranking delegations of both countries including Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio met in Riyadh/Saudi Arabia for extensive discussions, no Ukrainian representative was at the table (BBC, 18 February 2025). At the same time, ‘White House officials told Ukraine to stop badmouthing Donald Trump and to sign a deal handing over half of the country’s mineral wealth to the US’ (The Guardian, 20 February 2025). This was presented as a way to pay back all the assistance the US had provided over the course of the war.



The public humiliation of the Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy during a meeting in the White House was the final confirmation that the US had dropped its support for Ukraine. Denounced by many European leaders and commentators for what it is, a betrayal, this was not, however, the first betrayal of Ukraine. The country has been betrayed by the West on several occasions before, leaving it now in a perilous situation. In this blog post, I will discuss previous moments of betrayal taking a much longer historical perspective.

 

A previous betrayal occurred after the failed Ukrainian summer offensive of 2023 (Reuters, 21 December 2023). By then it should have been clear that Ukraine was not going to win the war against Russia on the battlefield despite all the Western deliveries of modern weaponry including state of the art battle tanks (see Fanning the Flames of War). Nevertheless, instead of advising Ukraine to move towards a negotiated peace deal with Russia, to end the slaughter and to salvage as much as possible, the West continued encouraging Ukraine to carry on the war. The promise of cruise missiles including the eventual permission of using them against targets on Russian territory kept Ukraine in the war (Politico, 25 April 2024).

 

Another betrayal occurred around the time of the so-called Istanbul communique, the result of initial peace talks between Russia and Ukraine in March 2022. This ‘agreement’ was anything but perfect and highly unlikely to provide the basis for ending the war in its final version. However, rather than pushing for deepening negotiations, the visit by the then British Prime Minister Boris Johnson to Ukraine on 9 April 2022 (CNN, 9 April 2022), guaranteeing his counterpart Zelenskyy the West’s continuing economic and military support, ensured that negotiations were broken off. We do not know whether a successful peace agreement could have been concluded back in 2022, but it would have clearly been the responsible thing to do to explore the potential of a peace agreement to the full. This did not happen.

 

The betrayals of Ukraine, however, do not stop here. It should have been obvious that the promise of eventual NATO membership at the 2008 NATO summit in Bucharest as well as discussions around Ukraine’s future membership of the European Union (EU) in subsequent years would intensify Russian concerns about increasing Western encroachment (Choonara, 2022). Instead of taking Russian security interests into account and attempting to devise a post-cold war new European security order based on the Conference on Security and Co-operation in Europe process of the 1970s, the West pushed relentlessly for Eastern expansion. Instead of fuelling the war with further weapons, the focus should have been on trust-forming measures (Forsberg and Patomäki, 2023: 15). Declaring Ukraine a neutral country with close economic relations with both Russia and Western Europe – a Cold War Finland kind of solution – back then, would have ensured Ukrainian territorial integrity today.

 

This does not justify Russia’s occupation of Crimea in 2014, nor its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. It does, however, explain why Russia, an imperialist power with its own ambitions, eventually decided that war was the best possible way forward.

 

And yet, the betrayals of Ukraine go even further back. In a moment of Western triumphalism over ‘winning’ the Cold War in the early 1990s onwards, the former communist countries in Central and Eastern Europe were ruthlessly incorporated in the global political economy along neo-liberal economic lines (see Capitalist expansion, the war in Ukraine and three decades of missed opportunities in Europe). Sought out for their comparatively cheap and educated, skilled labour, Western transnational corporations cherry-picked profitable industrial sectors, while other sectors were run against the wall. Eastern European labour was doubly exploited in these processes. Partly as cheap labour in their own country and partly as cheap migrant labour in Western European industries (Bieler and Salyga, 2020). The economic consequences for these countries were catastrophic. For example, ‘Ukraine’s GDP in 2019 was lower than in 1989 and life expectancy for men was 67’ (Cafruny and Fouskas, 2023: 5). Russia had not fared much better with its inclusion into the neo-liberal global political economy. ‘Its GDP collapsed by 40 percent. Its industrial inputs fell by half, and real wages dropped to half of what they were in 1987’ (Wargan, 2023).

 

These past mistakes undoubtedly cast a long shadow ahead. What does the future hold for Ukraine? As Adam D. Morton and I wrote in the 2024 Socialist Register, working people are always on the losing side in inter-imperialist rivalries (Bieler and Morton, 2024). The US may have appeared as supportive initially, but Trump’s recent decisions have harshly exposed the true self-interests of US imperialism. It was Ukrainian lives, which have been sacrificed for containing Russian advances. With a shifting focus towards China and the Far East, the expensive support for Ukraine is now regarded as rather wasteful. A deal with Russia over Ukraine will allow both powers to share their respective influence over the country including access to its rare earth minerals.

 

If the war does end in the near future, there will at least be a stop to the killing. Ukraine itself will, however, be divided politically and reduced economically to an exporter of primary commodities including grain and minerals. Its national sovereignty will be left in tatters. There will be no reconstruction of Ukraine unless it benefits Western corporations. After three years of war, the future for Ukrainian people is looking rather bleak indeed. The country is likely to fragment with right-wing, reactionary forces trying to outcompete each other in pleasing their respective imperialist masters in East and West.

 

Where does this leave Europe? US support for Ukraine had never taken European interests into account. In fact, the US benefitted enormously from the EU being cut off from comparatively cheap Russian energy supply. Especially Germany, the EU’s industrial powerhouse, has descended into a phase of deindustrialisation. Depending on the import of expensive liquified natural gas including from the US, the country’s industry is struggling to remain competitive (Cafruny and Fouskas, 2023: 7). Pressed into ramping up European armament, the continent is likely to experience heightened social inequality, widespread unrest and a further rise of the far-right. Not only Ukraine’s, but Europe’s future too is looking increasingly bleak against the backdrop of a global crisis of overaccumulation and intensifying great power, geo-political inter-imperialist rivalry.


AsTomáš Tengely-Evans (18 March 2022) had already written three years ago, ‘our opposition to war in Ukraine has to be based on understanding it as an inter-imperialist conflict between the West and Russia that’s tearing the country apart. That means standing against the Russian invasion, but also refusing to be cajoled and bullied into dropping our opposition to the West and NATO which offer no solution.’ 


Andreas Bieler


Professor of Political Economy
University of Nottingham/UK

Andreas.Bieler@nottingham.ac.uk

5 March 2025


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