Painting by Slovakian artist Rado Javor pictures the heroism of Artem Abramovych, a 24-year old tank commander from Zhytomyr, who in the summer of 2014 deliberately collided his older T-64 into the T-72 of the Russian aggressors to save the retreating Ukrainian soldiers near the village Nikiforivka in Donetsk oblast. In the collision, the tanks detonated and were completely destroyed, with this young man losing his life. He was posthumously awarded with the order of Hero of Ukraine.

Russian aggression in Ukraine which is seeking to rejoin Europe is a clash of civilizations that has its roots in developments a half millennium ago when Muscovy destroyed Novgorod which like Ukraine today looked to the principles of European civilization rather than as Muscovy did and does toward those of the Mongol khans, Yevgeny Ikhlov says.

Because Samuel P. Huntington stressed religions as the basis of civilizations, few have been willing to see that within those religious communities there can be significant civilizational conflicts. But even though both Russia and Ukraine are Orthodox, they are on two sides of a civilizational divide.

According to Ikhlov, “the Russian-Ukrainian war is a typical civilizational conflict,” one in which an imperial center is seeking to take control or resume control over peoples on its borders who look not to it but to other civilizational centers, in this case to Europe.

Even though Russia is in part “’a daughter’” of European civilization, the Russian commentator continues, its political system reflects not European values but those of the Mongol horde. Ukraine in contrast seeks to rejoin “’maternal’ European civilization.” As a result, “a battle has begun between two civilizational models on the territory of the former Ukrainian SSR.”

Over the past five years since the Russian invasion, he argues, this civilizational divide has become even clearer. Central Ukraine “would never tolerate the kind of arbitrariness and illegality” which the Russians have introduced into occupied Crimea and the contested Donbas regions.

In important ways, Ikhlov says, the conflict now is the same as the one at the end of the 15th century when Muscovy’s “’Orthodox sultanism’” moved to suppress European values in the western borderlands Muscovy aspired to control. At that time, there occurred “the historic division of Rus into West and East,” with the former influenced by Europe and the latter by the Mongols.

“Independent Ukraine today has become the embodiment of the heritage of Western Rus, including above all, the principles of municipal democracy and a rejection of the sacralization of power and of an imperially closed church,” the Russian commentator continues – the same conflict that existed between Muscovy and Novgorod 500 years ago.

“It remains only to recall,” Ikhlov says, “that both attempts at the conquest of Belarus by Muscovy in the 16th and 17th centuries also were typical civilizational conflicts for the borderlands and bore an extremely sharp character as a result of the resistance of the local ‘Litvin’ population.” As a result, the conquerors used genocide to keep power.

Read More:

Related

Tags: clash of civilizations, History, Mongol Horde, Muscovy, Russia, Russian history, Russo-Ukrainian War (2014-present), Ukrainian history