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A historian corrects misunderstandings about Ukrainian and Russian history

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Written by: Ronald Suny, University of Michigan
Published: 25 February 2022

 

Donetsk residents celebrate recognition of independence of the Donetsk and Lugansk People’s Republics by Russia on Feb. 21, 2022. Alexander RyuAlexander Ryumin\TASS via Getty Images

The first casualty of war, says historian Ronald Suny, is not just the truth. Often, he says, “it is what is left out.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin began a full-scale attack on Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022 and many in the world are now getting a crash course in the complex and intertwined history of those two nations and their peoples. Much of what the public is hearing, though, is jarring to historian Suny’s ears. That’s because some of it is incomplete, some of it is wrong, and some of it is obscured or refracted by the self-interest or the limited perspective of who is telling it. We asked Suny, a professor at the University of Michigan, to respond to a number of popular historical assertions he’s heard recently.

Putin’s view of Russo-Ukrainian history has been widely criticized in the West. What do you think motivates his version of the history?

Putin believes that Ukrainians, Belarusians and Russians are one people, bound by shared history and culture. But he also is aware that they have become separate states recognized in international law and by Russian governments as well. At the same time, he questions the historical formation of the modern Ukrainian state, which he says was the tragic product of decisions by former Russian leaders Vladimir Lenin, Josef Stalin and Nikita Khrushchev. He also questions the sovereignty and distinctive nation-ness of Ukraine. While he promotes national identity in Russia, he denigrates the growing sense of nation-ness in Ukraine.

Russian President Vladimir Putin in a dark suit looking serious as he sits at the head of a very big table.
Russian President Vladimir Putin in a meeting with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in Moscow on Feb. 22, 2022. Photo by Russian Presidency/Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

Putin indicates that Ukraine by its very nature ought to be friendly, not hostile, to Russia. But he sees its current government as illegitimate, aggressively nationalist and even fascist. The condition for peaceful relations between states, he repeatedly says, is that they do not threaten the security of other states. Yet, as is clear from the invasion, he presents the greatest threat to Ukraine.

Putin sees Ukraine as an existential threat to Russia, believing that if it enters NATO, offensive weaponry will be placed closer to the Russian border, as already is being done in Romania and Poland.

It’s possible to interpret Putin’s statements about the historical genesis of the Ukrainian state as self-serving history and a way of saying, “We created them, we can take them back.” But I believe he may instead have been making a forceful appeal to Ukraine and the West to recognize the security interests of Russia and provide guarantees that there will be no further moves by NATO toward Russia and into Ukraine. Ironically, his recent actions have driven Ukrainians more tightly into the arms of the West.

The Western position is that the breakaway regions Putin recognized, Donetsk and Luhansk, are integral parts of Ukraine. Russia claims that the Donbass region, which includes these two provinces, is historically and rightfully part of Russia. What does history tell us?

During the Soviet period, these two provinces were officially part of Ukraine. When the USSR disintegrated, the former Soviet republic boundaries became, under international law, the legal boundaries of the post-Soviet states. Russia repeatedly recognized those borders, though reluctantly in the case of Crimea.

But when one raises the fraught question of what lands belong to what people, a whole can of worms is opened. The Donbass has historically been inhabited by Russians, Ukrainians, Jews and others. It was in Soviet and post-Soviet times largely Russian ethnically and linguistically. When in 2014 the Maidan revolution in Kyiv moved the country toward the West and Ukrainian nationalists threatened to limit the use of the Russian language in parts of Ukraine, rebels in the Donbas violently resisted the central government of Ukraine.

A goat stands in front of the rubble of a partially destroyed house.
The War in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine has caused at least 14,000 deaths. Photo by Martin Trabalik/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images


After months of fighting between Ukrainian forces and pro-Russian rebel forces in the Donbas in 2014, regular Russian forces moved in from Russia, and a war began that has lasted for the last eight years, with thousands killed and wounded.

Historical claims to land are always contested – think of Israelis and Palestinians, Armenians and Azerbaijanis – and they are countered by claims that the majority living on the land in the present takes precedence over historical claims from the past. Russia can claim Donbass with its own arguments based on ethnicity, but so can Ukrainians with arguments based on historical possession. Such arguments go nowhere and often lead, as can be seen today, to bloody conflict.

Why was Russia’s recognition of Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics as independent such a pivotal event in the conflict?

When Putin recognized the Donbass republics as independent states, he seriously escalated the conflict, which turned out to be the prelude to a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. That invasion is a hard, harsh signal to the West that Russia will not back down and accept the further arming of and placing of weaponry in Ukraine, Poland and Romania. The Russian president has now led his country into a dangerous preventive war – a war based on the anxiety that sometime in the future his country will be attacked – the outcome of which is unpredictable.

A New York Times story on Putin’s histories of Ukraine says “The newly created Soviet government under Lenin that drew so much of Mr. Putin’s scorn on Monday would eventually crush the nascent independent Ukrainian state. During the Soviet era, the Ukrainian language was banished from schools and its culture was permitted to exist only as a cartoonish caricature of dancing Cossacks in puffy pants.” Is this history of Soviet repression accurate?

Lenin’s government won the 1918-1921 civil war in Ukraine and drove out foreign interventionists, thus consolidating and recognizing the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. But Putin is essentially correct that it was Lenin’s policies that promoted Ukrainian statehood within the USSR, within a Soviet empire, officially granting it and other Soviet republics the constitutional right to secede from the Union without conditions. This right, Putin angrily asserts, was a landmine that eventually blew up the Soviet Union.

The Ukrainian language was never banned in the USSR and was taught in schools. In the 1920s, Ukrainian culture was actively promoted by the Leninist nationality policy.

But under Stalin, Ukrainian language and culture began to be powerfully undermined. This started in the early 1930s, when Ukrainian nationalists were repressed, the horrific “Death Famine” killed millions of Ukrainian peasants, and Russification, which is the process of promoting Russian language and culture, accelerated in the republic.

Within the strict bounds of the Soviet system, Ukraine, like many other nationalities in the USSR, became a modern nation, conscious of its history, literate in its language, and even in puffy pants permitted to celebrate its ethnic culture. But the contradictory policies of the Soviets in Ukraine both promoted a Ukrainian cultural nation while restricting its freedoms, sovereignty and expressions of nationalism.

History is both a contested and a subversive social science. It is used and misused by governments and pundits and propagandists. But for historians it is also a way to find out what happened in the past and why. As a search for truth, it becomes subversive of convenient and comfortable but inaccurate views of where we came from and where we might be going.

[Understand key political developments, each week. Subscribe to The Conversation’s politics newsletter.]The Conversation

Ronald Suny, Professor of History and Political Science, University of Michigan

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Lakeport Planning Commission approves new senior apartment complex project

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 24 February 2022
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Lakeport Planning Commission has given its approval to plans for a new affordable housing project for seniors.

The commission met on Wednesday, Feb. 16, with commissioners in the chambers and community members able to attend both in person and via Zoom to discuss several projects, among them, the Bevins Street senior apartments.

Community Development Director Jenni Byers presented to the commission a density bonus application from AMG and Associates for the project, a 40-unit affordable housing complex which will be built on 3.1 acres at 447 Bevins St.

Byers said the developer plans to make it available to seniors whose income is from 30 to 60% of Lake County’s median income.

It will sit directly west of the Bella Vista senior housing complex, also built by AMG and Associates.

This will be the fourth project the developer has built in Lakeport. In addition to Bella Vista, it has built the two phases of the Martin Street affordable housing apartment complex.

The Bevins Street apartment project’s 40 units will be a mix of 32 one-bedroom units and eight two-bedroom units, with each of the units having either a patio or a deck.

It also will have a 1,000 square foot community building with a common kitchen, exercise room, laundry facility and business center, a community garden with raised planter beds, bocce ball court, a fenced dog park for residents’ pets, 51 parking stalls — 40 of which will be covered — along with covered picnic tables with a barbecue, pergolas made from noncombustible material, U.S. Postal Service-approved pedestal mounted mailboxes and an on-site resident manager.

Byers said that, based on state law, the developer can request up to three variances from city code and the city can’t deny it.

The Lakeport Municipal Code sets forth the criteria for density bonuses, which are meant to increase the production of affordable housing. Byers said the project is 100% affordable housing and so qualified for the density bonus, as well as up to three development incentives.

She said the developer was seeking a reduction of the off street parking requirement. Normally a development of this size would need to have 60 parking spaces, but they are planning to have 51. Based on state law, they could have requested even more of a reduction, Byers added.

The apartment complex will have a tower feature for its elevator that will be 42 feet high, exceeding the city’s maximum building height of 35 feet, she said.

Byers said the developer also asked to not have a parking requirement for recreational vehicles.

As proposed, Byers said the reductions are consistent with city code and the general plan housing element.

This is not the first density bonus application the city has considered. Staff said the city previously had approved one for the Bella Vista apartments and one for the first phase of the Martin Street apartments, both built by the same developer.

Commissioner Jeff Warrenberg moved to approve the project, with Commissioner Kurt Combs seconding and the commission giving unanimous approval.

Also during the meeting, the commission voted to have Mark Mitchell and Jeff Warrenberg continue to serve as chair and vice chair, respectively, for another year.

The commission also approved separate use permits and categorical exemptions for short-term rentals proposed by Tea Tree LLC at 1950 Lakeshore Blvd and Amber Chatwin of LNR Services at 600 Esplanade.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.

Garamendi, Thompson condemn Russia’s attack on Ukraine

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 24 February 2022
On Wednesday night, in the wake of reports that Russia has launched an attack on Ukraine, Lake County’s members of Congress condemned Russia for its actions, calling for accountability and swift action to end the conflict.

Congressman John Garamendi and Congressman Mike Thompson both spoke out on the situation.

Garamendi (D-CA-03) is chair of the Armed Services Subcommittee on Readiness.

“Tonight, Russia launched an unjustified and unprovoked attack against Ukraine. My prayers are with the people of Ukraine as they withstand this meritless incursion from Vladimir Putin and the Russian military” Garamendi said.

“Vladimir Putin’s justifications for this strike are ludicrous and predicated on lies. His attempt to provoke war in Europe and usurp the democratically elected government of Ukraine will bring widespread suffering and loss of life at a scale the continent of Europe has not witnessed in a generation. I condemn these actions in the strongest possible terms,” Garamendi continued.

“As chair of the Armed Services Subcommittee on Readiness, I am monitoring the situation closely,” Garamendi said. “These actions will further unite the United States and its allies — including NATO and the European Union — and Russia will be held accountable. My heart is with the people of Ukraine and my prayers are for their safety.”

In his remarks, Thompson (D-CA-05) said the decision by Putin to invade Ukraine “is pure evil and a direct attack on democracy.”

He added, “The response to this transgression must be swift — and that means cutting Putin, Russia, and their financial elites off from the global market and imposing further crippling sanctions.

“The United States and our allies must be steadfast in the face of blatant disregard for Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.

“My thoughts are with the people of Ukraine and I am hoping for a rapid resolution of this conflict and for lasting peace,” Thompson said.

Scotts Valley Advisory Council meets Feb. 28

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 24 February 2022
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Scotts Valley Community Advisory Council will meet next week to discuss projects and monitoring programs.

The group will meet at 5 p.m. Monday, Feb. 28, via Zoom. The public is invited to attend.

The meeting ID is 986 2616 1748, pass code is 173031. The meeting also can be accessed via phone at 1-669-900-6833 or +16699006833,,98626161748#,,,,*173031# for one tap mobile.

The council will host guest speaker William Fox, program manager with Lake County Water Resources.

Fox will discuss the status of the Fish and Wildlife permit to clear Scotts Creek and the highest priority areas to be cleared in Scotts Creek, as well as offer an update on the Blue Ribbon Committee for the Rehabilitation of Clear Lake and the status of the well monitoring program for Scotts Valley residents. There also will be time for questions and answers.

Under old business, there will be an update on the request to clear Scotts Creek beginning at the bridge at Hendricks and Scotts Valley Road and ending downstream from the newly installed culvert. Permits for the project are in process.

In new business items, they will discuss new use permits, the Multi-Tribal Fire Prevention Grant application to Cal Fere to support the Scotts Valley Firewise Community, updates on the Firewise Committee and broadband or Scotts Valley,

They also will talk about the North Bay Forest Improvement Program, and get updates from the Scotts Valley Groundwater Protection Committee,the South Cow Mountain Management Area implementation and the free drinking water testing program offered through Cal-WATCH.org.
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