Back in the mists of time, when Boris Johnson won a vote of confidence on June 6, Nadhim Zahawi, then education minister and now a somewhat ungrateful chancellor quick to bite the hand that lifted him, said Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy would be punching the air in delight.
And indeed, an adviser to Zelenskyy’s office was quick to tweet out support, praising Johnson for being “one of the first who realised the menace of [Russia] and stood by Zelenskyy to protect the free world from barbaric invasion”.
The next day, Zelenskyy himself said he was grateful he didn’t lose an ally he described as a “concrete leader”. But he also noted that he considered Britain a great friend — and that is what matters now that Johnson has been forced to resign after the most unedifying 48 hours in modern British politics.
Because for all the former prime minister’s determination to style himself as the saviour of Kyiv, Britain’s support for Ukraine — military, financial and moral — runs much deeper than one man. In fact, rather than Johnson saving Ukraine, the war in Ukraine may well have saved Johnson — the fallout from partygate was reaching its peak when Russia invaded in February, giving the British prime minister a lifeline, a reason to cling to power because as he and his allies were fond of saying: no one changes leaders during a war.
But that’s patently untrue, and the image of Johnson as Ukraine’s hero also sits uneasily with his alleged dubious connections with members of the Russian oligarchy. On Wednesday, as the resignation letters flooded in, Johnson was forced to admit to the Commons Liaison Committee that he had met ex-KGB officer Alexander Lebedev without officials present while he was foreign secretary in 2018.
Not just a great friend to Ukraine then, it seems.
Johnson liked to see his role in supporting Ukraine as pivotal — it fed into his admittedly delusional vision of himself as a latter-day Winston Churchill. He said he was leading the Western response — a fact disputed by European diplomats whose own leaders were also travelling to Kyiv, also pledging support, also welcoming (many more) refugees.
But Johnson’s foibles and dubious motivations aside, British support has been critical: the UK was one of the first countries to deliver weapons, including 5000 anti-tank missiles, long-range multiple launch rocket systems and artillery systems. Critically, it began delivering those anti-tank weapons to Ukraine in January, before the Russian invasion and analysts agree these arms played a decisive role in the first months of the war.
At the NATO summit in June, the UK pledged to provide another £1bn (A$1.75bn) of military support to Ukraine, bringing total military and economic support to £3.8 billion this year. And just this week, Johnson took time out of his political death-spiral to phone Zelenskyy and update him on the latest arms delivery, including 10 self-propelled artillery systems and loitering munitions due to arrive in the coming weeks and months.
Johnson’s early, clear vocal support was deeply appreciated in Ukraine. The mayor of Odesa made Johnson an honorary citizen and a number of towns said they would name streets after him. Peter Dickinson, editor of the Atlantic Council’s UkraineAlert Service, said many Ukrainians were personally charmed by the UK leader.
“They are savvy enough to understand that his bumbling Englishman persona is largely an act, but tend to enjoy his capering nonetheless. This is very much in line with the personality-driven political culture of Ukraine’s fledgling democracy, which generally eschews ideology and often resembles a high school popularity contest. Indeed, the carefully curated Boris brand is in many ways tailor-made for a country that just three years ago saw fit to elect a celebrity comedian as president,” he wrote in a recent blog.
There can be no denying that Zelenskyy welcomed Johnson’s vocal, visible, unequivocal support but the British leader was also not above using Europe’s worst modern-day crisis for his own personal gain — remember when he flew to Kyiv for a surprise visit instead of attending a Yorkshire conference of northern Conservatives last month, sparking widespread anger among those Red Wall Tories?
Luckily, behind Johnson’s bluster stood the British military, led by Defence Secretary Ben Wallace, and that is likely where the real power resides on this issue. It is interesting to note that one of those — very few — who did not resign during Johnson’s drawn-out ouster was Wallace, who said he was staying in post along with a number of others who “have an obligation to keep this country safe, no matter who is PM”. Wallace is one of the most outspoken critics of Vladimir Putin’s invasion and there is little chance he will water down UK support for Ukraine.
There’s also an interesting twist as Wallace has also come out on top of a new YouGov poll of Tory members on favoured future leaders.
Already, in Ukraine, the UK’s new political reality is being absorbed because, as they have known for some time, Britain is more than just one man.
“We want to believe it is not personal support by Boris Johnson or anybody else, but this is the support of all people in the United Kingdom,” Kira Rudik, a Ukrainian MP, said on GB News on Thursday. “We do hope that, no matter who is in office, this support will continue.”
As he delivered his resignation speech on Thursday, Johnson admitted that Britain’s support for Ukraine is bigger than him, addressing the Ukrainian people directly to say: “I know we in the UK will continue to back your fight for freedom for as long as it takes.”
There has been some damage already though. Johnson’s spectacular fall from grace was greeted with glee in Moscow, where Maria Zakharova, the top spokeswoman at the Russian foreign ministry, said it was a symptom of the decline of the West. “The moral of the story is: do not seek to destroy Russia. Russia cannot be destroyed. You can break your teeth on it — and then choke on them.”
But as a master of fact-light, bombastic rhetoric himself, Johnson will undoubtedly recognise this blatant attempt to redirect the truth to fit a particular narrative. He alone is responsible for the breaking of his own teeth and, unfortunately for Russia, it is not a given that his political demise will see a waning of British support for Ukraine.
I prefer the courageous Irish female politician who ripped into the hypocrisy of NATO and the UK as part of this sad warmongering. Not this self serving article with not a hope of peace in it. Just more dead sadly!
Interesting opinion, but subjective. Are you capable of providing credible sources and analysis on Ukraine-Russia-Turkey-CEE-EU without relying on old cold war, but now faux anti-imperialist agitprop, and boosting few public figures you agree with, to deflect from Putin and Russia?
Meanwhile implying everyone who disagrees with you, using actual credible evidence, is a moron or lackey for the US, the west, the EU, Anglo Saxons etc.?
Clare Daly, currently Independent MEP for Dublin since 2019, previously a Socialist TD for Dublin in the Dail since 2011.
Bit of a Millie Tant, of excruciating probity.
The elephant in the room ‘the image of Johnson as Ukraine’s hero also sits uneasily with his alleged dubious connections with members of the Russian oligarchy.’
Influence and money aka Londongrad has infected both the Tories and Labour in the UK, but especially the Tories…. one has observed others over compensate for indirect support of Putin or averting their gaze’ this includes several former Oz politicians, advisors and think tankers.
Good podcast on that topic (BJ doesn’t come off well) here:
https://www.tortoisemedia.com/listen/londongrad/
Good one, Private Eye also have a report from years ago available on their website on Londongrad titled ‘Lootin with Putin’ and naming enabling firms in the City.
Four more children killed today in the Donbas from Kiev artillery. Was the British made?
Could be Aussie made. By April of 2017 Turnbull had been responsible for dropping 1256 bombs on civilian areas in the Middle East.
I see our Bushmasters have been given the Russian torch treatment. Those things are not made for a conflict like in Ukraine, should we email Canberra and tell them?
I think they know. Another Defense procurement screw up. Only really designed for protection from light infantry weapons at 30m, grenades, and mines.
Really just an APC.
At a media level probably no more photo opportunities with Boris but at a practical level, an inconvenient and possibly delaying hiccup in the U.K.’s material support to Ukraine. At a personal level Boris always was and remains a narcissistic clown while Zelenskyy has morphed from a popular media figure into a popular and effective national leader, something well beyond beyond Boris’s ethical limitations and personal qualities.
I don’t think an ‘effective national leader’ would continue to relentlessly conscript untrained and unwilling Ukrainian citizens and send them to a certain death in a conflict which has, undeniably, already been lost. It’s utterly grotesque and the very antithesis of an ‘effective national leader’.
Before his election, Zelensky campaigned on a platform promising to pursue a negotiated peace settlement in regards to the 8yr civil war with the Russian speaking separatists in the Donbas region – but his EU and US overlords disagreed… and here we are.
The clown in Ukraine plays the part, the director is in Washington.
Zelensky has a British passport a London bank account likely a nice home in England and Miami where his mate Yats has hunkered down after he handed the baton to Poroshenko. The million dollar question is *how many millions of dollars is in his bank account*
More deflection, hero worship and running protection for Putin?
You talking to me … bud?
Until and unless all Ukraine people and Russian people are moved behind recognised borders, or those borders are rejigged now, no peace will come, not soon enough to prevent deaths, posturing, warmongering, scheming. Who will secure peace?.
Recognised by whom? The people who live there? That would be a just peace. But it’s a too radical idea. Imagine the reaction if it was proposed that West Australians could have a vote on whether to remain part of Australia, or an indigenous community in northern Australia wanted a vote on succession or even special autonomy? Imagine further if the demand for that decision was being created by countries outside Australia. Imagine further if the government of Western Australia had first been taken over in an armed coup backed by unbadged foreign troops.
I would love it if there could be an independent referendum of the people in the Dobass or Crimea to choose where they want the borders to be but under conditions of war and Russian occupation this is impossible. Note that, until this 2022 war Putin steadfastly refused overtures to be made part of Russia from those who had taken power in these areas. Power taken with Russian assistance and urging. He preferred them as dependent proxies without claims on the Russian purse.
Those borders you speak of were drawn up in 1922 by the Bolsheviks and in 1955 by the Soviets. There were no votes allowed. WA are quite within their rights to leave Australia if that’s what they want. Article 1 in both the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) read: “All peoples have the right of self-determination. By virtue of that right they freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development.” So the Falkland Islands get a vote but Crimea doesn’t get a vote because NATO wants Sevastopol.
And the West Papuans certainly don’t get a vote – nor any coverage.
Never looked at the history how that became part of Indonesia. I had better take a look.
Through a dodgy vote, with the West studiously looking the other way. And the West Papuans have been very unhappy ever since. Recent Indo treatment of the West Papuans makes the Chinese treatment of the Uyghurs look like a Sunday School picnic.
The dodgy vote was in 1969. I’d forgotten that the US had a hand in handing it over to Indonesia in 1962/1963.
Sukarno’s independence claim to the East Indies was based on common ethnicities, languages, kulturs & religions which was scarcely true even of Java, never mind the other islands of the archipelago.
None of which could remotely be applied to West Papua.
West Papua; we can list out fifty nations with similar issues but still does not absolve Putin from invading a neutral sovereign nation…..
Nor the US for doing the same many times over. Oops. We don’t like to mention that do we?
Mutually inclusive, but does not absolve any nation from invading a sovereign nation; what’s the limit to using the US invasions in the past to justify behaviour of others, now?
It reflects the hypocrisy of the West is all. Give themselves a pass and walk away scot free but should anyone else do the same….
BTW. The past was only a few years ago and Yemen is ongoing. Where is the outrage and economic coercion?
‘Neutral nation’! That’s the point.
If Ukraine (and its puppet-master, the US) had guaranteed the neutrality of Ukraine (ie, to never join the anti-Russian NATO) and respected the wishes of the Donbas provinces for autonomy (both of which were agreed to in two Minsk agreements precisely to avoid war), then this war would not be happening. You can’t break peace agreements and throw punches at someone and then complain when he fights back. Well, if you’re the West, maybe you can (and do).
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/official-results-97-of-crimea-voters-back-joining-russia/
Yes I know about that one, my wife was from Crimea / St Petersburg.
Interesting how US Gas exports to Europe are at record levels.
Who financially benefits the most from Ukraine conflict – USA.
Who looses the most (life and destruction) from the Ukraine conflict – Ukraine.
How much extra does the average Australian pay for petrol because of the Ukraine conflict – about a third of the original price.
Interesting.
PS 97% of the Crimea vote was to go with Russia according to Western News.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/official-results-97-of-crimea-voters-back-joining-russia/
EU just got slapped down by the US again. Biden signed 20 year deal to supply gas to China.
Not sure about that one Tony. US gas exports to China have fallen off a cliff and imports from Russia have taken off. When was this signed?
Two days ago I think.
Sorry Tony. Biden didn’t sign anything. A China Gas Holdings Ltd. subsidiary signed a 20-year sale and purchase agreement with NextDecade Corp., a U.S. developer of liquified natural gas projects, for 1 million tonnes per year of LNG. Small beer in the scheme of things.
Thanks for that. Some people like to spruik things up.
Yes 96 or 93% vote for annexation in the referendum (depending on which Russian government media you read at the time) organised after an invasion in a place where 37% of the population was ethnically Ukrainian or Tartar before the invasion. Really credible. Putin could quite possibly and believably have won that referendum but as usual he wasn’t going to trust the population.
But as we know, touches nose and winks, this is all what the Americans planned all along…