The conflict in Ukraine is now part of a much bigger crisis between Russia and the West, MI6's former head has said.
Sir John Sawers warned the crisis was no longer about just Ukraine, saying it was "much bigger and more dangerous".
Any
attempt by Western countries to arm Ukraine could lead to an escalation
on the ground and even cyber attacks by Russia against the West, he
warned.
Fighting between Ukrainian forces and pro-Russian rebels has continued, more than a day after a ceasefire was due.
Sanctions
have already been imposed on Russia, and EU leaders have threatened
Moscow with further measures if the planned ceasefire is not respected.
US
President Barack Obama has said the US is studying the option of
supplying lethal defensive arms to Ukraine - if diplomacy fails to end
the crisis in the east of the country.
'Thousands of deaths'
However,
giving a speech at King's College London, Sir John, who left MI6 in
November, warned any attempt by the West to arm the Ukrainian government
could lead to an escalation of tensions with Russia.
President Vladimir Putin has accused the West of causing the crisis in Ukraine
"Sanctions on Russia are
imposing costs. But the Ukraine crisis is no longer just about Ukraine.
It's now a much bigger, more dangerous crisis, between Russia and
Western countries, about values and order in Europe," he said.
Western
countries could "take on Moscow" by providing weapons to Ukraine so it
can defend itself and introducing more stringent sanctions, he said.
But Sir John warned Russian President Vladimir Putin was likely to respond.
"As
long as Mr Putin sees the issue in terms of Russia's own security he
will be prepared to go further than us. So he would respond with
further escalation on the ground. Perhaps cyber attacks against us.
"We have thousands of deaths in Ukraine. We could start to get tens of thousands, then what?"
The crisis might end up with a "new debilitating frozen conflict in Ukraine, for well into the future," he warned.
"That is a wretched outcome for Ukrainians. But it may be the least bad attainable outcome."
Fighting has continued between rebels and Ukrainian forces in eastern Ukraine
Sir John, who also served as
ambassador to the UN and as a foreign policy adviser to former Prime
Minister Tony Blair, said that recent interventions in Afghanistan and
Iraq had proved costly to the UK.
"In the wake of Iraq and
Afghanistan, Britain is pulling back from international intervention,
just as America pulled back after the Vietnam war," he said.
But
he warned that not intervening in Syria, and not sending ground troops
into Libya, had resulted in "growing chaos" which has been "exploited by
fanatics".
"Yes, intervening has huge risks and costs," he said. "Not intervening also has huge risks and costs.
"Afghanistan
and Iraq? Or Syria and Libya? Which outcome is worse? Perhaps it's
too early to say. We need to have that debate."
Sir John also
warned that the UK's intelligence services were "weaker", following
revelations by Edward Snowden, the former US spy agency contractor who
disclosed the extent of surveillance and electronic monitoring by US and
British government agencies.
"All of us, you and me here tonight, are more at risk from terrorism and cyber attack," he warned.
"Why? Mainly because technology companies have scaled back previous quiet cooperation with intelligence agencies."
No comments:
Post a Comment