The Will and Courage to Stand Up to a Modern-Day Threat to World Peace

Feb 21, 2022News, Publications

02/22/2022

We, the undersigned Former Leaders and civil society representatives of countries of the European Union, the Balkans, Eastern Europe and Middle East wish to express our grave concern about the rapidly growing threat of large-scale armed conflict that is threatening Ukraine’s sovereignty, political independence, unity, and territorial integrity.

The ongoing, almost eight-year-long interstate conflict — which has resulted in the illegal occupation and attempted annexation of vast parts of Ukraine’s territory — poses a serious challenge to the international security order.

The conflict’s humanitarian cost has also been distressing. The military hostilities alone took the lives of 14 000, injured over 25 thousand, and displaced more than 1.4 million persons from their homes. Massive and systemic human rights violations hurt the lives of Ukrainians remaining in the occupied territories.

Regretfully, until now, the international community has not been able to resolve this conflict through the available mechanisms of international law. It is especially worrying that the international organizations entrusted with maintaining world peace have not been able to enforce the rules-based international order essential to peace, security, and prosperity.

As a result, we observe further destabilization in the region, growing security risks for the entire European continent, and new threats to world peace.

We are sounding the alarm to prevent an irreversible destructive scenario from unfolding.  We must take lessons from the bitter experiences of the twentieth century and dedicate all our efforts to reversing a march towards conflict, and support a rules-based international multilateralism that reinforces human rights and national sovereignty and territorial integrity as stated in the UN charter.

Today, the world is not blind. We can discern the truth from lies. We have the wisdom to see the catastrophic consequences of the path of destruction for our future. And we must be determined to remove modern-day threats to world peace.

Ukraine, a founding member of the United Nations, and one of the greatest contributors to world peace as a country that voluntarily gave up the world’s third-biggest nuclear arsenal, must receive full support from the international community.

To demonstrate their commitment to peace, security, and justice, our governments must take determined and timely action to restore peace and security in Ukraine and defend a rules based international order based on the principle of equality of sovereign nations, denouncing spheres of influence, and upholding human rights as a foundation of peace and stability.

Our governments must promote conditions under which the fundamental principles of the international order are maintained. We have the tools, and we must use them.  Assertive enforcement of international law can be a formidable deterrent to any aggressive actors pursuing malicious agendas in an effort to reshape our world.

We encourage the leaders of the United States, the European Union, G20 countries to form a united front at a time of an unprecedented challenge to global peace and security.

We also call on the international community to provide material, financial, and military assistance to the government of Ukraine to help it to adequately defend itself.

All our nation’s stand to lose from any dismantling or weakening of the international order. If we want the world to prosper, and to enjoy global security, we must reject any policies undermining the very foundation of modern rules based international order. We must find the will and courage to stand up against any violations of international law. By ensuring Ukraine’s peace and stability and defending its territorial integrity our governments would also be protecting the peace security of the entire European continent and beyond. It would help to make the world safer for everyone.

 

Signed: 

Bertie Ahern, Prime Minister of Ireland 1997-2008

Abdulaziz Altwaijri, former Director General of ISESCO

Michael Dukakis, Governor of Massachusetts (1975-1979, 1983-1991)

Jan Fisher, Prime Minister of the Czech Republic 2009-2010

Chiril Gaburici, Prime Minister of Moldova 2015

Toomas Hendrik Ilves, President of Estonia 2006-2016

Kerry Kennedy, President Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights

Mats Karlsson, Vice-President of the World Bank 1999-2002

Aleksandr Kwasniewski, President of Poland 1995-2005

Leonid Kuchma, President of Ukraine 1994-2005

Andrius Kubilius, Prime Minister of Lithuania 2008-2012

Zlatko Lagumdzija, Prime Minister of Bosnia and Herzegovina 2001-2002, deputy Prime Minister 2012-2015

Igor Luksic, Prime Minister of Montenegro 2010-2012

Rexhep Meidani, President of Albania 1997-2002

Rovshan Muradov, Secretary General NGIC

Shuvaloy Mujumdar, Foreign Policy Program Director & Munk Senior Fellow, Macdonald Laurier Institute, Canada

Francis O’Donnell, Amb. (ret.,SMOM) & UN Resident Coordinator in Ukraine 2004-2009

Rosen Plevneliev, President of Bulgaria 2012-2017

Petre Roman, Prime Minister of Romania 1989-1991, Speaker of the Parliament 1996- 1999, Minister of Foreign Affairs 1999-2000

Paul Revay, former Director Trilateral Europe, Trustee Friends of Europe, Paris

Petar Stoyanov, President of Bulgaria 1997-2002

Rosalia Arteago Serrano, President of Ecuador 1997

Laimdota Straujuma, Prime Minister of Latvia 2014-2016

Ismail Serageldin, Vice-President of the World Bank 1992-2000

Eka Tkeshelashvili, deputy Prime Minister of Georgia

Nguyen Anh Tuan, CEO of Boston Global Forum

Vaira Vike-Freiberga, President of Latvia 1999-2007

Kateryna Yushchenko, First Lady of Ukraine 2005-2010

Viktor Yushchenko, President of Ukraine 2005-2010

Valdis Zatlers, President of Latvia 2007-2011

 

The Will and Courage to Stand Up to a Modern-Day Threat to World Peace