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May 18th, 2024

Insight

Save Odesa to save the world from hunger and high food prices

Trudy Rubin

By Trudy Rubin Philadelphia Inquirer/(TNS)

Published May 17, 2022

Save Odesa to save the world from hunger and high food prices
When Russia sent hypersonic missiles into a shopping center in Ukraine's elegant port city of Odesa on Monday, it was literally attacking the world.

Ukraine is known as the "breadbasket of Europe" and a global grain exporter. Eighty percent of its wheat used to ship from Odesa until Russia began blockading this major Black Sea port and targeting its civilians. Russia's assault is the cause of soaring wheat prices that threaten starvation for many of the world's poorest people, especially in the Middle East and Africa.

Moscow has already seized control of most of Ukraine's coastline, including Mariupol's port on the Sea of Azov. Smashing Odesa would virtually land-lock the country and destroy its international economy. With its maritime blockade of Odesa, Russia now controls nearly the entire northern coast of the Black Sea, contrary to international conventions.

"We didn't have a plan for Mariupol and it fell," retired U.S. Air Force Gen. Philip Breedlove, a former NATO commander, told me recently. "We still have time now to ensure Odesa doesn't fall, leading to a landlocked Ukrainian nation. What is our plan?"

The answer to that question — what is the plan to save Odesa? — is essential to much of the world.

I put this question by WhatsApp to Oleksiy Goncharenko, Ukraine's parliamentary representative in Kyiv, who is an Odesa native. It is essential, he said, to understand Vladimir Putin's hypocrisy when it comes to Odesa.

"Vladimir Putin thinks the aim of his life is to protect Russian-speaking people," Goncharenko told me, "but after Hitler, no one has killed so many Russian speakers as Putin has in Mariupol, Kharkiv, Odesa, and other Ukrainian cities."

Never mind that the Kremlin leader seems willing to destroy Odesa — a stunning city of glorious architectural jewels — which was founded in 1794 on the orders of Russia's Catherine the Great, who is a heroine of Putin's.

"He realizes he can't take Odesa by land [Ukrainian forces have successfully resisted], so he tries to destroy the infrastructure," said Goncharenko. "Even as Putin was laying flowers on May 9 in Moscow, in honor of Odesa as a World War II hero city, he was putting a dagger in the back of Odesa with missiles."

It boggles the mind that Putin still seems to believe some Russian speakers will welcome him in Odesa. The Russian leader attempted the same approach during his first invasion of Ukraine in 2014, when he tried to provoke unrest in Odesa. I was there at the time and witnessed the Russian-speaking inhabitants repel provocateurs from Moscow.

This time, said Goncharenko, it is the world's moral responsibility "to secure the Black Sea [and Odesa] in order to secure world food supplies."

"More and more people are suffering from hunger because of the Russian blockage of the Black Sea," he continued. "It will get worse, along with prices. Hunger leads to unrest and riots.

"Russia has mined the Black Sea," he also noted, causing insurance rates on commercial ships that enter the Black Sea to soar prohibitively.

The solution? "We need to have convoys under the flag of the United Nations which can take grain to those who need it," contended Goncharenko. The best option "would be an international declaration of guarantee of safety for Black Sea ports." He suggested that China (a big purchaser of Ukrainian grain), India, NATO, or a group of willing countries could guarantee the safety of the Odesa port and its export of agricultural goods.

Is this idea a pipe dream? Not so, said retired U.S. Adm. James Stavridis, a former supreme allied commander of NATO. "A good model," he said, "was Operation Earnest Will, when the United States conducted escort convoys to merchant ships in the Gulf during the Iran-Iraq War in the 1980s."

This time, Stavridis said, the idea would be to establish "a corridor from Istanbul across the Black Sea to Odesa." He added he thinks "the Russians would hesitate to interfere, particularly if it was done by the U.S. or by three NATO members or put together by the International Maritime Organization."

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But in the meantime, it is essential to protect Odesa from Putin's callous efforts to destroy the city from the air.

"We still need anti-ship missiles," said Goncharenko. Yes, talented Ukrainians took out the Russian flagship Moskva with their own improvised Neptune missile, "but it would be very good to have Harpoons, a NATO missile." Promised British anti-ship missiles will hopefully arrive soon. Yet there is no excuse for continued U.S. delay in helping Odesa fend off the Russian fleet with Harpoons.

And long-range anti-missile systems — either old Soviet systems or, even better, U.S. Patriot batteries, which Ukraine has begged for for months — are still not arriving. Nor are Poland's MiG-29 planes or more modern aircraft.

The moment is now. Does the West want Odesa's infrastructure to be destroyed, its food supplies blockaded? Or not?

Read the tweet of Charles Michel, president of the European Council, who was visiting Odesa the day the missiles hit: "I saw silos full of grain, wheat and corn ready for export. This badly needed food is stranded because of the Russian … blockade of Black Sea ports. Causing dramatic consequences for vulnerable countries. We need a global response."

(COMMENT, BELOW)

Trudy Rubin
Philadelphia Inquirer
(TNS)

Previously:

05/02/22: Bloodless Ukrainian War, not utopian fantasy says one-time largest foreign investor in Russia

04/11/22: The only way to end Putin's war crimes

03/28/22: Don't let Putin's nuclear and chemical threats stop us from giving Ukraine what it needs

03/24/22: An elegy for Mariupol, where I walked six weeks ago. Now razed by Russian bombs

03/18/22: Zelenskyy's brilliant speech should impel Biden and Congress to protect Ukrainian skies

03/11/22: Mariupol's bombed maternity hospital exemplifies why NATO should protect Ukraine's skies

03/10/22: No 'no-fly zone'? Then NATO must find another way to protect Ukraine's skies

03/07/22: The third World War has already started in Ukraine. Europe and the US should wake up

03/04/22:Putin must be stopped from turning Kiev into Aleppo

03/02/22:Why is Belarus helping Russia invade Ukraine? An explainer on the latest in the conflict

02/25/22: What the UN should finally do about Russia

02/24/22: Why Putin's Ukraine aggression will change the world --- an explainer on how we got here

02/10/22: Ukrainian civilians train for war with cardboard guns: 'We are scared but we are ready

01/13/22:Putin wants to reestablish the Russian empire. Can NATO stop him without war?

12/10/21: Can Biden and NATO prevent Putin from invading Ukraine? Summit puts it to the test

12/02/21: Boris Johnson stirs up new Irish Troubles for his own personal political gains

11/22/21: Xi Jinping thinks America is on the rocks. Is he correct?

08/18/21: President Biden, get our Afghan allies on evacuation planes

08/18/21:The horror of Afghan women abandoned by Biden's troop pullout

08/09/21:China is pushing a big COVID-19 lie that makes a new pandemic harder to prevent

05/27/21: Punish Belarus leader for Ryanair hijacking before air piracy becomes dictators' new tool

04/14/21: Can Beethoven temper the political tensions between US and China?

06/01/20: US must stand with Hong Kong against Beijing's efforts to crush its freedoms

05/20/20: COVID-19 offers a chance to halt Iran's hostage diplomacy

05/21/14: Newscycle spurs visit to country my family fled

04/21/14: Blind to Putin's strategy?

12/24/13: Obama's Syrian indifference has led to more death and destruction. Meet some real heroes

12/13/13: Where liberals have come to love the military

12/09/13: The China strategy

11/05/13: Return to Iraq is worth a close look

10/01/13: Obama's call to Iran: Who was really on the line?

09/11/13: How Obama got Syria so wrong

07/24/13: It's time for Obama to tell Putin 'nyet'

05/15/13: What Russia gave Kerry on Syria --- very little


Trudy Rubin is a columnist and editorial-board member for the Philadelphia Inquirer.

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