General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: If I lived in Crimea, I would have voted to leave the Ukraine and join Russia. [View all]Lydia Leftcoast
(48,223 posts)I don't like the idea of dismantling a country, BUT
1. 58% of the population of the Crimea is ethnic Russian
2. After World War I, entire new nations were set up by plebiscite out of the remnants of the Austro-Hungarian, Ottoman, and Russian Empires, including Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Finland, the Baltic States, and Romania. In addition, the boundary between Germany and Denmark was decided by plebiscite.
3. My guess is that after centuries of Russian, especially Soviet, domination, ethnic Ukrainians don't treat Russians very well.
Yet there are precedents for rigged plebiscites.
After World War II, the Soviets seized the Baltic States of Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia, which had been part of the old Russian Empire but which were granted their independence after World War I. They held "plebiscites" in which the very act of casting a ballot meant that one approved of joining the Soviet Union. The catch was that the countries were occupied by Soviet troops, who controlled the distribution of ration cards. People received ration cards ONLY after casting a ballot, with the result that the vote was counted as nearly 100%. (A few people went into the woods to be guerrillas and hassled the Soviets until well into the 1950s.)