Do Not Appease Evil
On January 5th, Ukrainian public figures published an open appeal to the
world leaders and the international community, dedicated to the issues of
ending the war in a just way and establishing a sustainable peace.
The document
is signed by more than 160 persons, including human rights activists, MPs,
diplomats, academics, famous artists, leaders of the largest business
associations and various religious communities (Christian, Muslim and Jewish).
The appeal,
entitled “Do not appease evil,” highlights the Ukrainian
vision of Russia’s far-reaching subversive objectives, and depicts the positive
and the negative scenarios of the war’s end that depend on the position of the
world leaders and the international community.
Do Not Appease Evil
An open
appeal by Ukrainian public figures
to the world leaders and the international community
The new year 2025 brings many uncertainties yet much hope to Ukraine and
Europe as we try to find a straightforward solution to a complex problem: how
to end the big war. As Ukrainian public figures and intellectuals, we address
the world leaders and the international community in order to share our
perspectives on the forthcoming challenges and expectations.
Above all, we would like to emphasize that acquiring additional territories
is not Russia’s primary objective in this war. It already has vast undeveloped
territories, and when it seizes a new land, this land is systematically
neglected. Similarly, the objective is not merely to bring Ukraine back under
its control. This is only one of the intermediate goals. Russia’s ultimate aim
is to break the current world order.
It seeks to regain its status of a superpower that acts arbitrarily and, by
the right of the stronger, attacks neighbors, interferes in the affairs of
other countries, commits terrorist acts, supports authoritarian regimes and
illegally armed groups around the world.
None of this is an isolated incident, a whim of Putin, or a temporary
“deviation from normalcy.” It is a part of a strategic design. This is why,
three years ago, Putin issued an ultimatum to the United States and its allies
in Europe, demanding a return to the 1997 disposition.
Ukraine, by reason of its history and geography, has become the next target
on the way to realization of these revanchist intentions.
For Ukraine itself, this war is existential: it is a war for survival of
the Ukrainian nation, society, and state. Ukrainian democratic and Russian
authoritarian-imperial political visions are essentially mutually exclusive.
That means that any ‘freezing’ of the conflict at this or that demarcation line
will not lead either to a relief of tensions or to the establishment of
sustainable peace.
For Russia, such a freeze would primarily signal the weakness of the West
and encourage further aggression and wars that spill the blood of Europeans and
Americans. Sustainable peace will come only when, under the combined pressure
of Ukraine and its allies, Russia faces a systemic crisis and the defeat of
Putin’s regime. As proven by history, tyrannies are fragile.
This war is not confined to Ukraine, nor can the ‘Ukrainian question’ be
solved exclusively within the framework of Russian-Ukrainian relations. If the
world leaders demand concessions of the territories and sovereignty from
Ukraine without providing any effective security guarantees, they will
essentially bring about Ukraine’s defeat, which will signal to China and other
revisionists that they can seize what they want.
North Korean troops will appear in different hot spots. Piracy, blocking of
trade routes, attacks on information systems and global communications will
sabotage global trade.
Longstanding efforts to limit the spread of nuclear weapons will be reduced
to naught. Russian media influence, cyberattacks, covert operations, and
election interference in democratic countries will undermine the world order.
And the possible fall of Ukraine would create a large wave of refugees and open
the way for Putin to advance farther westward.
On the other hand, an effective end of Russian aggression against Ukraine
could be a solution to many problems of the democratic world. Russia’s defeat
in its war of aggression against Ukraine would reestablish the order based on
rules and interdependence of responsible players. The security of global trade,
global nuclear energy, and food security will be strengthened. Terrorist
regimes and organizations around the world will lose Russian support and
weaken.
Today, Ukraine is buying time for the democratic world to unite and
strengthen. But this time is not limitless. The forces defending peace,
freedom, and human dignity must go on the offensive. Ukraine and the entire
democratic world can only win together or give in and lose together. The
illusion of peace at the cost of shame has repeatedly brought on a new war.
The strength of a democracy is the ability to learn from past mistakes.
Ukraine, too, has fought—and continues to fight—its way to democracy through
trial and error. It is paying an exorbitant price along the way. Each and every
one of us has relatives and friends that lost property, their health, or even
their lives.
But we understand that the price of war will be even higher if our allies
are seduced by the illusion of stopping the war without addressing its causes.
And this is not only for Ukraine, but for the entire world. That is why we urge
our partners to look for a way not to appease the aggressor, but to win
together.
Evil cannot be appeased. It must be defeated and punished for the sake of a
secure future of Ukraine, Europe, and the entire world.
January 5, 2025
Signatories.
Alim Aliev, deputy director general of
the Ukrainian institute, founder of the “Crimean Fig” cultural project
Kostyantyn Batozskyy, political analyst
Yaryna Boychuk, CEO, UCU Business School
Mykhailo Gonchar, President of the CGS Strategy XXI, Chief Editor of the
Black Sea Security Journal
Hanna Hopko, Network “ANTS”, member of the Parliament of Ukraine and
chairwoman of the Foreign Affairs committee (2014-2019)
Volodymyr Horbach, Executive Director of Institute for Northern Eurasia
Transformation
Yaroslav Hrytsak, professor, Ukrainian Catholic University
Ihor Koliushko, Centre for Policy and Legal Reform, Head of the Board,
former member of the Parliament of Ukraine
Serhii Koshman, civil society activist
Oleksii Kovzhun, media analyst and political consultant
Nataliia Kryvda, PhD, professor of Taras Shevchenko National University
of Kyiv, Head of Ukrainian Cultural Foundation
Oleksandr Novikov, Head of the National Agency on Corruption Prevention
(2020-2024), preacher of the integrity and human-centred management system OKR
Olesia Ostrovska-Liuta, Director, “Mystetskyi Arsenal” National Art and
Culture Museum Complex
Bohdan Pankevych, co-founder, member of the Board of the Ukrainian
Galician party
Oleksiy Panych, Professor of Philosophy, Ukrainian Evangelical Theological
Seminary
Valerii Pekar, adjunct professor of Kyiv-Mohyla and UCU Business
schools, chairman of the board of Decolonization NGO
Roman Rak, Senior Resident Fellow at Frontier Institute, Editor-in-Chief
of NZL Media (TUM)
Yaroslav Rushchyshyn, member of the Parliament of Ukraine
Olena Sotnyk, human rights lawyer and public figure, member of the
Parliament of Ukraine (8th convocation)
Taras Stetskiv, politician and public figure, member of the Parliament
of Ukraine (1st-4th and 6th convocations)
Oleksandr Sushko, Executive Director, International Renaissance
Foundation
Victoria Voytsitska, member of the Parliament of Ukraine (8th
convocation), ranking member of the Energy Committee, Advocacy Director of ICUV
Mykola Vyhovskyy, civil activist
Yaroslav Yurchyshyn, member of the Parliament of Ukraine, Head of the
Committee on Freedom of Speech
Olga Aivazovska, Chairperson, Civil Network OPORA
Andrii Dligach, Dr. Econ., founder, Advanter Group, Kyiv Foresight
Foundation
Orest Drul, editor
Dr. Oksana Gudzovata, professor of UCU Business School
Yevhen Hlibovytsky, general director, Frontier Institute
Valeriia Kozlova, associate professor, UCU Business School
Myroslav Marynovych, former prisoner of conscience (1977-1987)
Oleksandra Matviichuk, human rights lawyer, head of the Center for Civil
Liberties
Sofiya Opatska, Founding Dean, Business School of the Ukrainian Catholic
University
Svyatoslav Pavlyuk, Executive Director, Association Energy Efficient
Cities of Ukraine
Roman Romanov, Human Rights and Justice Program Director, International
Renaissance Foundation
Vitalii Rudenky, Research and Analytical Director, Transformation
Communication Activity
Igor Semyvolos, Executive Director of Association of Middle East Studies
Andriy Zagorodnyuk, Chairman, Centre for Defence Strategies
Dmytro Zolotukhin, deputy
minister of information policy of Ukraine (2017-2019), founder of the NGO
“Institute for postinformation society”
Oleksandr Yabchanka, officer of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, medical
doctor, lecturer of Ukrainian Catholic University
Yuri Andrukhovych, writer
Viktoriia Antonenko, CEO of the NGO ArcUA, Executive Editor of Arc.UA
Roman Bezsmertny, politician, diplomat, Ambassador extraordinary and
plenipotentiary
Martina Boguslavets, Head of Anti-corruption center MEZHA
Serhii Bolhov, Head of U8 Ukrainian Analytical Center NGO
Hanna Bondarenko, Head of Ukrainian Volunteer Service, Member of the
Youth Affairs Council under the President of Ukraine
Kateryna Botanova, cultural researcher, curator, head of analytics at
the Frontier Institute (Ukraine)
Yehor Brailian, Candidate of historical sciences, Associate Professor of
the Department of International Relations and Strategic Studies, Kyiv Aviation
Institute, analyst, Detector Media
Stepan Burban (Palindrom), artist, musician
Yevhen Bystrytsky, Dr., Leading Researcher of Institute of Philosophy,
National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
Sofia Cheliak, program director of Lviv International BookForum,
journalist, translator, PEN Ukraine member
Yehor Cherniev, Member of the Parliament of Ukraine, Head of the
Ukrainian delegation to the NATO PA
Dr. Roman Chmelyk, director, Lviv Historical Museum
Refat Chubarov, Chairman of the Mejlis of the Crimean Tatar People
Oleksandr Chudnovets, Chairman of the council of the public organization
Kyiv Military Historical Society
Orysia Demska, professor, National Academy of the SSU
Larysa Denysenko, Human Right Attorney, Writer
Taras Dobko, Rector, Ukrainian Catholic University
Petro Dolhanov, historian, Associate Professor of the Department of
Teaching Methods, Rivne Regional Institute for Postgraduate Pedagogical
Education
Oleg Dubish, Chairman of the Council of the Polish-Ukrainian Chamber of
Commerce and the Board of the Polish-Ukrainian Partnership Fund
Vladimir Dubrovskiy, Senior Economist at CASE Ukraine
Dmytro Durnyev, journalist
Oleksandra Dvoretska, human rights defender, founder Crimean Human
Rights Centre Deistviye (Action)
Uliana Dzhurlaik, Architect, civil activist, co-founder “Save Kvity
Ukrainy”
Sergiy Filimonov, Gonor movement founder, commander of Da Vinci Wolves
battalion, captain of the Armed Forces of Ukraine
Leonid Finberg, Director of the Judaica Center, National university
Kyiv-Mohyla Academy
Oksana Forostyna, Opinion Editor, Ukraina Moderna
Alyona Franchuk, Deputy Head of the Regional Development Center in Lviv
of the Ukrainian Leadership Academy
Vladyslav Greziev, founder, Lobby X recruiting platform, NGO
Zminotvortsi
Iurii Gudymenko, war veteran, statesman and civil rights activist
Myroslav Hai, chairman of the charity
foundation Myr & Ko, officer of the Armed Forces of Ukraine
Serhii Haidaichuk, president of CEO Club Ukraine
Olena Halushka, co-founder, International Center for Ukrainian Victory
Oleksiy Haran, Professor, National University of Kyiv Mohyla Academy
Ulana Holovatch, Associate Professor, Ukrainian Catholic University
Yurij Holovatch, professor, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
Olena Honcharuk, culture manager, creative director of the Oleksandr Dovzhenko
National Centre – Ukrainian film archive
Bohdan Hud, professor, Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, visiting
professor, University of Warsaw
Serhii Husak, second lieutenant of The National Guard of Ukraine,
otolaryngologist, musician (Nitso Potvorno)
Said Ismahilov, junior lieutenant of the Armed Forces of Ukraine,
ex-Mufti of the Muslims of Ukraine
Daria Kaleniuk, Anti-Corruption Action Centre
Zoya Kazanzhy, journalist, writer
Vakhtang Kebuladze, philosopher, writer, translator
Roman Kechur, Head of the Department of Psychology and Psychotherapy of
the Ukrainian Catholic University
Svitlana Khyliuk, Director of Law School, Ukrainian Catholic University
Andrii Klymenko, Crimean expert and journalist, Editor-in-chief of the
BlackSeaNews, Head of the Monitoring Group of the Black Sea Institute of
Strategic Studies
Natalia Klymovska, Vice Rector for Development and Communications,
Ukrainian Catholic University
Ivanna Klympush-Tsintsadze, Member of the Parliament, Chair of the
Committee on Ukraine’s Integration into the EU
Mykola Kniazhytskyi, Member of the Parliament of Ukraine
Olena Kondratiuk, Deputy Speaker of the Parliament of Ukraine
George (Iurii) Kovalenko, rector, Open Orthodox University of Saint
Sophia the Wisdom, archpriest, Orthodox Church of Ukraine
Roman Kravets, journalist
Mykhailo Krikunov, Ph.D., Dean, Kyiv Business School
Lt. Colonel Bohdan “Tavr” Krotevych, Chief of Staff of the 12th Special
Forces Brigade Azov of the National Guard of Ukraine
Viktor Kruglov, member of board of the Ukrainian association of
publishers and booksellers, CEO of Ranok Publishing house
Kyrylo Kryvolap, managing partner, Civitta Ukraine; director, Center for
economic recovery
Volodymyr Kurennoy, member of the Parliament of Ukraine (5th, 7th, 8th
convocations)
Ulyana Kyrchiv, historian
Serhiy Kvit, president of the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy
Kostiantyn Kvurt, Head of the Board, NGO “Internews Ukraine”
Bogdan Logvynenko, founder of Ukra?ner
Danylo Lubkivsky, Director of the Kyiv Security Forum, Deputy Foreign
Minister of Ukraine (2014)
Oleksandr Lysenko, professor, Institute of History of Ukraine of
National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine (NASU)
Taras Lyuty, professor, National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy
Ksenia Maryniak, C. Tran., CIUS Editor
Juliy Morozov, co-founder of NGO “Union of Responsible citizens” and
Military and civilians recovery space HART
Sevgil Musaieva, Chief Editor of Ukrainska Pravda (Ukrainian Truth)
Oleksii Mushak, member of the Parliament of Ukraine (2014-2019),
economic adviser to the Prime Minister (2019-2020)
Nataliya Mykolska, Executive Director Diia.City United (tech business
association), non-executive member of the Board “Ukrhydroenergo”, visionary,
expert on strategic transformation and globalization, Trade Representative of
Ukraine – Deputy Minister of Economy (2015-2019)
Lyana Mytsko, cultural manager, head of Lviv Municipal Art Center
Max Nefyodov, co-founder of Technology of Progress NGO
Volodymyr Ogrysko, Minister of foreign affairs of Ukraine (2007-2009),
CEO, Centre for Russian Studies
Volodymyr Omelyan, mayor of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, Minister of
Infrastructure (2016-2019), politician
Oksana Ovsiiuk, Editor-in-chief of the academic website “Ukraina
Moderna”
Tetiana Pechonchyk, head of the Human Rights Center ZMINA
Inna Pidluska, Deputy Executive Director, International Renaissance
Foundation
Viktoriya Podgorna, Member of the Parliament of Ukraine, Deputy of head
committee on Digital Transformation
Taras Prokopyshyn, Co-Founder and CEO, The Ukrainians Media
Oleksandr Pronkevich, Head of the Department of Philology of the
Ukrainian Catholic University
Vadym Prystaiko, diplomat, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine
(2019-2020), Vice-Prime Minister, Ambassador to the UK, Canada, Head of Mission
to NATO
Serhiy Prytula, Founder of Serhiy Prytula Charity Foundation
Victoria Ptashnyk, member of the Parliament of Ukraine (8th
convocation), deputy of Kyiv City Council
Oleh Romanchuk, Director of the Institute of mental health of the Ukrainian
Catholic University
Oleksii Riabchyn, Deputy Minister for Energy and Environmental
Protection of Ukraine 2019-20, Member of Parliament of Ukraine (2014-19)
Olexander Samarskiy, Retired Ambassador, Centre for Russian Studies
Mariana Savka, writer, editor-in-chief of the Old Lion Publishing House
Mykhailo Savva, head of the public organization “Expert Group “Sova”,
Doctor of Political Sciences
Olexander Scherba, author, diplomat
Akhtem Seitablaiev, film director
Konstantin Sigov, Director of European Humanities research Center,
National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy
Yevhen Sinkevych, professor, University of Czerkasy
Olga Shapoval, Executive Director Kharkiv IT Cluster, Program Lead
Charity Foundation IT4Life
Yuri Shapoval, Professor, Doctor of historical sciences, Head of the
Center for Historical Political Studies, Institute of Political and Ethnic
Studies, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
Roman Sheremeta, Professor
of Economics at Case Western Reserve University, Founding Rector of American
University Kyiv
Dmytro Sherengovsky, Vice-Rector for Outreach, Ukrainian Catholic
University
Iryna Shukhtuieva, public activist, curator of art projects
Grygorii Shverk, Member of the Parliament of Ukraine (8th convocation)
Ostap Slyvynsky, Associate Professor, Ukrainian Catholic University,
Vice President of PEN Ukraine
Oleksandr Solontay, Head of NGO Agency for Recovery and Development
Serhiy Sternenko, volunteer, civil activist
Yevhen Stepanenko, war veteran, writer, author of the book “Abc of war”
Roman Sulzhyk, ex-JP Morgan, ex-Deutsche Bank executive
Ulana Suprun, MD, a/ Minister of Health of Ukraine (2016-2019),
Editor-in-Chief of The Black Sea Whale
Tetiana Sylina, Editor of the international department, Mirror Weekly
(ZN.UA)
Katya Taylor, curator, founder of NGO Port of Culture
Olena Tregub, Executive Director NGO “Independent Anti-Corruption
Commission (NAKO)”
Dr. Bohdan Ustymenko, Director, National Security Institute
Yan Valietov, writer
Valeriy Veremchuk, co-founder of NGO “People’s Self-Defence Lviv”,
member of Lviv city council
Viktor Vovk, Club of Rome associate member, member of the Parliament of
Ukraine and deputy chairman of the Foreign Affairs committee (2014-2019), PACE
and PA OSCE member (2015-2019)
Taras Voznyak, general director of Lviv National Art Gallery
Yehor Vradii, Deputy Director of Museum “Jewish Memory and Holocaust in
Ukraine”
Hlib Vyshlinsky, Executive Director, Centre for Economic Strategy
Oleh Yaskiv, combat officer, professor in physics, cinema critic, art
manager and lecturer at Ukrainian Catholic University
Andrii Yermolenko, artist, designer, laureate of the Shevchenko Prize
2024, military serviceman
Volodymyr Zabolotovskyy, director, charitable foundation HELP HEROES OF
UKRAINE
Agiya Zagrebelska, policy director, Economic Security Council of Ukraine
Oleksandr Zaitsev, Professor, Ukrainian Catholic University
Yevgeniy Zakharov, human rights defender, director of the Kharkiv Human
Rights Protection Group
Rev. Andriy Zelinskyy, SJ, military chaplain, writer, co-founder of the
Ukrainian Leadership Academy
Mykhailo Zhernakov, Doctor of Law, Executive director of DEJURE
Foundation
Josef Zissels, Association of Jewish Organizations and Communities of
Ukraine, First of December Initiative Group
|