lundi 4 avril 2022

War in Ukrain: should we scientifically isolate Russia? Interview

 


Background: Events and positions in February and March 2022

The February 24, Russia invaded Ukraine, immediately followed with air attacks. Quickly, the global research community condemned this brutal invasion.

The February 25, the Alliance of Science organizations in Germany which includes the German Research Foundation froze cooperation with the Russian scientific institutions. The Alliance explained the German research funds will no longer benefit to Russia, no joint scientific events will take place and no new collaborations will begin. The same day, in the other side of the world, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge decided to end its relationship with the Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology in Moscow, which it co-founded in 2011. The administration of the MIT declared, “We take it with deep regret because of our great respect for the Russian people”.

The day after, the International Mathematical Union, which awards the Fields Medals (the Nobel Prize for mathematicians), cancelled the four-yearly conference which was scheduled to be held in St Petersburg in July.

Some days later, on 5 March, the European Commission announced the freezing of scientific cooperation with Russia. More precisely, the commission will stop payments to Russian research partners and will review all projects that involve Russian research organizations under Horizon Europe and its predecessor Horizon 2020. Following this decision, several European countries as France, Italy or Netherland froze scientific collaborations with Russia

Opposite to these decisions, several other science organizations refused to stop scientific collaboration with Russia. For instance, on March 1, the International Astronomical Union rejected a petition from Ukrainian astronomers to ban Russian astronomers. In a text, the president of the Union, Debra Elmegreen wrote: “that would definitely be making a political statement, which the IAU cannot do. The IAU was founded right after WW1 in order to bring colleagues together, so we do not wish to drive them apart by deciding whom to support based on what their governments are doing”. In France, the experimental ITER fusion reactor has no plans at present to expel Russia, which is a full member of one of the world’s biggest science collaboration. Laban Coblentz, the ITER’s spokesperson explained “ITER is a child of the Cold War and is deliberately nonaligned”. The CERN has also a difficult position. Historically, the CERN did not expel Russian scientists when the Soviet Union invaded Czechoslovakia in 1968 or Afghanistan in 1979. John Ellis, a theoretical physicist that worked to CERN for 40 years explained “One of the CERN’s mottos is “science for peace””. He pursued: “My personal attitude is that we should really strive to maintain that collaboration, if it’s all politically possible”. CERN Council is walking in a fine line. In a special session on 8 March the representatives voted to suspend Russia’s observer status and barred its representatives from auditing the Council’s deliberations. Nevertheless, they did not expel the thousand Russian scientists working with or to the CERN. Finally, the UK Universities advised its members to review collaborations with Russia on a case-by-case basis.

To complete the picture, I have to mention that the network Scholar at Risk took decisions to help Ukrainian researchers. For instance, the Swiss section of Scholar at Risk decided on March 7 to give 1 million Swiss Franc to help 10 Ukrainian researchers to come in Switzerland and to follow their research.

In Russia and in Ukraine the scientific communities are also moving.

On March 4, the Russian Union of the University rectorates published a text to support the war. They explained that the Russian University have to support the “denazification” and the “demilitarization” of Ukraine. For the closed to six thousands signatories (in date March 18) this war will allow the security of the Russia. In the opposite side of the political chess, Mikhail Gelfan, a Russian bioinformatician at the Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology in Moscow published a letter the day of the invasion to denounce this war. In this letter, he explained that there is no reason for Russia to invade Ukraine. For him, the Russia is the only responsible of this terrible war and all the death coming. He asked to stop immediately this war and to sign the peace. His text has been signed (in date of March 18 by 8000 people).

In Ukraine the scientific community wrote and shared a petition asking several things to the international scientific community. They asked:

• to block access to all scientometric databases and materials of scientific publishers for citizens and institutions of the Russian Federation;

• to make it impossible for researchers affiliated with institutions and scientific institutions of the Russian Federation to participate in international grant programs funded by the European Union and other partners;

• to suspend participation of researchers, students and institutions from the Russian Federation in current international academic mobility programs;

• to boycott attempts at holding scientific events on the territory of the Russian Federation (in particular, scientific conferences, symposiums, etc.);

• to suspend indexing of scientific materials published in the Russian Federation in all scientometric databases;

• to prohibit citizens of the Russian Federation from being editors/coeditors/reviewers of international publications.

This petition is still turning around the world and the number of signatories is growing every day. Some institutions/organizations already answered. For instance, on March 11, Clarivate, which runs the citation database Web of Science, announced that it will cease all commercial activity in Russia. Before this declaration, Clarivate already suspended the evaluation of any new journals from Russia and Belarus that are seeking to be included in the Web of Science. The Journal of Molecular Structure (IF 3,196) will no longer consider manuscripts written by scientists at Russian. Science and Nature refused. In an edito published on March 10, the direction of Nature wrote: “But Nature, in common with many other journals, will continue to consider manuscripts from researchers anywhere in the world. That is because we think at this time that such a boycott would do more harm than good. It would divide the global research community and restrict the exchange of scholarly knowledge — both of which have the potential to damage the health and well-being of humanity and the planet. The world must keep generating the knowledge needed to deal with this and other crises. The ability to communicate research and scholarship freely across national borders has been foundational to science and international relations — and has endured during some of the world’s worst historical conflicts.”

My introduction is long. But it is mandatory to have a complete background to understand the situation. As you can see, the scientific community is divided regarding the ban of the Russian scientific community.

Today, it is my pleasure to interview Dr Oleksandr Sobol, a Ukrainian researcher at the Polytechnic School of Lausanne and signatory of the Ukrainian petition.

Questions

1/ Dr Sobol, I can easily believe that the situation is highly complicated for you. My first question is simple in a normal situation but probably not here. How are you? How do you feel?

Thank you for asking. I am one of not very big number of Ukrainian scientists who managed to flee the war and are now on a safe territory. Therefore, it is a sin for me to complain about my present situation. Physically, I’m absolutely OK. However, morally it is very difficult to observe this horror which now happens in Ukraine – in the very heart of Europe in XXI century. And it is especially painful for me and all my compatriots abroad because we have a lot of relatives, friends, colleagues, students there, we know many of those places which now are occupied or even destroyed by Russian aggression. Each new day starts for us from reading the digest of news from our Fatherland and calling relatives, any free minute is also devoted to this. Unfortunately, the news are far from being good and only become worse as more and more Ukrainian people lose their homes, workplaces and even lives. Photos and movies showing the consequences of Russian’s invasion indicate that our country deals with an uncivilized, medieval, unscrupulous enemy whose aim is just to destroy Ukraine and its citizens. We see a plenty of evidences for this every day: chaotic shelling and bombing of peaceful cities, killings and violence against civilians in the occupied territories, the use of prohibited weapons, … (just one of the very last examples is the Bucha massacre https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LC03FYc_ZUA). Of course, we are trying to do our best in order to help Ukrainians: from donations of money for the needs of our armed forces and collecting humanitarian aid to taking part in different manifestations and meetings. But nonetheless sometimes we feel helpless.

2/ Before the war, what were the scientific links between Ukrainian and Russian universities? Did you have, as in the European Union, exchange between students as the Erasmus program? Did you have joint supervision for PhD program?

I know for sure that before 2014 when Russia annexed Ukrainian Crimea and occupied a part of Donetsk and Lugansk regions, there were a lot of scientific links between Ukraine and Russia. Just as an example, in 2013 as part of a group of students from Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv I visited Moscow and a town of scientists Chernogolovka (in Moscow region; the Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics is located there) and took part in a workshop on condensed matter physics. Several my groupmates during the bachelor studies decided to enter Russian universities in order to get a master’s and/or PhD degree there. We often invited scientists from Russia to give talks at seminars, conferences held in Ukraine and vice versa. The situation changed in 2014 after first acts of Russian aggression. At that time, however, scientific community remained more or less neutral. Of course, the number of scientific visits significantly decreased but the communication didn’t stop even officially. Again, one example from my own experience. According to the official rules which were valid until 2019 in Ukraine, a person willing to defend a PhD thesis was obliged to send an abstract of their thesis to all major scientific institutions of Ukraine and also to several institutions in Russia. This rule was, of course, an atavism from Soviet times but even in 2018 (when I was defending my PhD) I still had to do so. Moreover, I know for sure that until the day of Russian invasion, February 24, 2022, there was a collaboration between the Physics Faculty of Kyiv National University and the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna. This is only one of a big number of such cases. There were a lot of examples of joint supervision of Master’s or PhD programs. E.g., 3 of 10 students in my academic group on the Master’s level were supervised by two scientists, one of which was from Ukraine and another from Russia. After graduation, two of them got their PhD degrees in Russia. In just one department of Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology there were 6 or 7 researchers from Kyiv. Just after the invasion most of them fled Russia because they were afraid of being arrested.

But now, when Russia showed to the whole world its true face and bombs our cities, our universities which collaborated with Russian institutions in the past, naturally, any collaboration ceased to exist. Although I know that there is a fraction of Russian scientists who don’t support the invasion, their voices do not play any role and are not heard (fortunately to those people) by the Russian government and the majority of Russian people. There is a possibility of personal communication with those people but not an official scientific collaboration. In my opinion, any collaboration (co-supervision of programs, co-authorship of the articles,…) with scientists affiliated with Russia will not be acceptable by Ukrainian scientists for long times in the future. These things which Russians do now in Ukraine cannot be forgotten and cannot be forgiven, such wounds do not heal.

3/ As I summarized, some international institutions/organizations took a quick decision and froze all the link with Russian researchers, some others no. What do you personally think about the decision of the ITER and CERN administrators?

I think these are not the correct decisions. Freezing the links with Russian researchers is a kind of sanctions – scientific sanctions – which must be applied to Russia. Unless the whole civilized world simultaneously applies severe sanctions and makes the vast majority of Russian people to feel the pressure and inconveniences, this war will not finish soon. This is equally true for all kinds of sanctions: economical, scientific, cultural, sportive, touristic etc. This is basically the aim of sanctions – to show to citizens of a certain country that their government is doing something wrong. If the sanctions are not coordinated between different countries and do not cause the total isolation of an aggressor, their efficiency tends to zero. This is like you want to produce a vacuum: for this you need to close all the holes in the vessel and only after that start pumping the air out, otherwise you fail.

That is why I think the world should be consolidated in the question of sanctions. The more severe and comprehensive they are, the less time we will have to wait until they start working and the sooner this war finishes. This is actually the goal and not just to make somebody suffer because they are Russians. (On the contrary, Russians are now making Ukrainian people to suffer just because they are Ukrainians. I would not like anybody to think that I’m asking for the symmetric actions with respect to Russians. Those people are blinded by the Russian propaganda and the civilized world must open their eyes. The only possible way for now are effective sanctions in all spheres of human life.)

4/ In the petition you signed, you asked, I quote, “to prohibit citizens of the Russian Federation from being editors/coeditors/reviewers of international publications”. You never asked to the publishers to ban Russian researchers from the international journals but to ban them from the Editorial Board. Which is not the same. Thus, what do you think about the answer of Nature? Nature is not answering about the Editorial board but regarding the publication…

If there was a line in the petition asking to prohibit Russian citizens from publishing their works in international journals, I would have signed this petition as well. I would sign every petition which is aimed at sanctions against Russia. As I explained above, this is not because I hate all Russians, this is because I believe that otherwise we cannot change the situation.

I would like you to understand me correctly. I know that there are a lot of high-class scientists in Russia whose contribution to science is very valuable. However, if they support aggression (and we know that there are thousands of such scientists in Russia), they should be taught somehow that this is not a right position and the world is not supporting their position. The only civilized way to do so is to apply sanctions. For athletes these should be sportive sanctions (e.g., exclusion from international competitions), for singers these could be cultural sanctions (cancelling their concerts, exclusion their songs from hit-parades etc.), while for scientists only the scientific sanctions could be effective (freezing the collaboration, prohibiting from publishing in international journals, exclusion from editorial boards etc.). Of course, I know that there are a lot of scientists who are against Russian aggression in Ukraine. I strongly respect these people and appreciate their position. However, the western world should not weaken the sanctions only because these people just exist in nature. First of all, all sanctions are temporary. The more effective they are, the less time they last. Second, there are other ways to publish their results, e.g., not associate themselves with Russia in its current form. Finally, if their position is not aligned with that of the Russian government, they are probably in danger in Russia. In such a situation they could flee their country (at least for some time) and continue doing science and publishing their results without any restrictions.

From all that I mentioned above, it follows that I do not support the decision of “Nature”. Exclusion from the editorial board is already a good step but I suspect that this is not sufficient. I hope that those horrible facts of Russian crimes in Ukraine will force all conscientious international institutions to strengthen sanctions, including the scientific ones.

5/ In the petition you asked “to suspend participation of researchers, students and institutions from the Russian Federation in current international academic mobility programs”. Here it is a point I personally disagree. Indeed, it seems that you ask to blame students and the possibility for a Russian student to do his/her PhD elsewhere. Can you please explain this point?

First of all, I’m not the author of this petition and the fact that I signed it does not mean that I support all its statements (however, I indeed support the majority of them). Concerning the academic mobility programs for Russian students my position is the following. Western universities and other scientific institutions which are offering such programs, should ask the applicants from Russia and Belarus (and maybe also from other countries) to prepare one additional personal statement describing their position concerning the Russian aggression acts throughout the world. If students/scientists support Russia in these actions, why should the western world give them education/experience? To allow them to apply this knowledge to invent a new type of weapon? On the other hand, if the applicants do not agree and does not support the policy of Russian government, why not to give them a possibility to apply for academic position abroad. This could be a possibility to them to flee from their country where they are in danger because of the political position.

Therefore, here I would vote for a selective approach in making decisions. If a person shares the right human values like freedom, democracy, the rule of law, then why not to give them the opportunity to use all the possibilities of the civilized world on an equal footing with others?

6/ Do you support the position of professor Mikhail Gelfan? What would you like to tell to him?

Yes, sure. I sincerely support the position of Professor Mikhail Gelfan and strongly appreciate it. I would like to tell him and all the signatories of his letter that I truly admire their bravery to express their position even though it is not aligned with that of Russian government. I would like to wish them to insist on their position, not to give up, to stay safe and believe in better future for their country.

7/ Regarding the Swiss position, do you think that 1 million francs given by the FNS is enough?

It is hard to say now whether this is enough. Most of Ukrainian scientists which were in Ukraine when the invasion started, remained there because of the martial law. However, some part of them fled the country, mostly students and women. There are a lot of other countries in the world that also offered some positions for scientists at risk. The time will show if there is a demand from our scientists to increase the number of positions. If so, then maybe the Swiss government could find some additional funds for support. But still the announced amount already is a significant support for our scientists, this is a helping hand in these hard times for which we are very grateful.

8/ John Ellis said that Science works for peace. You agree with this sentence?

In the time I was a student, I would agree with Professor Ellis. But certainly not now. Indeed, this is the science that gave us everything making our life comfortable, meaningful, safe etc. But we should keep in mind that also all kinds of the most powerful and violent weapons have been created by scientists. If we lived in a highly-developed civilized world where all countries sincerely agreed to keep peace and destroy all weapons (even though the science still could make it possible to recreate them), then I would say that I agree with the statement of John Ellis. But these last weeks we see that our world is still not as civilized as we thought. Still there are some countries with an unpredictable behavior. And the problem is that one of these countries – the Russian Federation – is a nuclear-weapon state. In Russia, the science works not only for peace, that is for sure. This is like a monkey with grenade – the consequences may be catastrophic.

9/ Another point I did not evoke in my background is the biological weapons. On March 10, Vassily Nebenzia, the Russian Ambassador to the United Nation explained that Ukrainian researchers used bat to create bioweapons. What do you want to answer to this Russian propaganda? In France, some citizen believed to this propaganda…

Well, I would prefer not to talk to such odious people as Vasily Nebenzia. He belongs to such a kind of people which lie more often than breath. To be honest, I would be happy if Ukrainian laboratories had such a modern equipment that would allow our scientists to conduct the research at high level (you will not argue that production of biological weapons would require a very high-class equipment). Unfortunately, the present state of Ukrainian experimental science (even before the war) would never allow our scientists to do so. More than 25 years the science was not financed at a sufficient level that is why most laboratories still used the equipment produced in Soviet times. Only in the last 2 years, after the National Research Foundation was created, appeared a hope for the revival of Ukrainian science. The war interrupted this process, unfortunately, for a long time.

And now more concretely. There is no, I mean not even a single evidence for the words of Russian propaganda about Ukrainian bioweapons. But we see the evidences of Russian crimes in Ukraine every day, every hour, every minute. Thousands of our citizens are dead, millions of buildings are destroyed, long-term demographic consequences for Ukraine are also very severe. Due to modern technologies, the whole world can observe the brutality of Russian army in Ukraine in the real-time mode. For this we don’t even need to make up myths about different types of weapons – almost all of them have already been used against Ukrainian citizens. This is an obvious and undeniable fact.

I think the only possible way in which we can fight propaganda is to show people the true facts. Just see the photos in the internet made by independent international journalists in Ukraine, listen to our people (most probably you can find some of them in your area as millions of Ukrainians already fled their country), listen to your government after all.

10/ For this question I am not talking about the institutions but only about the “normal researcher” as me. The researcher without power. Which message do you want to give him? How can he/she help you to fight against this crazy and horrific war?

(Remark: here by “you” I mean not directly you, but any “normal researcher”)

I am also a “normal researcher” like you, like many other researchers in other countries. We cannot do global things like at the level of countries or governments, but nevertheless our input can also be valuable. First of all, I would suggest to operate only with facts and not believe in propaganda (from either side it comes). Formulate your own position in this situation. If you support this mad and horrible war, then better do nothing, the conversation should stop here. But if (most probably) you are against the war, there is a great variety of actions. For instance, you could start from your institution: require your supervisors and high-level management to officially state the position of the institution against the war; express your opinion concerning the scientific collaboration with Russian scientists, enrolling Russian students, supporting Ukrainian scientists/students; initiate the collection of humanitarian aid to Ukrainian people at your institution. Apart from your work, you may join different meetings and manifestations and express your political position to your government. The voice of one person will not be taken into account but it will be if there are a thousand or better a million of such voices stating the same thing: “Stop the Russian aggression! Stop the war!” There are also different ways to support Ukrainian people via your local or international charity organizations. Last, but not the least, just say a few words of compassion and support to Ukrainian refugees which you may meet on your way.

11/ Do you want to add something? Points we did not discuss. You have the place here.

I would loke to thank you very much for paying attention to this very important topic, for your time and for following the situation. It is very important to all Ukrainian people to feel this support from all civilized world. This gives us a feeling that we are not alone in the fight against the Russian aggression. First two weeks of the war, I was in Ukraine and saw by my own eyes how does the war look like. This is when you are awakened by the terrible sound of military airplanes and bomb explosions, when you see how your 82-years old grandmother and your pregnant wife run towards the bomb shelter several times during the day and night, when teachers, doctors and engineers dig trenches and weave camouflage nets, … To be honest, we were far from the hottest points but what we have seen will be forever in our memory. As well as we will remember the bombing of peaceful cities (like our Kharkiv, Irpin, Bucha, Mariupol, Chernihiv,…), murdering peaceful citizens (like the Bucha massacre) and destroying peoples’ lives (like of hundreds of thousands Ukrainians who lost their houses, jobs and relatives). I wish you and all people that now support us to never see the war in your countries.  I wish that such terrible things will never happen again in the future. Let us hope that this war finishes as soon as possible by a victory of democracy and freedom! Thank you once more for a possibility to express my position!

Dr Sobol, I thank you.

Interview pour La Science te parle le 4/04/2022

Citizen4Science donne une image erronée du monde de la recherche!

  NB  : Il est possible que ces lignes soient mal interprétées par la faune du net. Je précise donc que l’objectif de ma réponse n’est que ...