Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 22 – The Russian
Federation may open “a second front” against Ukraine from Transdniestria, the
breakaway portion of Moldova, and thereby threaten Kyiv’s control over Odessa
immediately and that country’s entire Black Sea littoral in the somewhat longer
term, according to officials and experts in Ukraine.
A few days ago, Marina Levko of
UNIAN notes, Vladimir Konstantinov, parliamentary speaker of the former
Autonomous Republic of Crimea, sent a request to Moscow “not to leave to the
arbitrary action of fate Russians and others “from Kharkiv to Odessa” who want
to become “part of Russia” (unian.net/politics/899376-pridnestrove-rossiyskiy-klyuch-k-odesse.html).
Some in Odessa reiterated that
request, noting that they are “under the gun” because they border the
unrecognized Transdniestria republic of Moldova, a request that appeared “absurd,”
Levko writes, “but this ‘closeness’ and the present of the unresolved
Trandniestria conflict and the presence of Russian peacekeepers” represents “a
threat to [Ukraine’s] national security.”
“Recently,” Artem Filipenko, the
head of the Odessa branch of the National Institute for Strategic Research,
said, “the authorities of Transdniestria have actively positioned the republic
as an advanced post of ‘Eurasian integration,’” a code word for joining with
Moscow. And while they had not received much public support from Russia in this
regard earlier, Crimea has changed the equation.
The Transdniestria authorities thus
had been “restrained” in their comments, Filipenko said, but “it is completely
natural that their sympathies are entirely on the side of the Crimean
separatists” and “it is not excluded” that Tiraspol is also worried that it may
face its own Maidan although the Ukrainian analyst suggested there is “not
particular reason” for this.
“Despite the fact that this state
unrecognized even by Russia does not play for the Kremlin the same strategic
role as the Crimean peninsula,” Filipenko continued, “now Russian political
technologists are forcefully promoting the theme of “the fall of the empire’s
prestige if it does not save Transdniestria.’”
They are doing so, he suggested by
arguing that “behind the back of Moldova stands Romania, and behind its, the United
States and NATO.” Consequently, Ukrainian officials are viewing what takes
place in Transdniestria as “a litmus test” of Russia’s broader intentions
against Ukraine.
Filipenko said that there are real
concerns that Moscow may be able to send “provocateurs” into Odessa from
Transdniestria, a fear that has led Ukrainian officials to go on the alert at
the border and in the city and region.
Moreover, Ukrainians are worried not only about that but about economic
and even military “interference.”
In the event of a blockade of the railway
passing through Transdniestria, Ukrainian firms would suffer enormously, and
Kyiv is concerned that there are enough Russian forces and support groups in
Transdniestria to cause trouble for its southeast, even though most Ukrainian
attention to the Russian threat is focused on the east.
Levko devoted most of the remainder
of her article to the arrangements Ukrainian officials, military, border
guards, and prosecutors, have put in place against a thrust against the republic
that so far relatively few outside that region are paying attention to,
although as she suggested they may soon be forced to redirect their focus.
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