Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 15 – Even as
Moscow appears to be reducing its military actions in southeastern Ukraine, a “reduction”
that is at least in part a disinformation campaign (nr2.com.ua/News/crime_and_accidents/Ekspert-V-seti-idet-dezinformacionnaya-kampaniya-o-situacii-na-Donbasse-86668.html), Putin is making Belarus into a base for attacking
Kyiv.
The
appearance of more Russian “little green men” in Gomel last week prompted some
Ukrainians to ask whether the Kremlin was planning to stage a Novorossiya-style
move into Belarus, Natalya Radina, the editor of the independent Belarusian
site Charter97.org, notes (ru.tsn.ua/analitika/belarus-voennyy-placdarm-putina-protiv-ukrainy-i-nato-401018.html).
But such questions are based on a misperception of
the situation: Putin has no need of invading Belarus as he did Ukraine, she
says. Instead, he has full control of Ukraine’s northern neighbor and is taking
steps to ready it to become a place des armes from which Moscow can attack Kyiv
from the north.
For the last several years, Radina
continues, Russian and Belarusian forces have been engaged in joint exercises
based on the assumption of countering a NATO threat. But since at least last
May, after Moscow moved into Ukraine, Russian military personnel have moved
into Belarus, although in an effort to hide this activity, they have dressed in
Belarusian uniforms.
At that time, there were roughly
3,000 Russian officers and soldiers in Belarusian garrisons. Now, their numbers
are much greater. Moreover, as the
Russian defense ministry has said, Moscow is advancing the date for the
establishment of a completely Russian air base in Belarus so that it will be
operational early next year.
One aspect of this situation is
especially worrisome, Radina suggests. Moscow
has said that its Belarusian base will have numerous MI-8 helicopters which are
used not for air defense but rather for moving troops. Such planes could be
used to move troops quickly in the direction of Kyiv which is not far south of
the Belarusian border.
Even if Moscow does not use this
base to attack Ukraine, Russia’s ability to do precisely that will force Kyiv
to divide its forces and thus make it easier for Putin to put pressure on the
Ukrainian government, however much some in the West will try to see any “freezing”
of movement in Ukraine’s southeast as a hopeful sign that the crisis is near an
end.
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