Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 27 – Despite fears
that Vladimir Putin may soon shift from his partially covert and still in some
circles deniable offensive in Ukraine to a full-scale military invasion of that
country, there are five compelling reasons why that won’t happen, Kseniya
Kirillova says. But the very fact that it won’t is pushing the Kremlin leader
to behave like a terrorist.
In a commentary for Novy Region-2
today, the Seattle-based commentator discusses the five reasons she says Putin
will not invade and then points to the consequences tragic now for Ukraine and
the West but ultimately even for fateful for Putin and the country which he
rules (nr2.com.ua/hots/Vojna_na_Donbasse/Reshitsya-li-Putin-na-polnomasshtabnoe-vtorzhenie-v-Ukrainu-89158.html).
First of all, Kirillova says, as
many have noted for some time, Russia simply does not have sufficient forces to
“hold all the occupied territories” in Ukraine that its army might be able to
seize to begin with. Ukraine and the world are changing, and “the tactics of
World War II will not work.” Seizing
territory doesn’t mean one can hold it.
Second, she continues, there is the
impact of sanctions. However critical
one may be of the West for its lack of decisiveness in response to Putin’s
aggression, the sanctions it has imposed are having a serious impact on the
Russian economy and would be expanded in the event of a major invasion and have
even more negative consequences for the country.
Third, the United States has still
more “radical means” at its disposal, even if Europeans are not inclined to go
along at present. On the one hand, Washington could cut Russia off from the SWIFT
banking system, something that would hurt many more Russian businesses. And on
the other, it would freeze the accounts of Putin and his accomplices now in
Western banks.
Fourth,
Kirillova points out, the collapse of the Russian economy is leading to “destabilization
within Russia itself.” Russians are already angry about the decline in their
standard of living. Protests are likely to emerge and spread, and Putin will
need his army to suppress them and maintain his power -- which is after all his
primary goal.
And fifth,
Putin lacks the cadres needed for such a war.
Most of his generals are corrupt and have accounts abroad as well, and
those around Putin “do not intend to die for their chief.” Indeed, Putin’s
entourage recalls that of Yanukovich: they’ll support the leader until things
get tough, and then they will begin to desert him.
For all these
reasons, Kirillova says, Putin can’t afford and won’t launch a full-scale
invasion of Ukraine. But that does not mean that he won’t continue to act as he
has. And his actions are intended to
intimidate and blackmail the West “and in the first instance, the United
States.”
Because of
Russia’s weakness rather than its strength, she suggests, “the Kremlin is
acting in the classical manner of terrorists – by taking hostages.” In this case, they are not individuals but
rather Ukraine and indeed “all Europe.” That
is horrific for the hostages and frightening for everyone else. But it should
scare the authors of this policy even more.
That is because
there has never been a terrorist that the West ultimately has not been able to
cope with – not Hitler, not Bin Laden, not Idi Amin, not Milosevic, and not “many
others as well.” Kirillova concludes by observing that in her view, “very soon
in this list will occupy an honored place Putin as well.”
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