Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 7 – Vladimir Putin
stopped using the preposition “v” or “in” Ukraine in 2004, reverting to the
older form “na” or “on,” in official government documents, an indication that
the Kremlin leader did not view Ukraine as a country but rather as a Russian
borderland, according to Andrey Illarionov.
From the time he became president in
2000 through March 2004, Putin used the preposition “v” exclusively in official
documents he signed, but beginning on April 5, 2004, he shifted to “na” and
since Putin returned for his third term, such documents have used “na”
exclusively (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=55235E0133DC6).
In his own speeches, commentaries
and responses to questions, Illarionov points out, Putin has gone from using “v”
in 87.5 percent of the cases in 2002 to 70 percent in 2007 to 15.4 percent in
2012 to 8.2 percent last year, thus ever more often replacing it with the “na”
and thus showing his lack of respect for Ukraine’s status as a state.
Since April 5, 2004, 99.4 percent of
the official documents Putin has signed which refer to Ukraine have used “v”
rather than “na.” Most of these 11
exceptions reflect either statements about the past or about the work of specific
Russian officials of various kinds in Ukraine, he says.
“The last time the
grammatical form ‘v Ukraine’ was used in official documents of the Kremlin was
about five years ago on July 1, 2010,” concerning the presentation of an award
to the head of ITAR-TASS in Ukraine. And
that order was signed by then-President Dmitry Medvedev.
Since that time, “v” has not
been used in the official documents of the Russian president and his
administration even once. “In 2011-2015, 100 percent of the cases have used the
form “na Ukraine,” Illarionov reports.
This allows one to conclude,
the Russian analyst says, that the decision to shift from “v” to “na” was taken
“in the period between March 1 and April 5, 2004” – quite possibly immediately
after Putin’s winning a second term as president and thus an indication of his
intentions toward Kyiv at that time.
Certainly by April 16, 2004,
Putin had made a decision to shift gears with regard to Ukraine. On that date,
Illarionov recalls, Putin told the Ukrainian President Viktor Medvedchuk, “You
know our position.” Working with Ukraine is “the top priority and the most
important for us.”
“But however that was, the beginning
of linguistic aggression by denying the statehood of Ukraine by the Russian
authorities begins in March-April 2004,” Illarionov says. That was before the beginning of the Orange
Revolution in Ukraine in that year and long before July 2013 when Putin began
his hybrid war against Ukraine.
“In other words,” Illarionov
concludes, “the decision about the denial of the statehood of Ukraine was not
provoked by any real actions of Ukrainians, be they from the Ukrainian authorities
or Ukrainian society. This decision was taken by Putin personally, independent
of the situation in Ukraine and as a result of his own ideas and in
correspondence with his own plans.”
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