Paul Goble
Staunton,
August 13 – Both Vladimir Putin’s plans for Ukraine – his initial one of
absorbing much of Ukraine and his “Plan B” of having the West force Ukraine
into agreeing to make concessions– have failed, Andrey Piontkovsky says; and “the
interests of Putin and his closest entourage” now “seriously diverge, with the
latter searching for his replacement.
In
a comment for Apostrophe.com.ua, the Russian analyst says that the only things
Putin can try is to step up his aggression or stage a provocation to prompt the
West to desert Ukraine. If he does the former and tries to seize Mariupol or a
land corridor to Crimea, the West has said it will increase sanctions and sell
lethal arms to Ukraine (apostrophe.com.ua/article/world/ex-ussr/2015-08-13/v-rossii-nashli-zamenu-putinu-vse-reshitsya-v-blijayshie-nedeli/2095).
“But
this is not all the West’s response could be,” Piontkovsky continues. Other
options include: “the seizure of the accounts of Russian officials and oligarchs
in Western banks, stepping up the pressure against Moscow regarding the
shooting down of the Malaysian airliner, the Litvinenko murder and a mass of
other things.”
But
not increasing his acts of aggression also constitutes a threat to Putin “as a
man responsible for a serious foreign policy defeat.” He thus doesn’t want to back down, but for
his entourage, “military escalation is absolutely unacceptable for Putin’s
entourage and for the majority of the Russian political establishment.”
Those
people “understand perfectly well that this will lead to their loss of billions
of dollars and to the rapid overthrow of the regime,” Piontkovsky says. But if Putin were to suddenly change course, he
would in the eyes of those around him be “guilty of a defeat,” and they would
desert him.
It
is worth remembering what happened to Nikita Khrushchev after the Cuban missile
crisis, the analyst continues. “He was forced to pull back after which his days
in power were numbered … for the establishment, the lesser evil is to withdraw,
part ways with Putin, and establish some kind of peaceful coexistence with the West.”
Members
of the Russian elite have been sending signals to the West in this regard for
several months, Piontkovsky says. Now, the situation has become more serious;
and he suggested that “everything will be resolved already in the coming weeks.”
If
Putin is going to expand his aggressive actions in Ukraine, he will have to do
so in August or September. “October is not the season for a military advance.” But
what may be even more likely, the Kremlin leader may try to stage “an enormous
provocation” designed to shift the blame on Kyiv and thus cost Ukraine the
support it has in the West.
Ukrainian
leaders have to be very aware of this danger and act with restraint and care on
the battlefield lest they fall into a trap, he says. But at the same time, they
need to launch “an aggressive diplomatic offensive.” They must tell the UN Security Council that
Moscow is escalating its aggression.
What
Moscow will do next is “difficult to predict now because the Kremlin ‘top’ is
in a panic,” Piontkovsky argues, as shown by Naryshkin’s article on the burning
of foodstuffs at the border and Lavrov’s behavior at a press conference after
meeting with Saudi officials.
The
Russian analyst suggests that “Moscow understands” that it has no really good
options in Ukraine and consequently many there are considering what to do in
the Russian capital. If his entourage
can force Putin out, Piontkovsky says, “the most probable figure” to replace
him is Sergey Ivanov.
“Formally,
[Ivanov] occupies a non-political post as head of the Presidential
Administration. Nevertheless, he unceasingly gives interviews to foreign media”
in which he portrays himself as someone who could be “a constructive partner
for the West.”
“Will
Putin’s departure change Moscow’s policy?” Piontkovsky asks rhetorically,
answering that “undoubtedly” it will even though those who will replace him
will come out of the same part of the elite he did. And in support of that argument he cites what
happened after Stalin died.
Stalin’s
successors “essentially changed the foreign policy of the USSR,” he writes. “The
same thing will happen in our case. A 20th congress of the United
Russia Party will take place at which the serious errors of Comrade Putin in
the Ukrainian question will be condemned.”
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