Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 9 – Vladimir Putin
not only doesn’t want to annex the Donbas but can’t do so, according to Yevgeny
Ikhlov; and that means the region will become another edition of
Transdniestria, creating ongoing problems for both Russian and Ukraine but
opening the possibility Kyiv will be able to follow the Baltic path to the
West, according to Dmitry Oreshkin.
Ikhlov points out today that Putin
faces a very different situation in the Donbas than he did in Crimea. Crimea
was annexed as a whole, but the pro-Moscow forces of the DNR and LNR do not
control all the Ukrainian oblasts of which they form a part, thus leaving the
Kremlin with no good choices (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=55EEC91811752).
If Moscow simply
annexed what the DNR and LNR now control, “for the first time, the Russian
border would become undefined for hundreds of kilometers,” creating a
bureaucratic, political and security nightmare for the Russian state, Ikhlov
suggests.
He argues that Moscow would in fact
have to do one of two things if it wanted to pursue Putin’s original policy of “reuniting
the Russian world with Holy Rus.” Either it would “have to consider both
oblasts entirely the subjects of the Old Russian Fedration which would mean the
official lodging of territorial demands against Ukraine.”
Or, he continues, it would have to “take
a decision about the voluntary self-demolition of each of these ‘peoples’
republics’ and about giving February 12, 2015 ceasefire line the status of a
state border, which would mean not only Russia’s withdrawal from the Minsk
accords but also the complete destruction of the mythology about ‘supporters of
federalization’” in Ukraine.
Doing either would undercut Russian
policy in Ukraine, exacerbate relations between Moscow and the West which would
beyond any doubt impose even more serious sanctions, and create problems at
home not only among Russian nationalists who would feel betrayed but also among
those who have been fighting in the Donbas and would not return home.
Meanwhile, Oreshkin points out that
because Putin cannot either force Kyiv to take the territories of the DNR and
the LNR back into Ukraine in a way allowing Moscow to have an effective veto
over Kyiv or annex them, his only alternative is “a second Transdniestria” (nv.ua/opinion/oreshkin/proschet-boevikov-i-hudshij-koshmar-putina-67783.html).
“Russia does not
have real political, diplomatic or economic resources to annex these
territories,” the Russian analyst continues.
“The naïve peasants in the Donbas
supposed that first in Russia everything is good and it will be glad to take
them in and second that Vladimir Putin is a real guy and will not surrender
them.”
“But it has turned out,” Oreshkin
says, that “in Russia everything is bad and there is no money, and that
Vladimir Putin is indifferent to the fate of the Donbas peasants: he needs an instrument
to influence Kyiv, and the ideal instrument [or at least the best available to
him] is a constantly smoldering conflict like those in the style of the
Karabakh or Transdniestria.”
Putin in no case “will
take the Donbas into the Russian Federation.” He can’t afford it at home or in
terms of his policies toward Ukraine. Thus, the Kremlin leader will continue to
try to force Kyiv to take responsibility for them and to get Western
governments to support him in that in the name of territorial integrity.
That is because,
Oreshkin argues, “the worst nightmare of Russia is a Ukraine” will be able to
form a normal economy and a democratic state as the three Baltic countries and
thus become part of the West.
Of course, he says, “it is possible
to continue to tell lies about the Baltic countries being a fascist nest; but
the people living there, including the [ethnic] Russians understand very well
that they live better than their counterparts in Moscow. The average monthly
pay in the Baltic countries is approximately 1,000 euros.” In Russia, it is
just over a third of that.
And that situation obtains, Oreshkin
continues, despite the fact that “in Russia, there is gas, oil, gold, timber,
diamonds and other things, and in the Baltic countries, there are not any of
these things.”
“If something similar occurs in
Ukraine, that would be a catastrophe for the Kremlin because while one can
still tell lies about the Baltics and their oppression of [ethnic] Russians, it
is far more difficult to lie about Ukraine – there are too many links and it is
too close a country.” And that is yet another reason Moscow is trapped and
cannot annex the Donbas.
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