Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 14 – The current
lull in the fighting in the Donbas is “one of the tactical elements in the
Kremlin’s efforts to get out of open confrontation with the West and offer the
West a new deal – the idea of a global anti-terrorist coalition,” Liliya
Shevtsova says; but it does not represent a change in Vladimir Putin’s
strategy.
That strategy remains exactly what
it was: to ensure that Moscow has sufficient leverage to block Ukraine from
becoming part of the West, she says. But now that effort is likely to take the
form of economic and political pressure, although the threat of military force will
remain as blackmail (apostrophe.com.ua/article/politics/2015-09-14/kreml-vyibiraet-novuyu-taktiku-chto-budet-s-dnr-lnr/2252).
“The partial ceasefire and lull in
the Donbas clearly testified to the exhaustion of a particular model in Kremlin
policy,” the Russian analyst says, “the model of forcible pressure on Ukraine.” Moscow has recognized this for some
time and sought a way out “without the loss of face” and “with the preservation
of a mechanism for influence on Kyiv.”
Shevtsova adds that she does not
think that “the return of the DNR and LNR to Ukraine is something real in the
near future given the maintenance of an open border with Russia and separatist
control over these formations.” Moreover, “the Kremlin is hardly read to
completely surrender these enclaves.” Whether Ukraine really wants them back is
another question.
What is clear is this: “Moscow wants
to get out from the sanctions regime,” and it “doesn’t need ‘a black hole’ in
the Donbas” which it would have to continue to put money into. Thus, she says, the Russian authorities will
tighten their control of the border with Ukraine to “prevent the flow of arms
and separatists with arms into the territory of Russia.”
According to Shevtsova, the Kremlin
understands that it has gotten itself into a dead end and that the use of more
force now would be counterproductive. But it also understands that it will be
able to achieve what is wants – keeping Ukraine “in a neutral strategic zone
outside of NATO guarantees” – if uses other means, while keeping the threat of
force in place.
No one should be fooled by what
Putin is doing, she suggests. “For Moscow, Ukraine remains a part of the
domestic agenda” of his Russia. And thus “the lull means only a change of
Kremlin tactics but not of its strategy.”
No comments:
Post a Comment