Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 28 –Moscow
continues to insist that it recognizes the Donbass as part of Ukraine and will
seek its return to Kyiv’s control, but its agents in the unrecognized DNR and
LNR are setting up special camps expanding patriotic instruction in the schools
to prepare the young there for the annexation of the region by Russia,
according to Vyachesav Gusarov.
Gusarov, a reserve officer of
Ukraine’s intelligence service and an expert in the Information Resistance
Group, describes this system in an interview today with Kyiv’s Apostrophe news
agency (apostrophe.ua/article/politics/2016-09-28/voyna-na-donbasse-v-dnr-i-lnr-detey-svozyat-v-voennyie-lagerya/7438).
Both the DNR and the LNR, he says,
organized youth camps this past summer and also sent young people from there to
other camps in Russia. In addition, the two “republics” have introduced “patriotic
education” courses in the schools and organized Soviet-style Pioneer
organizations.
And they have organized military
training schools in the two oblasts, places which did not have such
institutions in the past. All of these
things, Gusarov says, are intended to prepare the Russian-occupied area to become
part of the Russian Federation. “There is no doubt of that,” he says, given
what Moscow is doing in Moldova’s Transdniestr region.
This is all part of Putin’s plan to
extend Russian influence and control across the entire former Soviet and former
Warsaw Pact space, something that represents a threat to all the countries in
these regions. Ukraine might at some point become a leader that could unite
these countries in an anti-Russian coalition. But for the present, it is too
weak to do so.
In other comments, Gusarov says that
it is “not a very correct idea” to talk about Ukraine liberating
Russian-occupied Crimea by military means. Ukraine isn’t ready for this, and
Russia has created “a quite serious military sector which would be able to
ensure serious resistance to any Ukrainian move.
What makes Gusarov’s observations
about the DNR and LNR actions with respect to young people there is that it
suggests that Moscow is taking a long-term view and is creating a cadre of
people who can be either a foundation for Russian expansion or a Moscow-organized
fifth column should the Kremlin in fact hand the Donbass back to Kyiv’s
control.
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