Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 24 – Ukraine would
be far better off if it were left with a frozen conflict in which Russia openly
occupied the east than with the solution Vladimir Putin wants and some in the
West seem ready to accept: a reunited Ukraine in which Putin’s forces would
dominate not just the east but all of Ukraine, according to Andrey Piontkovsky.
In an interview with Nataliya Dvali
of Kyiv’s Gordon news agency, the Russian political commentator who has been
forced into exile by the Kremlin, says that Kyiv must continue to point out to
the West that Putin is a war criminal and that he will never pull his forces
out of the Donbass, give Ukraine control over its borders, or cease his plans
to dominate all of Ukraine.
Putin’s goal, which has remained
unchanged since the begionnng, he continues, “is not the annexation and
occupation of particular pieces of territory but control over all Ukraine, a
strategic task he has pursued at various times with the use of various tactical
measures” (gordonua.com/publications/piontkovskiy-putin-ne-dlya-togo-navoroval-250-mlrd-chtoby-prevratitsya-v-radioaktivnyy-pepel-155726.html).
Now that his direct military
aggression has not worked and his nuclear threats have backfired, Piontkovsky
says, “Putin wants not to freeze the confict in the Donbass but to insert a
cancerous tumor inside of it which will block reforms leading to a European
model of the state … [as well as] to preserve military and political control
over the occupied territories.”
Piontkovsky says that the Kremlin’s
goal is “to make bandits like …Motorola legal political players in Ukraine and
deputies of the Verkhovna Rada. That is how [Putin] interprets the Minsk
agreements.” And as long as Putin is in power, “Russia will never pull its
forces out of the Donbas and never hand over to Ukraine control over its
borders.”
Were it to do so, the Russian
analyst says, such a step would destroy “the Kremlin’s last hope to subordinate
all of Ukraine to itself.”
Ukraine had to sign the Minsk
agreements given Russia’s military pressure and Western insistence, but it
needed to do so to get a ceasefire because it was obvious to everyone even at
the time that Putin had no plans to fulfill his side of the bargain on any of
the other items in those accord, Piontkovsky says.
Before talking with Moscow about political
issues, he continues, the West and Ukrainne must demand that Moscow “fulfill
the main points of the Minsk agreement,” something Putin hasn’t done and won’t
do. Given that, “the only thing that one
should demand from states trying to be peacemakers – the US, Germany and France
– is to insist on the ceasefire’s continuation.”
If that happens, the situation in
the eastern portion of Ukraine will become a frozen conflict, something that
works against Putin and for Ukraine. It
highlights Putin’s failure in Ukraine, and it gives Ukraine time to make needed
reforms and to further integrate itself with Europe, precisely what Putin doesn’t
want to happen.
The West is beginning to understand
this, Piontkovsky says, although far too many in Western capitals are
frightened by the term “frozen conflict” and far too committed to the
restoration of what looks like the territorial integrity of Ukraine but that in fact would be a false version of
that given Russian activities in the east.
Sooner or later, Russia will give
the Donbass back to Ukraine but not before Putin leaves the Kremlin. And that will happen, perhaps sooner than
many think, because of his foreign policy failures, including most importantly
Ukraine. Indeed, if Russia had a Politburo as the Soviet Union did, he would
have been sent packing.
No comments:
Post a Comment