Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 14 – Although most
observers recognize that Moscow is treating the Minsk Accords as a dead letter,
few of them have focused on a more serious aspect of the Kremlin’s current
policy in Ukraine: its effort to seize Mariupol and thus gain a land corridor
to Russian-occupied Crimea, Leonid Polyakov says.
The former Ukrainian deputy defense
minister and current head of the experts’ council at the Kyiv Center for
Research on the Army, Convergence and Disarmament tells Radio Liberty’s Kseniya
Kirillova that continuing Russian attacks in the direction of Mariupol clearly
have that as their goal (ru.krymr.com/a/28368542.html).
But Mariupol, a city of more than
half a million residents, is important for Moscow for other reasons as well: it
is a major transportation hub with an airport and deep water port that would
allow the movement of goods and services into and out of that region, and it
has three major metallurgy plants that produce military goods Russia needs.
At the same time, Polyakov
continues, Moscow has other reasons to renew fighting along the demarcation
line. It wants to push Ukrainian forces back from the administrative centers of
the regions it occupies. It wants to keep
morale among its forces high. And it has not given up plans for “occupying new
territories” or for covering the covert introduction of more troops under cover
of fighting.
And not least of all, Moscow is
interested in provoking a response from Ukrainian forces in order to present
its version of the conflict in which Russia supposedly is interested only in
peace while Ukraine is the one doing the fighting. Give media coverage of what has been going on
around Mariupol, it has had some success in that regard.
At present, there is no clear
indication that Moscow will in the near term launch a major attack in the
eastern part of Ukraine, Polyakov says; but “Ukrainian must be prepared for the
worst possible scenario.” After all, “the Kremlin’s adventurism shows that this
can occur at any moment.”
No comments:
Post a Comment