Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 24 – Moscow completely
controls the situation in the occupied Donbass, Vitaly Portnikov says; and
consequently, one should not view what is going on there in recent days as any
threat to its ability to dictate outcomes but only as an occasion for Vladimir
Putin to choose among four possible scenarios for the region.
According to the Ukrainian
commentator, the Kremlin leader will choose the one that is worst for Ukraine
over the longer haul even if what he says may appeal to some Ukrainians and the
West in the short term (apostrophe.ua/article/politics/2017-11-24/u-putina-est-chetyire-stsenariya-dlya-donbassa-kreml-vyiberet-hudshiy-dlya-ukrainyi---vitaliy-portnikov/15654).
The fighting among the leaders of
the occupied regions may reflect differences of opinion within the Moscow
elite, Portnikov concedes in an interview with Yekaterina Shumilo of Apostrophe;
but that shouldn’t distract the attention of Ukrainians because it doesn’t
change the overall ability of the Kremlin to decide on the general course of
development.
And thus it is important to view the
four options Putin has not as an element of some “solution” of the crisis but
rather as being about what the Kremlin leader wants to achieve.
The first scenario for Putin,
Portnikovsays, “is to begin a new war” much as he did in Georgia to “’restore
the territorial integrity … of ‘the republics’ of Abkhazia and South Ossetia”
and seek to conquer all of Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts and incorporate them
into the unrecognized republics in the region.
Portnikov says that “this variant is
now unacceptable for Puutin because it will lead to new sanctions from the European
Union, a new deteriorating of relations with the Americans, and in both places new
and serous problems with the future of Russian capital and the Russian president.”
“This means,” the Ukrainian analyst
says, “that he will not begin a new war either before the Russian presidential
elections or afterwards.”
The second scenario would involve “a
complete withdrawal [of Russian forces] from the territory of the Donbass. This
also is an impossible vriant because a complete withdrawal would mean for Putin
a capitulation before the West. ‘The Rusisan world’ would thus have turned out
to be incapable of defending its supporters.” And Putin “will not be able to
move in that way.”
The third scenario, Portnikov continues,
is “the preservation of the status quo;” but that isn’t a good option for
Moscow because it will do nothing to prevent continued sanctions or Ukrainian
resistance. For the time being, however, Putin may as he did with his telephone
calls with Donbass leaders, seek to transform their region into a
Transdniestria.
And thus it is the fourth variant,
at least after the elections, that Putin is most likely to select, Portnikov
says. This involves “the replacement of Rusisan forceds on the territory of Donetsk
and Luhansk oblasts with UN peacekeeping forces without the restoration of
Ukrainian control over the territories.”
“For the US,” he says, “it is
possible that this will seem a triumph” because Washington will view it as a
development in which Russia will be forced to withdraw its forces from these
territories. “But the Ukrainian armed
foces, law enforcement structures, and state structures will not go into this
territory.”
And as a result, it will represent
for Ukraine the most dangerous outcome of all, the Ukrainian commentator says.
That is because this will not
transform the situation into “a frozen conflict” as some imagine but rather
become “a real trap for Ukraine” because after this occurs, people will start
talking about a transitional period, Russia will stop bearing the costs of supporting
the people there, and Ukraine will have to pay for everything but without
having control.
That burden, however, is not the worst
of this, Portnikov says. The worst is
that residents of a region Ukraine doesn’t control will nonetheless elect
people not only to local offices but to the Ukrainian Verkhovna Rada – and there
is thus the dangerous possibility that their votes will create “a stable
pro-Russian lobby” that will take Ukraine back to before 2013, thus “converting
all of Ukraine into a zone of influence of the Russian Federation.”
This is no fantasy, the analyst
continues. Moldova shows how this could work. There voters in Transdniestria
helped install a pro-Russian president in Chisinau even though the rest of the
country was opposed. Igor Dodon is “a
product of Russian political influence,” of a majority created by the addition
of voters from Transdniestria which Chisinau doesn’t control.
To create a similar “pro-Russian
majority in Ukraine is not as difficult as it seems” if Moscow with the
agreement of the West simply follows the same strategy. The limiting factor is
whether Russia – and that means Putin – will agree or whether he thinks he can
get even more under the circumstances.
The current situation is much more
favorable to Ukraine than the fourth scenario would be. It gives Kyiv room for maneuver: “We can
consider these territories occupied” and thus not allow people there to vote in
Ukrainian elections. But if there are UN
peacekeepers rather than Russian forces, that will be far harder to do.
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