Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 17 – Now that the
World Cup and the Helsinki Summit is over, Moscow analysts say, the Russian
government should immediately recognize the independence of the Ukraine’s Donbass
and then integrate it with Russia in the ways the governor of Orel Oblast has
already taken steps to do.
“Before the World Cup,” Aleksey
Polubota of Svobodnaya pressa says
today, “many political analysts in Moscow said that Russia’s hands were tied
lest it disturb relations on the eve of sports event so important for us.” But
now, he and many of them say, it is time to go ahead without regard to the West
(svpressa.ru/war21/article/205448/).
The governor of Orel Oblast has
shown the way by setting up a joint commission to integrate the two Donbass
republics into Russia, the Svobodnaya pressa analyst says. (For a discussion of
his actions last week, see windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2018/07/russia-has-begun-integration-of-donbass.html.)
Aleksey Kochetkov, the president of
the Russian Foundation for Civil Society Development, says that he personally
believes Moscow should have recognized the DNR and the LNR “already four years
ago.” Had it done so, he continues, many lives would have been saved. But even
now, taking that step would be a good one.
“In general,” Kochetkov says, “it is
necessary to put the question more broadly: does a Nazi regime, which has
destroyed peaceful residents, have the right to exist in the center of Europe?”
And that question must be raised, he says, because those under the protection
of the Ukrainian powers that be represent a threat not only for Russia but also
for other countries.”
Having analyzed the problems of the
so-called “unrecognized states on the post-Soviet space” for many years, he says
he believes that the process of Russian recognition has gone too slowly both
elsewhere and in the case of the Donbass, but despite its slow pace, Moscow is
moving toward recognition of two Donbass republics as it did Abkhazia and South
Ossetia.
Aleksey Anpilogov, head of the Osnovanye Historical Research
Foundation, stresses that each unrecognized republic is slightly different; and
he points to the situation in Cyprus where the Turks have controlled the north
but the south has been able to become a member of the European Union.
“Apparently,” he continues, “the
Kyiv regime hopes that approximately the same story will be repeated with
Ukraine; that is, despite the unresolved territorial disputes, the country will
be taken into the EU and NATO.” But however that may be, the peoples of the Donbass
are moving toward Russia even though Russia is not moving fast enough to
recognize them.
The Donbass and Ukraine are growing
apart, Anpilogov says, and soon no one will be talking about their coming back
together just as no one talks about reuniting Austria and Hungary even though
they were part of one country just over a century ago. Unfortunately, not everyone
in Moscow appears to understand this.
He gives as an example of this failure
the demand by Russian officials that “residents of the Donbass renew their
Ukrainian passports in a timely fashion lest they cease to be recognized on
Russian territory.” Anpilogov says he
has been assured that Russian officials are addressing this problem right now.
According to the analyst, “Russia missed
the first moment when it could have proceeded along this path, the fall of
2014. Now, however, for the recognition of the DNR and LNR, the Kremlin doesn’t
see a basis and is waiting for the next crisis” when it can act. For the time
being, he says, “a situation of ‘no war, no peace’ continues.”
Some Russian officials appear to
fear that giving Donbass residents Russian passports will upset the West. Of
course, it will, Anpilogov says; but the West was “far more unhappy about the
inclusion of Crimea into Russia. And despite that, the sky has not yet fallen.”
It wouldn’t in this case either.
“I think,” he concludes, “what is
involved are the phantom concerns of the Muscovite ruling class. Namely the
Muscovite and not the Russian because the main part of the ordinary citizens of
Russia and even regional elites would entirely support not only handing out
Russian passports to the residents of the Donbass but the inclusion of the DNR
and LNR into Russia.”
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