Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 18 – In a move
that gives substance to Ukrainian fears that Moscow will close the Sea of Azov
to Ukrainian shipping or even launch a new war from there but that also
reflects just how stretched the Russian navy is, Moscow is currently moving
naval vessels from the Pacific Ocean and the Barents Sea to the Kerch Straits.
Earlier, Ukraine had shifted vessels
to the Sea of Azov from its Caspian Flotilla (jamestown.org/program/moscow-shifts-flotilla-from-caspian-to-azov-sea-giving-it-a-new-offensive-capability/),
but that was a simple operation which made use of canals between the two relatively
close bodies of water.
Now, Moscow is going even further afield
in order to expand its military capacity in the Sea of Azov and the Kerch
Straits at a time when both sides there are “preparing for serious military
clashes,” according to Sergey Ishchenko in a new article on the Svobodnaya pressa portal (svpressa.ru/war21/article/216342/).
The Russian commentator entitles his
article “The Sea of Azov: The Scene before
Battle” and subtitles it “Our border guards are bringing to the Kerch Straits
military vessels even from the Pacific Ocean and the Barents Sea.” But he gives
few details, instead attacking Ukraine and what he sees as the alarmist and
aggressive tone of its official statements.
Russia already has far more vessels
with far greater firepower in this area than does Ukraine. The additions
Ishchenko says Moscow is making will only increase that imbalance and add to
fears in Kyiv that Russia is preparing to restart its war against Ukraine from
that direction (apostrophe.ua/article/society/accidents/2018-11-17/mejdu-ukrainoy-i-rossiey-zagoraetsya-tretiy-ochag-est-opasnost-bolshoy-voynyi/22103).
This latest Russian move, of course,
may be intended to spark such fears in Ukraine and force Kyiv to take defensive
actions that Moscow and its supporters can be counted on to portray as acts of
aggression against which the Russian side will say it has no choice but to
respond. But it is a dangerous move that
makes a broader conflict more likely.
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