Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 25 – Vladimir
Putin’s plan to offer Russian citizenship to anyone in the Russian-occupied
portions of the Donbass who wants it is designed to transform those regions
into a Moscow protectorate and set the stage for further Russian aggression
against Ukraine as a whole, Vitaly Portnikov says.
Many Ukrainians have long assumed
that Putin was planning to take this step, the Kyiv analyst says, with some
saying he would do so if Petro Poroshenko was re-elected in order to punish
Ukraine and others arguing that he would do so if as has happened Vladimir
Zelensky was to set the stage for talks (graniru.org/opinion/portnikov/m.276080.html).
While both sides in this debate may
have had some justification for their positions, Portnikov argues, “Putin would
have signed this degree in any case,” not to “’punish’ Poroshenko” or “’pacify
Zelensky.” That is because “it isn’t so important to Putin who will be
president of Ukraine.” He has larger goals.
For Putin, what matters is “chaos in
Ukraine, the weakness of its state, the demoralization of its society, the
promotion of tiredness from the war and a readiness on the part of many to end
it by any means.” The presidential
campaign in Ukraine has given Putin a great opportunity “for the next stage of
the operation aimed at destroying Ukraine.” Passportization is the signal.
The Kremlin leader, of course,
argues that he has taken this step because of the problems people in the
Donbass now face, hoping no one will notice that every single one of those
problems is something that Putin and his policies have created, Portnikov
continues.
Putin’s latest decree “allows those
who live in the occupied Donbass to choose between Ukraine and Russia already
not so much from the point of view of residence as from that of
citizenship. As a result, the border
between ‘the people’s republics’ and the Russian Federation now really will
disappear as it did earlier between Russia and Abkhazia or South Ossetia.”
“And this of course,” Portnikov
continues, “is a powerful and serious signal to the elites and residents of the
east and south east or more precisely to that part of them which would like to
join their regions to Russia or return them to their accustomed status as
Russian colonies,” to be in fact once again “Novorossiya.”
By this action, Putin has shown that
he isn’t able or doesn’t yet want to take these regions into Russia but instead
plans to “transform them into Russian protectorates.” Indeed, one can say that
“this decree is an invitation to protectorates.” And that in turn means that
“the Kremlin is certain” that now it can seize new territories “without
particular concern.”
That likely would have happened even
if Poroshenko had been re-elected so one cannot say that this is a response to
Zelensky’s victory. But the
effectiveness of the new government is something Moscow clearly assumes it can
test with less risk to itself than it suffered with its predecessor.
That should be clear to everyone.
The Kremlin would never have so openly violated the Minsk Agreements “if its
denizens weren’t certain of the directions they intend to proceed in,”
directions that involve more attacks against and efforts at subversion of
Ukraine as a whole and efforts to undermine Western support for Ukraine’s
defense of itself.
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