Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 15 – Both those
who want Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky to live up to all the provisions
of the Steinmeier plan he has agreed to and those who are against that because
they see it as capitulation, Vitaly Portnikov says, forget one important thing:
Vladimir Putin wouldn’t accept that such an offer because it isn’t part of his
plan for Ukraine.
The paradox of the situation is that
Zelensky wants negotiations with Putin so much that he has agreed to accept the
Kremlin’s current conditions while Putin to the contrary has shown no interest
in talks and keeps upping his demands (belsat.eu/ru/news/zelenskij-ne-vidit-motivov-kremlya-putinu-nuzhna-ne-kapitulyatsiya-kieva/).
“Even if Zelensky wanted to capitulate,
Moscow would do everything so that that could not happen,” Portnikov
suggests. The reason for that is
obvious: If Moscow did accept such a capitulation, Ukraine would nonetheless
remain a country “which would hardly be likely to return to the Russian sphere
of influence.”
More than that, by eliminating the
territorial problems Ukraine now has with Russia, Kyiv would find it easier to
move toward integration with the European Union and NATO, exactly the outcomes
the Kremlin is committed to preventing, the Ukrainian analyst says. In short, “Moscow
doesn’t need capitulation: Moscow needs destabilization.”
The Kremlin in fact wants to have
the destabilization in Ukraine that would allow it to move even further into
Ukrainian territory and keep the Ukrainian government from being able to function
without having to defer to Moscow on all key questions. That is why Putin is putting before Zelensky ever
more demands, certain that this will provoke Ukrainians to protest.
That works to Putin’s advantage by
creating an image of Ukraine as a country incapable of keeping its promises or ensuring
that its citizenry will go along with what its government decides. This “quite
simple special operation of the Kremlin” thus works to Putin’s advantage
because he has no intention of agreeing to a final settlement on Ukraine short
of its destruction.
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