Paul Goble
Staunton, May 7 – Earlier this year,
Russia’s Presidential Administration prepared a report on how best to “sell” an
agreement on Ukraine that will be less than many Russians assumed Moscow would
achieve and that could spark both anger and even opposition in that case, according to a PA
document the Dossier portal has obtained.
According to that document, the PA
has begun to prepared what might be called “the model of victory” including “propaganda
narratives with the help of which it will be possible to ‘sell’ a peace
agreement to Russians despite the high losses among Russian soldiers and the
absence of significant results” (dossier.center/ura-pobeda/).
The document specifies that “one
must know when to stop as going too far constitutes defeat and continuing the
special military operation would amount to a Pyrrhic victory,” a judgement that
reflects the view of Sergey Kiriyenko’s “close associates” who “warn that
continuing the war in Ukraine could force the revision of ‘fundamental
positions.’”
Those include, Dossier says, “the
implementation of a general mobilization and the complete and final conversion
of the entire economy to a war footing,” steps that would be deeply unpopular
and make the achievement of Putin’s other goals for the country almost
impossible to achieve.
Preparing such a plan is needed, its
authors say, because the most likely scenario for ending the war would be “far
from the goals” Putin has declared as the reason for conducting it. And the compromises
that such an accord will entail must somehow be presented as “a great victory
and contribution of the president personally.”
The PA document says that “the main
achievements” of the operation will be “territorial conquests,” additional
natural resources, a land bridge to Crimea and control of the shoreline of the Sea
of Azov, and “the acquisition of millions of new Russian-language citizens,”
according to Dossier.
At the same time, the document says,
“the propagandists plan to continue to insist that in the course of ten to
fifteen years, Ukraine will cease to exist and the European Union will suffer a
major economic shock” and that after such an agreement, Russia’s neighbors will
adjust themselves to this new reality whatever they say now.
But it continues, the reasons for
preparing such a document are obvious: “if a war which has carried off the
lives of hundreds of thousands of Russian citizens ends without obvious
achievements, certain segments of Russian society may view that in a negative
way,” especially the z bloggers and veterans.
The first will be compelled to
change their line and jailed if they do not, while the second must be given new
positions and tasks to show how important they are to Russia and its future,
the document says. For all other Russians “tired of the war and their problems,”
the PA says Moscow will be able to announce good news about developments at
home and abroad.
At home, it says, Russians will face
an easing of problems including the end of drone attacks and easing of
sanctions and thus economic development; and abroad, they will see Russia
having returned to a position as a world power that has been able thanks to the
special military operation to redefine the world order and make Russia its
leader well into the future.
Dossier concedes that “it is unknown
whether Putin will approve this plan,” despite PA support and the fact that it is
based on a Russian endgame for Ukraine very close to what is currently the
Kremlin’s negotiating position.