Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 11 – The main
reason Vladimir Putin invaded Crimea and the Donbass, Aleksandr Shmelyev says,
is that he feared that the ideas that had animated Ukrainians at the time of
the Maidan would spread into Russia and become the basis of a similar challenge
to himself. To prevent that, he acted as he did so as to alienate the two
nations from each other.
As a result, the former Vzglyad
editor and longtime Putin critic says, Russians and Ukrainians viewed each
other as the enemy and any contacts between them that might have been the way
“Ukrainian” ideas would spread into Russia were effectively blocked (dsnews.ua/world/esli-putinu-nado-budet-sbrosit-atomnuyu-bombu-na-moskvu--09012018220000).
That rather than simply presenting himself
as the latest “ingatherer of the Russian lands” or thumbing his nose at the
West, Shmelyev continues, explains why Putin has done what he has done in the
way that he has because his goal at all times is to defend his position lest
being forced out of it he might be charged with an enormous number of crimes.
“Putin couldn’t allow” either the
spread of ideas from Ukraine into Russia that might challenge him or the risk
that he would be ousted from power and face justice, the commentator says. “Therefore, he had to immediately break off ‘low-level’
contacts be tween the residents of our two countries.”
“I am certain,” he continues, “that
this was the first and main motive behind everything that followed: The task
was to get the two peoples into a fight with each other.” To that end, Putin
was prepared to use all kinds of propaganda and to engage in massive acts of
violence against Ukrainians.
And he did everything he could to
ensure that “as a result of the war, Ukraine would not be able to become an attractive example for
Russians.” Many seek to understand Putin
as a geopolitician or as a national leader, but in fact, he is a criminal who
is only seeking to ensure he and his group stay in power.
That should have been clear to everyone
when he orchestrated the blowing up of apartment blocks in Moscow in 1999,
Shmelyev says. And they should also have recognized that Putin doesn’t seem
himself opposed to the West as he understands it. In his view, all democratic
institutions in the West “are merely decorations as they are in Russia,” but “better
hidden.”
Given this, the analyst continues,
it is naïve to think the regime can be changed by a new round of sanctions or
anything else. It can only be contained and then removed. The people do not
really support it: they seek “escape” from politics and only want to survive.
But those around Putin who have been infected by his values back him as a
matter of survival.
They too can’t afford for him to
leave because they know that once he goes so will they as Russian then will have
to come up with a new system with new rules of the game.
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