Russia
Launches Surprise Large-Scale, 36 Warship Military Exercise In The
Black Sea
Many
were wondering what Russia's response to Germany's deposit
confiscation drill in Cyprus would be. The confusion was moderated
somewhat after it
was uncovered that
the very Russians who were supposed to be punished, have been able to
withdraw some or most of their Cyprus-based cash either before the
Cyprus D(eposit
Confiscation)-Day
or during the capital controlled blackout using various disclosed
loopholes. Yet that doesn't mean that Putin would avoid this
opportunity to give the "developed world" and his closest
neighbors a quick lesson in realpolitik. After all, who better than a
former KGB agent understands that one should never let a crisis go to
waste. Sure enough, today at 4 am, in a very surprising move, Puitin
ordered the launch of large-scale Russian military exercises in the
Black Sea region in a move which according to Reuters "may
create tensions with Russia's post-Soviet neighbors Ukraine and
Georgia." Of course, it may create tensions with our island
nations reachable by the Russian naval fleet, such as Cyprus, which
would naturally mean tensions with the same European (read German)
forces who structured the entire Cypriot bail in.
Putin
issued the order to start the previously unannounced maneuvers at 4
a.m. Moscow time (12.00 a.m. EDT) as he flew back from an
international summit in South Africa, his spokesman, Dmitry Peskov,
told reporters by telephone.
"These
are large-scale unannounced test exercises," Peskov said, adding
that 36 warships and an unspecified number of warplanes would take
part. "The main goal is to check the readiness and cohesion of
the various units."
He
did not say how long the exercises would last.
Putin
has stressed the importance of a strong and agile military since he
returned to the presidency last May after four years as prime
minister. In 13 years in power, he has often cited external threats
when talking of the need for unity in Russia.
Russia's
Black Sea fleet, whose main base is in the Ukrainian port of
Sevastopol, was instrumental in a war with Georgia in 2008 over the
Russian-backed breakaway Georgian regions of South Ossetia and
Abkhazia.
Disputes
with Kiev over Moscow's continued lease of the Black Sea navy base
have been a thorn in relations with its former Soviet neighbor.
Peskov
said that Russia is under no obligation to warn neighbors ahead of
time of plans to hold the air and sea military exercises as long as
fewer than 7,000 servicemen participated in the maneuvers.
And
while the proposed explanation may be valid, something tells us that
in this specific case it was not the Ukraine or Georgia that were
being contemplated, but the island nations in the Mediterranean, or
rather nation, especially the one located in close proximity to
Syria.
Keep
a close eye on if and when news hits that some 36 Russian warships
quietly passed through the Bosphorus in direction Nicosia. Perhaps if
Cyprus was so quick to hand over its Russian economic interest, all
that would be needed to make it flip on its dedication to the
Eurozone would be a brief but insistent naval semi-blockade. After
all, few things are quite as persuasive as 36 warships sitting idly
by doing not much of anything.
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