The western media is full of claims that the Russians are about to invade the Ukraine - and Moldova.
This claim does not even make GEOGRAPHICAL sense. The eastern, and Russian speaking parts of the Ukraine are - well - on the eastern side of the Ukraine, whilst Moldova (and trans-Dniestr) are on the western border.
The White House also intimated that Russia may be readying for further action. Tony Blinken, Barack Obama's deputy national security adviser, described the troop build-up as deeply concerning. He told CNN the Moscow's evident goal was to intimidate the Ukrainians, and added: "It's possible that they're preparing to move in."
RT
Meanwhile there is a real stirring-up of feeling in the east of the country.
Pro-Russian
protesters hold a banner reading "Odessa for referendum!"
stage a rally in the center of the Ukrainian city of Odessa on March
23, 2014 (AFP Photo / Alexey Kravtsov)Pro-Russian protesters hold a
banner reading "Odessa for referendum!" stage a rally in
the center of the Ukrainian city of Odessa on March 23, 2014 (AFP
Photo / Alexey Kravtsov)
Speakers
at the rally called for an end to the disinformation campaign waged
by local media, and for authorities to stop putting pressure on TV
channels.
That means that, to annex Moldova the Russians will have to cross from one side of the Ukraine to the other.
Are NATO expecting that we are not going to open our atlases?!
Russia
ready to annex Moldova region, Nato commander claims
Philip
Breedlove says large force on eastern border of Ukraine could easily
move into Trans-Dniester if the decision was made
23
March, 2014
Nato's
most senior military commander said on Sunday that Russia had amassed
a large military force on Ukraine's eastern border, and warned that
Moldova's separatist Trans-Dniester region could be the Kremlin's
next target.
General
Philip Breedlove, Nato's supreme allied commander, described the
Russian force that began exercises 10 days ago as very, very sizeable
and very, very ready.
"There
is absolutely sufficient force postured on the eastern border of
Ukraine to run to Trans-Dniester if the decision was made to do that.
That is very worrisome," Breedlove said.
The White House also intimated that Russia may be readying for further action. Tony Blinken, Barack Obama's deputy national security adviser, described the troop build-up as deeply concerning. He told CNN the Moscow's evident goal was to intimidate the Ukrainians, and added: "It's possible that they're preparing to move in."
Following
Russia's annexation of Crimea last week there is deep uncertainty as
to what Vladimir Putin may do next. The Russian defence minister,
Anatoly Antonov insisted on Sunday that Russian troops near Ukraine's
border complied with international agreements. Vladimir Chizov,
Moscow's ambassador to the EU, told the BBC that Russia did not have
expansionist views.
European
diplomats say that Putin's immediate post-Crimea goal is to
destabilise Ukraine and to sabotage its pro-western government in
Kiev. Beyond this, they add, they believe Putin's ambitions may
include creating a zone of Russian influence in the south and east of
Ukraine as far as Odessa, which borders Trans-Dniester, cutting off
Kiev's access to the Black Sea.
Russia
already has a military presence in Trans-Dniester, also known as
Transnistria, a Russian-speaking separatist territory in western
Moldova that broke away two decades ago. Trans-Dniester's communist
leadership has appealed for Russia to annexe the region. Moldova's
president Nicolae Timofti, meanwhile, has responded by urging the EU
to bring forward the signing of an association agreement scheduled
for early summer.
Ukraine's
acting foreign minister, Andriy Deshchytsia struck a pessimistic note
on Sunday, saying the chances of all out war between Kiev and Moscow
were growing. "The situation is becoming even more explosive
than a week ago," he told ABC News.
Addressing
a rally in Kiev on Sunday, Ukraine's defence minister Andriy Parubiy
claimed that Russian forces could attack at any moment. "Putin's
aim is not Crimea but all of Ukraine," he said. In a show of
national unity, demonstrators unveiled a giant yellow and blue
Ukrainian flag on the Maidan, the scene of Ukraine's uprising last
month.
In
deposed former president Viktor Yanukovych's eastern home town of
Donetsk, around 2000 pro-Russian demonstrators gathered in Lenin
Square. Speakers denounced the new government in Kiev as a fascist
junta. They demanded a referendum on federalisation, a step to
greater regional autonomy, and possible union with Moscow. The
protesters also criticised Serhiy Taruta, a local oligarch parachuted
in by Kiev to be provincial governor.
"We
have an orthodox faith and a common history with Russia and Belarus,"
Roman Protsenko, a 36-year-old IT programmer from Donetsk explained,
amid shouts of "Russia" and "Yanukovych". "This
is Russian civilisation. We're different from the west. We are in
favour of friendly relations but against Nato and the United States."
Pyotr
Kandybka, a former Soviet marine geologist, now retired, said that
British spies had financed the Maidan protest. He said that unless
the EU stopped "supporting fascism" ultra-nationalists
would soon sweep in from Ukraine into Poland and Germany, and cause
trouble and mayhem there.
After
the rally a crowd marched towards Donetsk's provincial administrative
HQ. Riot police guarded the building. In previous weeks angry mobs
have smashed windows, broken inside and raised the Russian flag. On
Sunday, however, the protesters departed peacefully, in a sign that
tensions in the east of the country may be beginning to subside, at
least for now.
Europe's
biggest geo-political crisis for decades will dominate a nuclear
security summit opening in The Hague on Monday that will include what
may prove to be the most difficult meeting to date between the US
secretary of state John Kerry and the Russian foreign minister Sergei
Lavrov. The two have talked almost daily but have agreed on
practically nothing.
The
encounter comes with Russia facing the loss of its coveted seat among
the G8 group of leading nations and US financial restrictions imposed
on the most powerful members of Putin's inner circle. European
leaders appear gloomy about Ukraine's prospects as a single state –
and the precedent Moscow's warp-speed annexation of Crimea sets for
the rest of Europe.
"I'm
very worried the unlawful attempt to alter the recognised borders of
our European neighbourhood, 25 years after the end of the Cold War,
will open Pandora's box," The German foreign minister
Frank-Walter Steinmeier told Welt am Sonntag. Steinmeier visited
Donetsk on Saturday. He described the situation there as anything but
stable.
Over
the weekend, the last Crimean airbase in Ukrainian hands fell to
Russian forces following a dramatic onslaught. An armoured personnel
carrier burst through the main gate of Belbek airbase near the
administrative capital of Simferopol. Two more Russian armoured
personnel carriers followed and gunmen fired automatic weapons into
the air and threw stun grenades.
Several
unarmed soldiers began singing the Ukrainian national anthem. During
the operation, Russian troops captured the base commander, Yuri
Mamchur. Ukraine's acting president Oleksandr Turchynov demanded the
release of Mamchur – the head of the Ukraine air force's 204th
tactical aviation brigade – who, he said, had been kidnapped in the
early hours of Sunday and taken prisoner.
Here is the response to the claims from Moscow.
So far, in my interactions with friends (who admittedly keep up with the play, on the whole), I have yet to find anyone who trusts the official western narrative
So far, in my interactions with friends (who admittedly keep up with the play, on the whole), I have yet to find anyone who trusts the official western narrative
Moscow:
No troop build-up or undeclared military activity near Ukraine
borders
Russia
is observing all international agreements on troop limits in regions
bordering Ukraine, the Russian Deputy Defense Minister said, adding
that foreign missions’ inspections can confirm that
23 March, 2014
The statement was made in response to reports by several foreign media outlets over concentrations of "thousands" of Russian servicemen on the Russian-Ukrainian border.
“By
the way this issue has during the last month been regularly raised in
telephone conversations between Russia’s Minister of Defense Sergey
Shoigu, and his foreign counterparts, including US Defense Secretary
Chuck Hagel and even acting Ukrainian Defense Minister Igor Tenyukh,”
Anatoly Antonov, the Russian Deputy Defense Minister said.
Sergey
Shoigu has, in a very transparent manner, informed all of them about
the real situation on the Russian-Ukrainian border. He also stressed
that Russia has no intention to concentrate troops there, Antonov
said.
Following
recent probes by foreign missions in Russia of Ukraine’s bordering
regions, foreign inspectors came to the conclusion that "Russian
Armed Forces are not undertaking any undeclared military activity
that would threaten the security of neighboring countries,"
Antonov added.
The
official said eight foreign inspection groups have recently visited
Russia.
“Our
venues and regions, where troops are stationed near Ukrainian
borders, have twice been checked by the Ukrainian military,” the
Deputy Minister said. “Besides, we have had on our territory
inspectors from the US, Canada, Germany, France, Switzerland, Poland,
Latvia, Estonia and Finland.”
Seven
of those eight missions were interested in Russian regions bordering
with Ukraine, Antonov said. Foreign inspectors were allowed to talk
to chiefs of the Russian military units, make pictures of deployment
sites and military vehicles, and control them during relocation.
“We
did our best to meet our partners’ requests by allowing them to
inspect all of the sites they wanted to. We have nothing to hide,”
Antonov said.
The
deputy minister said he was hoping that participants of those
inspecting missions would inform their countries’ leaderships of
what is really going on at the border between Russia and Ukraine.
"We
believe this would to large extent facilitate release of tension,
something the head of the Pentagon, Hagel, called for during his
recent phone conversation with Minister Shoigu.”
Germans,
French ‘nullified military co-op with Russia under pressure’
Berlin’s
and Paris’ moves to halt military cooperation with Moscow are
derailing the bilateral efforts of recent years and are completely
unconstructive, Antonov said. However, according to the defense
official, the two did so under pressure from their NATO ally.
“Obviously,
the proverbial ‘Atlantic solidarity’ has made our French and
German partners come up with loud statements against Russia,”
Antonov said.
“Refusing
from contacts and delegatory exchange though military departments
brings to naught the positive tendencies established in the recent
years, including the cooperation on Afghanistan, the dialogue on
transparency of military activity and military-technical cooperation.
We perceive the decision of the German side as taken under pressure
and unconstructive,” Antonov stressed.
Both
Russian and German defense ministries have recently undertaken some
“serious efforts” in mutually beneficial cooperation, the
official noted. He also highlighted the “unprecedented” bilateral
work with France, including that of the Air Forces and Airborne
Forces, noting that a “new impulse of cooperation” had been
planned for 2014.
Addressing
media on Sunday, Antonov stressed that Russia and its European
partners are equally interested in military cooperation. It is “very
easy to ruin what has been done by our countries [in the field of
military cooperation] and it will be very difficult to restore
relations,” he said.
The
Russian side hopes that Germany and France will review the situation
on the Ukrainian border upon receiving reports from the international
inspectors and will move to restore the severed ties, Antonov said.
For now, Moscow will act in accordance with the “existing
realities,” he added.
Massive
anti-Maidan rallies grip eastern Ukraine as residents demand
referendum
Rallies
have swept eastern Ukraine, with residents protesting against Kiev’s
coup-imposed government and demanding a referendum to decide on the
future of the region. Thousands took to the streets in Kharkov,
Donetsk, Lugansk, and Odessa on Sunday.
RT,
23
March, 2014
About
5,000 protesters gathered in the city of Kharkov on Sunday to rally
in favor of federalizing the country and holding people’s
referendums in eastern Ukraine.
The
demonstrators also demanded to make Russian the official language of
the Kharkov region. Russian is the most common first language in the
eastern regions.
Furthermore,
the residents of Kharkov proclaimed illegitimate the political part
of the EU-Ukraine association agreement signed by coup-installed
Prime Minister Yatsenyuk. Some of the protesters headed to the
Russian embassy, asking Moscow to investigate the legality of the
presence of NATO troops in Ukraine and addressed Crimeans, asking to
help the region.
The
rally in Kharkov was also dedicated to two protesters who were killed
last week by members of the ultra-nationalist Right Sector movement,
which played an active role in the Maidan protests. The demonstrators
chanted slogans such as “Glory to Kharkov defendants!” and “We
won’t live under Bandera!”
Stepan
Bandera was the head of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists
(OUN). Bandera's nationalist movement collaborated with Nazi Germany
during World War II and was involved in the ethnic cleansing of
Poles, Jews, and Russians. OUN was also responsible for the massacres
of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia, which resulted in about
100,000 murders.
Meanwhile
in the eastern Ukrainian city of Lugansk, preliminary results of an
improvised referendum were announced to a several thousands-strong
rally.
According
to the results, over 100,000 people voted in favor of joining Russia
in a people’s referendum that was carried out in the form of a poll
in Lugansk.
The
poll was initiated last Sunday and will continue for another week.
Another
1,000 people gathered near the building of the regional security
service, protesting against the current authorities in Kiev.
The
city of Donetsk, also located in the Donbass region, also witnessed
protests on Sunday, as more than 2,000 people took to the streets.
They demanded that a referendum be held to decide the future of the
region and handed out ballot papers.
Pro-Russian
protesters shout slogans during a rally in the eastern Ukrainian city
of Donetsk on March 23, 2014 (AFP Photo / Alexandr
Khudoteply)Pro-Russian protesters shout slogans during a rally in the
eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk on March 23, 2014 (AFP Photo /
Alexandr Khudoteply)
The
protesters hoisted a Russian flag near the city council building,
chanting “Russia” and “Berkut” while the building was
surrounded by police.
Thousands
also gathered for a rally in the Black Sea coastal city of Odessa on
Sunday, protesting against the coup-imposed government in Kiev. They
carried Ukranian, Russian, and Crimean flags and chanted slogans such
as “Ukraine
and Russia are together” and “Odessa
is against Nazis and tycoons,”
as well as “Referendum!”
The
peaceful demonstrators urged authorities to release Anton
Davidchenko, the arrested leader of People's Alternative, a council
that coordinates the work of regional public organizations. They
demanded an end to the persecution of activists accused of
separatism.
Davidchenko’s
mother, Lubov, who participated in the rally, urged all mothers in
Ukraine to “prevent their sons from going to the criminal war,
which the West-backed far-right authorities and tycoons in Kiev are
trying to unleash between the fraternal Slavic peoples in the
interests of their Western sponsors,” Itar-Tass reported.
“The
authorities in Kiev are speaking about war with Russia, but in fact
they are at war with their own people. The majority of Ukrainians do
not support [Kiev’s] policy, but Kiev prefers not to pay attention
to the people’s opinion, retaliating with repressions,” stated
city council deputy Sergey Bovbolan.
Pro-Russian protesters wave Russian
flags along with the flags of the Donetsk region during a rally in
the eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk on March 23, 2014 (AFP Photo /
Alexander Khudoteply)
A
crowd comprised of thousands of Odessa residents walked through the
central streets, visiting the Polish embassy to remind them of
Bandera’s crimes.
Poland,
Ukraine's western neighbor, has been very vocal during the crisis,
supporting the current far-right Kiev authorities. The country also
hosts the US military. The Pentagon dispatched 12 warplanes and
hundreds of troops to Poland following the Crimean referendum.
The
decision to hold a referendum in Crimea was sparked by the bloody
Maidan protests that resulted in the ousting of President Viktor
Yanukovich. Crimea refused to recognize the coup-imposed government.
The referendum held last Sunday resulted in over 96 percent of voters
answering in favor of the autonomous republic joining Russia. In
turn, Russia accepted the people’s will and welcomed Crimea’s
integration on Monday.
People
in the eastern regions of Ukraine fear that the far-right Kiev
authorities will not represent their interests. Residents of the
Donbass region – the majority of whom are Russian speakers – were
particularly unhappy over parliament's decision to revoke the law
allowing the use of minority languages, including Russian
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