The
Russian Perspective: "There Will Be War In Ukraine"
6
March 2014
With
Ukrainians living in the Crimea region voting to join Russia, the
West calling for sanctions (well some of the West), boots still on
the ground, and markets apparently of the belief that all is well in
the world once again, we thought the Russian perspective on the next
steps was useful...
The
current crisis is not about Crimea. It is about the rights of
Russian-speakers throughout Ukraine whom
the Kremlin wants to protect from violence and discrimination. Russia
does not want a military intervention in Crimea and does not want to
take Crimea from Ukraine.
There
is a political solution to this crisis.
First, create a coalition government in Kiev composed of all parties, including those from the east and south of the country. The current government is dominated by anti-Russian extremists from western Ukraine.
Second, Ukraine needs to draft a democratic constitution that has guarantees for Ukraine's Russian-speaking population that would grant official status to the Russian language and establish the principle of federalism.
Third, presidential and parliamentary elections must be held soon. Independent election observers must play an active role in ensuring that the elections are free and fair. There is a real danger that they will be manipulated by the neo-Nazi militants who de facto seized power in a coup.
If
these democratic and peaceful solutions to the crisis in Ukraine are
rejected by the opposition forces that have seized power in Kiev, I
am afraid that Russia will have no other choice but to revert to
military means. If
the junta leaders want to avoid war, they need to adopt Moscow's
peaceful and democratic proposals and adhere to them.
Those
currently in power in Kiev are carrying out a political strategy that
is not so much pro-European as it is anti-Russian,
as evidenced by the surprisingly heavy-handed tactics the U.S. and
European Union have employed in Ukraine. In the end, a minority
executed a violent coup that removed the democratically elected and
legitimate president of Ukraine.
The
Kremlin believes that the current Ukrainian leadership will
manipulate the elections planned for May 25 to install a single
leader or coalition government functioning
much as former Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili did in Tbilisi.
A "Ukrainian Saakashvili" will unleash an even more
repressive campaign of intimidation against Russian-speakers, one
that over several years would stoke anti-Russia hysteria among the
general population.
After
that, Kiev may evict Russia's Black Sea Fleet from Sevastopol and
purge Crimea of any Russian influence.Ukraine
could easily become a radicalized, anti-Russian state, at which point
Kiev will fabricate a pretext to justify taking subversive action
against Moscow. This looks especially likely considering that ruling
coalition members from the neo-fascist Svoboda and Right Sector
parties have already made territorial claims against Russia. They
could easily send their army of activists to Russia to join local
separatists and foment rebellion in the North Caucasus and other
unstable regions in Russia. In addition, Russia's opposition movement
will surely want to use the successful experience and technology of
the Euromaidan protests and, with the help and financial support of
the West, try to carry out their own revolution in Moscow. The goal:
to remove President Vladimir Putin from power and install a puppet
leadership that will sell Russia's strategic interests out to the
West in the same way former President Boris Yeltsin did in the 1990s.
The
official census puts the Russian minority in Ukraine at 16 percent of
the total population, although that number was falsified. The actual
number is closer to 25 percent. Surveys indicate that 45 percent of
the country's population speak Russian at home, 45 percent speak
Ukrainian and 10 percent speak both languages. In
the most recent Gallup survey, when asked in which language they
would like to be polled, 83 percent of respondents chose Russian.
Taking into account the rural population in western and central
Ukraine, about 75 percent of the people, probably speak Russian. Of
that 75 percent, only about 10 percent are those in Kiev and
a few other major cities who supported the protests. This means that
only 35 percent of the population are attempting to impose its will
on the remaining 65 percent, using a violent coup to achieve their
goals.
Putin
made the right decision:
He did not to wait for that attack and took preventative measures.
Many in the West say the Kremlin's reactions were paranoiac, but
Germany's Jews also thought the same of leaving the country in 1934.
Most of them chose to believe they were safe and remained in Germany
even after Hitler came to power. The infamous Kristallnacht took
place five years later, one of the first early chapters in the "Final
Solution." Similarly, just four years remain until Russia's
presidential election in 2018, and there is a strong risk that
subversive forces within and outside Russia will try to overthrow
Putin, in part using their new foothold in Ukraine.
Will
there be war in Ukraine? I am afraid so. After
all, the extremists who seized power in Kiev want to see a bloodbath.
Only fear for their own lives might stop them from inciting such a
conflict. Russia is prepared to move its forces into southern and
eastern Ukraine if repressive measures are used against the
Russian-speaking population or if a military intervention occurs.
Russia will not annex Crimea. It has enough territory already. At
the same time, however, it will also not stand by passively while
Russophobic and neo-Nazi gangs hold the people of Crimea, Kharkiv and
Donetsk at their mercy.
Or
out another way:
If the extremists who seized power in Kiev do not accept Russia's democratic proposals, Russia will likely be forced to revert to military means to solve the crisis in Ukraine.
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