Things
have taken a sharp turn for the worse in the last 24 hours. I will
leave you with this summary for the time being.
You
will understand if I won't be posting so much in the coming few days,
I'm sure
Ukraine
SITREP April 15, 10:54 EST (a sharp turn for the worse)
The
situation in the Ukraine has taken a very sharp turn for the worse.
Two
Presidential candidates from the eastern part of the country were
assaulted yesterday by Ukie brownshirts. Mikhail Dobkin got away
with only paint and flour thrown at him, but reports say that his
bodyguard were hurt. Oleg Tsarev got severely beaten, however, and
barely escaped the Right Sector lynch mob. No doubt, this will not
prevent the "democratic West" from concluding that the
elections were free and fair.
A
mob of Right Sector activists surrounded the Parliament building in
Kiev and accused the regime in power of incompetence and indecision
in its repression of the eastern Ukraine. The Right Sector wants
weapons do "close down the border with Russia and deal with the
insurrection in the East". After some negotiations they gave
the so-called "President" 24 hours to yield to their
demands. Iulia Tymoshenko was so frightened that she apparently
declared that the Right Sector might seize power.
The
"anti-terrorist" operation has now clearly begun. Several
towns and at least one airport in the East have been stormed by
pro-regime forces. Combats are reported from many parts of the
region.
In
the meantime, the EU and the USA are preparing another round of
sanctions against, you guessed it, Russia.
Russian
Foreign Minister Lavrov has announced that if the regime in Kiev uses
violence the talks scheduled for this Thursday in Geneva will be
scrapped.
Putin
called Obama and they had diplomats often call a "frank and
lively exchange of views"
I
have just received the confirmation that the video with the so-called
"Russian Lt.-Colonel" is a fake made by a member of the
UDAR party of Klitchko (Google translated article here)
It
appears that after a few days of confusion and chaos, the regime in
Kiev and its western sponsors have decided to try to solve the
problem by brute force. This maximalist strategy of "no
negotiations, only violence" is fully consistent with the usual
US practice and the record of the Ukie neo-Nazis. For a few days
there were signs that maybe a real negotiation might take place, but
now this options seems have been discarded in favor of a violent
crackdown. Of course, the recent visit of the CIA director in Kiev
(now admitted by the US government) had strictly nothing to do with
that. Yeah, right.
Now
a lot will depend on how effective the Fascist forces will be in
their crackdown. I personally very much doubt that the goal of
pacifying the eastern Ukraine is achievable. The freaks can probably
put down a town or two, but all of them seems hardly doable, even
over time and one by one.
Furthermore,
and even though the Kremlin really does not want to end up in this
situation, I am quite certain that the Russia military will intervene
should the bloodbath become too massive.
I
am starting to get the feeling that the West's 1%ers have concluded
that a civil war in the Ukraine and/or a Russian intervention might
be a better option that a democratic and federalized Ukraine. Within
their own logic and twisted system of values, they might be right:
there are more and more signs that a referendum or any chance for
democracy could be used by the eastern Ukraine to secede. So, in the
traditional AngloZionist way, they concluded "if I can't have
it, I burn it".
The
idea that the Ukraine might turn into another Afghanistan is,
however, naive to the extreme. Afghanistan was a country united just
about only one thing: the hatred of foreign occupiers. Furthermore,
the Soviet troops who fought there were officially doing their
"internationalist duty" and not defending their own people
and land. Then, while the Soviet Union did occupy all of
Afghanistan, thus an large hostile area, I am quite sure that any
Russian military operation would stop at the Dniepr (who in Russia or
eastern Ukraine needs to live "under one roof" with the
Galician Nazis anyway?!). Finally, and contrary to the prevailing
myth, the Soviet military was rather successful in Afghanistan and it
withdrew only because Gorbachev and the Russian people found it
pointless, if not outright immoral, to invade another country. In
other words, politics got the Soviet out, not the prowess of the
Afghan resistance who could not even take Kabul for a full three
years after the Soviet withdrawal.
In
contrast with Afghanistan, all the Russian military would have to do
is whack the forces involved in the repression against the East and
then let the locals take over. Something not unlike what the
Russians did in Georgia: they eliminated the Georgian armed forces,
helped the folks in South Ossetia and Abkhazia get organized,
withdrew and recognized the sovereignty of these republics. One
possible option for the Russian military would be to engage in a
short but determined attack on key installations and units involved
in the crackdown, then let the locals organize their "Republic
of Donetsk" or "Novorossia" or whatever else they want
to call it and recognize it as an independent state. No such option
was even remotely possible in Afghanistan. So all that talk about a
"new Afghanistan for Russia" is just wishful thinking by
western elites.
The
next week will be crucial and the outcome of the conflict will
probably be decided in the next days so stay tuned.
Kind
regards,
The
Saker
Ukraine
on the brink as troops take on rebels
Vladimir
Putin denounces Kiev for mobilising forces against pro-Russian gunmen
in east of country
15
April, 2014
Ukrainian
government forces launched their first significant military action in
the east of the country on Tuesday, clashing with about 30
pro-Russian gunmen at a provincial airfield and heightening fears
that the standoff could escalate into a major armed conflict.
Shots
were fired in Kramatorsk airport as Ukrainian special forces stormed
in to reassert Kiev's control. As troop helicopters hovered above and
tempers flared, a Ukrainian general was set upon by a group of local
people incensed that two protesters had been injured, knocking off
his military-issue fur hat and yelling, "Jail him."
At
the same time as Kramatorsk airport was being seized, elite Ukrainian
units were also gathering outside the nearby city of Slavyansk in an
operation aimed at taking back control from armed pro- Russian
groups.
The
deployment involved regular army troops alongside special forces from
the interior ministry and the security service in at least nine troop
carriers and seven buses. Tracked troop carriers could be seen parked
in the woods.
It
was the first major operation since the Ukrainian government vowed to
take "anti-terrorist" action if the rebels did not vacate
government buildings in eastern Ukraine. A smaller, abortive
operation in Slavyansk on Sunday ended in a shoot-out, in which one
Ukrainian soldier died and two were wounded, apparently by
pro-Russian forces.
Ukraine's
acting president said the recapture of the airport was just the first
such action aimed at restoring Kiev's control over the east.
"I
just got a call from the Donetsk region: Ukrainian special forces
have liberated the airport in the city of Kramatorsk from
terrorists," Oleksandr Turchynov told parliament.
"I'm
convinced that there will not be any terrorists left soon in Donetsk
and other regions and they will find themselves in the dock – this
is where they belong."
Russia's
president, Vladimir Putin, declared the Ukrainian moves
"anti-constitutional acts" and in a phone call to the
United Nations secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, demanded that the UN
condemn them. But the US voiced strong support for the Ukrainian
operation, arguing that the government in Kiev "has to respond"
to armed groups.
"We
understand the government of Ukraine is working to try to calm the
situation in the east and note the measured approach of the Ukrainian
security forces thus far," said White House press secretary Jay
Carney.
Representatives
from Ukraine, Russia, the US and the European Union are due to meet
in Geneva on Thursday for the first time since the crisis began in
February, but there were clear signs that the situation in eastern
Ukraine risked spiralling out of control before the diplomats could
meet.
In
Kiev, two candidates from a pro-Russian party campaigning for planned
May elections were attacked by loyalist crowds.
In
Kramatorsk, meanwhile, the commander of the Ukrainian operation to
seize back control of the airport, General Vasily Krutov, was jostled
and manhandled by furious local people when he addressed a crowd that
gathered at the airfield's perimeter.
He
had told them that his men had been forced to open fire because they
had been confronted by gunmen in military uniform without insignia,
but the protesters insisted there had only been local people armed
with clubs. The Guardian saw a man in the crowd with a wound on his
side that he said was from a bullet graze.
Krutov
insisted that the unrest in eastern Ukraine, where protesters are
seeking local referendums on greater autonomy from Kiev, were being
led by Russian forces. He said more than 300 Russian troops had
infiltrated the neighbouring Luhansk region the day before. "We
need to destroy this foreign invader," Krutov said. "We
have among these spies Russian military, professionals with long
experience in all sorts of conflicts."
The
mayor of Slavyansk said the pro-Russian local people there were being
supported by unmarked troops from Russia and Crimea. Turchynov gave
pro-Russians in eastern Ukraine until Monday morning to give up their
arms and the buildings they had seized, but instead a pro-Russian mob
took over yet another government building in Horlivka that day. A man
who appointed a new police chief there later said he was a lieutenant
colonel in the Russian army.
Krutov
said the government's ultimatum would not be extended. That would be
"too humanitarian", he said. He added that civilian
casualties were possible but his forces would try to make sure "not
one innocent person suffers".
He
said: "Unfortunately we face a difficult situation because those
realising their plan are hiding behind human shields" – an
apparent reference to the many pro-Russian local people who have
taken part in taking over buildings. "Some of them are cynically
working toward their own ends, but many are under the influence of
propaganda," he said.
At
the White House, Carney said the Ukrainian authorities had repeatedly
sought to negotiate a peaceful resolution with armed groups occupying
buildings in eastern cities, and made clear that use of force was not
its "preferred action".
But
he continued: "That said the Ukrainian government has a
responsibility to provide law and order. These provocations in
eastern Ukraine are creating a situation in which the government has
to respond."
Asked
what advice the CIA director, John Brennan, who visited Kiev on
Saturday, and other US officials have given security forces in Kiev,
Carney replied: "We urged the Ukrainian government to move
forward, gradually, responsibly, and with all due caution, as it
deals with this situation caused by armed militants.
"Let's
be clear: the way to ensure that violence does not occur is for these
armed paramilitary groups, and these armed so-called pro-Russian
separatists, to vacate the buildings and to lay down their arms."
William
Hague, the foreign secretary, said in a speech to the City of London
on Tuesday that the EU was completing preparations for "far-reaching
economic, trade and financial sanctions whenever necessary"
against Moscow.
"In
recent days Russia has deliberately pushed Ukraine to the brink, and
created a still greater risk of violent confrontation," he said.
"We call on Russia to stop these actions and to condemn the
lawless acts in eastern Ukraine."
The
UN human rights office, meanwhile, said ethnic Russians in eastern
Ukraine had falsely claimed to be under assault to justify Russian
intervention, warning that such propaganda could affect Ukraine's
presidential election next month.
Russia
condemned the report, saying it was one-sided and seemed to have been
"fabricated" to fit pre-formed conclusions.
The
events in Ukraine helped pushed global stock markets down as
investors worried that the west might scale up sanctions against
Russia. The DAX index in Germany, which has strong trade ties with
Russia and imports a third of its gas from the country, fell 1.8%,
while Moscow's Micex slumped 2.5%.
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