Media jumped to report Russia and Ukraine reach ceasefire
A
ceasefire...then no-ceasfire...complete confusion surrounding a peace
plan in the Ukraine crisis. In the NOW we set the record straight
Who is going to put these groups back in the box – and how?
Who fights in the Ukraine
The
political crisis in Ukraine led to the formation of many armed groups
on its territory
THE UKRAINE- ENTERING THE END GAME
Alexander
Mercouris
Via
Facebook
We
have had an extraordinary succession of diplomatic move and counter
move over the last two days.
1.
Yesterday was the false announcement by Russian media agencies of
supposed proposals by the NAF that would have allowed the DPR/LPR to
remain if only nominally part of the Ukraine.
2.
This morning we had the equally false announcement by Poroshenko's
Secretariat that he had agreed a ceasefire with Putin.
3.
This afternoon the Kremlin published its plan for a ceasefire. Whilst
this purports to be limited to its technical aspects in reality it
effectively gives the DPR/LPR what they have demanded all along and
since before the ATO was launched, which is the removal of all
Ukrainian forces from their territory. The Kremlin's ceasefire
proposal throws in a no fly zone for good measure.
This
flurry of announcements suggests moves in an end game, which is what
I think we are looking at. So what is going on?
First
of all it bears reiteration that none of this would be happening were
it not for
1.
The NAF's battlefield victories and the not so slow motion collapse
of the Ukrainian army. Lugansk and Donetsk airports have now
definitely fallen. The very latest reports suggest that Mariupol is
totally surrounded and that Kiev has only the remnant of right wing
militia battalions there and that it is likely to fall or be
liberated by the NAF very soon. There are reports of more and more
Ukrainian soldiers surrendering or deserting and the hoard of
captured weapons in the NAF's hands is growing to prodigious levels.
As the junta's military gets weaker the NAF grows stronger. Though
Putin has said (echoing comments made a week ago by Zakharchenko -
see below my discussion of his press conference on this Page) that
the NAF has no plan to advance beyond the boundaries of the DPR/LPR,
the main force of the Ukrainian army is now actually concentrated on
the territory of the DPR/LPR. If the Ukrainian army disintegrates,
which is now looking distinctly possible, it is not clear what
organised military force the junta has left to bar an NAF advance on
Kharkov, Odessa or even Kiev.
2.
As I explained a few days ago (see below on this Page) the true story
of the recent EU summit is that for all the talk of sanctions the
US/EU has emphatically ruled out the one thing that might at the risk
of a very dangerous escalation have made a difference to this
situation. This was the possibility of western military intervention
in the conflict to bail the junta out. Please note that by "western
military intervention" I mean boots on the ground and air
strikes. As Mark Sleboda has absolutely correctly pointed out talk of
weapons being supplied to the junta is a red herring. The reality is
the junta has been getting weapons for weeks from old Soviet stocks
in eastern Europe and has never been short of weapons to fight this
war.
Given
the military disaster Poroshenko, the junta and their western
sponsors have no realistic option other than to look for a diplomatic
way out. As I said a few days ago (see below on this Page) that was
what all the talk at the EU summit of the need for ceasefires and of
"the situation being close to the point of no return" was
all about. With the economy in freefall and the army disintegrating
further prolongation of the war risks the junta's and the Ukraine's
collapse (about this however see below).
Ending
the war for the junta is however something a lot easier said than
done. Having promised victory and having spurned three opportunities
for a political settlement and a ceasefire (on 21st February 2014,
17th April 2014 and 2nd July 2014) the junta and its western backers
now face the critical problem of how they are going to sell news of
their ending of the war in conditions of total defeat to the Maidan
movement and to the Ukrainian people as a whole.
The
way they are trying to do this and to square this circle is as
follows:
1.
Firstly, they are trying to preserve the fiction that their war is
with Russia rather than with the people of the Donbas and the NAF. It
is far easier to admit defeat at the hands of Russia than at what
began as a lightly armed self defence force just 4 months ago; and
2.
Secondly by trying to achieve through diplomacy a peace settlement
that preserves the appearance of Ukrainian sovereignty over the
Donbas thereby letting the junta claim that the integrity of the
Ukrainian state has been preserved.
If
one understands this then the strange diplomatic moves we have seen
over the last two days begin to make sense.
The
reason Poroshenko said falsely that he had agreed a ceasefire with
Putin is because (1) he needs a ceasefire in order to avoid a total
disaster and (2) he cannot declare a ceasefire unilaterally since
that would too obviously be a surrender and (3) he does not want to
agree a ceasefire with the NAF since that would demolish his claim
that his war is not with the NAF but with Russia.
The
strange attempt yesterday to pretend that the NAF is merely seeking
autonomy within a confederated Ukraine when the NAF leadership has
repeatedly made clear over the last few weeks that it is seeking full
independence from the Ukraine was clearly intended by someone to help
Kiev save face by pretending that some sort of deal is possible that
would preserve Ukrainian sovereignty over the Donbas. That these
reports came from Russian news agencies suggests
(1)
that there is a faction within the Russian government or Russia's
political elite that still wants that solution presumably in order to
limit the damage to Russia's relations with the west; or
(2)
that there is still a body of opinion within the elite of the Donbas
itself (possibly led by Rinat Akhmetov) that also still wants to
maintain a link, however tenuous, to Kiev and which also is trying to
help the junta save face and which still has some influence within
the Donbas leadership or at any rate the NAF's negotiating team; or
(4)
that these reports originated with the Lukashenko government which is
hosting the talks in Minsk and which for various reasons also wants
to help the junta save face whilst preserving at least the appearance
of a united Ukraine.
Of
course these three possibilities are not mutually exclusive and it is
possible and even likely that all are true.
However
the important point is that Putin is having none of it. He has made
it absolutely clear over the course of the day that he did not agree
a ceasefire with Poroshenko and that if Poroshenko does genuinely
want a ceasefire he must agree it not with Russia but with the NAF.
By publishing his ceasefire proposals Putin has also made clear that
he supports the NAF's demand for a total withdrawal of Ukrainian
troops from the Donbas as a condition for a ceasefire. Indirectly, by
limiting himself to technical discussions about a ceasefire, Putin
has also made clear that he and Russia are not prepared to get
involved in political discussions about the Donbas's future and that
as he previously said in Minsk this is something that will have to be
negotiated directly with the NAF instead. Those who expect Putin to
put pressure on the NAF to accept something less than full
independence are on the evidence of the last few weeks likely to be
disappointed.
In
other words Putin is denying Poroshenko any hope of saving face by
stripping him of even the appearance of wriggle room. That explains
the dismayed reaction in Kiev to today's developments with all the
wild talk from Yatsenyuk & co of "frozen conflicts"
that we have been hearing over the course of the day. It also
explains the desperate attempt to put pressure on Putin by
Poroshenko's western backers by suspending completion of the Mistral
sale.
What
happens next? I do not expect Putin to retreat from the line he is
now publicly taking whatever Poroshenko or the west may want and
whatever further sanctions the EU announces on Friday. Certainly
suspension of the Mistral sale will not impress him. It seems to me
that there are now two possibilities:
(1)
There will be no formal ceasefire agreement of any kind, the
Ukrainian military collapse will continue and the NAF will drive the
Ukrainians out of the Donbas by itself. At that point the fighting
will finally stop; or
(2)
The junta will accept Putin's ceasefire proposals and will start
negotiations with the NAF.
Politically
it is much easier for the junta to do (1). However the consequences
of that course should be clear. In the absence of a formal ceasefire
agreement the Ukraine faces the almost certain prospect of a
continued cut off of Russian gas at a time when it has also lost
access to its coalfields in the Donbas and has no realistic
alternative sources of energy and no foreign exchange to buy it in
any event. Gazprom has again made clear today (and the timing is
surely not an accident) that it is not prepared to consider the
"compromise proposals" made by the European Commission. it
insists on full payment of all gas arrears and has said that it will
not in any event go below the price it previously offered, which is
$385.
In
the absence of a diplomatic settlement the Ukraine therefore faces
likely economic collapse possibly within a matter of weeks or at the
most months.
Any
realistic assessment of the situation therefore points to (2) as the
only viable way forward. A grasp of reality is however something the
Maidan movement has at all times been short of. Because of the nature
of the regime in Kiev and of the Maidan movement I expect the junta
if left to itself to opt for (1). The only way that might change
would be if the Europeans finally screwed up the will and courage to
do that which they have up to now consistently failed to do, which is
put pressure on Kiev to agree to (2). As I see little prospect of
that, I expect (1).
Looking
further forward what is the future of the Ukraine and of the DPR/LPR?
Though
it may take time for reality to sink in, the disaster in the east,
the loss of the Donbas and the gathering economic crisis will be a
shattering blow to the Maidan movement. Not only has it been defeated
on the battlefield but it must also face the reality that (as with
Georgia in 2008) its western "friends" for all their brave
talk in the final analysis have abandoned it. It must also face the
return of tens of thousands of traumatised and embittered young men
who have experienced the humiliation of defeat. As was the case with
Saakashvili, though to a much greater extent, politically speaking it
will be downhill for the Maidan movement from now on. I do not know
how long the process will take but its eventual collapse is likely
only a matter of time.
Beyond
that my belief remains that if the Donbas manages to secede in time
Kharkov, Odessa, Kherson and the rest of Novorossia will follow. If
there is an economic collapse in the next few weeks or months as I
expect that may happen sooner rather than later. As for what would
happen to whatever rump Ukraine was left, shorn of the Donbas and
possibly of its remaining eastern provinces and facing economic
disaster, its prospects are bleak. Certainly its chances of joining
NATO or the EU any time soon are I would say nil. Trapped in
political limbo, there is a chance that in time more rational
political forces may emerge that will seek some sort of rapprochement
with Russia. How long that will take I do not know.
As
for the DPR/LPR, they will surely become de facto part of Russia with
which they will quickly integrate economically (eg. by adopting the
rouble) even if for a time they remain nominally independent of it.
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