Ukraine - Poroshenko Initiated Clash With Russia To Gain Dictatorial Powers - He Failed
27
November, 2018
The
Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko's attempted to shore up his
approval rate for the upcoming election by provoking a military
incident. It was a gamble and it failed.
Three
Ukrainian boats, a tug and two gun boats, attempted
to sail from
the Black Sea through the Kerch Strait into the Sea of Azov. The
Kerch Strait is territorial Russian water since Crimea voted to join
Russia. "Innocent passage" is allowed but necessitates
following the laws and regulations of the territorial country.
Depth chart - Sea of Azov
Dark
blue - less than 5 meters, light blue - less than 10 meters, white -
less than 13.5 meters
shipping channels not shown -
shipping channels not shown -
The
Ukraine does not accept the decision the people of Crimea and insists
that the peninsula is still part of its territory. The Ukrainian
president Petro Poroshenko sent the boats with the order not to
coordinate their passage with Russian authorities. The captured
sailors confirm
that.
He obviously wanted to provoke a violent Russian reaction.
Ukraine’s state security service says that its intelligence officers were among the crew on Ukrainian naval ships seized by Russia in a standoff near Crimea.
The SBU agency said in a statement Tuesday that the officers were fulfilling counterintelligence operations for the Ukrainian navy, in response to “psychological and physical pressure” by Russian spy services. It didn’t elaborate, but demanded that Russia stop such activity.
Russia’s FSB intelligence agency said late Monday that that there were SBU officers on board the Ukrainian ships, calling that proof of a “provocation” staged by Ukraine.
What
is the real reason that these agents were on board of the Ukrainian
gun boats?
A
few of the Ukrainian seaman were lightly wounded when the Russian
coast guard took a shot at one of the boats.
The
gun boats of the Gurza-M
class were
built on a shipyard that Poroshenko owned at that time. He profited
from ordering them. They may be useful for river policing but do not
belong at sea.
The
Russian coast guard had no problem to disable the ships and to
capture their crews. A Crimean court ordered that the sailors will be
held for two more month while they face charges over border
violations.
In
1988 the U.S. tried to pull up a similar stunt in the Black Sea. Two
U.S. Navy ships with spying equipment crossed into Soviet territorial
water near Crimea. They got
rammed (vid)
by Soviet ships and were smart enough to move out before the
situation escalated further.
Poroshenko's
intent was to provoke an incident that would allow him to present
himself as a war-president. Elections are coming up and all polls
show him below 10% and far behind two other candidates. He attempted
to use the incident to introduce martial law over all the Ukraine.
Martial
law would give Poroshenko full control over the country. He would be
able to remove any regional or local government, to shut down the
political opposition and to censor the media. He would be able to
postpone the upcoming elections indefinitely.
Back
in July Yulia Tymoshenko, who is leading the polls for the next
elections, warned that
Poroshenko would take this step (machine
translation):
The leader of Batkivshchyna, Yulia Tymoshenko, claims that one of her main competitors in the upcoming presidential election, the incumbent head of state, Petro Poroshenko, is allegedly nurturing a “extremely dangerous plan” to disrupt voting by escalating the war in Donbass and imposing martial law in Ukraine. The politician made such a statement on the TV channel UA: First.
Tymoshenko stated that Poroshenko "does not want" to hold presidential elections in order to "save power", ...
“Intelligence data speak of an extremely serious threat,” Poroshenko declared in a televised address on Monday, brandishing a pile of paper, which, he said, was an intelligence report detailing the Russian forces massed close to the border. At a session of the United Nations Security Council called at Ukraine’s request late on Monday, the country’s representative, Volodymyr Yelchenko, claimed the Azov Sea ports of Mariupol and Berdyansk faced invasion.
That
is of course utter nonsense. Russia has no interest in launching a
war with the Ukraine. There is nothing to gain from it.
The
parliament must vote on the introduction of martial law and the
opposition parties recognized Poroshenko's stunt for what it was. His
plans were rejected. Poroshenko pulled back. Instead of the 60 day
long, renewable period of martial law he wanted, he had to settle for
30 days. And that was still not enough:
Rival political parties - former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko’s Fatherland, Lviv Mayor Andriy Sadovyi’s Self-Help and populist Oleh Lyashko’s Radical Party – demanded further concessions. They wanted immediate confirmation, rather than just a promise, that the election will go ahead on March 31. They sought to limit martial law to a number of regions rather the whole country, and they objected to any plans to limit Ukrainians’ constitutional freedoms. Their fear wasn’t just that campaigning would be limited, but that Poroshenko would get near-dictatorial powers.
There
will now be a limited martial law but only in those regions that
border Russia or the Black Sea. The opposition and its foreign
backers will take care that its use will not get out of hand. There
will be a limited call-up of reserve troops, but most of the
reservists are to likely ignore it.
With
the election date set to March 31 by the parliament Poroshenko has no
legal tool to postpone it.
Unless
of course he manages to provoke a real war, either with the rebels
who are holding the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts, or with Russia
itself. The lunatic warmongers at the Atlantic Council urge him to
do exactly that:
Even though Ukraine is outgunned, it does have options. It can undertake operations to break the blockade, though they would likely be fruitless given the forces Moscow has sent there.
Nevertheless, it cannot accept this attack on its sovereignty and integrity passively. Ukraine should give careful consideration to a special operation that might disrupt the bridge that Moscow built over the Kerch Strait that joins Crimea to Russia.
But that’s not all. Ukraine should invite the United States and NATO to send a fleet of armed ships to visit Mariupol, the main city on the Sea of Azov coast and defy Russia to fire on or block NATO from exercising the right to visit Ukraine’s ports. Those ships should be armed and have air cover but be instructed not to fire unless fired upon.
Even
Poroshenko is not dumb enough to repeat his failed provocation in the
Kerch Strait. The Kerch bridge is guarded. Its pillars are massive
because it was build near a fault and has be able to withstand
earthquakes. A saboteur unit would have to bring several tons of high
explosives to even damage one. To reach Mariupol in the Sea of Azov
ships have to cross through the the Kerch Strait. The passage is a
very narrow artificial channel with only 8 meter depth. Outside of
the channel the water is as shallow as a think tankers thought. Any
ship with more than 2-3 meters draft has zero room to navigate there.
Russia does not even need boats or airplanes to protect it. A few
guns along the coast can easily control the passage. No sane naval
commander will try to pass the Strait by force.
Russia
already warned warned
against further
'reckless' moves and deployed
an anti-ship missile system (vid)
to the Kerch Strait to make sure that any further provocations there
will have deadly consequences.
Poroshenko
could start a provocation elsewhere. He could attempt to
reconquer the
Donetzk airport.
But while he might itch for losing more fights, a full blown war is
out of question. Kiev's army is low on morale and would be defeated
within days.
Poroshenko's
rule was catastrophic for the Ukraine. In several cities the central
heating and warm water supply is
broken.
Ten-thousands will have to freeze during the winter, some of them to
death. Since Poroshenko came to power millions of able Ukrainian
workers have fled or work abroad, most of them to Russia. The most
industrialized regions are in firmly in rebel hands. Most of the
population is poor, the bureaucracy is utterly corrupt and the
country is practically bankrupt.
There
will likely be dozens of corruption cases brought up against
Poroshenko himself as soon as he loses power. If he is smart he will
flee the Ukraine the very day his term ends.
The
international reactions showed that Poroshenko is no longer of value.
While the russo-phobe Poland and the Baltic countries called for more
sanction against Russia the European heavyweights Germany and France
urged deescalation and direct negotiations between Russia and
Ukraine. (Sources in Berlin say that Merkel firmly told him to stand
down.) The U.S. reaction was delayed and mild. Trump punted the
problem to the Europeans.
Pedro
Poroshenko will leave the political stage as a despised man. But will
also be much richer after he pilfered the Ukrainian state wherever he
could. The people of the Ukraine should take their money back before
dumping him abroad.
Tymoshenko
accused Poroshenko: He plans martial law
7
May, 2018
Via Google Translate
The
president is negotiating with militants in the Donbass on the
escalation of war to disrupt the elections-2019 martial law, says the
leader of the Fatherland
The
leader of Batkivshchyna, Yulia Tymoshenko, claims that one of her
main competitors in the upcoming presidential election, the incumbent
head of state, Petro Poroshenko, is allegedly nurturing a “extremely
dangerous plan” to disrupt voting by escalating the war in Donbass
and imposing martial law in Ukraine. The politician made such a
statement on the TV channel UA: First.
Tymoshenko
stated that Poroshenko "does not want" to hold presidential
elections in order to "save power", and therefore began a
"deep negotiation process" with the Kremlin puppet in the
occupied Donbas.
“Poroshenko
wants to initiate the beginning of a big war. He wants the
territories of Ukraine to be additionally seized, everything to burn,
to burn, to let the war go to the highest level ... He wants to
impose martial law and not hold elections in principle,” the deputy
said.
According
to Tymoshenko, presumably, one can already observe the prerequisites
for a "big war": in the Donbass "our military are
beginning to die", the number of wounded is growing, and
fighting is becoming more active.
Also,
the leader of Batkivshchyna stated that Poroshenko and his entourage
have "friendly relations" with the leaders of the
Kremlin-controlled militants.
On
June 20, 2018, Tymoshenko announced that she would run for president
in the 2019 elections. According to the latest opinion polls of the
KIIS , the Rating and the Razumkov Center , the leader of the
Fatherland is in the second round, its closest competitor is Anatoly
Gritsenko .
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