RUSSIA-UKRAINE
BLACK SEA MILITARY CRISIS: ON THE BRINK OF WAR
26
November, 2018
On
November 25, the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) Border
Service was forced to open fire on and damage Ukrainian warships,
which were carrying out hostile actions and advancing in Russian
territorial waters in the Black Sea off Crimea.
After
the short close-quarter firefight, two Ukrainian ships were taken
towed and one ship escorted by Russian forces to the Russian port of
Kerch. The Ukrainian side said that 6 service members had been
injured in the incident. The Russian side says that 3 Ukrainian
servicemen had been slightly injured. They received medical help and
there is no threat to their lives.
The
data available from both sides, Ukrainian and Russian, demonstrates
that the Ukrainian warships intentionally entered Russian territorial
waters and were moving more deeply into them. Such a military action
with the to be expected loud political coverage is not possible
without a direct order from the Ukrainian top military-political
leadership.
From
the beginning, the Ukrainian side claimed that it informed the
Russian side about the planned displacement of its ships into the Sea
of Azov through the Kerch Strait. The Russian side says that there
has been no request on this issue.
Even
if the Ukrainian side had indeed somehow informed the Russians,
it still needed to wait for an answer and permission from the Russian
authorities. As the further developments showed, the Ukrainian side
had received no answer/permission from the Russian side.
The
existence or absence of the Ukrainian request to the Russians is
irrelevant. The fact is that the Ukrainian warships violated Russian
territorial waters threatening navigation in the area and provoking
the Russian side.
For
more than 5 hours, the Russian side had been avoiding any action to
stop and block warships of the de-facto “unfriendly state” in its
territorial waters. Only at about 19:00 local time, the FSB Border
Service did employ real measures to put an end to the hostile actions
of the warships of the de-facto “unfriendly state” in Russian
territorial waters.
Summing
up the existing data, it can be concluded that:
- When the Ukrainian warships entered Russian territorial waters, there was an attempt to block the advance of the Ukrainian naval group. One of the ships of the FSB Border Service provoked a maritime collision incident with a Ukrainian ship by putting its own hull on the vector of the Ukrainian warship’s advance.
- Within the next few hours, there was a close escort of the Ukrainian ships by the Russian naval group. Apparently, both the groups were inside or near Russian marginal waters.
- In a couple of hours, there was a firefight incident between the Russian and Ukrainian naval groups.
- The Ukrainian Navy recognizes that the incident happened near the borderline of the Russian 12-nautical miles zone.
- The Ukrainian naval group was completely dominated by the Russian naval group.
- There were casualties among Ukrainian service members.
- Warships of the Ukrainian naval group suffered damages.
- The Ukrainian naval group was blocked and then escorted/towed by the Russian naval group to Kerch.
There
is no doubt that the leadership of the Ukrainian Armed Forces,
particularly Commander-In-Chief Petro Poroshenko, gave the order to
stage an action, which could cause casualties among at least military
personnel. The command and servicemen of the Ukrainian Navy made
every possible effort to fulfil this order.
The
Russian side seemed to try to avoid an armed clash and likely
attempted to solve this crisis via military-diplomatic channels for
at least several hours. However, it failed to do this.
The
existing data allows us to conclude that the current Ukrainian
political leadership bears most of the responsibility for the
November 25 maritime incident.
As
to what developments we should expect in the following days, we can
expect that.
The
Ukrainian government will employ its propaganda and oppressive power
to boost the image of Russia as the aggressive foe of Ukraine. This
will lead to the escalation of tensions in the conflict zone in
eastern Ukraine as well as tensions in the contact zone between
Russian and Ukrainian forces in the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov.
If
this fails, this incident could lead to a full discreditation of the
current Ukrainian political leadership, particularly President
Poroshenko, and his US supervisors.
It
is important to note that overnight on November 26 the situation
started escalating in eastern Ukraine where the Ukrainian Armed
Forces opened a massive artillery fire on villages and towns
controlled by the Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR) at 21:48 local
time. This could indicate that the Poroshenko regime is
intentionally fueling military tensions in the region in order to
start a new conflict.
Overnight
on November 26, Poroshenko held a meeting with the military cabinet
and announced the introduction of martial law. Furthermore, the
Ukrainian Armed Forces were brought to “full” combat readiness.
The
introduction of martial law allows the delay of the 2019 presidential
election in Ukraine, which is currently set to be held on March 31,
2019. According to polls, Poroshenko would be highly likely to lose
his presidential post were the election to take place now. The armed
conflict and martial law may allow him to change the situation in his
favor.
Such
a conflict would also allow Ukraine’s “Western partners” to
boost their military presence in the country and nearby regions thus
further destabilizing the situation.
DETAINED
UKRAINIAN SERVICEMEN CONFIRM THEY PROVOKED BLACK SEA INCIDENT WITH
RUSSIA UPON ORDER FROM THEIR COMMAND
26
November, 2018
The
Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) said on November 26 that it
has questioned Ukrainian servicemen who were detained following the
maritime incident in the Kerch Strait.
The
FSB released a video footage of the questioning session with:
- 3rd Rank Captain Vladimir Lesovoy, commander of a support vessels division of the Ukrainian South naval base (army unit A-1728);
- Andrei Drach, according to Russian officials, officer of the 7th main military intelligence directorate of the Ukrainian Security Service who had been onboard the Nikolpol boat;
- Sergei Tsybizov, a sailor from the Nikopol.
The
Ukrainian servicemen confirmed that they were action upon a direct
order from their command and the November 25 maritime incident was a
pre-planned provocation.
“Radio requests [from Russian border guards] were deliberately ignored. There were firearms and machine guns with munitions onboard. I was aware that these were provocative actions,” Lesovoy stated adding that the formal goal was to reach Mariupol [the Sea of Azov] from Odessa [the Black Sea] through Kerch Strait.
The
Urainian intelligence officer, Drach, confirmed that the Russian side
was working to prevent an armed clash in the area.
“We entered Russia’s territorial waters where the Russian coastal guards warned us that we were violating Russia’s laws. They told us to leave the Russian territorial waters,” he said.
However,
the Ukrainian naval group was ignoring the warnings.
“We continued to move. We were contacted by Russian ships which warned us they would open fire if we did not stop, The commander stopped the boat, and we were detained. That’s all,” Tsybizov said.
The
FSB further revealed that there were two Ukrainian intelligence
officers were coordinating the provocation on board of the shi
“The Ukrainian warships entered Russia’s territorial waters at a direct order from the Kiev authorities. The warships trespassed into the Russian territorial water that had enjoyed this status even before Crimea’s reunification with Russia. The provocation was coordinated by two Ukrainian Security Service officers who were aboard the Ukrainian ships,” the FSB said in a statement.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.