debka wants war, i suppose

Ukraine slides into civil war. Putin resigns responsibility
DEBKAfile, May 3 2014

Merkel’s attempt during her visit to Washington on Friday April 2 to bridge the differences between Obama and Putin over Ukraine was overtaken by events on the ground. That morning, the junta in Kiev launched its first serious offensive to retake the eastern Ukrainian cities captured by pro-Russian militias, starting with Slavyansk. In Odessa pro-Kiev gangs started a fire which left more than 40 militiamen dead. Moscow’s reaction Saturday came directly from Putin’s office. His spokesman Dmitry Peskov said:

Neither Russia nor any other country can any longer influence citizens of Ukraine’s southeast … It will be impossible now to talk them into laying down their weapons when their lives are threatened by radicals, nationalists and armed forces that obey criminal orders and murder their own people.

It was also made clear that the May 25 election was off, as far as the Kremlin was concerned. Those comments followed the German chancellor’s failure to make any headway on Ukraine in her White House interview with Obama, say our sources. That the Merkel-Obama talks did not go well was evident in both their remarks. The chancellor started by saying:

We have a few difficulties to overcome between security and protecting privacy.

She was not only referring to the simmering scandal following last year’s revelation that the NSA was eavesdropping on her private cellphone calls. She also had in mind another intelligence issue between the two governments: future collaboration between the US and German agencies in Ukraine. Obama answered her with a piece of friendly advice: Germans following the Ukraine story from Russia’s perspective should “stay focused on the facts and what’s happening on the ground,” he said, and keep in mind that “there just has not been the kind of honesty and credibility about the situation” from Putin. Obama urged broader sanctions as the only way to make Putin see the light. It was obvious that Obama and Merkel were far from being in accord on Ukraine and on how Russia should be handled. Neither Merkel nor the German BND intelligence agency subscribes to Obama’s unquestioning backing for the interim government in Kiev. And on Friday, they deeply resented the fact that on the day of Merkel’s Washington visit, the Kiev regime was allowed to launch its most serious military offensive against pro-Russian militias to date, starting in Slavyansk and spiraling Saturday into heavy fighting 15 km away in Kramatorsk and other places. Moscow responded by declaring “no longer viable” the Geneva accords for de-escalating the crisis reached in Geneva two weeks ago by the US, Russia, the EU and Ukraine. The German chancellor for her part viewed the timing of the Kiev offensive as a US attempt to dictate to Berlin and Europe its policy of harsh, unequivocal confrontation with Putin, when she had come to Washington to urge Obama to start listening to the Russian president instead of turning a deaf ear. The wide gap between them came into hard focus when a German reporter at the press conference put a (possibly planted) question to Obama: Why instead of those long, fruitless phone conversations with Putin, doesn’t he try to meet him face to face and talk the Ukraine issue over instead of telling him what to do. The US president ignored the question. Before deciding whether to continue to try her hand at mediating the quarrel between the two presidents, Merkel faces two tough decisions:

  1. Whether or not to line up behind Obama’s policy of broadening sanctions against Russia until the Kremlin falls in behind Washington on Ukraine. The answer to this question is negative. At home, the industrial giants that are the engines of Germany’s economic prosperity have lined up against this course. Before she went to Washington, she faced a powerful lobby of BASF, Siemens, Volkswagen, Adidas and Deutsche Bank, urging her to stand up to Obama against broader sanctions against Russia. She can’t ignore them. Germany’s external trade is heavily weighted in favor of ties with Russia and China rather than the US, and a third of its gas comes from Russia. Furthermore, two former German chancellors Helmut Kohl and Gerhard Schroeder are partners in Moscow’s state energy concerns.
  2. Merkel must also determine whether the BND will join US agents to guarantee the May 25 election. At Friday’s news conference in Washington, she noted that not much time is left to that date, a hint that a postponement may be useful for developing dialogue with the Russian ruler and action to cool the hotheads leading the civil violence. But Obama ignored her comment. Clearly, after giving the Kiev government its head for a military offensive that morning, he was not prepared to give up the prospect of the Ukraine military forcing its will on the dozens of towns held by the pro-Russian militias and making them take part in the vote.

Saturday morning, when it was not quiet clear where the US-Russian-German dance over Ukraine was headed, the militia in Slavyansk released 12 ‘military observers’, 7 Europeans and 5 Ukrainian officers. Among them were four Germans. Word of their release came from Vladimir Lukin, an envoy sent by Putin to negotiate the release. It was accompanied by a comment from Moscow that it would be “absurd” to try and hold an election amidst a civil war. The Russian president appeared to be signaling he was amenable to certain concessions in return for postponing or calling off Ukraine’s elections. But when no positive reaction came from Washington, Putin took the step of disowning responsibility for the violence spiralling in Ukraine. After entering Kramatorsk, junta official Vasyl Krutov told reporters Saturday afternoon:

What we are facing in the Donetsk region and in the eastern regions is not just some kind of short-lived uprising, it is in fact war.

One Comment

  1. Posted May 4, 2014 at 11:14 am | Permalink

    This is the best think piece I’ve read on Ukraine in a while. Germany could torpedo U.S. mayhem and destruction in a heartbeat. All Merkel needs to do is say that German national interest is not served by demonizing Putin and sanctioning Russia; she could then call for the obvious, indefinite postponement of the May 25 presidential poll. This would then send the parties back to the bargaining table to agree on what now cannot be denied — the future of Ukraine depends on federalization and neutrality.

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