Ukraine on the edge again
With the failure of the two warring sides to honour the Minsk ceasefire agreements, the civil war in Ukraine is threatening to escalate into a bigger conflict involving Russia and the U.S. By JOHN CHERIAN
WITHIN DAYS AFTER THE MINSK II CEASEFIRE agreement was signed, it was clear that the guns were not likely to go silent in Ukraine in the immediate future. Both sides in the raging civil war, which has been going on for almost a year now, are blaming each other for breaking a short-lived truce, which had raised hopes of a more durable peace in a conflict that has claimed 5,600 lives and rendered more than a million people homeless. According to the agreement signed on February 12 in Minsk, the capital of Belarus, the two sides were to end hostilities within 72 hours. The agreement, signed after many hours of intensive talks involving the leaders of Russia, France, Germany and Ukraine, was similar to the one signed in September 2014 in Minsk.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel played a key role in the latest
negotiations, having come to believe that the situation in Ukraine can only be
solved diplomatically and not militarily as some in the United States administration
feel. She shuttled between Washington, Moscow and Kiev in her bid to get the
two sides in Ukraine to agree to a ceasefire. Although Germany
supported the Barack Obama
administration in its efforts to effect an illegal regime change in Ukraine in
2014, Angela Merkel has resisted U.S. moves to further militarise the conflict.
She also saw to it that western Europe remained united behind Germany on the
issue. Many European Union (E.U.) states had unwillingly supported the tough
U.S.-led sanctions on Russia. Germany and Italy, among other countries, are
dependent on Russian gas to power their economies. A war at their doorstep is
the last thing they want in recession-hit Europe.
The key point in the ceasefire agreement was the withdrawal of the
opposing forces from their current positions and the creation of a buffer zone.
In recent weeks, civilians, as has been the case throughout the conflict, bore
the brunt of the war. Both sides targeted heavily populated urban areas. The
attack on a trolley bus carrying passengers in Donetsk in the third week of
January, which claimed 13 lives, triggered intensive fighting and sounded the
death knell for the Minsk I agreement. The cities of Donetsk and Luhansk have
been subjected to artillery shelling by the Ukrainian Army since early January.
The military assault started after the U.S. Congress passed the “Ukraine
Freedom Support Act” and soon after the visit of the head of the U.S. Armed
Forces to Europe, Lieutenant General Ben Hodges, in January. By early February,
the Ukrainian Army started retreating after the rebels started gaining ground
steadily following the capture of the airport in Donetsk.
Many Ukraine watchers believe
that another ceasefire was in the interest of the central government in Kiev. A
prolonged ceasefire would give the Ukrainian Army the much-needed respite and
time to rearm. President Petro Poroshenko told a Ukrainian television station
that he had used the first ceasefire situation to rearm and bolster the Army. Under
the terms of the latest agreement, a 30-kilometre buffer zone should have been
in place by now and all heavy weapons should have been relocated outside this
zone. Both sides were mandated to start talks about meaningful decentralisation
of power, a long-standing demand of the Russian-speaking people of eastern
Ukraine. The rebels, on their part, reiterated their commitment to the unity of
Ukraine as a federal state. It was agreed that rebel leaders would not be prosecuted
by the central government and that there would be an exchange of hostages and
illegally held prisoners. Both sides also agreed that international
humanitarian aid would be allowed to flow unimpeded into areas devastated by
the conflict. The two sides also agreed to adopt in 2015 a new Constitution
that would guarantee federalism.
The ongoing conflict has destroyed Ukraine’s industrial base. The
country’s economy, which was never on a strong footing, has shrunk by 8 per
cent and is floundering. The rebels in the east conceded the government’s right
to control and police the country’s borders, even in the conflict zones. The
Russian side conveyed to the Western leaders in Minsk that Moscow had “full
respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine”. When the
latest agreement was signed, Debaltseve in the Donetsk province was already surrounded
by the eastern rebel forces. The control of the city is of tactical importance
for the rebel forces as it is a transportation hub connecting the eastern
cities of Luhansk and Donetsk. Poroshenko evidently hoped that the agreement
would allow his beleaguered troops in the city to hold on. The representatives
of eastern Ukrainians offered safe passage for the Ukrainian troops out of the
city. Aleksander Zakarchenko, a rebel leader, warned that the terms of the
ceasefire agreement did not cover Debaltseve. “Any attempt by Ukrainian armed
forces to unblock Debaltseve will be regarded as a violation of the Minsk
agreements,” he said. But Poroshenko had insisted that the Army was in control
of the city and ordered the troops to keep on fighting. Barely a week later,
the Ukrainian Army had to beat a hasty and blood-soaked retreat. Poroshenko now
claims that he ordered a “planned and orderly” retreat of the 8,000 Ukrainian
troops from the city. The Defence Ministry is claiming that 80 per cent
of the troops have returned safely.
The Ukrainian military seems to have suffered a huge setback. Poroshenko
claims that the casualties number only in double digits. He reacted to the
military setback by calling for the deployment of E.U. and United Nations
peacekeepers along Ukraine’s border with Russia. Moscow protested against the
demand immediately. Deployment of E.U. troops on the border would bring them in
direct confrontation with Russian forces. The Organisation of Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) has been given the task of supervising the
ceasefire. OSCE observers are already on the ground monitoring the ceasefire.
Earlier, Russian President Vladimir Putin issued a call to the Ukrainian Army
to stop firing. He asked the pro- Russian militias separately to allow
Ukrainian soldiers to leave the town peacefully. Putin has downplayed the fall
of Debaltseve and has urged the two sides in the conflict to “fully” implement
the ceasefire agreement he negotiated with the leaders of Germany and France.
The Donetsk People’s Republic Forces, which has captured Debaltseve,
claim that more than a thousand Ukrainian forces lost their lives in the
fighting. Poroshenko is already facing difficult questions about his decision
not to pull out troops immediately after the agreement was signed. In western
Ukraine, young people are refusing to be conscripted into the Army. The
disenchantment with politicians, who took over Kiev after the Maidan (independence
square in Kiev) putsch in 2014, seems to be growing. Poroshenko’s approval
ratings have taken a beating, with opinion polls showing that 46 per cent of
the people feel he is not doing a good job. Unemployment and inflation are at
an all-time high and the gross domestic product has shrunk by 6.5 per cent.
Many of those fighting alongside the Ukrainian Army are extreme
right-wing nationalists belonging to neo-Nazi groups such as the Right Sector.
A militia known as the Azov Battalion wears Nazi insignia on the uniforms and
helmets. Putin, while on a state visit to Hungary in the third week of
February, said he had credible information that Western powers had started supplying
lethal weapons to Ukraine. He said the flow of weapons would increase the casualty
rates “but the outcome will not change”. The Obama administration has tried to
pin the blame on Russia and the eastern Ukrainian rebels for the events that have
occurred since the signing of the Minsk II agreement. Ashton Carter, who
recently took over as the U.S. Defence Secretary, said he was inclined to
endorse the plan for dispatching more lethal weapons to the Ukrainian Army. The
European leaders argued against such a move, fearing that the conflict might
spiral out of control.
There are genuine fears in the international community that the conflict
in Ukraine could escalate into a bigger conflict involving Moscow and
Washington. Obama said he was seriously considering the option of sending more
sophisticated weapons to Ukraine. He has been warning Russia of adverse
consequences if it supported the mainly Russian-speaking rebels in eastern
Ukraine. Russia has denied that it has sent troops or heavy weaponry into Ukraine.
Putin insists that only Russian
volunteers are fighting in eastern Ukraine. But
if the U.S. and the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) go ahead and send
lethal weapons to Ukraine, Russia will not stand aside. The war of words between the U.S. and
Russia is escalating although the fighting in Ukraine has subsided following
the rebels’ capture of Debaltseve. A long-term solution to the Ukraine crisis
is possible if the West distances itself from the goal of incorporating Ukraine
into the E.U. and the NATO. Ukraine has to revert to its “non-aligned” status.
Otherwise, the civil war will turn into a “frozen conflict”, like the ones in
Georgia, Azerbaijan and Moldova, to name a few.
(Published in Frontline.in)
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