Putin resumes his chiseling of Ukraine

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Russia took another significant step toward creating a puppet state inside Ukraine. During the weekend, the Moscow-controlled cities of Donetsk and Luhansk and nearby areas staged “elections” for the leaders of what Russian President Vladimir Putin calls Novorossiya.

Russia took another significant step toward creating a puppet state inside Ukraine. During the weekend, the Moscow-controlled cities of Donetsk and Luhansk and nearby areas staged “elections” for the leaders of what Russian President Vladimir Putin calls Novorossiya.

In so doing, they directly violated a Sept. 5 cease-fire agreement for eastern Ukraine that Putin endorsed. Having promised to respect Ukrainian sovereignty (not counting Crimea), Russia now supports the renegade election and says the Ukrainian government should negotiate with separatist leaders.

Meanwhile, Russia and its proxies appear to be preparing for a new round of aggression. On Sunday, the Kiev government and Western journalists reported a renewed flow of troops and armor from Russia into the Donetsk area. Buzzfeed correspondent Max Seddon reported seeing a column of 31 unmarked military trucks along with “anti-aircraft weapons, ammunition boxes, radar systems, (and) a bus of gunmen.” This is another violation of the cease-fire agreement, which called for the withdrawal of Russian weapons and troops from Ukraine and the sealing of the border under international observation.

It’s not hard to guess what Mr. Putin has in mind.

As it stands, the Donetsk-Luhansk ministates are not easily sustained; they lack a port, power supplies and access to the region’s principal airport. Alexander Zakharchenko, declared the winner in the “Donetsk People’s Republic,” is on record as saying his regime intends to capture the Ukrainian-controlled port of Mariupol as well as several large towns retaken by government forces last summer. In violation of the cease-fire, Russian-led forces already have been fighting to capture the Donetsk airport.

Once “Novorossiya” is consolidated, Putin will have achieved his principal strategic aim in Ukraine. He already incorporated a sizable piece of Ukraine, the Crimean Peninsula, into Russia, and human rights assaults on the Tatar minority there go pretty much unremarked in the West. Now, he will be able to use the territory he controls in eastern Ukraine to permanently destabilize the government in Kiev and ensure it does not fulfill its mandate to economically integrate Ukraine with the European Union. It’s the same strategy he has pursued in Georgia and Moldova, where “frozen conflicts” created and sustained by Russia have endured for decades.

If the Obama administration and its European Union allies have a plan to prevent Putin from completing this coup, it isn’t evident. The Kremlin shrugged off Western sanctions while compensating Putin’s cronies for their losses. U.S. and German spokesmen denounced the weekend elections, and Berlin vaguely threatened further sanctions. But both governments refused Ukraine’s increasingly desperate requests for military assistance, including defensive weapons, that might deter a new Russian offensive.

On Monday, Vice President Joe Biden went out of his way to correct himself after saying Russia “invaded” Ukraine; the White House still bans that term, as if lexicological make-believe will somehow erase the thousands of Russian troops stationed inside Ukraine. More worrying is the administration’s make-believe about its policy, which officials actually seem to think has been a success. Biden said of the crisis: “We’ve put it under control.” In fact, a big chunk of eastern Ukraine is now under the control of Putin — and it will be Moscow, not the White House, that determines what happens next.

— Washington Post