Russia’s Blueprint
for Invasion and Assimilation of Ukraine
Novaya Gazeta, a Russian newspaper partly owned by Kremlin
critic Alexander Lebedev, published on February 24 an article about a Kremlin
policy paper that it said came into its possession. The document apparently
laid the groundwork and justification for Russia’s invasion and conquest of
Ukraine.
Presumably, by making the paper public, the newspaper’s
editors believe in its credibility or at least newsworthiness. Its revelation
received a lot of press in Ukraine and the free world. Even The New York Times
reported its existence a couple of days later.
According to the editors of Novaya Gazeta, the Kremlin’s blueprint for invading and
re-subjugating Ukraine was circulated within the highest echelons of
Russia’s leadership some two weeks before Viktor
Yanukovych decided that it was better for his personal welfare to flee
Ukraine on February 22, 2014. A day later, Russian troops invaded Ukraine via
Crimea and we witnessed a video of a lightly armed and outmatched Ukrainian
garrison, commanded by Col. Yuriy
Mamchur, that bravely refused to surrender to Russian invaders, while
singing the Ukrainian national anthem.
The plans outlined in the policy paper are plausible because
they verify Russia’s historical intention
to dominate the former captive nations, beginning with Ukraine, which has
always been considered by Russian officials and third-party pundits as the
crown jewel, without which Vladimir Putin or whoever occupies the head of the
Kremlin’s table could not begin to plan the restoration of the Russian empire.
I do not think the paper set in motion the Russian military
machine’s execution of the invasion plans. Even plans for D-Day were set in
motion in May 1943 – some 13 months ahead of the Allied invasion of Nazi
strongholds in Europe.
Indeed, writing about the Russo-Ukraine War of 2014-15, I noted that Putin had threatened
Ukraine with the reformation of the Russian prison of nations in the summer of
2013, when he visited Kyiv for the anniversary of Christianity in Ukraine. He
was quite adamant in his admonition to so-called Ukrainian leaders headed by
his minion Viktor Yanukovych that if Ukraine accedes to the European Union,
Russia’s response would not be pleasant for Kyiv. Yanukovych ultimately did
renege on his promise to sign the already negotiated and prepared accession
documents in the fall of 2013, which triggered national student demonstrations,
the destruction of Lenin monuments around Ukraine, killings on Maidan, and the
Maidan revolution which ultimately ousted Yanukovych. Then the undeclared Russo-Ukraine
war of 2014-15 began with the invasion of Crimea.
The policy paper reads like a justification after the
decision and plans for an invasion had been finalized.
The editors of Novaya Gazeta noted: “Moreover, if genuine,
the paper gives insight into the shortcomings of Russian intelligence about the
Maidan in Ukraine and the Kremlin’s lack of understanding of Ukrainian national
feeling in eastern parts of the country, as well as the strength of influence
of Ukrainian oligarchs on political events.”
Russia believed that eastern Ukrainians at least would greet
the invading Russian soldiers and mercenaries like liberators rather than
aggressors and criminals. The invasion and war seem to be poorly planned when
reviewed on the basis of the Ukraine’s strong military response, the nation’s deep
moral, spiritual and political support for repulsing the Russian invaders and
the free world leaders’ vocal support for Ukraine, condemnation of Putin and
Russia, and western sanctions against Russia which have contributed to its
monumental economic collapse. Russian planning was further muddied by the murder of Borys Nemtsov who was on the
verge of revealing irrefutable proof of Russia’s direct involvement in the
invasion of Ukraine.
However, Russian leaders, especially Putin, have not been
known for committing such fatal errors. Perhaps this justification after the
fact was meant as another smokescreen to confuse the free world and throw it
off the trail of Moscow’s intentions. Perhaps Putin is simply following through
with his plan to re-subjugate Ukraine and the other former captive nations and
restore the Russian empire-prison of nations regardless of what the free world
thinks of him.
Still, the concepts of invasion of Ukraine and its
integration into Russia permeate the document, confirming its national fixation.
The Kremlin leaders demonstrated fear and concern that
events in Ukraine are snowballing toward chaos, which would vacate their
control over their forcer captive nations. They
blamed Yanukovych, Russia’s stooge,
who suffered the brunt of Moscow’s disdain for what was happening in Ukraine,
as well as the events surrounding what has simply come to be known as Maidan.
Ultimately, they said they feared losing revenue from a major buyer of Russian
energy products.
“The assessment of the political situation in Ukraine should
be primarily based on recognizing the bankruptcy of [Ukraine’s] President
Viktor Yanukovych and his ruling ‘family,’ which is rapidly losing control of
the political process;
“Secondly, the paralysis of the central government and lack
of a distinctive political body which the Russian Federation could negotiate
with;
“Thirdly, the low probability of such an acceptable body
emerging after the snap parliamentary and presidential elections announced by
Viktor Yanukovych on February 4,” the authors wrote.
They also observed: “The non-systemic opposition (the
so-called Maidan) remains beyond the control of the leaders of the systemic
opposition, as the ‘warlords’ (mostly, football fans and people from the world
of organized crime) (strange and
inaccurate assessment – ID) set the tone there, while not having electoral
influence, and apparently, controlled not so much by the oligarchic groups, but
largely by the Polish and British intelligence services (the Poles and Brits were not blamed as much as the US—ID). At the
same time, many oligarchic groups are funding Maidan, so as ‘not to put all
one’s eggs in one basket.’
“President V.
Yanukovych is a man of low morals and willpower – he is afraid to give up
the presidency and yet at the same time he is ready to ‘give up’ on the
security forces in exchange for a guarantee of him remaining president and
having immunity after leaving office.”
A couple of pages later, the authors predicted Yanukovych’s
impending political demise. “Current events in Kyiv convincingly show that
Yanukovych’s time in power could end at any moment. Thus, there is less and
less time for an appropriate Russian response. The number of dead in riots in
the capital of Ukraine is direct evidence of the inevitability of civil war and
the impossibility of reaching consensus if Yanukovych remains president. In
these circumstances, it seems appropriate to play along the centrifugal
aspirations of the various regions of the country, with a view to initiate the
accession of its eastern regions to Russia, in one form or another. Crimea and
Kharkiv region should become the dominant regions for making such efforts, as
there already exist reasonably large groups there that support the idea of
maximum integration with Russia.”
It is obvious that Russia hoped to use to its advantage any
political calamity in Ukraine and force ripping apart the country perhaps as
the first step to seizing all of Ukraine up to the Polish and Belarusian
borders.
The Kremlin also did not place any confidence in the
Ukrainian Armed Forces. Perhaps not surprisingly inasmuch as many sources in
Ukraine have pointed out that by this time Yanukovych and his junta had weakened
the army to a poorly armed, demoralized rabble. In hindsight, perhaps his
mission was to destroy the army so that Russia and its terrorist mercenaries
could easily sweep across Ukraine.
“The position of Ukraine’s army is even more ambiguous.
According to an employee of Ukraine’s Defense Ministry, the army is ‘locked in
barracks while the officers guard the weapons depots so that, God forbid, they
do not fall into the hands of contract soldiers, who in this case would start
shooting at each other,’” the authors indicated.
If this statement is true, the army or what was left of it
would not be able to defend the nation from snipers, criminals, saboteurs and
Russian soldiers, leaving the country ripe for the picking. Fortunately, the
opposite proved true and the army, National Guard and volunteer battalions
managed to hold their own against Russian invaders.
Moscow noted that the so-called snap parliamentary and presidential
elections “could become the trigger for a new round of protest- and
assault-like civil war, the deepening of the ‘east-west’ electoral division and
ultimately accelerate Ukraine’s
disintegration.”
The seemingly sympathetic concern wanes in view of today’s
Russian war with Ukraine. More likely Moscow understood that it could no longer
control elections in Ukraine like in the past and bring to power another puppet
leader that the Kremlin could manipulate.
The authors stated that “Russia’s policy toward Ukraine must
finally become pragmatic.” Part of its pragmatism rested in the conclusion that
Yanukovych was useless. They wrote:
“First, the regime of Viktor Yanukovych has gone totally
bankrupt. Its political, diplomatic, financial, and information support from
the Russian Federation is no longer meaningful.
“Second, as a sporadic civil war in the form of urban
guerrilla of the so-called ‘supporters of the Maidan’ against the leadership of
a number of the country’s eastern regions has become a fact, while the
disintegration of the Ukrainian state along the line of geographical
demarcation of regional alliances – ‘western regions plus Kyiv’ and ‘eastern
regions plus Crimea’ - has become part of the political agenda, [and] in these
circumstances, Russia should in no way limit its policy toward Ukraine only to
attempts to influence the political situation in Kyiv and the relationship of a
systemic opposition (A. Yatsenyuk, V. Klitschko, O. Tyahnybok, P . Poroshenko,
etc.) with the European Commission.
“Third, in an almost complete paralysis of the central
government, unable to form a responsible government even facing threats of
default and of Naftogaz lacking funds to pay for Russian gas, Russia is simply
obliged to get involved in the geopolitical intrigue of the European Community
directed against the territorial integrity of Ukraine.
“First of all, this is because otherwise our country risks
losing not only the Ukrainian energy market, but also indirect control over
Ukraine’s gas transportation system, which is much more dangerous. This will
endanger the position of Gazprom in Central and Southern Europe, causing huge
damage to our country’s economy.”
Russian planners also discounted using the Constitution of
Ukraine as a mechanism for legitimately initiating the integration of Ukraine’s
eastern territories and Crimea into the Russian Federation. If Putin and his
junta couldn’t use Ukrainian laws as a Plan B for their diabolical goal of
absorbing Ukrainian territory into Ukraine, then they would be set with their original
scheme of invading Ukraine.
Still this essay discuses another legal avenue for
integrating Ukraine into Russia, which the authors admitted sounded
paradoxical. The authors had in mind
“the system of Russian-Ukrainian Euroregions, members of the Association of
European Border Regions (which, in turn, is a member of the Assembly of
European Regions). For example, the Donbas Euroregion includes the Donetsk,
Luhansk, Rostov and Voronezh regions, the Slobozhanshchina Euroregion includes
the Kharkiv and Belgorod regions, the Dnepr Euroregion includes the Bryansk and
Chernihiv regions, and so on.
“Using the legal
instruments of the Euroregions, legitimate from the EU’s perspective,
Russia should press for signing agreements on cross-border and trans-border
cooperation, and then establish direct public-contractual relations with those
Ukrainian territories where a pro-Russia electoral mood is prevalent.”
With a measure of foresight, the authors suggested that in the
process of what they called “pro-Russian
drift” of Crimea and eastern Ukraine, “certain events should be created
beforehand that can support this process with political legitimacy and moral
justification; also a PR strategy should be built that draws attention to the
forced, reactive nature of the actions of Russia and the pro-Russian political
elites of southern and eastern Ukraine.”
The plan also called for subverting the nation by fomenting anti-Kyiv and anti-Ukraine
demonstrations in eastern Ukraine, during which regional residents would
proclaim that they “can’t be held hostage to the Maidan. Ukraine’s unitary
state system, which allows a violent nationalist minority of the population to
impose its choice throughout the country, should be reconsidered. Russia is a
federal state, and such a thing is unthinkable there. Strengthening the
state-legal ties with Russia, we will strengthen the integrity of the Ukrainian
state.”
With Russian flags in their hands, the demonstrators were to be instructed not to insist on changing the
constitutional order. “They should impute strong condemnation of ‘Western
separatists, jeopardizing the country’s territorial integrity at the will of
their foreign masters,’ as well as the demands for the swift development of
‘associative relations between the eastern regions of Ukraine and the Russian
Federation:’ ‘We are with Russia. No to civil war.’”
The protesters were to be trained to repeat three demands:
* A demand for
“federalization” (or confederation) as a guarantee for these regions against
the pro-Western and nationalist forces interfering in their internal affairs;
* The eastern and
south-eastern areas joining the Customs Union at the regional level
independently from Kyiv, which will provide for the necessary conditions for
their industry’s normal operation and development;
* Direct
sovereignty, followed by accession to Russia - the only guarantor of
sustainable economic development and social stability.
The authors suggested that the pro-Russian integration
process must be institutionalized and legally registered with local referendums
that would decide “self-determination and further possibility of joining the
Russian Federation.”
Returning to its outreach effort, the authors urged a
PR-campaign in the Russian and Ukrainian media.
“This includes developing and giving out to the media
concept documents, a kind of manifesto of the eastern Ukrainian and western
Ukrainian separatism. The general public in Russia should speak up in support
of the accession of the eastern regions of Ukraine to Russia (a possible slogan
‘Putin 2.0 – we want a Treaty of Pereyaslav
2.0’).”
Clever of them to use computer lingo in their policy paper.
They could have added Tyranny 2.0, Russian
Imperialism 2.0, Russification 2.0, and No Democracy 2.0
However, any Russian PR campaign would be doomed to failure
because the free world realizes that its media disseminates deceit, lies and
fabrications in place of news and credible information.
Novaya Gazeta’s editors correctly pointed out that the
report is “drafted in a pragmatic, almost cynical style. It has no
‘spiritual-historical’ justification for Russian interference in Ukraine. No
arguments about Novorossiya, the protection of the Russian-speaking population,
the ‘Russian World’ and the upcoming Russian Spring. There is only geopolitics
and cold expediency.”
The absence of defending the pro-Russian population in
eastern Ukraine is especially odd inasmuch as Putin, Lavrov, Churkin and other
Russian officials have used that argument as justification for invading Ukraine
on two fronts.
Novaya Gazeta editor’s further point out that “The
document’s authors made a significant error in determining the territories most
ready to unite with the Russian regions: they name Crimea and Kharkiv region,
considering Donetsk region, ‘Akhmetov’s empire,’ less promising. Reality has
altered these calculations. But in general, the scheme was implemented.”
The Kremlin’s policy paper accentuates Russia’s overall age-old goal of destabilizing Ukraine, dividing
the country and integrating its pieces into Russia, and restoring the Russian
empire. This mission is its national obsession.
Russian leaders were fixated by the goal of seizing foreign lands, then
maintaining the empire, and now since they have lost the captive nations by restoring
the empire. Regardless of the reason – acquisition of warm water ports, forming
an anti-NATO buffer, protecting its realm, maintaining an energy customer or
recovering its crown jewel, Putin or whoever occupies the head of the table in
the Kremlin will not abandon what they consider their sacred mission.
Ukraine and the free world, acquainted with this plan, must
not abandon their defensive ramparts.
It would be foolhardy to treat this blueprint with derision.