Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Ukraine And The Conflict In South Ossetia

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Ukraine And The Conflict In South Ossetia

    UKRAINE AND THE CONFLICT IN SOUTH OSSETIA
    By Roman Kupchinsky

    Eurasia Daily Monitor
    Monday, August 11, 2008
    DC

    In the morning of August 10, the Ukrainian Ministry of Foreign Affairs
    informed its Russian counterpart that in order to prevent Ukraine from
    being drawn into an armed conflict, Ukraine might take measures to
    prevent the Russian Black Sea Fleet (RBSF) vessels from returning to
    their base in Sevastopol in the Crimea if they were involved in combat
    operations against Georgia. This ban might last until the conflict in
    South Ossetia is "regulated," the website of the Ministry of Foreign
    Affairs of Ukraine stated.

    Two days earlier, on August 8, the, troop landing ship Yamal left
    Sevastopol for the Russian port of Novorossiysk, according to a report
    on the www.proUA.com website which also noted that a large contingent
    of ships from the RBSF that had taken part in the military exercise
    Caucasus-2008 in late July did not return to Sevastopol but remained
    in Novorossiysk (www.proUA.com, August 10).

    Western media reported that on the night of August 9, Russian troops
    had been put ashore from warships into the disputed territory of
    Abkhazia.

    On August 9 the flagship of the RBSF, the cruiser Moskva, with the
    commanding admiral of the fleet, Alexander Kletskov aboard, sailed
    from Sevastopol. It was accompanied by the destroyer Smetlivy and the
    anti-submarine ships Muromets and the Aleksandrovets, along with an
    assortment of support vessels.

    As the situation on the ground in South Ossetia rapidly deteriorated,
    Georgian National Security Council Secretary Alexander Lomaia told
    the media that the Russian navy was blocking Georgian ports and
    preventing ships laden with grain and fuel from entering. Meanwhile,
    Interfax reported that "The navy was ordered not to allow supplies
    of weapons and military hardware into Georgia by sea."

    On August 10, however, Novosti Press Agency quoted an unnamed, highly
    placed source in the General Staff of the Russian navy as saying that
    the role of the RBSF in the conflict was to merely "provide aid to
    refugees" and strongly denied that Russian ships were blockading the
    Georgian coast. "A blockade of the coast would mean that we were at
    war with Georgia...which we are not," the source was quoted as saying.

    The question of what type of humanitarian role the cruiser Moskva,
    armed with 16 cruise missiles, torpedoes and an assortment of other
    sophisticated weaponry, could play was not raised.

    Ukraine's threat elicited a quick response from the Russian
    side. Anatoly Nagovitsin, the deputy head of the General Staff of the
    Russian armed forces, was quoted by UNIAN press agency on August 10
    as saying that the Ukrainian statement "needed reworking," adding that
    thus far the RBSF was not engaged in military actions against Georgian
    ships but that this could possibly change along with the situation.

    Later that day, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Gregory Karasin told
    a press conference in Moscow that the Russian foreign ministry would
    begin talks with Ukraine on the return of the RBSF to Sevastopol,
    adding that Russian ships were close to Abkhaz territorial waters in
    order to prevent a situation similar to the one in South Ossetia from
    taking place in Abkhazia (UNIAN, August 10, 2008).

    Russian statements took on more ominous tones later that evening
    after Russian troops began an assault on the Georgian city of
    Gori. The Ukrayinska Pravda website quoted a spokesman for the
    Russian Foreign Ministry as saying, "The actions by the Ukrainian
    side are contrary to Ukrainian-Russian agreements and are hostile to
    the Russian Federation." At approximately the same time, Interfax,
    citing information released by the Russian navy, reported that a
    Georgian military ship had been sunk by the Russian fleet off the
    coast of Abkhazia.

    The Ukrainian move seems to have come as a nasty surprise for the
    Kremlin and the Russian General Staff, but it is also a risky one
    for Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko. Throughout Yushchenko's
    presidency, Ukraine and Georgia have been exceptionally close. They
    both applied for a Membership Action Plan in order to join NATO as
    part of their pro-Western policies, and both were rejected. Ukrainian
    arms sales to Georgia have been bitterly criticized by Russia, which
    claims that the arms were being used by Georgia for "ethnic cleansing."

    As recently as mid-July, Ukrainian, Azeri, Armenian and U.S. troops
    took part in a large scale Georgian military exercise, "Immediate
    Response 2008," which was planned by the U.S. Armed Forces European
    Command and financed by the U.S. Defense Department.

    If the Ukrainian leadership goes through with its threat to close
    off Sevastopol to Russian ships returning from the Georgian coast,
    a host of problems might arise.

    The political situation on the Crimean peninsula, never favorable
    for Kyiv, could deteriorate further and increase calls by Russian
    politicians not to renew the 1997 Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation,
    and Partnership by which Russia recognized the present borders of
    Ukraine and which is due to expire in December 2008.

    If the treaty expires, the consequences could be severe, since this
    treaty, in addition to Nikita Khrushchev's handover of the territory
    to Ukraine in 1954, legalized Ukrainian claims to the Crimea. This
    could pave the way for renewed calls by Russian politicians and
    military leaders to annex the peninsula.

    Another problem that is sure to become aggravated is the continuing
    dispute between Kyiv and Moscow over the Russian lease of the RBSF
    base in Sevastopol, which is due to expire in 2017. Ukraine does not
    want to extend the lease, and the Russians insist that it be prolonged.

    But the main question worrying the West and the Ukrainian leadership
    is that an emboldened nationalistic Russia might decide to come to the
    "rescue" of the predominantly Russian population in the Crimea just
    as it "came to the rescue" of the South Ossetians and Abkhaz.

    Such a scenario could conceivably force Kyiv to defend its territorial
    integrity and declare war on Russia, which would have enormous
    repercussions around the world.
Working...
X