Fielding questions during a live phone-in last month, President
Vladimir Putin described regions of eastern and southern Ukraine as a
“New Russia” that could one day return to Moscow’s control.
Now that vision is taking shape.
Russia’s widely condemned annexation of Crimea in March and Putin’s
increasing rhetoric about protecting Russian-speakers abroad had raised
fears the Kremlin was gearing up to seize new territory.
Those
worries were allayed when Russian troops failed to pour over the border
after separatists in the eastern regions of Donetsk and Lugansk said
weekend referendums had overwhelmingly backed breaking away from
Ukraine.
Putin’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov insisted Wednesday that Moscow
had “no intention” of sending in troops to eastern Ukraine.
While denying Russian troops were in the restive regions, Putin
recalled that after its conquest in tsarist times the territory from
Donetsk to Odessa was known as Novorossiya — New Russia.
Won by Russia in famous battles led by Catherine the Great and her
favourite Grigory Potemkin, eastern and southern Ukraine only ended up
as part of the country after the territory was transferred by the
Bolsheviks in the 1920s, Putin said.
“Why they did this, God only knows,” he lamented.
After the weekend votes in the east, the rebels moved quickly to
stake their claim to joining Russia, with Donetsk separatist chief Denis
Pushilin declaring they were seeking to “restore historic justice” —
echoing a term Putin used to describe Russia’s annexation of Crimea in
March.
The separatists have promised to hold referendums on joining Russia.
“It is for all the population of the ‘People’s Republic of Lugansk’
to make their voices heard on questions of such importance,” news agency
RIA Novosti quoted the head of local rebel forces, Vasily Nikitin, as
saying.
But votes on joining Russia are unlikely to have any more
international weight than the independence referendums, which were
dismissed as a “farce” by authorities in Kiev and declared illegal by
the West.
- ‘New means of pressure’ -
The “New Russia” idea has taken hold in the regions however, with the
self-styled governor of Donetsk, Pavlo Gubarev, using the term this
week.
He told the Russia-24 news channel the newly declared “People’s
Republic of Donetsk” was “only the first step towards the great New
Russia in the ‘ex-east of Ukraine’.”
Even if they claim to control large parts of Donetsk and Lugansk, the separatists are a long way from realising their dream.
Ukrainian forces remain in control of the region’s military bases and
border posts and, despite intense fighting, the rebels could not
withstand a full assault without Moscow’s help.
Analysts said that, for now, Putin may be content with putting his
“New Russia” dream on hold and using instability in eastern Ukraine
against Kiev.
As long as Kiev remains unable to claim full control of Ukrainian
territory, Moscow can undermine the legitimacy of a pro-Western
government it despises for overthrowing Kremlin-backed authorities
earlier this year.
“The Kremlin doesn’t need the Donetsk and Lugansk regions right now —
it already has to deal with Crimea,” said Konstantin Kalachev, head of
the Moscow-based Political Expert Group.
“Now it has a new means of pressure on everyone.”
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