In a bizarre turn of events Tuesday, Russian and Ukrainian delegations taking part in peace negotiations in Istanbul appeared to have reached a breakthrough. But following a tepid response by Secretary of State Antony Blinken, contemptuously dismissing Russian peace overtures as nothing more than “delaying tactics” meant to “deceive people and deflect attention,” head of the Russian delegation Vladimir Medinsky walked back the earlier optimistic remarks, saying “a gradual military de-escalation does not necessarily mean an immediate ceasefire.”
Hours later on Tuesday evening, in what appeared to be
either a coincidence or a sabotage attempt, an ammunition depot across the
Ukraine border in Russia “mysteriously
exploded,” sending thick plumes of smoke into air, visible in videos posted
on social media, injuring
four Russian soldiers, and effectively pouring cold water over the optimism
generated by the likelihood of the success of the peace process between Ukraine
and Russia.
A Ukrainian missile appeared to have hit a temporary Russian
military encampment outside Belgorod, in Russia’s village of Krasny Oktyabr,
about 40 miles from the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv, said the Russian state-run
news agency Tass. The strike would only be the second that struck a military
target inside Russia and wounded soldiers. Last week, Tass reported two men were hurt
when a shell from Ukraine exploded in the same area.
The generous Russian offer scaling back its blitz north of
the capital and focusing instead on liberating Russian-majority Donbas region
in east Ukraine, a task that has already been accomplished in large measure, isn’t
the first time the Kremlin extended the hand of friendship to Kyiv. Last week,
Russia made a similar
peace gesture that wasn’t even dignified with a response by Western
policymakers and went almost unheeded in the establishment-controlled media.
Russian Deputy Defense Minister Alexander Fomin said the
offer to scale back military operations was a confidence building step for the
ongoing negotiations with Ukrainian officials in Istanbul. “In order to
increase mutual trust and create the necessary conditions for further
negotiations and achieving the ultimate goal of agreeing and signing an
agreement, a decision was made to radically, by a large margin, reduce military
activity in the Kyiv and Chernihiv directions,” Russian Deputy Defense Minister
leading the Russian peace delegation told reporters.
Ukrainian negotiators said that under
their proposals, Kyiv would agree not to join alliances or host bases of
foreign troops, but would have security guarantees in terms similar to Article
5, the collective defense clause of the transatlantic NATO military alliance.
The proposals, which would require a referendum in Ukraine,
mentioned a 15-year consultation period on the status of Crimea, annexed by
Russia in 2014. The fate of the southeastern Donbas region, which Russia
demands Ukraine cede to separatists, would be discussed by the Ukrainian and
Russian leaders.
Kyiv’s proposals also included one that Moscow would not
oppose Ukraine joining the European Union, Russia’s lead negotiator Vladimir
Medinsky said. Russia has previously opposed Ukrainian membership of the EU and
especially of the NATO military alliance. Medinsky said Russia’s delegation
would study and present the proposals to President Vladimir Putin.
Welcoming the Russian peace initiative, Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelensky said
Tuesday the signals from peace talks with Russia “could be called positive”
but added that Ukraine would not slacken its defensive efforts until it noticed
“concrete actions.”
It would be prudent, however, of the Ukrainian leader to get
rid of the duplicitous NATO interlocutors and try reaching a political
settlement to the conflict with Russia bilaterally if he wishes peace and
stability to prevail in the embattled country, because opportunistic NATO
leaders have their own axe to grind by taking advantage of the humanitarian
crisis unfolding in Ukraine.
The Biden administration doesn’t seem particularly enamored
of Russian peace proposal that could bring much-needed relief to the war-ravaged
country because, as the seasoned American politician and peace activist Ron
Paul aptly
observed, Washington’s policy appeared to be “fighting Russia down to the last
Ukrainian.”
While on a whirlwind Middle East trip in Morocco, Antony
Blinken, the charismatic secretary of state idolized by diplomatic community
for wavy salt-and-pepper hair and suave Parisian etiquette who has childishly refused
to diplomatically
engage with his counterpart Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov since
the start of the conflict on Feb. 24, derisively
mocked the diplomatic breakthrough achieved in Istanbul as nothing more
than “delaying tactics” meant to “deceive people and deflect attention.”
Paranoidly echoing the secretary of state’s imagined
apprehensions, the
Pentagon said Russia had started moving very small numbers of troops away
from positions around Kyiv, describing the move as more of a “repositioning”
than a withdrawal. “We all should be prepared to watch for a major offensive
against other areas of Ukraine,” Pentagon spokesman John Kirby told a news
briefing. “It does not mean that the threat to Kyiv is over.”
Not to be left behind in the collective Russophobic hysteria
inflicting Western policymaking circles and the mainstream media alike, Britain’s
defense
ministry said Moscow was being “forced to pull out troops” from the
vicinity of Kyiv to Russia and Belarus, to resupply and reorganize after “taking
heavy losses,” adding that Russia was likely to compensate for its reduced
ground maneuver capability through “mass artillery and missile strikes.”
“The combat potential of the Ukrainian Armed Forces has been
significantly reduced, which allows us to focus our main attention and efforts
on achieving the main goal—the liberation of Donbas,” Russian Defense Minister
Sergey Shoigu proudly boasted
Tuesday. He added that 123 of Ukraine's 152 fighter jets had been
destroyed, as well as 77 of its 149 helicopters and 152 of its 180 long- and
medium-range air defense systems, while its naval forces had been totally
eliminated.
It’s worth recalling that the Russian special military
operation, dubbed “Operation Z” by Vladimir Putin, wasn’t a full-scale war. It
was a calculated military incursion having well-defined security objectives: the
liberation of Donbas and denazification and demilitarization of Ukraine.
Those military objectives have already been achieved in
large measure, as not only the Russian-majority Donbas including Kherson and
Mariupol have been liberated but the battles are ongoing in the adjacent areas in
the northeast, Kharkiv and Sumy, that will hopefully fall soon.
Sergey Shoigu has already proved through facts and figures
how the country has been demilitarized with the combat potential of Ukraine’s
armed forces significantly reduced. As for denazification, Donbas was the hub
of neo-Nazi Azov, Right Sector, Dnipro 1 and 2, Aidar and myriad of other
ultra-nationalist militias funded, armed and trained
by the CIA since the 2014 Maidan coup toppling Ukrainian President Viktor
Yanukovych and consequent annexation of the Crimean Peninsula by Russia. With
the liberation of Donbas and deployment of Russian peacekeeping forces,
neo-Nazi militias wouldn’t find a foothold, at least, in east Ukraine bordering
Russia’s vulnerable western flank.
As for the “40-mile-long” convoy of battle tanks, armored
vehicles and heavy artillery that descended from Belorussia in the north and
reached the outskirts of Kyiv in the early days of the war without encountering
much resistance en route the capital, that was simply a power projection gambit
astutely designed as a diversionary tactic by Russia’s cunning military
strategists to deter Ukraine from sending reinforcements to Donbas in east
Ukraine, where real battles for territory were actually fought, and scramble to
defend the embattled country’s capital instead.
Except in the early days of the war when Russian airstrikes
and long-range artillery shelling targeted military infrastructure in the outskirts
of Kyiv to reduce the combat potential of Ukraine’s armed forces, the capital
did not witness much action during the month-long offensive. Otherwise, with
the tremendous firepower at its disposal, the world’s second most powerful
military had the demonstrable capability to reduce the whole city down to the
ashes.
What further lends credence to the indisputable fact that the
Russian assault on Kyiv was meant simply as a show of force rather than actual
military objective to occupy the capital is the factor that Belarusian troops
didn’t take part in the battle despite staging military exercises alongside
Russian forces before the invasion and despite the fact that Belarusian
President Aleksander Lukashenko is a dependable ally of the Russian strongman,
Vladimir Putin.
Although Russia lost the lives of 1,351 soldiers during the
war, as candidly admitted by the Russian defense ministry, the myth of
countless charred Russian tanks, armored vehicles and artillery pieces
littering the streets of Ukraine’s towns and cities is a downright fabrication
peddled by the corporate media as a psychological warfare tactic to insidiously
portray the losing side in the conflict as a winning side.
Besides the handful neo-Nazi militias and foreign
mercenaries fighting pitched battles against Russian forces in Donbas, the
much-touted “resistance” was nowhere to be found in the rest of Ukraine. As
soon as the war began last month, the “valiant resistance” fled across the
border to the safety of Poland, Romania and neighboring countries.
The opportunistic militant leaders of the virtually
nonexistent “resistance” are reaping windfalls by reportedly selling caches of
anti-aircraft and anti-armor munitions provided by NATO countries in the
thriving arms markets of Eastern Europe and buying opulent mansions in southern
France and Italy.
In the 2001 census, nearly a third of Ukraine’s over 40
million population registered Russian as their first language. In fact, Russian
speakers constitute a majority in urban areas of industrialized eastern Ukraine
and socio-culturally identify with Russia. Ukrainian speakers are mainly found
in sparsely populated western Ukraine and in rural areas of east Ukraine.
Russian, Belarusian and Ukrainian together belong to the
East Slavic family of languages and share a degree of mutual intelligibility.
Thus, Russians, Byelorussians and Ukrainians are one nation and one country
whose shared history and culture goes all the way back to the golden period of
the 10th century Kyivan Rus’.
In addition, Russians and Ukrainians share Byzantine
heritage and together belong to the Greek Orthodox Church, one of the oldest
Christian denominations whose history can be traced back to the Christ and his
apostles. Protestantism and Catholicism are products of the second millennium
after a Roman bishop of the Byzantine Empire declared himself Pope following
the 1054 schism between the Orthodox and Catholic Churches.
In comparison, what do Ukrainians have in common with NATO
powers, their newfound patrons, besides the fact that humanitarian imperialists
are attempting to douse fire by pouring gasoline on Ukraine’s proxy war by
providing caches of lethal weapons to militant forces holding disenfranchised
Ukrainian masses hostage.
While addressing a meeting on socioeconomic support for the
constituent entities of the Russian Federation on March 16, Russian President
Vladimir Putin succinctly elucidated the salient reasons for pre-emptively
mounting a military intervention in Ukraine in order to forestall NATO’s
encroachment upon Russia’s security interests. Here are a few trenchant
excerpts from the lucid and eloquent
speech:
“We are meeting in a complicated period as our Armed Forces
are conducting a special military operation in Ukraine and Donbass. I would
like to remind you that at the beginning, on the morning of February 24, I publicly
announced the reasons for and the main goal of Russia’s actions.
“It is to help our people in Donbass, who have been
subjected to real genocide for nearly eight years in the most barbarous ways,
that is, through blockade, large-scale punitive operations, terrorist attacks
and constant artillery raids. Their only guilt was that they demanded basic
human rights: to live according to their forefathers’ laws and traditions, to
speak their native Russian language, and to bring up their children as they
want.
“Kiev was not just preparing for war, for aggression against
Russia – it was conducting it … Hostilities in Donbass and the shelling of
peaceful residential areas have continued all these years. Almost 14,000
civilians, including children have been killed over this time … Clearly, Kiev’s
Western patrons are just pushing them to continue the bloodshed. They
incessantly supply Kiev with weapons and intelligence, as well as other types
of assistance, including military advisers and mercenaries.
“Just like in the 1990s and the early 2000s, they want to try again to finish us off, to reduce us to nothing by turning us into a weak and dependent country, destroying our territorial integrity and dismembering Russia as they see fit. The failed then and they will fail this time … Yes, of course, they will back the so-called fifth column, national traitors – those who make money here in our country but live over there, and live not in the geographical sense of the word but in their minds, in their servile mentality.”
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