Image via Azov Batallion, Ucrainie.
By Wording OD
Russia is warning that Kiev may launch a new offensive against supporters of the self-proclaimed republics in the Donbass region of eastern Ukraine. Moscow is urging Paris and Berlin to put pressure on the Ukrainian authorities to prevent a potential renewal of violence.
As hostilities threaten to break out again in eastern Ukraine, Moscow
is warning that Kiev may be on the verge of launching a new offensive
against the self-proclaimed rebel republics in the region.
At a meeting with the German and French ambassadors on July 6,
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin told them that
heightened tensions in the Donbass indicate that the Ukrainian troops
are preparing for action to try and take back territory occupied by
Russian-backed rebels as part of a two-year-old conflict with the
central government in Kiev.
Karasin urged the two ambassadors, who represent the two countries
whose leaders – alongside the presidents of Russia and Ukraine – form
the four-party negotiating group for resolving the Donbass crisis, “to
exercise their influence to put pressure on Kiev in order to prevent a
military scenario…”
On the following day, the situation in eastern Ukraine was discussed
in a telephone conversation between Russian President Vladimir Putin and
his U.S. counterpart Barack Obama.
This time, a similar appeal was made to the Russian leader in
relation to the rebel regimes in Donetsk and Lugansk, which enjoy
Moscow’s patronage. Obama asked Putin to “take measures to end the significant uptick in fighting in eastern Ukraine.”
Fears regarding a dramatic increase in hostilities in the Donbass
were voiced not only in Russia but in Ukraine too. Kiev linked this
eventuality to the Kremlin’s desire to destabilize the situation in
Ukraine as a whole and in the Donbass in particular. Ukrainian parliamentary speaker Andrei Parubiy said that Moscow may be tempted to do it against the backdrop of “the U.S. election and the crisis in the EU.”
Rise in ceasefire violations
There is no doubt in any quarters that tensions along the contact
line in the Donbass have risen recently. According to media reports,
over the past several weeks, reports of shelling in the region have risen by a third, while the OSCE is also reporting more frequent ceasefire violations.
At the same time, Russian experts do not believe there are grounds to
say that the Ukrainian military are preparing a large-scale offensive
on the rebel-held areas of the Donbass.
According to Vladimir Yevseyev, deputy head of the CIS Institute,
“one should not be saying that Kiev is deploying a large number of
troops.” Rather, he said, one could talk of acts of provocation staged
by radicals (there are many fighters from volunteer detachments at the
contact line known for their radical views) who are keen to see
relations between Russia and the West deteriorate.
Viktor Murakhovsky, a military expert and editor-in-chief of the Arsenal Otechestva
(Arsenal of the Fatherland) magazine, told RBTH that he had no data to
confirm that the Ukrainian side is preparing “a large-scale military
action.”
Meanwhile, Alexander Khramchikhin, deputy head of the Moscow-based
Institute of Political and Military Analysis, pointed out that despite
the lack of reports that Kiev is preparing an offensive, hostilities in
Donbass have never really stopped and a real war “could flare up once
again at any moment.”
Khramchikhin attributes this to the fact that neither of the parties
is satisfied with the status quo – both Kiev and the rebel regions would
like to have more.
‘Pointless outcome’
Russia continued its attempts to appeal to Germany and France on July 8, this time at a more senior level.
In a telephone conversation with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and
French President Francois Hollande, Vladimir Putin urged them to put
pressure on Kiev to get the Ukrainian military to end “actions of
provocative nature.”
Murakhovsky pointed out that “the Ukrainian side from time to time
uses local operations to train its units, including with the use of
heavy weaponry.”
This is particularly relevant for the volunteer battalions, he added,
citing recent clashes near the key railway junction of Debaltseve,
previously held by Ukrainian forces but controlled by the rebels since
February 2015.
In the action, two companies of Ukrainian government troops tried to
occupy the neutral zone but were repelled and had to retreat,
Murakhovsky explained.
“From the military point of view, the outcome [of that operation] was absolutely pointless,” he said.
Source:RBTH.com Russia.
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