MOSCOW:
Russian President Vladimir Putin has taken a gamble on Ukraine and is
betting that US President Barack Obama will blink first.
Wounded
by a personal political defeat in a battle for influence over Russia's
Slavic neighbour, Putin is fighting back, and presenting the crisis as a
question of symmetry.
In
his view, the West "stood by" and allowed armed men to direct events in
the capital Kiev now he is "standing by" as armed men extended their
control over the Crimea region.
The
former KGB spy blames the West for stirring passions in Kiev,
encouraging an opposition to break agreements to restore peace and
allowing what Moscow calls "extremists" and "fascists" to dictate
political developments in Ukraine.
Now authorised by parliament to deploy Russia's military in Ukraine to protect national interests and those of Russian citizens.
Putin
is taking on a West he feels has cut Moscow out of talks on the future
of Russia's Orthodox Christian brothers. How far he will go is the big
question.
While Moscow
has put 150,000 troops on high alert near Ukraine's border, it has
shown no signs, yet, of sending them and denies Ukrainian allegations it
sent the protesters who have hoisted Russian flags in some eastern
towns.
Putin is saying
nothing in public on Ukraine and has not done so since Moscow-backed
President Viktor Yanukovich was deposed more than a week ago.
At
the centre of attention as one Western leader after another calls to
urge him not to use force, he is betting the West's response will be
weak.
His calculation
is that Obama has few levers at his disposal and no appetite for war
over a remote Black Sea peninsula with symbolic and strategic value to
Russia as home to a Russian naval base, but little economic
significance.
The two presidents spoke by phone for 90 minutes on Saturday. The call appeared to have ended in a stalemate. R
ECLAIMING "LOST" TERRITORY:
Putin
is banking on salvaging something out of a battle over Ukraine that he
appeared to have won when Yanukovich spurned trade and political deals
with the European Union in November, but then seemed to lose when
Yanukovich was ousted after three months of protests.
"The
West told Putin to get lost over Ukraine," said Sergei Markov, a
pro-Putin political analyst and director of the Institute for Political
Studies in Moscow, underlining the depth of hurt Putin felt over
Ukraine.
Accusing
Western powers and international organisations of trying to ignore
Moscow in talks on financial assistance for Kiev, Markov said: "What we
are saying is that if there are any UN, IMF, G8 agreements without
consultations with us, then we will see them as illegitimate."
Reclaiming
Crimea, a former Russian territory handed to Ukraine by Soviet leader
Nikita Khrushchev in 1954, would win Putin kudos among core voters and
especially nationalists.
If
the status quo established in the last few days holds, with Russian
forces already in charge in Crimea, he can hope to have won back Crimea
without a shot being fired in anger or the necessity of taking on
another drain to the state coffers.
Even
if a pullback is forced on him, Putin will still portray himself as the
defender of national interests and those of Russians abroad. In the
eyes of many voters, he hopes, he will not have given up Ukraine without
a fight.
While he has
been busy defending national interests, his lieutenants have been
lambasting the West over Ukraine, accusing it of manipulating events and
working with a government chosen by gun-toting "extremists".
Combined
with an orchestrated wave of nationalist indignation over attempts to
limit use of the Russian language and persecute Russians in a country
many consider an extension of their own, Putin's stance plays well at
home.
His insistence
that Ukraine's new leaders stick to the terms of a European
Union-brokered political agreement last month with Yanukovich goes down
well.
This month, his
popularity ratings have bounced back to almost 70 percent, according to
an opinion poll by independent pollster Levada.
"Putin has not forgiven the fact that the agreement was not fulfilled and that is one of his greatest motivations.
He
considers he is acting in a symmetrical way," said Gleb Pavlovsky, a
former Kremlin spin doctor. "I think that the authorities think it's
very helpful that people are getting themselves worked up about this.
And
the majority feel in a patriotic mood about Crimea and Ukraine. I think
it's positive for the Kremlin. They won't refuse action."
ACTION?
Whether
he takes action may still depend on the West. Military intervention in
Ukraine has higher stakes than the war Russia fought with Georgia in
2008 invading Ukraine's southeast could transform Putin, a man who
wanted the Sochi Winter Olympics to show Russia's modern face, into a
pariah.
If Western
powers decide to try to punish Russia with sanctions, Putin will be
likely again to pursue a "symmetrical" policy and hit back with similar
moves.
This would go
down well with core supporters, but might risk unsettling the wealthy
businessmen whose support helps cement Putin's grip on power.
But
there is a risk Putin could be forced into action over Crimea by the
nationalist thinking that he has let loose and this would be
particularly risky if he were pushed into action to defend Russian
speakers in eastern Ukraine.
The
decision to seek authorisation to send in troops looked less like a
prelude to war and more like a threat aimed at getting Kiev and the West
to cut a deal, Professor Mark Galeotti from the Center of Global
Affairs at New York University wrote on his blog.
"As
the language toughens and the troops roll, though, it's getting harder
to believe that common sense is going to prevail in the Kremlin."
In
broadcasts with Cold War overtones, state television has many times
repeated footage of parliament accusing Washington of crossing a red
line by warning that Moscow will face "costs" if it intervenes in
Ukraine.
It has run
image after image of pro-Russian protesters raising the Russian flag
above administrative buildings in several eastern regions, including the
industrial centres of Donetsk and Kharkiv.
The
patriotic mood has caught on. For every dissenter wondering whether
this is the worst thing Russia could do since it crushed opposition in
Czechoslovakia in 1968, there are dozens more who say the West is
fomenting violence.
Near
Red Square and the Defence Ministry in Moscow on Sunday, a few hundred
protesters waved banners calling for "No War". Dozens were detained.
But
their numbers could not match the thousands who turned out for a
demonstration for the "defence of the Ukrainian people" in central
Moscow.
"Fascism will not win," the protesters chanted. "Crimea is Russia. We are for Russian unity."
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