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Maidan Community Sector, Lviv Information DigestApril 3, 2014Dear friends! Russia has carried out an act of aggression towards
Ukraine. Russian troops have entered Crimea. Thus we take it upon ourselves to
inform you about the events in Ukraine. We will provide you with yet another
viewpoint regarding this conflict. We will do our best to remain fair and
objective. April 3 – “Russia is
very afraid that Ukraine will join NATO. It is one of their phobias”, stated
acting President and Chairman of the Supreme Council of Ukraine Oleksandr
Turchynov. He also emphasized that “through its aggression, its actions, its
troops, which are permanently stationed at the border, the Russian Federation
is pushing Ukraine to join NATO”. April 3 –
“Anti-terrorist” operation, during which over a 100 protesters were killed, was
basically led by Viktor Yanukovych, stated the Head of Security Service of
Ukraine Valentyn Nalyvaichenko. Officers of special units like “Berkut” and
“Alfa” who took part in the armed offences are now hiding in Crimea. Some of
the snipers were arrested. According to Nalyvaichenko, there are grounds to
believe that officers of Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation
(FSB) are implicated in mass killings in Kyiv (2 groups – 6 and 26 FSB officers
were in Ukraine at the time of the killings and top officials of the Security
Service of Ukraine reported to them). April 3 – Special new
weapons, all personal, secret, and other files of the Secret Service of Ukraine
were transported to Simferopol around the 20th of February, before the Supreme
Council appointed new leadership at defence and law enforcement agencies.
Apparently it was then, that in Russia the decision was made to annex Crimea.
Disposition of all secret service files in the area, controlled by Russian
intelligence forces poses an enormous threat for Ukraine’s future. April 3 – Ukraine
believes that 485 USD for 1,000 cubic meters is an exaggerated price for gas.
This price was announced by Russia as a new price of gas for Ukraine. Ukraine
will look for an alternative and cheaper ways to transport gas to Ukraine,
informed Yuriy Prodan, Minister of Energy and Coal Industry of Ukraine. April 3 – The US
Department of Justice is using Dmytro Firtash as a source of information about
Russian gas giant Gazprom. If Firtash is found guilty, he is facing a
confiscation of his assets consisting of 159 companies and 41 bank accounts in
many world countries. His fortune is estimated at 1.2 billion dollars. April 3 – USS Donald
Cook, Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense System carrier is heading towards Black
Sea. The ship is capable of tracking and bringing down ballistic missiles while
patrolling eastern area of the Mediterranean Sea. Maidan Community
Sector, Lviv: Dear friends! Russia has carried out
an act of aggression towards Ukraine. Russian troops have entered Crimea. Thus
we take it upon ourselves to inform you about the events in Ukraine. We will
provide you with yet another viewpoint regarding this conflict. We will do our
best to remain fair and objective. P.S.: Please spread
this appeal as much as possible. Paul Goble Moscow Now Has a
Ukrainian Problem in the Russian Far East, Former Japanese Defense Minister
Says Staunton, April 2 –
Vladimir Putin’s Anschluss of Crimea is echoing through the non-Russian nations
within the Russian Federation, but it is also creating a new Ukrainian problem
for the Kremlin leader in the Russian Far East where a former Japanese defense
minister has noted that 60 percent of the inhabitants on the disputed Etorofu
Island are Ukrainian. In a commentary over
the weekend, Yuriko Koike, who currently chairs Japan’s Liberal Democratic
Party General Council and serves in the Diet, says that “given the Crimean
annexation,” Tokyo’s position in talks with Moscow about the disputed Northern
Territories changed. Moreover, she wonders
whether, given the share of ethnic Ukrainians on these islands, “ Putin would
accept” an independence referendum there “as readily as he did the ballot in
Crimea, undertaken at the barrel of a gun.” The former defense
minister’s comments are important both for what they say about how Tokyo views
the impact of Putin’s intervention in Ukraine and because they call attention
to something many people either do not know or have forgotten: there is a
significant Ukrainian population in the Russian Far East and the US once
directed Ukrainian language broadcasts to it. “For Japanese leaders
and citizens,” Koike writes, “President Vladimir Putin’s brutal annexation of
Crimea was an unsurprising return to the normal paradigm of Russian history.
Indeed, most Japanese regard the move as having been determined by some
expansionist gene in Russia’s political DNA, rather than by Putin himself or
the specifics of the Ukraine crisis.” “Japan,” she continues,
“is particularly concerned with Russian expansionism, because it is the only
G-7 country that currently has a territorial dispute with Russia, which has
occupied its Northern Territories since the waning days of World War II … Since
then, these islands have been controlled by either the Soviet Union or its
successor state, Russia.” Moreover, Koike points
out, “as elsewhere in Russia, their residents have been impoverished by
consistently incompetent and corrupt government, whether run by Communists or
today’s crony capitalists.” “After coming to power
at the end of 2012, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe had sought to improve
relations with Putin in the hope of beginning serious talks on the Northern
Territories. But now that Putin has made his project of imperial restoration
crystal clear, those hopes are stillborn.” Tokyo supports Ukraine’s territorial
integrity. The former defense
minister continues by saying that “in the immediate future, Japan will work
with the G-7 to ensure that Putin’s reckless ambitions do not endanger other
parts of Ukraine. Already, Japan has decided to provide ¥150 billion ($1.5
billion) in economic aid for Ukraine, the largest pledge by any individual
country, including the US, thus far.” “Before the Crimea
invasion, territorial negotiations between Japan and Russia showed signs of
progress,” she observes. “But it is now clear not only that Putin is returning
Russia to the stagnation of the late-Soviet era, but also that he subscribes to
former Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev’s dictum that “what we have, we hold.” And she adds that “more
important, Japan understands that business as usual with an aggressive Russia
that undermines the international order could embolden others closer to home to
embrace Putin’s lawless tactics. The days of an inward looking Japan are over.
Japan now sees threats elsewhere in the world in the context of its own
security, and will react appropriately.” Koike’s comments
represent a major geopolitical shift and her remark about the ethnic Ukrainians
in the disputed territories should lead others to focus on what Ukrainians call
the “Zeleny Klyn” or “green wedge,” the portion of the Russian Far East to
which St. Petersburg send Ukrainians in the last three decades of the tsarist
period. During the Russian
Civil War, these ethnic Ukrainians alternately pushed for their own independent
government and opposed White Russian groups who supported the idea of Russia
“one and indivisible” and refused to recognize the rights of ethnic Ukrainians
or other non-Russian groups. That failure of most
anti-Bolshevik leaders contributed to the victory of Lenin, but after 1917, the
Soviet authorities behaved in an even more repressive fashion, refusing to
allow Ukrainian language schools and other institutions to continue to function
and forcibly re-identifying Ukrainians in the Far East. Exactly how many ethnic
Ukrainians there are in the region between the Amur River and the Pacific Coast
is thus unknown, but some have estimated that has many as half have Ukrainian
roots. Those roots may become more important as Putin’s Russian nationalist
impulses continue to manifest themselves. Japan and to a lesser
extent China have paid attention to the Zeleny Klyn, and the United States has
as well. In the mid-1980s, the US even broadcast in Ukrainian to the region
from Japan for a brief period, a remarkable step because it was the only time
during the Soviet period that US broadcasts ignored Moscow-imposed divisions on
the peoples of the USSR. The most comprehensive
source on the Zeleny Klyn is Ivan Svit’s “Ukrains’ko-iapons’ki vzaiemyny”
[Ukrainian-Japanese Relations] (in Ukrainian, New York, 1972, 371 pp.) For a
valuable English language discussion and notes to other sources, see John J.
Stephan, “The Russian Far East,” Stanford, 1994.)
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