The Minsk Peace Deal:
Farce Or Sellout?
By Paul Craig Roberts
February 12, 2015 "ICH"
- Judging by the report on RT
http://rt.com/news/231667-minsk-ceasefire-deal-breakup/
I conclude that the Ukraine peace deal
worked out in Minsk by Putin, Merkel,
Hollande, and Poroshenko has little chance
of success.
As Washington is not a
partner to the Minsk peace deal, how can
there be peace when Washington has made
policy decisions to escalate the conflict
and to use the conflict as a proxy war
between the US and Russia?
The Minsk agreement makes
no reference to the announcement by Lt. Gen.
Ben Hodges, commander of US Army Europe,
that Washington is sending a battalion of US
troops to Ukraine to train Ukrainian forces
how to fight against Russian and rebel
forces. The training is scheduled to begin
in March, about two weeks from now. Gen.
Hodges says that it is very important to
recognize that the Donetsk and Luhansk
forces “are not separatists, these are
proxies for President Putin.”
How is there a peace deal
when Washington has plans underway to send
arms and
training to the US puppet government in
Kiev?
Looking at the deal
itself, it is set up to fail. The only
parties to the deal who had to sign it are
the leaders of the Donetsk and Lugansk
break-away republics. The other signers to
the Minsk deal are an OSCE representative
which is the European group that is supposed
to monitor the withdrawal of heavy weapons
by both sides, a former Ukrainian president
Viktor Kuchma, and the Russian ambassador in
Kiev. Neither the German chancellor nor the
French, Ukrainian, and Russian presidents
who brokered the deal had to sign it.
In other words, the
governments of Germany, France, Ukraine, and
Russia do not appear to be empowered or
required to enforce the agreement. According
to RT, “the declaration was not meant to be
signed by the leaders, German foreign
minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said.”
http://rt.com/news/231571-putin-minsk-ukraine-deal/
The terms of the agreement
depend on actions of the Ukrainian
parliament and prime minister, neither of
which are under Poroshenko’s control, and
Poroshenko himself is a figurehead under
Washington’s control. Moreover, the
Ukrainian military does not control the Nazi
militias. As Washington and the right-wing
elements in Ukraine want conflict with
Russia, peace cannot be forthcoming.
The agreement is nothing
but a list of expectations that have no
chance of occurring.
One expectation is that
Ukraine and the republics will negotiate
terms for future local elections in the
provinces that will bring them back under
Ukraine’s legal control. The day after the
local elections, but prior to the
constitutional reform that provides the
regions with autonomy, Kiev takes control of
the borders with Ukraine and between the
provinces. I read this as the total sell-out
of the Donetsk and Lugansk republics.
Apparently, that is the way the leaders of
the republics see it as well, as Putin had
to twist their arms in order to get their
signatures to the agreement.
Another expectation is
that Ukraine will adopt legislation on
self-governance that would be acceptable to
the republics and declare a general amnesty
for the republics’ leaders and military
forces.
Negotiations between Kiev
and the autonomous areas are to take place
that restore Kiev’s taxation of the
autonomous areas and the provision of social
payments and banking services to the
autonomous areas.
After a comprehensive
constitutional reform in Ukraine
guaranteeing acceptable (and undefined)
autonomy to the republics, Kiev will take
control over the provinces’ borders with
Russia.
By the end of 2015 Kiev
will implement comprehensive constitutional
reform that decentralizes the Ukrainian
political system and provides privileges of
autonomy to the Donetsk and Lugansk regions.
Both Putin and Poroshenko
are both reported as stating that the main
thing achieved is a ceasefire starting on
February 15.
The ceasefire is of no
benefit to the Donetsk and Lugansk republics
as they are prevailing in the conflict.
Moreover, the deal requires the republics’
forces to give up territory and to pull back
to the borders of last September and to
eject fighters from France and other
countries who have come to the aid of the
break-away republics. In other words, the
agreement erases all of Kiev’s losses from
the conflict that Kiev initiated.
All of the risks of the
agreement are imposed on the break-away
republics and on Putin. The provinces are
required to give up all their gains while
Washington trains and arms Ukrainian forces
to attack the provinces. The republics have
to give up their security and trust Kiev
long before Kiev votes, assuming it ever
does, autonomy for the republics.
Moreover, if the one-sided
terms of the Minsk agreement result in
failure, Putin and the republics will be
blamed.
Why would Putin make such
a deal and force it on the republics? If the
deal becomes a Russian sell-out of the
republics, it will hurt Putin’s nationalist
support within Russia and make it easier for
Washington to weaken Putin and perhaps
achieve regime change. It looks more like a
surrender than a fair deal.
Perhaps Putin’s strategy
is to give away every advantage in the
expectation that the deal will fail, and the
Russian government can say “we gave away the
store and the deal still failed.”
Washington’s coup in Kiev
and the attack on the Russian-speaking
Ukrainians in the east and south is part of
Washington’s strategy to reassert its uni-power
position. Russia’s independent foreign
policy and Russia’s growing economic and
political relationships with Europe became
problems for Washington. Washington is using
Ukraine to attack and to demonize Russia and
its leader and to break-up Russia’s economic
and political relations with Europe. That is
what the sanctions are about. A peace deal
in Ukraine on any terms other than
Washington’s is unacceptable to Washington.
The only acceptable deal is a deal that is a
defeat for Russia.
It is difficult to avoid
the conclusion that the Russian government
made a strategic mistake when it did not
accept the requests of the break-away
provinces to be united with Russia. The
people in the Donetsk and Lugansk provinces
favored unification with the same massive
majorities that the people in Crimea showed.
If the provinces had been united with
Russia, it would have been the end of the
conflict. Neither Ukraine nor Washington is
going to attack Russian territory.
By failing to end the
conflict by unification, Putin set himself
up as the punching bag for Western
propaganda. The consequence is that over the
many months during which the conflict has
been needlessly drawn out, Putin has had his
image and reputation in the West destroyed.
He is the “new Hitler.” He is “scheming to
restore the Soviet Empire.” “Russia ranks
with ebola and the Islamist State as the
three greatest threats.” “RT is a terrorist
organization like Boco Haram and the
Islamist State.” And so on and on. This CNN
interview with Obama conducted by
Washington’s presstitute Fareed Zakaria
shows the image of Putin based entirely on
lies that rules in the West.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Duu6IwW3sbw
Putin could be no more
demonized even if the Russian military had
invaded Ukraine,
conquered it, and reincorporated Ukraine in
Russia of which Ukraine was part for
centuries prior to the Soviet collapse and
Ukraine’s separation from Russia at
Washington’s insistence.
The Russian government
might want to carefully consider whether
Moscow is helping Washington to achieve
another victory in Ukraine.
See also -
The Saker: Minsk-2:
The Useless Agreement Which Everybody
Wanted:
What is going on here? Has everybody just
gone crazy?