August 16/17, 2023 -
Information Clearing House - " CovertAction Magazine"
-- I just returned from my third
trip to Russia, and my second trip to Donbas
(now referring to the republics of Donetsk
and Luhansk collectively) in about eight
months. This time, I flew into lovely
Tallinn, Estonia, and took what should be
about a six-hour bus ride to St. Petersburg.
In the end, my bus trip took me about 12
hours, due to a long wait in Customs on the
Russian side of the border.
Having a U.S. passport and trying to pass
the frontier from a hostile, NATO country
into Russia during wartime got me
immediately flagged for questioning. And
then, it turned out I did not have all my
papers in order as I was still without my
journalist credential from the Russian
Foreign Ministry, which was necessary given
that I told the border patrol that I was
traveling to do reporting. I was treated
very nicely, though the long layover forced
me to
lose my bus that, understandably, went on
without me.
However, sometimes we find opportunity in
seemingly inconvenient detours, and that was
true in this case. Thus, I became a witness
to a number of Ukrainians, some of them
entire families, trying to cross the border
and to immigrate to Russia. Indeed, the only
other type of passport (besides my U.S.
passport) I saw amongst those held over for
questioning and processing was the blue
Ukrainian passport. This is evidence of an
inconvenient fact to the Western narrative
of the war that portrays Russia as an
invader of Ukraine. In fact, many Ukrainians
have an affinity for Russia and have
voluntarily chosen to live there over the
years.
Between 2014—the real start of the war
when the Ukrainian government began
attacking its own people in the Donbas—and
the beginning of Russia’s intervention in
February 2022, around
one million Ukrainians had already
immigrated to Russia. The fact that
Ukrainians were going to live in Russia was
reported in the mainstream press back then,
with the
BBC writing in September 2014 about some
of the refugees while noting that
“[s]eparatists in the eastern regions of
Donetsk and Luhansk declared independence
after Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine.
Since the violence erupted, some 2,600
people have been killed and thousands more
wounded. The city of Luhansk has been under
siege by government forces for the past
month and is without proper supplies of food
and water.” The number of dead in this war
would
grow to 14,000 by February 2022, again
before Russia’s Special Military Operation (SMO)
had even begun.
When I commented to one of the Russian
border officials—Kirill is his name—about
the stack of Ukrainian passports sitting on
his desk, he made a point to tell me that
they treat the Ukrainians coming in “as
human beings.” When my contact in St
Petersburg, Boris, was able to send a photo
of my
newly acquired press credential to Kirill, I
was sent on my way with a handshake and was
able to catch the next bus heading to St.
Petersburg almost immediately.
Once in St. Petersburg, I went to Boris’s
house for a short rest and then was off by
car to Rostov-on-Don, the last Russian city
before Donetsk. I was driven in a black
Lexus by a kind Russian businessman named
Vladimir along with German, the founder of
the humanitarian aid group known as
“Leningrad Volunteers.” The car was indeed
loaded with humanitarian aid to take to
Donbas. After some short introductions, and
my dad joke about the “Lexus from Texas,” we
were off on our 20-hour journey at a brisk
pace of about 110 kilometers an hour.
We arrived in Rostov in the evening and
checked into the Sholokhov Loft Hotel, named
after Mikhail Sholokhov, Rostov’s favorite
son who wrote the great novel And Quite
Flows the Don. We were told that, until
recently, a portrait of the titular head of
the Wagner Group, Yevgeny Prigozhin, had
adorned the lobby wall. They took this down
after members of the Wagner Group invaded
Rostov, putting fear in many of the
residents. Now, the hotel only has Hollywood
movie posters decorating the walls.
In the early afternoon the next day, my
translator Sasha arrived from her hometown
of Krasnodar, Russia, a seven-hour train
ride from Rostov. Sasha, who is 22 years
old, is a tiny red-headed woman who quickly
turned out to be one of the most interesting
people I met on my journey.
As Sasha explained to me, she has been
supporting humanitarian work in Donbas since
the age of 12. She told me that she derived
her interest in this work from her
grandmother who raised her in the “patriotic
spirit” of the USSR. As Sasha explained, her
parents were too busy working to do much
raising of her at all. Sasha, who is from
the mainland of Russia, attends the
University of Donetsk to live in solidarity
with the people who have been under attack
there since 2014.
At age 22, Sasha, who wore open-toed
sandals even when we traveled to the front
lines, is one of the bravest people I have
ever met, and she certainly disabused me of
any notion that I was doing anything
especially brave by going to the Donbas.
But, of course, as Graham Greene once wrote,
“with a return ticket, courage becomes an
intellectual exercise” anyway.
We quickly set out on our approximately
three or four-hour drive to Donetsk City,
with a brief stop at a passport control
office now run by the Russian Federation
subsequent to the September 2022 referendum
in which the people of Donetsk and three
other Ukrainian republics voted to join
Russia.
I was again questioned by officials at
this stop, but for only 15 minutes or so. I
just resigned myself to the fact that, as an
American traveling through Russia at this
time, I was not going to go through any
border area without some level of
questioning. However, the tone of the
questioning was always friendly.
We arrived in Donetsk City, a small but
lovely town along the Kalmius River, without
incident. Our first stop was at the
Leningrad Volunteers warehouse to unload
some of the aid we had brought and to meet
some of the local volunteers. Almost all of
these volunteers are life-long residents of
Donetsk, and nearly all of them wore
military fatigues and have been fighting the
Ukrainian forces as part of the Donetsk
militia for years, many since the beginning
of the conflict in 2014.
Members of the Donetsk militia
escort Ukrainian prisoners of war in the
Donbas. The militias have been fighting the
Ukrainian Army, backed by the U.S., since
the war really started in 2014. [Source:
medium.com]
This is something I cannot impress upon
the reader enough. While we are often told
that these fighters in the Donbas are
Russians or “Russian proxies,” this is
simply not true. The lion’s share of
fighters are locals of varying ages, some
quite old, who have been fighting for their
homes, families and survival since 2014.
While there have been Russian and
international volunteers who have supported
these forces—just as there were
international volunteers who went to support
the Republicans in Spain in the 1930s—they
are mostly local.
Of course, this changed in February 2022
when Russia began the SMO. Nonetheless, the
locals of Donetsk continue to fight, now
alongside the Russian forces.
The lie of “Russian proxies” fighting in
the Donbas after 2014 is actually one of the
smaller ones of the Western mainstream
press, for the claim at least acknowledges
that there has been such fighting. Of
course, the mainstream media have tried to
convince us that there was never such
fighting at all and that the Russian SMO
beginning in February 2022 was completely
“unprovoked.” This is the big lie that has
been peddled in order to gain the consent of
the Western populations to support Ukraine
militarily.
What is also ignored is the fact that
this war was escalating greatly before the
beginning of the SMO and this escalation
indeed provoked it. Thus, according to the
Organization for Security and Co-operation
in Europe (OSCE), a 57-member organization
including many Western countries, including
the United States, there were about 2,000
cease-fire violations in the Donbas just in
the weekend before the SMO began on February
24, 2022.
In a rare moment of candor,
Reuters reported on February
19, 2022, “Almost 2,000 ceasefire violations
were registered in eastern Ukraine by
monitors for the Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europe on Saturday, a
diplomatic source told Reuters on Sunday.
Ukrainian government and separatist forces
have been fighting in eastern Ukraine since
2014.”
Jacques Baud, a Swiss intelligence and
security consultant and former NATO military
analyst,
further explains the precipitating
events of the SMO:
“[A]s early as February 16, Joe Biden
knew that the Ukrainians had begun shelling
the civilian population of Donbass, putting
Vladimir Putin in front of a difficult
choice: to help Donbass militarily and
create an international problem, or to stand
by and watch the Russian-speaking people of
Donbass being crushed.
…This is what he explained in his speech
on February 21.
On that day, he agreed to the request of
the Duma and recognized the independence of
the two Donbass Republics and, at the same
time, he signed friendship and assistance
treaties with them.
The Ukrainian artillery bombardment of
the Donbass population continued, and, on 23
February, the two Republics asked for
military assistance from Russia. On 24
February, Vladimir Putin invoked Article 51
of the United Nations Charter, which
provides for mutual military assistance in
the framework of a defensive alliance.
In order to make the Russian intervention
totally illegal in the eyes of the public we
deliberately hid the fact that the war
actually started on February 16. The
Ukrainian army was preparing to attack the
Donbass as early as 2021, as some Russian
and European intelligence services were well
aware. Jurists will judge.”
Of course, none of this was news to the
people I met in Donetsk, for they had been
living this reality for years. For example,
Dimitri, a young resident of Donetsk who has
been fighting since 2014 along with his
mother and father, told me quite
exasperatedly as he pointed to some of the
weapons and ammunition behind him, “what is
all this stuff doing here? Why have we been
getting this since 2014? Because the war has
been going on since then.”
Dimitri, who was studying at the
university when the conflict began, can no
longer fight due to injuries received in the
war, including damage to his hearing which
is evidenced by the earplugs he wears. He
hopes he can go back to his studies.
Just a few days before my arrival in
Donetsk, Dimitri’s apartment building was
shelled by Ukrainian forces, just as it had
been in 2016. Like many in Donetsk, he is
used to quickly repairing the damage and
going on with his life.
Dimitri took me to the Donetsk airport
and nearby Orthodox church and monastery
which were destroyed in fighting between the
Ukrainian military and Donetsk militia
forces back in 2014-2015. Dimitri
participated in the fighting in this area
back then, explaining that during that time,
this was the area of the most intense
fighting in the world. But you would not
know this from the mainstream press coverage
that had largely ignored this war before
February 2022.
Bridge near the Donetsk airport
which was destroyed in 2015 by Donetsk
militia forces to prevent Ukrainian troops
and tanks from crossing. [Source: Photo
courtesy of Dan Kovalik]
One of the first individuals I
interviewed in Donetsk was 36-year-old
Vitaly, a big guy with a chubby, boyish face
who wore a baseball hat with the red Soviet
flag with the hammer and sickle. Vitaly, the
father of three children, is from Donetsk
and has been fighting there for four years,
including in the very tough battle for the
steel plant in Mariupol in the summer of
2022. He decided to take up arms after
friends of his were killed by Ukrainian
forces, including some who were killed by
being burned alive by fascist forces—the
same forces that, we are told, do not exist.
Vitaly, referring to the mainstream Western
media, laughed when saying, “they’ve been
saying we’ve been shelling ourselves for
nine years.”
Vitaly has personally fought against
soldiers wearing Nazi insignia, and he is
very clear that he is fighting fascism.
Indeed, when I asked him what the Soviet
flag on his hat meant to him, he said that
it signified the defeat over Nazism, and he
hopes he will contribute to this again.
Ukrainian soldiers with Nazi
insignia on their helmets. [Source:
nbcnews.com]
When I asked him about claims that Russia
had intervened with soldiers in the war
prior to February 2022 as some allege, he
adamantly denied this, as did everyone else
I interviewed in Donetsk. However, he has
witnessed the fact that Polish and UK
soldiers have been fighting with the
Ukrainian military since the beginning.
Vitaly opined that, given what has
transpired over the past nine years, he does
not believe that the Donbas will ever return
to Ukraine, and he certainly hopes it will
not. Vitaly told me quite stoically that he
believes he will not see peace in his
lifetime.
During my stay in Donetsk, I twice had
dinner with Anastasia, my interpreter during
my first trip to the Donbas in November.
Anastasia teaches at the University of
Donetsk. She has been traveling around
Russia, including to the far east, telling
of what has been happening in the Donbas
since 2014 because many in Russia themselves
do not fully understand what has been going
on. She told me that as she was recounting
her story, she found herself reliving her
trauma from nine years of war and feeling
overwhelmed.
Anastasia’s parents and 13-year-old
brother live near the front lines in the
Donetsk Republic, and she worries greatly
about them. Anastasia is glad that Russia
has intervened in the conflict, and she
indeed corrected me when I once referred to
the Russian SMO as an “invasion,” telling me
that Russia did not invade. Rather, they
were invited and welcomed in. That does seem
to be the prevailing view in Donetsk as far
as I can tell.
During my five-day trip to Donetsk, I was
taken to two cities within the conflict
zone—Yasinovataya and Gorlovka. I was
required to wear body armor and a helmet
during this journey, though wearing a
seatbelt was optional, if not frowned upon.
While Donetsk City, which certainly sees
its share of shelling, is largely intact and
with teeming traffic and a brisk restaurant
and café scene, once we got out of the city,
this changed pretty quickly.
Yasinovataya showed signs of great
destruction, and I was told that a lot of
this dated back to 2014. The destruction
going back that far included a machine
factory which is now being used as a base of
operations for Donetsk forces and the
adjacent administrative building which looks
like it could have been an opera house
before it was shelled.
Destruction of homes from
Ukrainian army shelling in Yasinovataya.
[Source:
tellerreport.com]
For its part, the city center of Gorlovka
looked largely unmolested with signs of
street life and even had an old trolley,
clearly from the Soviet era, running through
the center of town. But the outskirts of
Gorlovka certainly showed signs of war. In
both cities, one could frequently hear the
sounds of shelling in the distance.
In Gorlovka, we met with Nikoli,
nicknamed “Heavy.” Nikoli looks like a Greek
god, standing at probably 6 feet, 5 inches,
and all muscle. I joked with him while I was
standing next to him that I felt like I was
appearing next to Ivan Drago in Rocky IV. He
got the joke and laughed. While a giant of a
man, he seemed very nice and with a strong
moral compass.
He led us to a makeshift Orthodox chapel
in the cafeteria of what was a school, but
which is now the base of operations for his
Donetsk militia forces. He told us that,
even now after the SMO began, about 90% of
the forces in Gorlovka are still local
Donetsk soldiers, and the other 10% are
Russians. Again, this is something we rarely
get a sense of from the mainstream press.
Ukrainian army shelling being
carried out around Gorlovka. [Source:
plenglish.com]
Nikoli, while sitting in front of the
makeshift chapel, explained that, while he
still considers himself Ukrainian—after all
he was born in Ukraine—he said that Donetsk
would never go back to Ukraine because
Ukraine had “acted against God” when it
began to attack its own people in the Donbas.
He made it clear that he was prepared to
fight to the end to ensure the survival of
the people of Donetsk, and I had no doubt
that he was telling the truth about that.
At my request, I met with the First
Secretary of the Donetsk section of the
Communist Party of the Russian Federation
(CPRF), Boris Litvinov. Boris, who has also
served in the Donetsk parliament, explained
that the Communist Party under his
leadership had been one of the leaders and
initiators of the 2014 Referendum in which
the people of Donetsk voted to become an
autonomous republic and leave Ukraine.
According to Boris, about 100 members of
the Donetsk section of the CPRF are serving
on the front lines of the conflict. Indeed,
as Boris explained, the CPRF supports the
Russian SMO, only wishing that it had
commenced in 2014. Boris is clear that the
war in Ukraine is one over the very survival
of Russia (regardless of whether it is
capitalist or socialist) and that Russia is
fighting the collective West that wants to
destroy Russia.
Boris compares the fight in the Donbas to
the fight of the Republicans against the
fascists in Spain in the 1930s, and he says
that there are international fighters from
all over the world (Americans, Israelis,
Spanish and Colombians, for example) who are
fighting alongside the people of Donbas
against the fascists just as international
fighters helped in Spain.
The last person I interviewed, again at
my own request, was Olga Tseselskaya,
assistant to the head of the Union of Women
of the Republic of Donetsk and First
Secretary of the Mothers’ United
organization. The Mothers’ United
organization, which has 6,000 members
throughout the Donetsk Republic, advocates
for and provides social services to the
mothers of children killed in the conflict
since 2014.
I was excited that Olga opened our
discussion by saying that she was glad to be
talking to someone from Pittsburgh because
Pittsburgh and Donetsk City had once been
sister cities.
I asked Olga about how she viewed the
Russian forces now in Donetsk, and she made
it clear that she supported their presence
in Donetsk and believed that they were
treating the population well. She adamantly
denied the claims of mass rape made against
the Russians earlier in the conflict.
Of course, it should be noted that the
Ukrainian parliament’s commissioner for
human rights, Lyudmila Denisova, who was the
source of these claims,
was ultimately fired because her claims
were found to be unverified and without
substantiation, but again the Western media
has barely reported on that fact.
When I asked Olga whether she agreed with
some Western peace groups, such as the Stop
the War Coalition in the UK, that Russia
should pull its troops out of the Donbas,
she disagreed, saying that she hates to
think what would happen to the people of the
Donbas if they did.
I think that this is something the people
of the West need to come to grips with; that
the government of Ukraine has done great
violence against its own people in the
Donbas, and that the people of the Donbas
had every right to choose to leave Ukraine
and join Russia. If Westerners understood
this reality, they would think twice about
“standing with” and continuing to arm
Ukraine.
Daniel
Kovalik
is a Senior Research Fellow at the Council
on Hemispheric Affairs. He teaches
International Human Rights at the University
of Pittsburgh School of Law.
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