This weekend, the G7 meets in Germany, with Ukraine and Russia’s
behavior expected to figure prominently on the agenda. Also, EU countries will
be deciding whether sanctions imposed on Russia over actions in Ukraine should
be renewed.
WASHINGTON — Renewed intense fighting between government forces and Russian-backed
rebels in eastern Ukraine raises the question, why now? – especially given the
diplomatic context.
The West is seeking to reaffirm its warnings to Russia over Ukraine even as
the renewed violence suggests that Russia wishes to keep Ukraine weak and
"unstable."
This weekend, the newly re-minted Group of Seven industrialized countries –
it ceased being the G8 last year after Russia was dropped from the elite club
over its annexation of Crimea – meets in Germany, with Ukraine and Russia’s
behavior expected to figure prominently on the agenda.
More important for Moscow on a practical level is the fact that European
Union countries have begun deliberating over whether EU sanctions imposed on
Russia over its actions in Ukraine should be renewed when they expire in July.
In recent weeks, multiple signs pointed to building
momentum in some EU countries to reward Moscow for a calmer Ukraine by at least
weakening sanctions, if not scuttling them altogether. But the resurgence of
shelling and loss of life around Donetsk will probably quiet any calls for
encouraging gestures toward Russia, some European officials say – with some
predicting that EU sanctions will now be easily renewed into next year.
The new violence also comes shortly after Secretary of
State John Kerry traveled to Sochi, Russia, to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The May 12 meeting was trumpeted by the Russian government as evidence that
Western attempts to isolate Russia were futile and that even the United States
recognized it needed working relations with Russia.
The new fighting, described as the most intense since a cease-fire was signed in February
in Minsk, Belarus, will darken the diplomatic atmosphere and almost certainly
put off any Western gestures toward Russia, regional experts say.
Shelling from rebel-held Donetsk to the nearby
government-held town of Maryinka has very likely “tipped the scales” of Western
diplomatic thinking once again heavily against Russia, says Julianne Smith,
former national security adviser to Vice President Joe Biden and now director
of the strategy and statecraft program at Washington’s Center for a New
American Security (CNAS).
Sustained fighting, especially on the heels of
stepped-up reports of Russian soldiers deployed in eastern Ukraine, would very
likely leave Mr. Putin’s former fellow club members in the G7 “willing ... to
send a stronger signal to Moscow,” she says.
Each side blamed the other for Wednesday’s heavy
fighting, which reportedly killed more than a dozen civilians and fighters on
both sides and left the town of Maryinka in flames. But Maryinka is in a band
of territory west of Donetsk that the rebels have repeatedly said they hoped to
“liberate” – even after the Minsk cease-fire.
Photos and video footage emerged Wednesday of
buildings in Maryinka destroyed by heavy artillery and tank fire. The Ukrainian
government accuses Russia of supplying the rebels with heavy weaponry. Reports
also claimed that both sides were using multiple rocket launchers known as
Grads, even though such weaponry is supposedly banned from areas along the line
of separation by the Minsk agreement.
By Wednesday afternoon, Russia was officially blaming
the intense fighting on “Ukrainian provocation.”
But Russia has laid responsibility for Ukraine’s civil
war at Kiev’s feet ever since fighting broke out last year. At the same time,
it has forcefully denied any direct role in the fighting, despite mounting
evidence of Russian soldiers and heavy Russian weaponry in rebel-held
territory.
It’s hard to tell yet if Russia played any role in
encouraging the resurgence of fighting in eastern Ukraine. But if it did, it
would fit in the playbook that Russia appears to have been following concerning
Ukraine, some regional experts say.
“Putin wants a Ukraine that is kept off balance” by
unabated instability, says Richard Fontaine, president of CNAS and former
foreign policy adviser to Sen. John McCain (R) of Arizona.
Mr. Fontaine says Putin’s aim has been to engineer a
situation where “he can control the dialing up and dialing down” of violence in
eastern Ukraine in a way that keeps the country politically and economically
unstable – but yet does not deepen Russia’s confrontation with the West.
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