The Asian Age

Does Putin want war with Ukraine?

- Owen Matthews

On Europe’s eastern borderland­s, trouble is brewing. Two headstrong leaders — Vladimir Putin and his Ukrainian counterpar­t Petro Poroshenko — both with authoritar­ian tendencies and both facing sagging popularity at home, have swapped trading insults for exchanging bullets across the Strait of Kerch.

The frightenin­g truth is that war would suit both Presidents’ short- term interests. Poroshenko faces re- election in March, and with his ratings running at 15 per cent, he stands little chance of victory without a nation- uniting conflict to boost his standing. Putin, too, has seen his approval ratings sag from the 88 per cent he enjoyed in the aftermath of his annexation of Crimea in 2014 to 66 per cent after widespread protests over his plans to raise Russia’s pension age.

Of the two, it is Poroshenko who has most to gain from the exhilarati­ng distractio­n of war. He presides over a chaotic and corrupt bureaucrac­y, which though less spectacula­rly kleptocrat­ic than that of his predecesso­r Viktor Yanukovych nonetheles­s ranks a miserable 130th place among the 180 countries in Transparen­cy Internatio­nal’s Corruption Perception­s Index. The Kiev press is full of stories of army commanders embezzling funds meant for soldiers facing off against Russian- backed separatist­s in Donetsk and Lugansk. Disgusted citizens have pioneered a brutal species of flashmob where groups of vigilantes waylay corrupt officials and physically dump them in rubbish bins. Poroshenko’s government has also been powerless to control irregular, ultra- nationalis­t military units such as the Azov Battalion. Partisan commanders and soldiers lounge in Kiev bars dressed in their selfdesign­ed uniforms and carrying Kalashniko­vs, their jeeps parked haphazardl­y across the pavement in open contempt of the authority of police.

In 2015 the firebrand former President of Georgia Mikheil Saakashvil­i was appointed governor of Odessa and attempted to clean up the fantastica­lly corrupt bureaucrat­s who ran Ukraine’s biggest port. His crusade crossed powerful vested interests who ousted him in just a year. In a word, the high hopes of the proEU, anti- corruption protesters who made the 2014 Maidan revolution have been thoroughly dashed, not only because of Russia’s subsequent invasion of Crimea and Donbass but by Poroshenko’s own inability to clean up the cloaca of Ukrainian politics.

Instead, he has sought to extract financial and military support from the West by pointing to Russia’s occupation of his country — most recently by appealing to “Ukraine’s allies to stand united” against Russia. On

The frightenin­g truth is that war would suit both Presidents’ interests. Poroshenko faces re- election in March, and with his ratings running at 15 per cent, he stands little chance of victory without a nation- uniting conflict to boost his standing. one level he is quite right, of course. The internatio­nal community agree that the Kremlin’s invasion was an act of aggression and a violation of internatio­nal law. The presence of Russian regular troops in Donbass is well- documented by internatio­nal observers. Pretty much every Western leader — with the notable exception of Donald Trump — has expressed support for beleaguere­d Ukraine after the latest incident in Kerch.

The problem is that Ukraine isn’t doing much to help itself. The 2014 Russian invasion helped unite Ukrainians — even Russian- speaking ones — behind a genuine sense of nationhood. National day rallies in Russophone Kharkov and Dnipropetr­ovsk have attracted record turnouts, their squares filled with a sea of yellow and blue Ukrainian flags. Without Crimea or the pro- Moscow population­s of the separatist Donbass, the electoral maths of Ukraine has swung unequivoca­lly westward. But instead of implementi­ng the pro- European, reformist hopes of Maidan, the country remains an economic basket case whose economy, media and politics are dominated by a group of warring oligarchs.

Indeed, the business interests of one of Ukraine’s most politicall­y powerful magnates, Rinat Akhmetov, may be one of the proximate causes of Russia’s recent escalation of tensions in the Azov Sea. Akhmetov, Ukraine’s richest man, owns a swath of steel mills and coal mines on both sides of the front lines in Donbass. Last year, separatist­s in Donetsk seized Akhmetov’s assets within their own territory.

Like all of Ukraine’s oligarchs, Akhmetov is also a major political player. The Kremlin has always had high hopes that Akhmetov will be able to orchestrat­e an electoral comeback for candidates sympatheti­c to Moscow. But earlier this month Akhmetov signalled that he would not support the Kremlin’s preferred presidenti­al candidate, Yuriy Boyko.

Blocking the Straits of Kerch may be the Kremlin’s way of meting out punishment to Akhmetov for his disloyalty and forcing him to toe the Moscow line. Restarting a shooting war with Ukraine might not seem the most tiny obvious way for the Kremlin to boost pro- Russian candidates in the elections. But many of Moscow’s actions in Ukraine have been more about sowing chaos than pursuing Russia’s longterm interests. For instance, in gaining Crimea, Russia lost any hope of there ever being another pro- Moscow government in Ukraine — a major strategic loss.

For now, Russia’s strategy seems to be to turn up the conflict a single notch, rather than launching an all- out military offensive against Mariupol. The short- term aim seems to be to damage Poroshenko’s chances in the elections by showing him to be powerless to release the Ukrainian sailors in custody in Crimea. Once the humiliatio­n of Poroshenko is complete, the Kremlin’s calculatio­n seems to be that the war can be further escalated or contained as political expediency dictates.

The danger is, of course, that such finely tuned military games have a habit of getting out of control. The Kremlin may have underestim­ated Poroshenko’s domestic support — as well as his stomach for a fight. Certainly the Ukrainian Parliament’s surprise approval of imposing martial law in 10 provinces that border Russia showed that he has deeper support than his poll ratings suggest. Poroshenko now has an excellent casus belli — and may yet choose to show his mettle by answering Russian gunfire with his own.

Putin has demonstrat­ed he’s not a man to be cowed — either by Western sanctions or by the defiance of smaller, weaker neighbours. He seems not to have intended the seizure of Ukrainian gunboats to kick off a full- scale war. But he may well get one, nonetheles­s.

By arrangemen­t with the Spectator

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