Ghosts of Cold War stalk Ukraine
Tension mounts as Putin secures authority to invade Ukraine Rapid pace of events rattles country’s new leaders as gunmen march into Crimea
RUSSIAN President Vladimir Putin secured his parliament’s authority yesterday to invade Ukraine after troops seized control of the Crimea peninsula and pro-Moscow protesters hoisted flags above government buildings in two eastern cities.
Putin’s open assertion of the right to deploy troops in a country of 46 million people on the ramparts of central Europe creates the biggest direct confrontation between Russia and the West since the Cold War.
It followed days of warnings from US President Barack Obama and other Western leaders that Russia must not intervene, and assurances from Moscow that it would not do so.
Putin swiftly secured unanimous approval from Russia’s senate for the use of armed force on the territory of his neighbour, citing the need to protect Russian citizens, the same reason he gave for invading tiny Georgia in 2008.
Britain summoned the Russian ambassador. EU ministers were due to hold emergency talks. Czech President Milos Zeman recalled the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968.
Troops widely believed to belong to Moscow have already seized Crimea, an isolated peninsula in the Black Sea where Moscow has a large military presence in the headquarters of its Black Sea Fleet.
The campaign there has been bloodless so far, with Kiev’s new authorities powerless to intervene.
Scores were also hurt yesterday in clashes between proRussian demonstrators and supporters of Kiev’s new authorities in eastern cities — areas near the Russian frontier, where Moscow is staging war games.
Putin asked parliament to approve force “in connection with the extraordinary situation in Ukraine, the threat to the lives of citizens of the Russian Federation, our compatriots”, and to protect the Black Sea Fleet in Crimea. The authorisation to use force in Ukraine would last “until the normalisation of the socio-political situation in that country”.
The upper house swiftly delivered a unanimous yes vote, shown on live television.
So far there has been no sign of Russian military action in Ukraine outside Crimea, the
It is time to put an end to this lawlessness. Russians are our brothers
only part of Ukraine with a Russian ethnic majority, which has often voiced separatist aims.
The Kremlin has not yet openly confirmed that the troops that have seized Crimea are Russian. A Kremlin spokesman said Putin had not yet taken the decision to use force under the authorisation granted by the upper house, and still hoped to avoid further escalation.
Tension also rose dramatically elsewhere, with big and occasionally violent demonstrations in eastern and southern cities, where most people, though ethnically Ukrainian, speak Russian, and many support deposed president Viktor Yanukovych and Moscow.
By nightfall, protesters had torn down Ukrainian flags on government buildings in Kharkiv, Donetsk, Odessa and Dnipropetrovsk and replaced them with Russian flags.
In Kharkiv, scores of people were wounded in clashes when thousands of pro-Russian activists stormed the regional government headquarters, and fought pitched battles with a smaller number of supporters of Ukraine's new authorities.
In Donetsk, Yanukovych’s home region, lawmakers declared they were seeking a referendum on the region’s status.
Thousands of followers, holding a giant Russian flag and chanting “Russia, Russia” marched to the government headquarters and replaced the Ukrainian flag with Russia’s.
Coal miner Gennady Pavlov said Putin's declaration of the right to intervene was “right”.
“It is time to put an end to this lawlessness. Russians are our brothers. I support the forces.”
The rapid pace of events has rattled the new leaders of the country, who took power of a nation on the verge of bankruptcy when Yanukovych fled Kiev last week after his police killed scores of anti-Russian protesters in Kiev. Ukraine’s crisis began in November when Yanukovych, at Moscow’s behest, abandoned a free trade pact with the EU.
After Russia’s announcement, Ukraine’s acting president, Oleksander Turchynov, called a meeting of his security chiefs. Vitaly Klitschko, anoth- er anti-Yanukovych leader, called for general mobilisation.
On Kiev’s central Independence Square, a World War 2 film about Crimea was being shown, when Yuri Lutsenko, a former interior minister, interrupted it to announce: “War has arrived.” Hundreds chanted “Glory to the heroes. Death to the occupiers.”—