Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Forget diplomacy now

- DANIEL DEPETRIS

September was a rocky month for Vladimir Putin.

First came a tactical embarrassm­ent of monumental proportion­s when Russian forces lost more than 1,000 square miles of territory south of Kharkiv, Ukraine, in a manner of days— exposing the Russian army’s slapdash nature for the umpteenth time.

Then came the diplomatic finger-wagging from Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who used a public appearance with Putin on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organizati­on summit to urge him toward dialogue. A day earlier, Putin acknowledg­ed that China, which Moscow increasing­ly depends on for political and economic support, had “questions and concerns” about how the war was proceeding.

Putin’s mobilizati­on of 300,000 reservists, a decision he avoided for nearly eight months, sparked the most vocal acts of opposition from the Russian public since the war began. Protests cropped up in dozens of cities and towns across the country.

Terrified at the idea of risking their lives for a mystifying cause, men eligible for the draft rushed to airports, bus depots and train stations; at least 200,000 Russians have fled the country since the Kremlin’s order was announced. Russian business leaders are so concerned about the loss of able-bodied workers that they are asking the Russian government to exempt those with specialize­d skills.

Putin is therefore desperate for anything he can call a win. His highly manufactur­ed signing ceremony on Friday at the Grand Kremlin Palace, where he approved the incorporat­ion of four Ukrainian regions—Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzh­ia—into the Russian Federation, was meant to serve that purpose.

Addressing hundreds of dignitarie­s underneath a gaudy chandelier, Putin lambasted the collective West for attempting to destroy Russia and colonizing others throughout history. The irony of these remarks occurring at the same time Russia is trying to colonize Ukraine was apparently lost on Putin.

“I want the Kyiv authoritie­s and their real masters in the West to hear me, so that they remember this,” Putin bellowed. “People living in Luhansk and Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzh­ia are becoming our citizens. Forever.”

On its face, it would seem that Putin’s annexation of east and southeast Ukraine doesn’t change things all that much. Just like Russia’s previous absorption of Crimea, Moscow will insist these four Ukrainian regions are now an integral part of its territory, while everybody else will reject this change of status as if it never happened.

The Crimea comparison, however, doesn’t hold. Crimea was already under full Russian control when Putin took it over. And the Crimea takeover was bloodless.

Not so with the Ukrainian oblasts Putin annexed on Friday. In fact, the Russians don’t have full control over any of them. Luhansk, which was all but gobbled up by Russian troops in early July, is seeing renewed fighting. Ukrainian forces still control major population centers in Donetsk and are on the upswing in the northern part of the territory, booting the Russians from Lyman.

Putin has essentiall­y declared victory over swaths of Ukraine he doesn’t control, and the Ukrainians have no intent of giving it to him. By seeking to create a victory out of the jaws of defeat, Putin has just created another problem for the depleted and under-resourced Russian military, which will now be expected, at a minimum, to capture every inch of Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzh­ia. Anything less would be another blunder for Putin and his war effort, not to mention more evidence of Russia’s numerous military shortcomin­gs.

The annexation is significan­t for another reason: It puts the kibosh on end-of-war diplomacy between Kyiv and Moscow. True, there wasn’t much diplomacy to begin with.

Last week’s events, however, change the game. If the prospects of a negotiatio­n were infinitesi­mal last week, they are practicall­y impossible today.

This is troubling news for those around the world who want the war to end as soon as possible. But our feelings are irrelevant. The only two people who can end the fighting don’t want to.

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