The Proof of the Putin is in the Ukraine

Date: July 26, 2014

Pressure is mounting on Putin to both take responsibility for his actions as

well as give back that which he has annexed. It is not likely to happen

peacefully.

Let’s look at a map. Please, find a map and look carefully. See the size of

Russia? Eight time zones, from the Pacific to two seas on Russia’s western

border, from the Arctic all the way south to Mongolia, China and Iran.

Natural resources? Approximately 35% of the world’s gas reserves, 15% of the

world’s known oil reserves. And then there are rare minerals, coal, iron,

aluminum, titanium, copper and on and on. It is a rich, under-exploited

land.


During his first time as President, Putin went after any of Russia’s richest

(oligarchs) who would not follow his orders for his plan for rebuilding

Russia. Mikhail Khodorkovsky was his principle target and, in short order,

he stripped Khodorkovsky of all his money, his position as head of one of

the largest oil and gas companies, and then jailed him. The other oligarchs

quickly fell into line. They now follow his every whim, setting gas and oil

prices, muscling his foes, putting pressure on nations as he directs. It is

as if all the commercial enterprises of the USA were at the command of the

President, “If you don’t do as I say, I’ll close every MacDonalds in France,

ground every Boeing.” That sort of power.


Crimea? That was a simple matter of making the Russian Navy generals and

their retired servicemen happy. For decades Crimea has been Russia’s Florida

for retiring service personnel. They whined they were worried their

retirement payments were going to be taxed again if Ukraine joined up with

the European Union (EU), so he came up with his version of the Monroe

Doctrine (“Mother Russia can protect Russians anywhere”) and simply invaded,

annexed, Crimea back into Russia. Think he’ll give it back? Not on your

life. To do that would destabilize his relations with his Navy admirals.

Their loyalty is critical to his powerbase. He can bully oligarchs, he

cannot bully the military. He has to placate the military.


Ukraine’s eastern borders? Russian Generals have a similar problem there.

Many of the Russian farmers, families and retirees from Russia’s military

live and work in eastern Ukraine. They do not want EU taxation, welfare,

rules and loyalties. They have leverage within the Russian sphere, none

within Europe and certainly not NATO. The western Russian regions are

controlled by three generals and their armies, the very same armies NATO

prepared for conflict with in Germany. Tank battles, missiles, troops.

Russia’s armies may have largely stood down but that does not mean Putin

wants to appear weak, he needs their loyalty, he needs their strength in

order to maintain power. When those Generals tell him they need to protect

Russians, he is forced (and probably wants to) unleash their forces from

within Russia to support “separatists.” Separatists my eye. Missile

batteries? You bet. Artillery fired from within Russia? You bet. And more to

come. Did Russian technicians and Russian-trained men fire and bring down

the jetliner? Sure. Putin’s response and that of his generals is that the

airliner should not have been there (true) and that the loss of life is

regrettable. End of his interest.


The world doesn’t want this kind of tyrannical, out-of-step with capitalist

world-development, behavior. Sanctions are being levied. On whom? His

oligarchs, who will be financially harmed for sure, but they are unlikely to

believe they can sway or overthrow Putin. They saw the example of

Khodorkovsky. A European court decision ruling Russia must refund billions

he stripped from Khodorkovsky is unlikely to even be met with a statement

from the Kremlin. Sanction against the military? These are old hard-liners.

Any sanctions levied against them will be seen as strengthening their will.

Unless the West understands the siege of Stalingrad, we will never

understand that will, that ability to sacrifice, that core fortitude.


Strangely, the weakest part of Putin’s hold on Russia comes from the air

force. It is notable that the Russian air force has not been seen over

Crimea or Ukraine. The day we see them supporting Putin’s forays into old

Soviet territory is the day the West better sit up and pay attention. Only

then will we know he has complete control. This doesn’t mean the air force

will not defend Russia, but action on now-foreign soil is clearly not in

their current interest or else you would have seen air superiority displays

in celebration over Crimea and that jetliner would not have been attacked if

Russia jets had been in the air, in harm’s way. So watch the Russian air

force, that’ll be you next clue as to what Putin can get away with.

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Published on July 30, 2014 17:11
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