(RFE/RL) --- Fighting in eastern Ukraine — and particularly around the city of Donetsk — has flared up again, more intensely than
anything since a shaky ceasefire was agreed to in Minsk on September 5.
Journalists and
other observers on November 7 reported seeing dozens of military vehicles,
including tanks and armored personnel carriers, entering separatist-controlled
areas of eastern Ukraine
from Russia .
The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) confirmed the
sightings the following day.
Numerous
videos of the convoy have appeared online.
Pro-Kremlin analyst
Sergei Markov, however, told the Daily Beast that Moscow is providing "multilayered
support" to the separatist movement.
What is the cause
of the renewed military activity in eastern Ukraine ?
Here are a few
possibilities:
'Election' Reaction
On November 2, the
separatist authorities in eastern Ukraine
held disputed elections that Kiev , the OSCE, the
EU, and the United States
said were illegitimate and a violation of the Minsk agreement. Ukrainian President Petro
Poroshenko said the voting "torpedoed" the Minsk process.
In response,
Poroshenko sent additional troops to the region and asked parliament to repeal
a law on autonomy for the breakaway regions that was passed as part of the Minsk process.
"I think the
recent transfer of equipment [from Russia to the separatists] is
primarily defensive at this stage," said Tom Frear, a researcher at the
European Leadership Network (ELN), in a written interview. "The rhetoric
coming out of Kiev following the elections in
the Donbass and the revocation of the autonomy agreement means that Russia and the Donbas
leadership can't rule out a renewed Ukrainian offensive."
Tactical
Considerations
The influx of
equipment to the separatists could also signal a desire to solidify their
positions and make some small local gains that could make it easier to get through
the winter.
The separatists may
be seeking control of specific objects, such as a power plant to the north of
Luhansk and Donetsk
airport, Frear says. Such moves, he says, are "aimed at securing economic
assets that make the long-term survival of the Luhansk People's Republic [LNR]
and the Donetsk People's Republic [DNR] more plausible."
Russian analyst
Markov also told the Daily Beast that the separatists are seeking to take
control over "Piski, Avdiivka, and Schastye, a town with a central heating
station." In addition, he speculated they might want to recapture
Slovyansk and Kramotorsk, which are "symbolically and strategically
important towns for them."
Building A Land
Bridge
More dramatically, Moscow may be intent on adding territory to the separatist
region that would give Russia
a land bridge across eastern Ukraine
to the Black Sea peninsula of Crimea , which Moscow
annexed in March.
The region is
currently accessible to Russia
only by air and across the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov .
Such a land bridge would make it much easier for Moscow
to supply Crimea .
Ivan Lozowy, an
independent policy analyst based in Kiev , says
establishing this land bridge is Putin's "unfinished business in eastern Ukraine "
and "a priority" for him.
It would, however,
have to include the key city of Mariupol ,
which would be a difficult objective to capture.
Mariupol "is
pretty much dead set against letting the Russian troops through," Lozowy
says. "The local residents have even been helping to build fortifications."
And What About
Kharkiv?
The so-called
Novorossia project has foundered in recent months, and could be strengthened if
the separatists were able to get control of Kharkiv , Ukraine 's
second-largest city.
Lozowy notes that
the city has "symbolic significance," as well as being a major
industrial center.
In December 1917,
Kharkiv was the first Ukrainian city to recognize the Bolshevik coup in Russia , and the city served as Ukraine 's
capital until 1935. Ukraine 's
largest tank producer is located in the region, among many other
military-industrial enterprises.
"Undoubtedly,
Kharkiv, which has remained on the whole indifferent to calls to join
'Novorossia,' really upsets certain circles both in Moscow and in the LNR and
DNR," Russian military analyst Aleksandr Golts told openrussia.org on
November 10.
Lozowy says
achieving the two goals of establishing a land bridge to Crimea
and incorporating Kharkiv into the separatist territory would "bring Putin
and the Kremlin very close to their original goal of building — or carving out,
rather — a 'Novorossia' from Ukrainian territory."
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