(Newsweek) --- A top secret Kremlin
briefing purportedly intended for the eyes of Russian President Vladimir Putin
on the eve of Ukraine’s revolution which discusses how to co-opt regions of the
country’s east into the Russian Federation has been leaked, according to Russian
media.
The document, which
forsees the break-up of Ukraine ,
with eastern regions joining Russia
“in some form or another”, was printed in daily newspaper Novaya Gazeta today.
It consists of a
seven-point policy brief, advising the Kremlin on how Russia should react to the likely collapse of
the regime of then-president of Ukraine ,
Viktor Yanukovych. The document advises Putin on how to “reorient” regions of Ukraine to
Russian influence.
Novaya Gazeta
estimates that the memo dates back to the eve of Ukraine ’s Euromaidan uprising
between February 4 and 12, 2014 and were intended to be submitted to the
presidential administration. However Novaya Gazeta could not confirm
that Putin had ever seen the papers nor could Newsweek verify their
authenticity independently .
Point three of the
document laments that the Ukrainian constitution doesn’t contain mechanisms by
which the country’s eastern territories and Crimea might decide to secede and
join the Russian Federation .
The author therefore suggests that it is then right for Russia to “play on the aspirations” of eastern
Ukrainian regions with pro-Russian sentiments, to allow them
"ascension" to Russia
"in one form or another.”
Thus, the author of
the document highlights the need for Russia to first “sign contracts for
cross-border cooperation [ed with these regions], after which [they can]
establish direct government-agreed relations with these Ukrainian territories
where there are durable pro-Russian electoral sympathies."
The author
highlights Crimea and Kharkiv as regions pro-Russian groups are already strong
enough to push for “maximum integration” with Russia , also listing Luhansk and
three other eastern Ukrainian regions. Crimea was annexed by Russia in March
last year, while pro-Russian separatists are currently battling pro-Kiev forces
for control of Luhansk.
Interestingly the
region of Donetsk ,
which has seen some of the most invigorated pro-Russian militias and fiercest
fighting, is omitted from that list as the author believed local Ukrainian
oligarch Rinat Akhmetov’s control there was too strong.
In Novaya Gazeta’s
notes on the document, the paper highlights how pragmatic the document is, in
juxtaposition with the image of the Ukrainian conflict which the Kremlin have
presented to the world “There is no ‘spiritual-historical’ justification for
Russian interference in Ukraine [in the document],” Andrey Lipsky, Novaya
Gazeta’s political editor writes. “There are no arguments about ‘Novorossiya’
[New Russia] or the protection of Russian-speakers, or the ‘Russian world’ or
the resurgent ‘Russian Spring’. Only geopolitics and cold expediency.”
Instead, the reason
for Russian interference in regions of Ukraine
given by the author is retaining control over Ukraine ’s
gas pipelines and strengthening Russia ’s
role in Eastern and Central Europe .
Elsewhere
Yanukovych is notably described rather negatively as an individual “of
inconsiderable moral will”. The author of the document does not believe he
would stay in power for long, saying that there is no longer a need for “the Russian federation
to provide any political, diplomatic, financial or informational support”.
According to Lilia
Shevtsova, Kremlinologist and Russia
expert at Moscow ’s
Carnegie Endowment for Peace, the leaked document’s publication is very
significant.
“This ‘plan’
suggests that the attempts of the forces close to the Kremlin, apparently
working on Kremlin orders, to find ways to subjugate Ukraine had been undertaken before
Yanukovych’s collapse, thus we are dealing with a certain strategy that fits
Putin's new survival doctrine adopted in 2012-2013,” she says.
“The interesting
part is the fact that the plan includes a demand to the change the Ukrainian
constitution which has become the Kremlin's demand and recently became the
condition of the Minsk-2 truce, endorsed by the Merkel- Hollande tandem,”
Shevtsova adds, referring to the ceasefire meeting in Minsk a fortnight ago
negotiated between the leaders of Russia, Ukraine, France and Germany.
According to
Newsweek’s Russia
correspondent, Anna Nemtsova, another interesting aspect of the leaked
documents is how it came into Novaya Gazeta’s possession.
“The most
interesting part about the document was the motivation of the Kremlin-insider
source,” Nemtsova says.
“Novaya Gazeta’s
deputy editor has known the source for many years and he tells me that there
are people in the Kremlin who feel concerned about Russia's future and want to
stop the war with somebody's hands, or at least change the public opinion,”
Nemtsova adds
“On the other hand,
other Kremlin experts tell me that the document in Novaya had no significance -
that Putin had received many similar briefings in the past decade.”
The newspaper
stated that a figure possibly linked with the memo is Kremlin-ally and
billionaire Constantine Malofeev. According to the newspaper, however,
Malofeev’s press representative “categorically denied” his alleged involvement
in drafting the document as soon as the Novaya Gazeta announced that they would
publish it and linked them to Malofeev on the Echo of Moscow radio station last
week.
Malofeev’s
representative told the paper he will pursue legal action because of their
claims he is linked to the document.
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