GHN offers an article originally posted
by IBTimes reporting about the interview of unnamed Russian official with the
Financial Times.
A Russian government official has
revealed that Russia would be willing to fight a war over the Crimea region of
Ukraine and protect the large Russian population and its military assets there.
"If
Ukraine breaks apart, it will trigger a war," the unnamed official told
the Financial Times.
"They
will lose Crimea first [because] we will go in and protect [it], just as we did
in Georgia," the official continued.
Russian
President Vladimir Putin has been publicly restrained about the Ukraine and sent Vladimir Lukin, a former diplomat
and human rights commissioner, to Kiev as a mediator.
But analysts
have pointed to the possibility of a repetition of the 2008 Georgia conflict
when Russian troops and tanks invaded after the Georgian government launched an
attack on the separatist region of South Ossetia. One hundred and fifty people
died in the Russian action.
Russia is one
of the few countries in the world to officially recognize the independence of
South Ossetia and Abkhazia, and would be likely do so with the Crimea region
should Ukraine divide.
The speaker of
the Crimea parliament, Volodymyr Konstantinov, suggested that the
Russian-majority region might secede from Ukraine if it splits in the event of
a civil war.
"It is
possible, if the country breaks apart. And everything is moving towards
that," he told Russian news agency Interfax.
Ukraine's
western region of Lviv has already reportedly declared independence from the
central government.
Ukraine is a
nation torn between Russia and the European Union, situated at the heart of the
"shared neighborhood" between the two blocs.
Approximately
21% of Ukraine's population is Russian and it holds deep cultural and
historical links with modern Russia because of its Soviet history.
The region of
Crimea lies on the northern coast of the Black Sea. Russia's massive Black Sea
Fleet is stationed at Sevastopol and 60% of the region's population are ethnic
Russians.
The Russian
elite views Ukraine as part of the Soviet "sphere of influence" and
sees the country as a potential bulwark against the growth of EU liberalization.
"We will
not allow Europe and the US to take Ukraine from us. The states [are] of the
former Soviet Union, we are one family," a foreign policy official told
the FT.
"They
think Russia is still as weak as in the early 1990s but we are not."
Ukrainian
President Viktor Yanukovych has claimed a deal to resolve Ukraine’s political
crisis has been reached with pro-European opposition leaders after the
bloodiest day in the country's history since the Soviet era.