The Japan Times - Vladimir Putin's Ukraine obsesssion

EUR -
AED 4.15662
AFN 80.915794
ALL 97.779523
AMD 440.739925
ANG 2.039597
AOA 1035.477232
ARS 1360.267458
AUD 1.749914
AWG 2.039834
AZN 1.864881
BAM 1.949117
BBD 2.282772
BDT 137.368965
BGN 1.953828
BHD 0.426538
BIF 3315.791738
BMD 1.13167
BND 1.457203
BOB 7.829154
BRL 6.438185
BSD 1.130623
BTN 95.371972
BWP 15.351361
BYN 3.700013
BYR 22180.722889
BZD 2.271013
CAD 1.56425
CDF 3251.28661
CHF 0.931407
CLF 0.027715
CLP 1063.535883
CNY 8.228652
CNH 8.150063
COP 4863.972245
CRC 571.839179
CUC 1.13167
CUP 29.989243
CVE 110.846498
CZK 24.927354
DJF 201.12014
DKK 7.463479
DOP 66.48568
DZD 149.871831
EGP 57.342145
ERN 16.975043
ETB 148.283674
FJD 2.554061
FKP 0.852483
GBP 0.851462
GEL 3.100564
GGP 0.852483
GHS 15.560332
GIP 0.852483
GMD 80.853118
GNF 9795.209305
GTQ 8.707143
GYD 236.538914
HKD 8.770524
HNL 29.254098
HRK 7.53804
HTG 147.713494
HUF 403.632274
IDR 18593.78313
ILS 4.093817
IMP 0.852483
INR 95.308699
IQD 1482.487091
IRR 47657.432839
ISK 146.879518
JEP 0.852483
JMD 179.325099
JOD 0.802696
JPY 162.656564
KES 146.132465
KGS 98.964721
KHR 4533.454903
KMF 491.71018
KPW 1018.502582
KRW 1556.452668
KWD 0.346992
KYD 0.942169
KZT 584.80472
LAK 24455.143959
LBP 101302.735603
LKR 338.67868
LRD 226.124625
LSL 20.862349
LTL 3.341526
LVL 0.684536
LYD 6.172834
MAD 10.430534
MDL 19.46924
MGA 5041.588319
MKD 61.549116
MMK 2376.013298
MNT 4043.44419
MOP 9.025552
MRU 44.876325
MUR 51.38952
MVR 17.429089
MWK 1965.71042
MXN 22.281532
MYR 4.754543
MZN 72.370195
NAD 20.862375
NGN 1818.084242
NIO 41.60048
NOK 11.765948
NPR 152.594757
NZD 1.896261
OMR 0.435666
PAB 1.130623
PEN 4.14474
PGK 4.596824
PHP 62.785442
PKR 318.168896
PLN 4.269619
PYG 9037.012324
QAR 4.12036
RON 4.979459
RSD 117.357172
RUB 91.095022
RWF 1605.83907
SAR 4.244354
SBD 9.470204
SCR 16.086699
SDG 679.571603
SEK 10.943295
SGD 1.459061
SHP 0.889315
SLE 25.745187
SLL 23730.525941
SOS 646.765219
SRD 41.701696
STD 23423.274546
SVC 9.893077
SYP 14713.81642
SZL 20.86234
THB 37.242871
TJS 11.758381
TMT 3.960843
TND 3.39274
TOP 2.650484
TRY 43.653015
TTD 7.679667
TWD 33.016796
TZS 3039.66439
UAH 47.011499
UGX 4134.821806
USD 1.13167
UYU 47.447304
UZS 14643.803427
VES 100.278969
VND 29375.311958
VUV 137.036611
WST 3.144371
XAF 653.715427
XAG 0.034835
XAU 0.000339
XCD 3.058394
XDR 0.81668
XOF 651.842054
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.750061
ZAR 20.689754
ZMK 10186.386925
ZMW 31.176098
ZWL 364.397129
  • RBGPF

    4.2100

    67.21

    +6.26%

  • RYCEF

    0.0700

    10.42

    +0.67%

  • NGG

    0.1600

    71.84

    +0.22%

  • RELX

    0.0200

    55.04

    +0.04%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    22.02

    -0.36%

  • SCS

    -0.1700

    9.97

    -1.71%

  • GSK

    -0.2200

    38.85

    -0.57%

  • BTI

    0.5800

    43.75

    +1.33%

  • RIO

    -0.1300

    59.57

    -0.22%

  • AZN

    -0.3500

    72.09

    -0.49%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    22.26

    -0.27%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    9.6

    -0.1%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.05

    -0.15%

  • BCC

    -3.6800

    92.47

    -3.98%

  • BP

    1.0600

    29.18

    +3.63%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    21.39

    -0.28%

Vladimir Putin's Ukraine obsesssion
Vladimir Putin's Ukraine obsesssion

Vladimir Putin's Ukraine obsesssion

Russian President Vladimir Putin has an obsession that is so close and yet so far: to return Ukraine to Moscow's fold, in the name of Russia's greatness.

Text size:

For many Russians of his generation, who were raised on Soviet propaganda, the USSR disintegrating and its spheres of influences vanishing in just three years remains an open wound.

For Putin, a KGB officer based in East Germany at the time the Soviet Union was gradually collapsing between 1989 and 1991, this was a personal defeat.

The Russian leader has said many times that he suffered the same misery as his compatriots when the Soviet empire crumbled, most recently claiming he was forced to drive a taxi to make ends meet when he returned to his homeland.

For many Russians, the years after the Soviet collapse were marked by humiliation and poverty -- a stark contrast to the West's triumphalism and prosperity at the time.

Putin has claimed that the end of the Soviet Union was the "greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the 20th century" -- despite Russia living through two world wars.

Observers say his sense for revenge deepened when NATO and the EU expanded into countries once dominated by Moscow.

Putin has since made it his historical mission to stop this advance in what he believes should be Russia's region of influence.

For the longtime Russian leader, any moves towards bringing Ukraine into Western alliances is a red line.

- Vision of 'NATO rockets in Moscow' -

In his vision, "if the authorities do not solve this security problem now, then Ukraine will be in NATO in 10-15 years" according to analyst Alexei Makarkin.

When a pro-Western revolution took place in Kyiv in 2014, Moscow land-grabbed Ukraine's Crimean peninsula and pro-Russian separatists took up arms in the east of the country.

Recent rhetoric from Putin has criticised Ukraine for presenting itself as a victim of Tsarist and Soviet imperialism.

And, he says, two Ukrainian revolutions -- in 2005 and 2014 -- that drove out pro-Russia elites were the result of a Western plot.

For the Kremlin chief, Russia must respond by being strong, menacing even. Giving in is not in the nature of the former KGB agent and judoka.

Born into a working class Saint Petersburg family, Putin said in 2015 that "if a fight is inevitable, you must strike first."

One of his school teachers, Vera Gurevich, has said that when a 14-year-old Putin broke one of his classmate's leg, he said that some "only understand force."

After Ukraine's Orange Revolution that broke out in the winter of 2004, Putin waged natural gas wars against the country, destabilising it economically.

Then he made a military move in 2014, by taking Crimea, and supporting pro-Moscow rebels in eastern Ukraine.

He has repeatedly called into question the idea of distinct Ukrainian identity and statehood.

As far back as 2008, according to Russian and US media, Putin told his then US counterpart George W. Bush that "Ukraine is not even a country."

During his end-of-year press conference in December, Putin again raised eyebrows by saying Ukraine was "created" by Vladimir Lenin, the founder of the Soviet Union.

- Desire to 'stop time' -

Months earlier, in a long article called "On the historical unity of Russians and Ukrainians," he said that Kyiv's decisions are driven by a Western "anti-Russia" plot.

The West is "setting up a political system in Ukraine in such a way that presidents, deputies and ministers change, but the line towards division with Russia, towards enmity with it, is unchanged," Putin wrote.

Tatiana Stanovaya, who runs the R.Politik analytical centre, said that, according to this logic, the 100,000 Russian troops massed on Ukraine's border are not a threat.

The Russian leader, she said, has always believed that the Ukrainian people are themselves pro-Russians that have been "the subject of manipulation."

"In their (the Kremlin) understanding, war would not be an attack on Ukraine, but a liberation of the Ukrainian people from a foreign occupier," she said.

His spokesman Dmitry Peskov made this position clear back in December: "It is not possible to lose a brotherly nation, it will remain brotherly."

In essence, Russian authorities see it as their mission to bring Ukraine back onto its natural course.

The Kremlin has for years repeated its line that the West has taken advantage of Russia's post-Soviet weakness to camp close by, betraying vague promises made in the twilight of the USSR.

With his army at Ukraine's doorstep, Putin is demanding that NATO move back to its 1997 borders and roll back the European security framework born out of the end of the Cold War.

What drives Putin, said Makarkin, "is the desire to stop time."

T.Ueda--JT