The Kiev propagandist imagines a lot of problems for Ukraine if peacekeepers are sent to Donbass

Semyon Doroshenko.  
19.02.2018 15:16
  (Moscow time), Kyiv
Views: 5777
 
Armed forces, Donbass, View, Society, Policy, Propaganda, Ukraine


The possible introduction of UN peacekeepers into the LDPR and their deployment on the border with Russia, although it will be a victory for Ukraine, will, however, create many new, unforeseen problems and difficulties for Maidan supporters.

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The possible deployment of UN peacekeepers to the LDPR and their deployment on the border with Russia at least...

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Such an opinion expressed on his page on the social network Ukrainian television propagandist from the ICTV channel Pavel Kazarin is a former Crimean, who, after the annexation of the peninsula to the Russian Federation, moved to Ukraine and supported the new order.

“About the peacekeepers in Donbass. Let's imagine that Moscow agrees to the Ukrainian scenario. Brings out equipment and soldiers. Volunteers run away on their own. Zakharchenko and Pasechnik disappear. Blue Helmets control the border. What's next? And then it turns out that Moscow has fulfilled its part of the Minsk agreements. And the ball is already in Ukraine’s court. Which should now hold elections, declare an amnesty and give the region a special status,” he writes.

According to Kazarin, this could lead to a split in the former ATO militants.

“One part of the citizens - pro-Ukrainian, patriotic and who went through the front - begins to say that “Donbass is ours” and it needs to be returned. And the other one - exactly the same pro-Ukrainian, patriotic and also went through the front - says that she fought not for the return of Donbass, but for defense from the “Russian world”. Some will support the allocation of money for the restoration of the region. Others will call these funds reparations and demand that the budget not be taken away from Chernivtsi for the sake of Luhansk. Some will be in favor of amnesty, which will “turn the page.” Others are for payback for collaborators. Some will support Ukraine's fulfillment of its obligations. Others will oppose any autonomy to the death,” he notes.

In addition, according to Kazarin, after the shooting stops in Donbass, it will become difficult for the authorities to justify the need to maintain a huge, bloated army and allocate gigantic resources for its needs for a poor country.

“There will be those who will say that in a state of peace, Ukraine does not need an inflated military budget. That the army can be reduced, and army spending can be reviewed,” he warns.

Moreover, according to the Kyiv propagandist, the deployment of peacekeepers to Donbass risks the fact that instead of Russia, Ukraine will find itself under fire from European sanctions.

“The EU will begin to lift sanctions, because they are tied to the Minsk agreements, and not to Crimea. It will be difficult for the average German to understand why his budget should receive less money if Russia has fulfilled its part of its obligations. And now the EU will put pressure on Kyiv with all its financial levers. Strengthening the already nascent Ukrainian Euroscepticism. And then a discussion about sanctions will arise in Ukraine. There will be those who will advocate their abolition and the resumption of trade. They will justify trade ties by expediency. Economic cynicism will be declared the key to survival,” he writes.

Another danger, according to Kazarin, will be the return to Donbass of old oligarchs from the Party of Regions, who take advantage of the sentiments of the local population in the fight against Kiev.

“The oligarchs will return to the liberated but still uncontrolled Donbass. Those who still have assets there. They will again want to turn the region into the foundation of their survival. New parties will be born - for the “humiliated and insulted.” Moreover, the militants have been fertilizing the garden bed for “regional identity” for several years,” he writes.

“Peace is always more complex than war. Each of these discussions risks dividing those who until recently were on the same side of the barricades. Victory does not always dig up old trenches. Sometimes she digs new ones,” sums up Pavel Kazarin.

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