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DPR and LPR leaders after signing Minsk: “I hope we’ll see a completely different Ukraine in the nearest future” [Video]

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of this site. This site does not give financial, investment or medical advice.

A win scored by the DPR and LDR, and a chance for Ukraine’s citizens to purge the hate that Americas’ neo-conservatives taught them for so many decades.

Poroshenko, after signing this deal, may end up being enemy number one with Kiev’s nazi battalions.

Via Fort Russ blog:

On the withdrawal of heavy weapons under OSCE control.

The conditions are rather odd: it specifies a distance of 50km (for cannon) or 140km (for rocket artillery), from the actual line of the front as of midnight, February 15, and for the militia from the September 19 line [the line of demarcation from Minsk-1].

This means that both sides should leave their positions, creating a huge belt (100-300km) without weapons, de facto up to the borders of the Donetsk and Lugansk regions. Which leads to the following question: who will control it? This is the key question. So far there are no clear answers. But considering that the issue of peacekeepers was frequently brought up, this is who they have in mind. It is not for nothing that the Donbass representatives said that they will accept only Russian and Belarusian peacekeepers. Kiev, on the other hand, does not want peacekeepers, but if it does agree it will want NATO troops. So there is a big question mark here.

On Ukraine’s constitutional reform which has to be implemented by the end of 2015…

There is a provision which includes the main provisions of the law on the “Special Status of Lugansk and Donetsk Region.”

Donbass receives widespread autonomy within the framework of nominally unitary Ukraine. This is the compromise which satisfied Putin after the 16-hour Minsk marathon. Moreover, France and Germany guarantee the re-establishment of the Donbass banking system, and will reach an agreement with Russia concerning the rules concerning the free trade zone between EU, Russia, and Ukraine, while taking into consideration the special status of Donbass.

On the border control issue…

Here the language is extremely clear. The border between Ukraine and Russia will be re-established only after Ukraine carries out constitutional reforms, which implies autonomy (self-government, people’s militia, cross-border cooperation with Russia). In other words, once Kiev gives Donbass control over its own territory, then the border shall be re-established…but will remain under militia control.

Summary and conclusion…

To sum up this quick analysis based on still-incomplete information one can say the following: in purely diplomatic sense, Russia scored a success, forcing Kiev and the West to accept a painful and temporary, but real compromise. It is based on freezing the military conflict and the autonomy of the Donbass while nominally preserving Ukraine’s borders. In practice we are talking about reformatting Ukraine from a unitary into a federal state, regardless of Poroshenko’s denials. If the Galicia banderites realize this, they’ll start screaming about “Poroshenko’s treason.”

Of course, the implementation of the agreement is another question. The fact that neither Poroshenko nor European leaders signed it does not make it easier. On the other hand, Hollande’s and Merkel’s wishes are more than real, so it will fall to them to compel Kiev to implement the “Collection of Measures.” The only other option is a complete defeat for Ukrainian forces. To which Putin merrily alluded when he mentioned Debaltsevo—either you come out with your hands up, or you’ll continue to get killed.

The Minsk peace plan from February 12 does not solve the problem (and it could not solve it), but creates the possibility to delay the war until the end of 2015. With one condition: that Kiev and Washington accept the federalization of Ukraine. If not, the war will come to Kiev.

References:

http://fortruss.blogspot.com/2015/02/eng-subs-dpr-lpr-prime-ministers-joint.html

http://fortruss.blogspot.ca/2015/02/minsk-2-preliminary-analysis.html

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The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of this site. This site does not give financial, investment or medical advice.

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vaju01
February 12, 2015

RT @redpilltimes: #DPR & #LPR leaders after #Minsk: “I hope we’ll see a completely different #Ukraine in the nearest future” http://t.co/tR…

NewsCoverUp
February 12, 2015

RT @redpilltimes: #DPR & #LPR leaders after #Minsk: “I hope we’ll see a completely different #Ukraine in the nearest future” http://t.co/tR…

NEWS_WORLD_
February 12, 2015

#DPR and LPR leaders after signing Minsk: “I hope we’ll see a… http://t.co/GNIk454rjy #timeline #notizie #news http://t.co/ZeQZanuvkH

Nine year old boy is violently taken down by Swedish metro police

When Ukraine breaks the Minsk 2 agreement, these are the headlines that western main stream media will blast out