Cross us and we will crush you, warns Medvedev
President Medvedev of Russia yesterday promised a “shattering blow”
against any foreign power that moved against Russian citizens.
The threat will compound the fears of former Soviet states, which are
concerned that they could be next after Russia’s attack on Georgia.
“If someone thinks they can kill our citizens, kill soldiers and
officers fulfilling the role of peacekeepers, we will never allow this,”
Mr Medvedev told a group of Second World War veterans in Kursk. “Anyone
who tries to do this will receive a shattering blow.”
He continued: “Russia has the capabilities - economic, political and
military. Nobody has any illusions left about that.”
Russia’s incursion into Georgia, and its reluctance to leave, has
alarmed former Soviet states such as Ukraine and the Baltic states of
Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. The war was designed in part to send a
message to the former Soviet states that “you can’t solve your problems
by running to give the West a hug”, Liliya Shevtsova, an analyst at the
Carnegie Centre in Moscow, said. At the start of the war, Mr Medvedev
said it was his constitutional right to defend the “lives and dignity”
of Russian citizens. Georgia’s allies now fear that Russia will begin to
throw its weight around in defence of the millions of ethnic Russians
who live outside the motherland. The break-up of the Soviet Union left a
huge Russian diaspora outside the country. There are more than 8 million
ethnic Russians in Ukraine, 4.5 million in Kazakhstan and 1.2 million in
the Baltic states. Russia justified its attack on Georgia by insisting
that it was acting to protect the 90 per cent of South Ossetians who
have Russian passports.
How many of the passports are genuine is another question, as the
region has long been infamous for smuggling and counterfeit passports
and dollars.
Yevgeniya Latynina, a columnist, wrote last week that when the South
Ossetian leader, Eduard Kokoity, received his passport, he opened it to
find that it contained the picture of Abraham Lincoln from a $5 note
instead of his own photograph.
Russia’s relations with Ukraine and the Baltic States have worsened
in recent years after Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania joined Nato and the
EU, and Ukraine tried to follow them. One man was killed in
demonstrations staged by Russians in Tallinn last year after Estonian
authorities moved a Second World War monument that had been erected in
the city by the Soviet regime. Moscow has complained that ethnic
Russians are discriminated against in the Baltic states - an accusation
that the EU has supported in some cases.
Ukraine and the Baltic States were quick to support Georgia, but
Belarus, normally an ardent supporter of its only ally in Europe, meekly
called for a ceasefire. There are more than one million ethnic Russians
in Belarus.
The leaders of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia condemned the actions of
Russian forces and travelled to Georgia last week to show solidarity
with Tbilisi. Estonia’s Postimees newspaper even published a map
explaining the weapons Russia might use against the country. Ukraine
told Moscow that it could not use its Crimea-based Black Sea Fleet in
armed conflicts without permission, after warships were deployed near
Georgia. On Sunday Ukraine offered to create a joint missile defence
network with the West amid fears that its port city of Sevastopol, home
of the fleet, could become the next flashpoint between Russia and its
former satellite states.
Viktor Yushchenko, Ukraine’s reformist President, who visited Tbilisi
last week to support President Saakashvili of Georgia, said that the use
of Russian ships for a war violated Ukraine’s neutrality and risked
drawing it into conflict.
-CNN
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