Monday, March 25, 2024

The battle of Donbas, Ukraine. डोनबासको युद्ध, युक्रेन

The Donbas represents one of the largest coal reserves in Ukraine, with estimated reserves of 60 billion tons of coal. Coal mining in the Donbas is conducted at very deep depths. With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the Donbas became a major industrial engine of the economy of independent Ukraine.


 The region also served as the political base of Viktor Yanukovych, a pro-Russian politician who would play a significant role in early 21st-century Ukrainian history. In 2004 Ukrainian Pres. Leonid Kuchma presented Yanukovych as his successor, but Yanukovych faced a strong challenge from opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko. During the presidential campaign, Yushchenko was prevented from speaking in the Donbas by local authorities, and he became seriously ill from dioxin poisoning in an apparent assassination attempt (allegedly by the Ukrainian state security service). When Yanukovych and Yushchenko faced each other in the second round of the 2004 presidential election, exit polls gave Yushchenko the clear lead. Yanokovych was declared victorious, however—a result that was quickly recognized by Russian Pres. Vladimir Putin. Yushchenko’s supporters maintained that the results were fabricated, and a mass protest movement that came to be called the Orange Revolution began in western Ukraine, where Yushchenko was generally regarded as the winner. Meanwhile, in Syeverodonetsk, in the Donbas, a meeting of Moscow-supported politicians recognized Yanukovych as president and considered a referendum on whether the Ukrainian oblasti (provinces) of Donetsk and Luhansk should become autonomous and ultimately secede from Ukraine and join Russia. In December 2004 the presidential election results were annulled by the Supreme Court, and a second runoff was held, in which Yushchenko was declared the winner. Instability would plague Yushchenko’s administration, however, and he was soon forced into a power-sharing agreement with Yanukovych as his prime minister. Yanukovych was elected president in 2010, and he immediately pivoted away from the pro-European course that Yushchenko had set in favor of a strongly pro-Russian foreign and domestic policy. In 2012 Yanukovych signed a law that granted local authorities the power to confer official status upon minority languages; in cities throughout the Donbas, this meant the recognition of Russian as an official language alongside Ukrainian. In spite of Yanukovych’s obvious affinity for Russia, in late 2013 he signaled his willingness to conclude an association agreement with the European Union. After a visit with Putin in Moscow, Yanukovych opted not to sign the agreement, and, within hours of the about-face, protesters took to the streets. For months thousands of people converged on central Kyiv to participate in a protest camp in the city’s Maidan Nezalezhnosti (“Independence Square”). In February 2014 Yanukovych attempted to quash the demonstration with a bloody crackdown that killed dozens of protesters and destroyed his political base. Impeached by an overwhelming parliamentary majority that included members of his own party, Yanukovych fled to Russia. Within days Putin, deprived of his lever in Kyiv, invaded the Ukrainian autonomous republic of Crimea. Putin spent the next month consolidating his grip on Crimea, and in April 2014 Russian-backed militants and Russian troops in uniforms that lacked insignia seized control of a broad swath of the Donbas. Pro-Russian separatists in Donetsk and Luhansk proclaimed their independence, and fierce fighting continued throughout the region. During the summer of 2014, the Ukrainian military pushed back Russian and separatist forces throughout the Donbas, recapturing the cities of MariupolSlov’yansk, and Kramatorsk and waging a pitched battle for control of the Donetsk airport. Tens of thousands of people were internally displaced by the fighting, and damage to infrastructure within the conflict zone disrupted access to water and electrical power. Several attempts were made to negotiate a cease-fire, and in February 2015 talks in Minsk, Belarus, led to an agreement that saw most heavy weapons being withdrawn from the line of contact that ran through the Donbas. This did not mean an end to the fighting, however, and by 2022 the war in the Donbas had claimed more than 14,000 lives. From the beginning of hostilities, Putin had denied—implausibly—the involvement of Russian personnel in the Donbas war, but in late 2021 it appeared that Russia was preparing for overt military action against Ukraine. Moscow stated that the massing of troops and matériel along the Ukrainian border was nothing more than an exercise, but Western analysts characterized the buildup as clear evidence of a planned invasion. On February 21, 2022, Putin’s intentions were made clear when he recognized the independence of the self-proclaimed people’s republics of Donetsk and Luhansk. Three days later Russian troops poured into Ukraine from Crimea, Belarus, and southwestern Russia, but their advance was soon checked by a tenacious Ukrainian defense. As the Russian drive on Kyiv faltered, the focus shifted to the Donbas, where many of Ukraine’s most seasoned units were holding the line. With his broader ambitions in Ukraine frustrated by a poor performance by the Russian military and overwhelming Western support for Ukraine’s government, Putin sought to salvage his “special military operation” by “liberating” the Donbas. As his casus belli, Putin had claimed, falsely, that Ukrainian forces were carrying out a genocide against Russian speakers in the Donbas. Ironically, the Russian invasion caused significantly more death and hardship than the previous eight years of conflict, and cities like Mariupol—traditionally strongly pro-Russian in their sympathies—were essentially razed by indiscriminate Russian artillery strikes. In September 2022 Ukraine launched a counteroffensive that liberated some 4,500 square miles (almost 12,000 sq km) of Russian-occupied territory in Kharkiv, Donetsk, and Luhansk oblasti. Putin responded by initiating a massive conscription drive to replace Russia’s staggering personnel losses, and the Russian occupation governments in the Donbas and southern Ukraine hastily declared that they would hold “referenda” on joining Russia. Outside of Russia, the so-called “referenda” were dismissed as a sham, and video evidence emerged of Russian gunmen going door-to-door to collect “votes.” Although the Russian military controlled less than half of Donetsk oblast, Russian authorities reported that 99 percent of residents had voted to join Russia. This unbelievable total recalled a similar “referendum” held in Russian-occupied Crimea in 2014. On September 30 Putin delivered an address that announced the illegal annexation of Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, and Zaporizhzhya oblasti by Russia. The move, which was roundly condemned by the West, was an attempt to legitimize Russia’s invasion and occupation at a time when Ukrainian forces were reclaiming territory throughout the region.

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