After the Russian parliament approved sending more soldiers to the Crimean peninsula, Andriy Parubiy, Secretary of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine, announced Sunday that the Ukrainian Defense Ministry had orders to assemble all soldiers. The new Ukrainian government in Kyiv had already alerted the army on Friday. Since then, Russian forces have effectively occupied the Crimean peninsula.
According to Kyryl Savin, director of the Heinrich Böll Foundation in Kyiv, Ukraine's military mobilization is an attempt to show Russia and the world that Ukraine will not stand by and do nothing while Russia violates its sovereignty. 'But I think it's more of a symbolic gesture,' Savin said. If, however, Russian troops were also to invade south-east Ukraine, that could change quickly: 'I'm pretty sure that this would result in military as well as civil resistance.'
Ukraine's interim head of government, Arseniy Yatsenyuk, said his country was on 'red alert.' He called the Russian parliament's approval of Vladimir Putin's request to send troops to Crimea 'a declaration of war on my country.'
'If Putin wants to be the president who started a war between neighboring and friendly countries, between Ukraine and Russia, then he is only centimeters away from his goal,' Yatsenyuk said. 'We're on the brink of disaster.'
Ukraine's chances against Russia are slim
Experts agree that Ukraine's military doesn't stand much of a chance against Russia. It's also unclear whether the political leaders in Kyiv still have full authority over the Ukrainian army all over the country. According to Russian media reports, many Ukrainian soldiers have defected to the Russian army.
Furthermore, the new Ukrainian leadership has the problem that some important positions in the administration are still held by people who support the pro-Russian position of the deposed president, Viktor Yanukovych. 'These people aren't openly opposing the new leaders in Kyiv, but they're sabotaging their decisions,' Kyryl Savin explains.
The Ukrainian government's influence on the Crimean peninsula seems to be dwindling, not least as a result of the Russian soldiers' deployment. In addition, Sergey Aksyonov, head of the largest pro-Russian party in Crimea, has taken over power on the peninsula. Ukrainian Interior Minister Pavel Petrenko declared the new leadership on the Crimean peninsula illegitimate.
Russian media agitate against Kyiv
The new Crimean government wants to give people there the chance to decide on the peninsula's autonomous status in a referendum on March 30. In the most extreme case, this could lead to secession from Ukraine.
The majority of the Crimean population are ethnically Russian, and many people living there are getting their information from Russian media. 'Russian media outlets are agitating against the current government in Kyiv and are whipping up panic,' Felix Schimansky-Geier, a German political scientist at the National University of Kyiv's Mohyla Academy told DW. 'The people are being influenced by this.'
A controversial language law, which had aimed to abolish Russian as the second official language in Ukraine, has now been scrapped. The Russian-speaking population would have seen it as a provocation, which is why the EU was in favor of keeping the current language laws.
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