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Russian State News Agency Blames Ukraine for Breakdown in Relations, Ignores Russian Aggression


Russia -- Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych (L) and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin at a signing ceremony in Moscow, December 17, 2013
Russia -- Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych (L) and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin at a signing ceremony in Moscow, December 17, 2013
RIA Novosti

RIA Novosti

Russian state news agency

“Relations between Moscow and Kyiv deteriorated after the coup in Ukraine, the return of the Crimea to Russia, and the beginning of the conflict in the Donbas.”

False
Russia is objectively responsible for the decline in relations with Ukraine.

On October 22, the Russian state-owned news agency RIA Novosti ran a story on President Vladimir Putin giving an order to draw up a list of counter-sanctions against Ukraine in retaliation for that country’s sanctions against Russia. RIA Novosti cited a statement on the Kremlin’s website which described the measures as a response to “actions of Ukraine that are unfriendly and contrary to international law, (and) are related to the introduction of restrictive measures against citizens and legal entities of the Russian Federation."

According to the RIA Novosti story, relations between the two countries soured after a “coup,” the “return” of Crimea to Russia, and the “beginning of the conflict in the Donbas.” At no time is Russian complicity in the latter two developments mentioned.

First, Polygraph.info and others have thoroughly refuted the claim that the 2014 Maidan revolution was a coup.

The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines a coup as “a sudden decisive exercise of force in politics,” such as “the violent overthrow or alteration of an existing government by a small group.”

In the case of Ukraine, there is ample evidence to show that former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych fled from Kyiv and finally from Ukraine altogether not because he feared for his life or was threatened with actual violence, but rather on his own volition to avoid prosecution for numerous crimes he had allegedly committed while in office.

UKRAINE – A pro-European integration supporter washes a banner with an image of Russian President Vladimir Putin near a barricade in Independence Square where the supporters are holding a rally, in Kyiv January 9, 2014
UKRAINE – A pro-European integration supporter washes a banner with an image of Russian President Vladimir Putin near a barricade in Independence Square where the supporters are holding a rally, in Kyiv January 9, 2014

Protests did not turn violent until after government snipers and riot police killed several protestors on February 20.

Security camera footage and eyewitness testimony shows Yanukovych had prepared to leave Kyiv the day before, and two days prior to the signing of the February 21 agreement, which was to end the violence on the streets of the capital. Yanukovych fled Kyiv in the early morning hours of February 22, not long after signing the agreement.

Ukraine - Uniformed men, believed to be Russian servicemen, march outside a Ukrainian military base in the village of Perevalnoye outside Simferopol, March 5, 2014
Ukraine - Uniformed men, believed to be Russian servicemen, march outside a Ukrainian military base in the village of Perevalnoye outside Simferopol, March 5, 2014

As for Crimea, it did not “return” to Russia. Putin’s government staged a largely bloodless takeover of the peninsula, taking control of the local parliament in Simferopol using military force, and then within a few weeks staged a “referendum” which was not observed by any reputable international election monitors. The United Nations adopted a resolution stating the referendum had “no validity,” and so most of the world’s nations recognize Crimea as a territory of Ukraine under Russian occupation.

Lastly, Russian officials have denied involvement in the military conflict in Donbas despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary. Russian claims that the conflict in eastern Ukraine was a spontaneous local uprising have been contradicted by some of the key Russian operatives involved. The “rebels” have been shown to possess large numbers of serviceable tanks, armored vehicles, and heavy artillery, among other military hardware. Russian authorities have yet to come up with a plausible explanation for the “rebels’” surplus of Russian military equipment, although on one occasion they claimed all this was dug out of abandoned mines.

UKRAINE -- "Pro-Russian rebel" tank takes part in a military exercise on a shooting range near Luhansk, September 25, 2018
UKRAINE -- "Pro-Russian rebel" tank takes part in a military exercise on a shooting range near Luhansk, September 25, 2018

​Given the loss of its territory and the fact that the war in Donbas has killed over 10,000 people and displaced nearly two million others, it is Russia, not Ukraine, that objectively bears responsibility for the worsening of relations.

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