Friday, March 14, 2014

Merkel backs US on the sanctioning of Russia

If Russia continues on its course of the past weeks, that will not only be a great catastrophe for Ukraine. It will cause massive damage to Russia, both economically and politically,” [Chancellor Merkel] said. “None of us wants it to come to this, but we are determined to act. Let me be absolutely clear; the territorial integrity of Ukraine is not up for discussion.”

...Russia cannot suspend oil and gas exports without cutting off its own source of foreign revenue. Any such move would destroy its credibility as a supplier of energy, accelerating Europe’s long-term switch to other sources.

Russian companies have $653bn (£392bn) of foreign dollar debt, and must roll over roughly $150bn this year. Yields on five-year bonds have already spiked 200 basis points, even for blue-chip firms. The rouble has fallen 11pc this year after dropping 8pc last year, making dollar debts harder to repay. “It is going to be very difficult to roll over these bonds, and it will be at much higher cost,” said Mr Ash.

Capital flight reached $63bn last year. Former finance minister Alexei Kudrin said this could reach $50bn a quarter as the crisis deepens. The central bank has already raised interest rates sharply to stem outflows, pushing the economy into recession.

...“Russia could cut off 2.5m barrels a day of refined products such as diesel that are hard for Europe to replace since it has run down its refineries,” he said.

Germany is in an awkward position since it exports $50bn of cars, machinery and industrial goods to Russia each year. There are 6,200 German companies in the country with vast sunk costs. Last year alone they invested $105bn. Germany’s trade group BDA said a tit-for-tat sanctions war would be “painful” for Germany but “life-threatening” for Russia.

Igor Rudensky, head of the Duma’s Economics Committee, said sanctions will boomerang. “They are a double-edged sword, and Western states should be very careful,” he said.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Beyond the tinkering the US and NATO have committed in Ukraine, there is the larger issue of encroachment. Yes US and NATO have made a move to bring Ukraine toward the west, with Russia's sharp retort being the stealth occupation of the Crimea to protect the integrity of their only warm water naval base at Sevastopol.  As far as I know, Putin still denies the troops in Crimea are Russian, as he did in this press conference:

"QUESTION: Mr President, a clarification if I may. The people who were blocking the Ukrainian Army units in Crimea were wearing uniforms that strongly resembled the Russian Army uniform. Were those Russian soldiers, Russian military?

VLADIMIR PUTIN: Why don’t you take a look at the post-Soviet states. There are many uniforms there that are similar. You can go to a store and buy any kind of uniform.

QUESTION: But were they Russian soldiers or not?

VLADIMIR PUTIN: Those were local self-defence units.

QUESTION: How well trained are they? If we compare them to the self-defence units in Kiev…

VLADIMIR PUTIN: My dear colleague, look how well trained the people who operated in Kiev were. As we all know they were trained at special bases in neighbouring states: in Lithuania, Poland and in Ukraine itself too. They were trained by instructors for extended periods. They were divided into dozens and hundreds, their actions were coordinated, they had good communication systems. It was all like clockwork.  Did you see them in action? They looked very professional, like special forces. Why do you think those in Crimea should be any worse?

QUESTION: In that case, can I specify: did we take part in training Crimean self-defence forces?

VLADIMIR PUTIN: No, we did not."


Does this necessarily mean Russia has cause to annex Crimea, if Crimea itself votes to become part of Russia? Ukraine is a buffer country for Russia, so naturally it is one for Europe. 

24 comments:

Lydia said...

About those troops in Crimea -- from a day ago: "A senior Russian lawmaker said military units are occupying positions in Crimea in case of armed attack from Kiev, in the first apparent admission by Moscow that its forces have occupied the Ukrainian region in a military operation."

ricpic said...

Ukraine is a buffer country for Russia, so naturally it is one for Europe.

Viewed by Russians, not all but most, Putin has taken back a part of Russia, the Crimea, as they understand their country historically. In other words he is in sync with the nation.

Viewed by Europeans, whatever that means, Ukraine and Crimea are vaguely alien, vaguely oriental, definitely backward and not really in the neighborhood. I'm sure the Poles are alarmed. The Germans and the French? Not so much. The fact is that after years of trying, Brussels has not been able to impose a European consciousness on the separate ancient nations of Europe.

What does the above mean? It means that in case of a showdown over Ukraine the "Europeans" won't have nearly the stomach for prolonged economic hardship that the Russians will. And Merkel, behind her bluster, knows it.

Putin WON! Eat it, Hussein and your fellow One Worlders in Brussels.

Lydia said...

Latest news: Draft U.N. resolution declares Crimea referendum invalid:

"A draft U.N. Security Council resolution declares that Sunday's planned referendum on Crimea's status "can have no validity" and urges nations and international organizations not to recognize it, according to a copy obtained by Reuters."

And now all eyes are on China:

"Several Western diplomats said their hope was that China, which has joined Russia in vetoing three council resolutions on Syria since 2011, this time would distance itself from Moscow and abstain. That would further isolate Russia.

China has voiced support for Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity during Security Council sessions on the crisis, although diplomats said it was not entirely certain whether Beijing would break from Russia on Ukraine."

Titus said...

Don't know why but she is my fave world leader

Trooper York said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Trooper York said...

Just think of it as Texas and it is not such a big deal.

We did the same thing and we should stay out of this. Russia is not a problem for us. It is not a problem for us it is a problem for the Europeans. Let them worry about it.

Obama is not strong enough to stand up to Putin. He should stay out of it.

Revenant said...

I've nothing particularly against sanctioning Putin or Russia. He's a nasty leader of a nasty country, more or less.

BUT, if the majority of Crimeans truly do prefer being part of Russia to being part of Ukraine, we have no business standing in their way. Let Ukraine stop them if it can; no business of ours.

Trooper York said...

For once the atheist douchenozzle is on the money. Let the Crimean people decide what they want to do.

edutcher said...

As David Niven said of Errol Flynn, she can always count on him to let her down.

Titus said...

Don't know why but she is my fave world leader

Only because she showed you her behind.

Icepick said...

Germany is reducing it's reliance on both nuclear and coal power. Can they make up the difference in natural gas andoil by cutting off their supplier?

Hitler knew he needed the petroleum of the Soviet Union if he hoped to survive. Apparently Merkel isn't as smart as Hitler, though at least she hasn't invaded them yet.

Titus said...

A friend of my referred me to chaturbait. Good lord. The site is the UN of live wanking.

Titus said...

I agree with Troop...did I mention I fired a catholic hater this week....hug.

tits.

rcocean said...

McCain is now "embarrassed by the Republican party" because it wouldn't approve aid to the Ukraine on Captain Queeg's schedule.

No word on whether the Republican party is embarrassed by McCain.

Oh, and the "Ambiguously Gay" Goober from SC agrees with McCain.

deborah said...

Thanks for the links, Lydia:

"Several Western diplomats said their hope was that China, which has joined Russia in vetoing three council resolutions on Syria since 2011, this time would distance itself from Moscow and abstain. That would further isolate Russia."

I don't know. China and Russia work together a lot. They are members of the Shanghai Cooperation Council along with the Stans. Other nations such as Iran, India, and Pakistan have observer status. Russia and China have participated in war exercises together within the context of the council.

I can't exactly see the benefit for China to abstain. What am I missing?

deborah said...

ricpic:
"Viewed by Europeans, whatever that means, Ukraine and Crimea are vaguely alien, vaguely oriental, definitely backward and not really in the neighborhood. I'm sure the Poles are alarmed. The Germans and the French? Not so much. The fact is that after years of trying, Brussels has not been able to impose a European consciousness on the separate ancient nations of Europe."

Interesting insights about the psychological make-up of Ukraine, thanks.

With regards to Brussels, I have read that if Ukraine entered into some sort of pre-EU status it would involve severe austerity measures.

deborah said...

"BUT, if the majority of Crimeans truly do prefer being part of Russia to being part of Ukraine, we have no business standing in their way. Let Ukraine stop them if it can; no business of ours."

Exactly. They're not in NATO and we have zero obligation to interfere. I'm sure R2P will be bandied about freely.

deborah said...

Ice:
"Hitler knew he needed the petroleum of the Soviet Union if he hoped to survive. Apparently Merkel isn't as smart as Hitler, though at least she hasn't invaded them yet."

I don't quite get why Merkel is jumping in.

The World Post: If we manage to get by this crisis and avoid a war, Ukraine is in an economic mess. George Soros has called for Germany to take the lead in helping Ukraine. And, just before the outbreak of the Ukraine crisis, German President Joachim Gauck called on his country to step up to the world stage. What is the EU role here, and Germany’s role in particular?

Brzezinski: If the EU is serious about playing a role in the world, it has to start here. And that means putting up the money to help stabilize Ukraine’s teetering economy. A compromise solution that is acceptable for Russia as well as the West, and that will avoid war and give the Ukrainians some hope of a future, will involve serious economic aid and investment. Since Germany is the most prosperous and strongest economy in the EU, it should take the lead."

http://news.yahoo.com/brzezinski-formally-recognize-ukraine-prepare-nato-troops-193009083--politics.html

deborah said...

Titus:
"Don't know why but she is my fave world leader."

Because Thatcher is dead?

deborah said...

rc, McCain and Graham should be hand-cuffed together permanently.

Lydia said...

I can't exactly see the benefit for China to abstain [on the proposed UN resolution negating a Crimean referendum vote]. What am I missing?

For one thing, supporting a referendum in Crimea would remind the world that China would hardly favor the same sort of thing in Tibet or Taiwan.

deborah said...

Great point, Lydia. I suppose an abstention by China would be moot, as Russia holds a veto.

Still, Crimea and Tibet/Taiwan are different kettles of fish, and China may want to show solidarity with Russia against the West for meddling in Ukraine in the first place.

Titus said...

No Deb. I have no recollection of Thatcher-I was in elementary school at that time and wasn't paying attention to world leaders.

I think my admiration for Merkel is that she has small german tits.

Sorry.

tits.

Lydia said...

Update on that UN resolution -- they just voted and China abstained.

deborah said...

Thanks, Lydia, that's why we pay you the big bucks :)