Putin is making a huge bet that the threats by the USA are of the same quality of the threats against Syria, etc. Now Putin has gone outside of the Crimea, which supports him, and taken over a village that has the manifolds and pumping station for part of the Natural Gas pipeline network.
I think that Putin is going to grab East Ukraine and Odessa. He doesn't appear to be worried about the USA or NATO and with his veto, he doesn't have to worry about the UN authorizing force against him.
I think it's also clear that he's not worried about Germany, etc not buying his Natural Gas and Oil. His friends to the East will buy all that becomes available. Apparently, China has agreed to buy 300% of the Oil they are currently buying from Russia and provide 5 Billion towards additional Natural Gas Pipelines into China.
http://news.nationalpost.com/2014/0...-control-of-ukrainian-village-outside-crimea/
I think that Putin is going to grab East Ukraine and Odessa. He doesn't appear to be worried about the USA or NATO and with his veto, he doesn't have to worry about the UN authorizing force against him.
I think it's also clear that he's not worried about Germany, etc not buying his Natural Gas and Oil. His friends to the East will buy all that becomes available. Apparently, China has agreed to buy 300% of the Oil they are currently buying from Russia and provide 5 Billion towards additional Natural Gas Pipelines into China.
http://news.nationalpost.com/2014/0...-control-of-ukrainian-village-outside-crimea/
Russian forces — backed by helicopter gunships — take control of Ukrainian village outside Crimea
Mike Eckel and Jim Heintz, Associated Press | March 15, 2014 4:32 PM ET
SIMFEROPOL, Ukraine — Russian forces backed by helicopter gunships and armored vehicles Saturday took control of a village near the border with Crimea on the eve of a referendum on whether the region should seek annexation by Moscow, Ukrainian officials said.
The action in Strilkove appeared to be the first move outside Crimea, where Russian forces have been in effective control since late last month. There were no reports of gunfire or injuries. The incident raises tensions already at a high level before Sunday’s referendum.
In a statement, the Foreign Ministry denounced the foray outside Crimea, and said Ukraine “reserves the right to use all necessary measures to stop the military invasion by Russia.”
The village is on a long spit reaching northward from the main part of the Black Sea peninsula, about 10 kilometers (six miles) north of the border between Crimea and the Kherson region.
A spokesman for the Ukrainian border guard service, Oleg Slobodyan, told The Associated Press the Russians, about 120 in all, took control of a natural gas distribution station in the village. The Foreign Ministry said the force consisted of about 80 and didn’t mention the station, but said the village was seized.
As Crimea prepares for Sunday’s referendum, dozens of billboards throughout the regional capital proclaim “Together With Russia.” But a few have been hit by spray-painters who scrawled out “Russia” and replaced it with “Ukraine.”
The referendum is denounced by Kyiv and the West as illegitimate; the West is threatening costly sanctions against Russia if it moves to incorporate Crimea. But the result is seen as a foregone conclusion — Crimea is almost certain to vote to split off, further aggravating Ukraine’s political crisis and one of the harshest East-West confrontations since the end of the Cold war. . . .
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