Why Ukrainian forces gave up Crimea
without a fight - and NATO is alert
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[July 24, 2017]
By Pavel Polityuk and Anton Zverev
KIEV/SEVASTOPOL, Crimea (Reuters) - The
career of Sergei Yeliseyev helps to explain why Ukraine's armed forces
gave up Crimea almost without a fight - and why NATO now says it is
alert to Russian attempts to undermine military loyalty in its eastern
European members.
His rise to become number two in the Ukrainian navy long before Russia
seized Crimea illustrates the divided loyalties that some personnel in
countries that once belonged to the Soviet Union might still face.
Yeliseyev's roots were in Russia but he ended up serving Ukraine, a
different ex-Soviet republic, only to defect when put to the test. NATO
military planners now believe Moscow regards people with similarly
ambiguous personal links as potentially valuable, should a new
confrontation break out with the West.
In 2014, Yeliseyev was first deputy commander of the Ukrainian fleet,
then largely based in Crimea, when Russian soldiers in unmarked uniforms
took control of Kiev's ships and military bases on the peninsula.
Instead of resisting, Yeliseyev quit and subsequently got a new job:
deputy chief of Russia's Baltic Fleet.
Yeliseyev, now aged 55, did not respond to Reuters questions sent to him
via the Russian defense ministry.
In Kiev, however, there is no doubt where his loyalties lay. "When he
took an oath to Ukraine, these were empty words for him. He has always
been pro-Russian," said Ihor Voronchenko, now commander of the Ukrainian
navy, who once served with Yeliseyev.
In fact, the Russian soldiers were pushing at an open door in late
February 2014 - Yeliseyev was just one of many to defect and almost all
Ukrainian forces in Crimea failed to resist.
Russia annexed Crimea the following month, prompting a major row with
the West which deepened over Moscow's role in a rebellion in eastern
Ukraine that lasts to this day.
At the time, Moscow and its allies in Crimea exploited weaknesses within
Kiev's military to undermine its ability to put up a fight, according to
interviews conducted by Reuters with about a dozen people on both sides
of the conflict.
The Russian defense ministry did not respond to questions on their
accounts of the events in 2014 submitted by Reuters.
One NATO commander told Reuters that, in a re-run of the tactics it
deployed in Crimea, Russian intelligence was trying to recruit ethnic
Russians serving in the militaries of countries on its borders.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, the commander said the alliance was
particularly sensitive to the risk in countries with high concentrations
of ethnic Russians, notably the Baltic states.
NATO had to guard against this, said the commander, though the risk
should not be overstated because having Russian roots did not
necessarily mean that a person's loyalty is to Moscow.
Officials in the Baltic states, former Soviet republics which unlike
Ukraine are NATO members, play down the danger.
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg likewise said he trusted the
armies of the Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. Still, he told Reuters: "We
always have to be vigilant. We always have to develop our intelligence
tools and to be able to see any attempts to try to undermine the loyalty
of our forces."
DROPPING THE GUARD
Years before the Crimean annexation, a Ukrainian appointment panel
appeared to drop its guard when it interviewed Yeliseyev for the deputy
naval commander's post.
Yeliseyev was born near Moscow, graduated from a Soviet naval school in
the Russian city of Kaliningrad in 1983 and served with the Russian
Pacific fleet.
So the panel asked Yeliseyev what he would do if Russia and Ukraine went
to war. He replied that he would file for early retirement, according to
Myroslav Mamchak, a former Ukrainian naval captain who served with
Yeliseyev. Despite this response, Yeliseyev got the job in 2006.
Mamchak did not disclose to Reuters how he knew what was said in the
interview room but subsequent events bear out his account.
Relations between Russia and Ukraine dived as Kiev moved closer to NATO
and eight years after his appointment, with the countries on the brink
of conflict over Crimea, Yeliseyev stayed true to his word by quitting.
Russia's actions were not the only factor in the Crimean events.
Ukraine's military had suffered years of neglect, there was a power
vacuum in Kiev after the government was overthrown, and many Crimean
residents felt more affinity with Moscow.
Still, Ukrainian service personnel with Russian ties switched sides when
the annexation began and some officers pretended to put up resistance
only to avoid court-martial. Moscow also intercepted orders from Kiev so
they never reached the Crimean garrison.
"There was nothing spontaneous. Everything was organized and each
fiddler played his role," said Mykhailo Koval, who at the time was
deputy head of the Ukrainian border guard and is now deputy head of the
Security Council in Kiev.
INVITATION TO DEFECT
Voronchenko, who was another deputy commander of the navy at the time of
the annexation, said he had received invitations to defect to Moscow's
side soon after the Russian operation began.
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A Ukrainian naval officer (C) passes by armed men, believed to be
Russian servicemen, as he leaves the naval headquarters in
Sevastopol, Ukraine March 19, 2014. REUTERS/Vasily Fedosenko/File
Photo
These, he told Reuters, came from Sergei Aksyonov, who was then head
of Crimea's self-proclaimed pro-Russian government, as well as from
the commander of Russia's southern military district and a deputy
Russian defense minister.
Asked what they offered in exchange, Voronchenko said: "Posts, an
apartment ... Aksyonov offered to make me defense minister of
Crimea." Neither Aksyonov nor the Russian defense ministry responded
to Reuters questions about the contacts.
Voronchenko, in common with many other senior Ukrainian officers,
had been in the Soviet military alongside people now serving in the
Russian armed forces. He had spent years in Crimea, where Russia
leased bases from Ukraine for its Black Sea fleet after the 1991
break up of the Soviet Union.
"Those generals who came to persuade me ... said that we belong to
the same circle, we came from the Soviet army," he said. "But I told
them I am different ... I am not yours."
Naval chief Denis Berezovsky did defect, along with several of his
commanders, and was later made deputy chief of the Russian Black Sea
fleet.
Many in the ranks followed suit. At one Ukrainian signals unit,
service personnel were watching Russian television when President
Vladimir Putin appeared on the screen.
"To my surprise, they all stood up," said Svyatoslav Veltynsky, an
engineer at the unit. "They had been waiting for this." The majority
of the unit defected to the Russian side.
JUST A SHOW
Even those willing to resist found themselves in a hopeless
position. One member of the Ukrainian border guards told Reuters how
his commander had despatched their unit's ships to stop them falling
into Russian hands, and ordered his men to train their rifles on
anyone trying to enter their base.
However, the base's military communications were not working, having
been either jammed or cut by the Russians. Isolated from his own
side, and outnumbered and outgunned by Russian troops outside, the
commander struck a deal with the head of a Russian special forces
unit.
Pro-Russian civilians were allowed to force the base's gate without
reprisals. The Ukrainians "supposedly could not do anything; you
cannot shoot civilians", the member of the unit said on condition of
anonymity because he is still living in Crimea and feared
repercussions.
Russian troops then followed the civilians in, taking over the base
and offering the unit a chance to switch allegiance to Russia. About
half agreed, although the base's chief refused and was allowed to
leave Crimea.
"The commander did not resist," said the unit member. "On the other
hand, he did what he could under the circumstances."
Two other people involved in the annexation - a former Ukrainian
serviceman now on a Russian base in Crimea, and a source close to
the Russian military who was there at the time - also described
witnessing similar faked confrontations.
"You have to understand that the seizure of Ukrainian military units
in Crimea was just a show," said the source close to the Russian
military.
LESSONS LEARNED
NATO's Baltic members differ significantly from Ukraine. Soviet-era
commanders, for instance, largely left their armed forces after the
countries joined the Western alliance in 2004.
Officials also point out that Russian speakers were among the seven
members of Latvia's forces to die during international deployments
to Afghanistan and Iraq.
Nevertheless, lessons have been learned from Crimea. "We learned, of
course, that there was not only the issue of loyalty, but also false
orders were submitted and there was a blockage of communication
during the Crimea operation," said Janis Garisons, State Secretary
in the Latvian defense ministry.
Latvia has changed the law so that unit commanders are obliged to
resist by default. But Garisons said the simplest step was taken
long before the annexation, with the introduction in 2008 of vetting
by the security services for "everybody who joins the armed forces,
from private to general".
(Additional reporting by Margaryta Chornokondratenko in KIEV,
Andrius Sytas in VILNIUS, Gederts Gelzis in RIGA, David Mardiste in
TALLINN, and Robin Emmott in BRUSSELS; editing by David Stamp)
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