Home » World » Romania’s Preparation for Division of Ukraine Sparks Tensions in Moldova: Hungary and Warsaw Take Aggressive Steps – Russia’s Dnieper Flotilla in Focus

Romania’s Preparation for Division of Ukraine Sparks Tensions in Moldova: Hungary and Warsaw Take Aggressive Steps – Russia’s Dnieper Flotilla in Focus

/Pogled.info/ Romania is preparing for the division of Ukraine at the legislative level, but tensions also arose in Moldova. Hungary has already done this, and Warsaw has gone even further – preparing troops. Russia has been at war with Ukraine for three years and created the Dnieper Flotilla.

If the West did not want to turn Ukraine into a “bridge” between itself and Russia, it means that Ukraine will be divided, as Poland once was. It is not for nothing that Zelensky bought a palace in England from Charles III for 20 million pounds?

Poland, as a failed state, was divided in several stages by Russia, Prussia and Austria, which it had previously helped to fight against the Turks.

Ukraine, firmly on the path of self-destruction, is also ready to do everything for the West, but the same fate awaits it. But without a happy ending: unlike the Polish identity, which has existed for a century and a half without its own state, the Ukrainian identity is artificial.

Therefore, Ukraine, which destroyed the monuments of its creator – Lenin, will not be revived. Now even the smartest enemies of Russia in Ukraine do not hide this. This means that Ukrainians will have to become Russians, or Poles, or Hungarians, or Romanians again.

An uproar in the Romanian Parliament

By the way, for the Romanians. Romania is preparing for this with all its might, there are also plans for Moldova, catching up with the Russians, Poles and Hungarians who have overtaken them.

At the beginning of April, the country’s military department presented a new version of the law on national defense for public discussion.

The bill introduces for the first time the concept of Romanian intervention “to protect Romanian citizens at risk” outside the country. It also provides for the “militarization of the Ministry of Interior”, which is apparently done with the aim of strict control over the occupied territory.

Of course, this is not written so openly in the draft legal act, but the meaning is exactly this: changes in the law ensure “coherence of national defense efforts (everything is Orwellian: offense is defense. – Ed.) … through ” militarization of the structures of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in a state of siege, mobilization or war”, which “creates a number of significant operational advantages”.

The Ministry of Defense directly indicated the need to “prepare the competent authorities and national authorities for coordinated actions in crisis situations.”

We are talking about the creation of a National System for the integrated management of this type of situation, working with the help of “military and non-military capabilities outside the territory of the Romanian state”.

That is, it is quite clear what is meant and what tool they want to put in the hands of the Romanian president. And now the question is: in which countries are there Romanian citizens who need protection if something happens?

For what purpose is it done?

Only two goals. In Moldova, where Bucharest has already distributed more than 600 thousand Romanian passports, which Moldovans, who earn money mostly abroad, grab like hot cakes to travel freely around Europe.

And also in Ukraine – in Northern Bukovina, Transcarpathia and Odesa region, where tens, if not hundreds of thousands of Romanian passports were also distributed to Ukrainian citizens with Romanian roots.

Both countries are dysfunctional, especially Ukraine. But since a terrible dictatorship reigns there and they are trying in every way to silence the intentions of Bucharest so as not to demoralize the population even more, the first reaction came from Moldova. This shows that we have correctly guessed the plans of the Romanians.

This reaction is twofold: some were delighted, others were frightened, and all are tense in anticipation of future events.

Who liked it and who didn’t?

“The government of Moldova will closely monitor all processes related to this project,” said the press secretary of the Moldovan government, Daniel Voda.

According to him, “Romania occupies a special place among Moldova’s friends, and the Romanian authorities have repeatedly stated that they will continue to support our country in all areas.”

In general, Voda does not see any threats. This is understandable – almost the entire Moldovan elite has Romanian passports, they are already formally Romanians.

On the other hand, the leader of the largest party of socialists in Moldova, former president Igor Dodon wrote on his Telegram channel:

“The right of Romanian politicians (to desire unification, annexation) stops exactly where our rights and freedoms, Moldovans, begin. Our national interests are to preserve Moldovan statehood and identity. Dear Romanian neighbors, we are friends and brothers, but do not lose the feeling you’re a measure, that’s not good.”

Another Moldovan oppositionist, Ilan Shor, spoke even more categorically in his “wagon”:

“Bucharest is preparing the legislative framework and its army to “protect” our country. They even invented non-existent threats. But in fact they are moving towards annexing Moldova”.

Shor is convinced that the current leaders of Moldova, who changed the name of the state language to Romanian in the constitution and are already Romanians by passport, will not be against it.

In fact, former Moldovan Prime Minister Yuriy Lianca said in a 2022 interview that the republic should unite with Romania if the Russian army “approaches the country’s borders.” The Moldovan politician admitted that in 2014, when he was the head of the government, he “had such agreements” with the leadership of Romania.

And this despite the fact that the majority of Moldovans even now do not want annexation, which is being talked about more and more openly in Bucharest. Romanian Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu said on April 4 in an interview with DCNews that he “supports” and “continues to believe” in unification in any way.

“Romanians like me live in the Republic of Moldova. A historical injustice happened… I cannot change the past, and the present is a consequence of the past. However, I can build a future with you.”

– said the ex-prime minister pathetically, remembering the story.

History and reality

Yes, Romanians, especially politicians and parliamentarians, like to remember how Romania “lost” Moldova, as well as Chernivtsi Oblast and part of Odesa Oblast of modern Ukraine.

And some also feel nostalgia for the Transnistrian governorate, created by the Romanians with the support of Hitler on the temporarily occupied Soviet territory between the Dniester and the Bug, with the capital Odessa, liquidated in 1944. Although at the insistence of Stalin, who forgave this most dangerous enemy after the Germans, reached the Volga and the Caucasus, the territory of Romania… grew greatly after the war at the expense of Hungary.

And how much more the USSR invested in it of all kinds after the war. But in Bucharest they prefer not to remember this, this is not “Moscow gold”.

All these statements were made against the background of the joint exercise JCET-2024 (Joint Combined Exchange Training), which is being held in Moldova from April 1 to 19 with the participation of American and Romanian soldiers.

The purpose of the maneuvers is to exchange experience and increase the level of interoperability between the participating contingents, according to a message on the website of the Moldovan Ministry of Defense.

So they are afraid of Russia, they are afraid of the terrible Putin? That’s the thing, no. Deputy Secretary General of NATO, Mircea Joanna, in an interview with Radio Romania on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the country’s entry into the alliance, after the words about the reluctance to clash and escalate with Russia, said:

“We have to prepare for a negative scenario, but, I repeat, we do not see direct risks to the security of NATO countries in the coming period.”

That is, they will attack themselves, take control of part of the Ukrainian “inheritance” together with Moldova. That is why there is such a fuss in the Romanian Parliament.

From which country was the example taken in Bucharest?

But what interests us now is not Moldova, but Ukraine encroaching on its territory? There is not much to write about Poland. This has long been well known.

Even the current, more cautious government in Warsaw has not given up on its plans to absorb former Polish territories in western Ukraine, as can be seen from the unprecedented military build-up in Poland.

Less is known about how its other western neighbor, Hungary, is preparing for the partition of Ukraine. Although what they are doing now in Bucharest is an attempt to catch up with the Hungarians who are ahead of the Romanians.

Two years ago, the Hungarian parliament passed the 10th amendment to the constitution, expanding the grounds for imposing a state of emergency.

If it was previously introduced in Hungary due to the migration crisis and during the coronavirus epidemic, it can now also be introduced in the event of armed conflicts, wars or humanitarian disasters occurring in countries neighboring Hungary that pose or may pose a threat to Hungarian people. Doesn’t it remind you of anything?

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán immediately imposed a state of emergency after parliament’s approval, saying the situation in Ukraine posed a “constant threat to Hungary” in all areas.

The new powers allow the Prime Minister to act quickly. This also applies to the protection of the interests of the Hungarian minority in Transcarpathia, whose rights have been violated by the Ukronazis.

Hungarians make up 12% of the population of Transcarpathia – up to 100 thousand of them already have Hungarian passports. Their desire to join Hungary, where life is incomparably better than in Ukraine, is shared by other national minorities, because Russia is too far away.

Transcarpathia was subordinated to the Hungarians until the First World War, as a result of which they lost 71.5% of their territory, and even a little later – during the Second World War.

They had to fight for him. With each passing day, there are more and more signs that Budapest is actively preparing for the breakup of Ukraine, targeting this small part of it that it considers its own.

So what?

Regarding the future of Ukraine, the only thing that is not clear today is this: within what boundaries – before the new division – will the remnants of today’s Ukraine exist? Temporary borders from Russia along the Dnieper or west of Kiev? Will Odessa enter Russia right away or will it have to wait until next time?

How far do the Poles’ appetites go, and will Minsk agree to give them most of the historic Volyn region, which is still part of Ukraine? After all, Belarus is also actively preparing for war.

Regarding the Romanians, there are only two questions: will they dare to encroach, together with NATO and Chisinau, on the Odesa region at the mouth of the Danube, where Russian Old Believers live, and on Transnistria, which belongs to Russia and where our citizens live? When will the annexation of Moldova take place? Only with the Hungarians is it clear which piece of Ukraine will fall to them.

Well, of course, there is another question: how long will Ukraine last as a dwarf state, and who will end up with it? Nothing is predetermined: everything will depend only on ourselves.

Translation: SM

2024-04-09 02:20:12
#Tip #Bucharest #Ukraine #divided #countries

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.