AP
Nearly 24 hours later, there's a consensus about the shooting down of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17: It's a
game-changer for the conflict in Ukraine.
The crash, which Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko called "a terrorist act," thrust the conflict to the
forefront of a loaded plate of international crises.
And it dramatically increases the stakes for all the players involved —
for Russia, Ukraine, the U.S., and the E.U. But as usual, it all comes
down to how far one man wants to take things: Russian President Vladimir
Putin.
"Right now, the world is in mourning, but it will quickly enter the
anger stage, and that is dangerous for Russia," said Garrett Khoury, the
director of research at
The Eastern Project.
"As usual, though, in the end it comes down to Putin. He's shown he can
push, inflame, and escalate. Can he now show an ability to deescalate?"
There are two schools of thought as to how Putin could handle this.
The bullish case is presented by Khoury and others, who theorize the
development could finally push Putin to disown the pro-Russian
separatists.
The bearish case, on the other hand, comes from people
like Eurasia Group president Ian Bremmer and Potomac Research group national security analyst
Lt. Gen. Dan Christman, who argue the incident will only push him further.
"The question," Foreign Policy Initiative Eurasia analyst
Hannah Thoburn told Business Insider, "is whether Putin thinks he’s gone
too far, so he really reigns the separatists in — or he’s really boxed
himself into a corner and he lashes out.
"I’m fearful that the latter is the more likely one," he said.
The first outcome would still be a less-than-perfect one — it would
mean that Putin has officially lost control of the separatists, who
would be fighting with arms and tanks supplied by Russia.
But it would, theoretically, stave off a full-blown international
crisis. So far, some analysts have read into Putin's post-plane-crash
comments as sympathetic, despite him
pinning the blame for the tragedy on Ukraine.
"Putin seems to be backing away from making this a crisis. So I think
it best to wait and see," Council on Foreign Relations editor Bernard
Gwertzman told Business Insider in an email Friday morning.
Bremmer, however, told Business Insider on Thursday that the incident
has the potential to significantly destabilize the situation.
Ukraine's
new government, led by Poroshenko, has already spent a good chunk of
its political capital upon entering office on pushing back the
separatists. And he will likely feel more intensified pressure to
conduct military operations to remove by force the pro-Russian
separatists in southeastern regions of Ukraine.
REUTERS/Maxim Zmeyev
An
armed pro-Russian separatist stands on part of the wreckage of the
Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 plane after it crashed near the settlement
of Grabovo in the Donetsk region, July 17, 2014.
During
the months-long conflict, Russia has long asserted its right to
intervene on behalf of Russian-speaking citizens. The Pentagon said
Wednesday that Russia was again building up its forces along the
volatile Russia-Ukraine border. And there's nothing to suggest they
won't respond the same way this time.
"The more likely scenario
will feature a Putin public relations offensive to shift blame to the Ukrainians — which would escalate this crisis to tension levels not seen since the Cold War," Potomac Research's Greg Valliere wrote in a research note Friday morning, summarizing Christman's comments.
In the latter case, more countries could get involved in the conflict
— and in a broader scope. It could push the U.S. and E.U., which just
leveled a new round of sanctions on Russia this week, to go even further. The White House clearly
pointed the finger at Russia in a late-night statement on
Thursday, and President Obama warned further sanctions would be on the
table if Russia continued to destabilize the situation.
And the Ukrainian government could begin lobbying to get
military support from the U.S., which has so far resisted, as well as
more nonmilitary aid from the European Union.
"Ukrainian government now under
much more pressure to remove the separatists by force. There's a better
chance that they secure meaningful military support (including weapons)
from the U.S. and nonmilitary from the EU," Bremmer wrote in an email to
BI.
"But the Russians will deny any involvement and demand
protection of the Russians on the ground. Likelihood of escalation has
just increased significantly."
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