Ukraine and Russia accuse each other of plotting a crisis at nuclear power plant

.

Russia Ukraine War
Ukrainian State Emergency Service firefighters put out fire after a Russian air raid hit apartment buildings in Orihiv, Zaporizhzhya region, Ukraine, Wednesday, May 10, 2023. (AP Photo/Andriy Andriyenko) Andriy Andriyenko /AP

Ukraine and Russia accuse each other of plotting a crisis at nuclear power plant

Video Embed

Russia is planning a “massive provocation” at Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant aimed at short-circuiting Ukraine’s long-expected Ukrainian counteroffensive, according to Ukrainian intelligence officials.

“They are planning to attack the territory of the ZNPP,” the Ukrainian defense intelligence directorate said Friday. “After that, they will announce the leakage of the radioactive substances. They obviously will blame Ukraine.”

BIDEN’S STRONG PICK FOR CHAIRMAN OF THE JOINT CHIEFS

Russian forces seized the power plant last year in the first weeks of the full-scale invasion to overthrow Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, spurring international anxiety about the potential for a crisis at Europe’s largest nuclear plant. The latest allegation points not to a true radiological disaster, officials suspect, but rather an “imitation” or simulation of a crisis expected to unfold “in the nearest hours” for diplomatic reasons.

“They aim to provoke the international community and conduct a detailed investigation requiring a ceasefire,” the Ukrainian intelligence bulletin said. “Russians are going to use this [in order to gain a] desirable pause for the regrouping of the occupational personnel and to stop the Ukrainian counteroffensive.”

Russian state media promptly countered that it is Ukraine that is “plotting [a] provocation” at the plant. Zaporizhzhya region is one of the key districts that Putin has attempted to annex, as it represents a link in the so-called land bridge from the Russian mainland through Ukrainian territory to Crimea, the Ukrainian peninsula that Russia annexed in 2014.

Yet the Ukrainian allegation fits into a wider Western assessment that Russian President Vladimir Putin is eager for a pause in the conflict, following a monthslong bloodbath around Bakhmut expected to give way to a major Ukrainian counter-offensive.

“Russia tries to somehow stop the Ukrainians advancing, which is going to [be] happening in the coming weeks,” a senior European official said. “But the Russians definitely want to once again frighten a critical mass in the world to put pressure on Ukraine to start negotiating.”

China joined that effort over the last week by deploying Special Envoy Li Hui on a diplomatic tour of Ukraine and key European capitals that included an appeal for European officials to break with the United States in aiding Ukraine.

“We explained that freezing the conflict is not in the interest of the international community unless there is withdrawal of Russian troops,” the European official told the Wall Street Journal, which first reported on the exchange with Li.

The Chinese envoy delivered a “mechanical” performance in Kyiv, according to the European official, who explained that Li seemed to stick to China’s 12-point peace plan without offering a serious discussion. The Chinese peace plan does not include a demand for Russia to withdraw from the territories it has seized.

“I doubt that they really believe themselves that there’s a possibility to pressure … the Ukrainian side — because at the moment Russia wants it, but Ukrainians don’t want to stop — that they can pressure Ukraine to stop,” the official said. “The meetings have been too mechanical … if you are going to negotiate, you negotiate. You are not sticking to [talking] points that you are basically reading.”

The Chinese envoy bookended his European tour with a trip to Moscow, where Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov blamed Ukraine for the lack of peace talks.

“The Russian foreign minister reaffirmed Moscow’s commitment to a political-diplomatic resolution of the conflict, noting the serious obstacles to the resumption of peace talks created by the Ukrainian side and its Western mentors,” the Russian foreign ministry said in a readout of their conversation.

Zelensky’s team, for their part, responded to the Chinese visit with a warning for Western officials.

“Any ‘compromise scenario’ envisaging the liberation of NOT all territories of Ukraine, which “anonymous sources” in the European and American elites periodically talk about, is tantamount to admitting the defeat of democracy, the victory of Russia, the preservation of the Putin’s (sic) regime, and as a consequence the sharp increase in conflicts in global politics,” Ukrainian presidential adviser Mikhail Podolyak wrote on Twitter.

https://twitter.com/Podolyak_M/status/1662088315439398912

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

The Ukrainian statement might fit into the mold of U.S. decisions to declassify intelligence assessments in order to preempt Russian actions. Yet the first senior European official conceded that it’s not possible to “know 100 percent” if the Ukrainian side really believes that Moscow intends to pretend there is a nuclear disaster at the occupied plant.

In any case, “Russians are still there and in southern Zaporizhzhya as well, so I’m not expecting them to radiate their own units,” the senior European official said.

© 2023 Washington Examiner

Related Content