According to some accounts, the conflict in Eastern Ukraine is a tug
of war over the region’s mines, steel mills and other heavy industry.
The website European Dialog,
for example, tells us the region is “crucial to Russia,” which “values
Ukraine because of industries, like steel and agriculture, that have
served as vital inputs for Russia’s economy from the Soviet era to the
present.”
Others view Eastern Ukraine’s heavy industry as more of a
liability than a prize, and see the current conflict as a geopolitical
one that can have no good outcome for the population. Speaking to a
reporter from The Guardian, coal
miner Igor Yefremov expressed his fear that “If we join the European
Union our mines and factories will shut down.” At the same time, he
acknowledged, “Already the orders from Russia are drying up. Russia
doesn't want us because of the chaos in Kiev."
So where does the
truth lie? Is Eastern Ukraine’s heavy industry a glittering economic
prize or a white elephant? Or is it simply irrelevant to a conflict that
is fueled more by Vladimir Putin’s testosterone and popular nostalgia
for a vague but warmly remembered Soviet past?>>>Read more
Good blog and one of the only analysis that I've seen of this key factor in the crisis. BTW - Russia already owns many of the main businesses in eastern Ukraine and they are keen to protect their investments. http://www.veb.ru/en/press/news/arch_news/index.php?id_19=31057
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