Friday, August 29, 2014

Why Did Russian President Putin Use The Term 'Novorossiya' In Yesterday's Statement

The area of 'New Russia' which Putin now refers to in Ukraine.(WikiCommons)

The Very Scary Word In Putin's New Statement On The Ukraine Crisis -- Max Fisher, VOX

Russian President Vladimir Putin just dropped the biggest, scariest dogwhistle of the Ukraine crisis: "Novorossiya."

The word literally means "new Russia" — it was an old, imperial-era term for southern Ukraine, when it was part of the Russian Empire, and is now a term used by Russia ultra-nationalists who want to re-conquer the area.

Putin has used the word twice during the crisis. First, he used it in April, about a month after Russia had invaded and annexed the Ukrainian region of Crimea, subtly suggesting that the annexation was justified because Crimea was in Novorossiya and thus inherently part of Russia.

Read more ....

Update: Why is Vladimir Putin Referring to Eastern Ukraine as 'New Russia'? -- Jack Moore, international Business Times

My Comment: Putin is appealing to his nationalist base .... and he is succeeding.

4 comments:

James said...

That is no slip of the tongue and it was meant for a bigger audience than just his domestic base.

War News Updates Editor said...

I am 50-50 on this one James .... Putin always has a focus on his base .... but then again he does enjoy rattling the West. And on this statement .... I will agree that he has rattled the West.

James said...

I didn't mean that it wasn't also for home consumption.

War News Updates Editor said...

I know that you also meant the domestic audience .... but I sometimes wonder if Putin is really sensitive on the international audience .... or if he cares. I guess it depends on the issue.