Putin’s next target may be Eastern Europe’s Moldova, analysts warn

Putin’s next target may be Eastern Europe’s Moldova, analysts warn


Noul Neamt Monastery in Chitcani, Moldova, an area controlled by breakaway Transnistrian authorities.

Pablo Bonfiglio | Moment | Getty Images

Three weeks into the war in Ukraine, as Russia faces staunch and seemingly unexpected resistance on the ground, analysts have warned that President Vladimir Putin may be considering his next target: Moldova.

A landlocked Eastern European country situated on Ukraine’s western border, Moldova shares several parallels with its neighbor that could see it become a staging post for the continued onslaught — or itself vulnerable to attack.

“If the conflict escalates beyond Ukraine, Moldova is one of the places that ranks highest on list,” Adriano Bosoni, director of analysis at risk management firm Rane, told CNBC.

Moldova, like Ukraine, is not part of the European Union, nor is it a member of NATO — though it has ambitions to become both. But, like Ukraine, the former Soviet republic is home to a sizeable pro-Russian separatist population based primarily in the breakaway state of Transnistria on the Ukrainian border.

They would be very weak. There would be little to no resistance.

Clinton Watts

distinguished research fellow, Foreign Policy Research Institute

Governed by its own Kremlin-backed leader, Transnistria could present a strategic opportunity for Russia, which has already has amassed some 1,500 troops in the area.

Either Putin could recognize it as an independent state — as he did with Donetsk and Luhansk before launching a full-blown invasion of Ukraine — or it could become the focus point of a so-called false flag event, manufactured by Russia to justify an intervention.

“To me, it’s super interesting that Russia has not yet recognized Transnistria as an independent republic the same way that it did with Luhansk and Donetsk,” said Bosoni.

“If we saw Russia do that, it would be a serious indication that they are thinking of taking the conflict to Moldova.”

The Russian embassies in London and New York as well as the Russian Foreign Ministry did not respond to CNBC’s requests for comment.

A battleground with a back door to Ukraine

Blinken says that the U.S. has Moldova’s back. It does not mean that they would back it.

Adriano Bosoni

director of analysis, Rane

“They would be very weak. There would be little to no resistance,” said Clinton Watts, a research fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute, of Moldova’s resistance. The country — one of Europe’s poorest on a GDP-per-capita basis — has much less military capability than Ukraine.

An invasion of Moldova could therefore open a back door into southwest Ukraine, said Watts, noting that Putin may be looking for an alternate game plan given Russia’s as-yet failed efforts to encircle the capital Kyiv.

Tiraspol, the capital and largest city in Transnistria, an unrecognized breakaway state in Moldova.

Posnov | Moment | Getty Images

“They may hold out [on Kyiv] and try to circle in on Odessa first,” he said, referring to the port city in south Ukraine. Russia may then try to seize the south of the country, having already closed in on Mykolaiv, 130 kilometers to Odessa’s east.

“I think it’s more likely that he wants to take southern Ukraine and reunite with it Transnistria, using that as a launching pad to take Moldova,” Watts added.

Facing a precarious position

If that were to happen, Moldova could face a fate similar to that of Ukraine, locked in conflict with a global superpower while Western allies watch from the sidelines.

“In this region now there is no possibility for us to feel safe,” the country’s President Maia Sandu said earlier this month during a meeting with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

At the time, Blinken pledged America’s support for the small republic, which days earlier applied for fast-track EU membership. But without being an EU or NATO member, neither organization is likely to help substantially.

“Blinken says that the U.S. has Moldova’s back. It does not mean that they would back it,” said Bosoni.

Critically, that is what sets Moldova apart from other former Soviet nations, such as the Baltic states of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia, all of which have expressed national security concerns amid heightened threats from their Russian neighbor. All three are members of the EU and NATO, suggesting allies would step in in the event of a Russian invasion.

And that leaves Moldova in a precarious position if Russia makes it its next target.

“It might not be in 48 hours. It might be 48 months from now,” said Watts.



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