By Russia
Foundation chair David Clark, Special to CNN
April 29, 2014 -- Updated 1105 GMT (1905 HKT)
[Editor's
note: David Clark is chair of the Russia Foundation, which is a UK-based
think-tank focused on education and dialogue on themes including democracy and
economic cooperation. Clark was a special
adviser to former foreign secretary Robin Cook between 1997 and 2001. Follow Clark on Twitter. The opinions expressed in this
commentary are solely his.]
London
(CNN) -- The full scale of Russian President Vladimir Putin's new imperial
ambition was revealed recently when he referred to the southern and eastern
territories of Ukraine
as Novorossiya (New Russia).
This was
the name given to the region by Catherine the Great after she captured it from
the Ottomans in the late 18th century and began colonizing it with Russian,
Ukrainian and German settlers.
Along with
his assertion that Crimea belongs to Russia because of the blood-price
Russian troops paid to conquer it more than two centuries ago, Putin's
appropriation of Tsarist terminology establishes a new and troubling benchmark
for his irredentist project.