How and why the U.S. government aided a coup led by neo-Nazis in Ukrai…
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작성자 최고관리자 작성일14-03-06 21:45 조회5,244회 댓글0건관련링크
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How
and why the U.S. government aided a coup led by neo-Nazis in Ukraine
Why U.S. imperialism
continues to target Russia
LiberationNews.org
| MARCH 4, 2014
Oleh Tyahnybok, leader of the Neo-Nazi Svoboda party. Fascists now control key posts in the government, including over the armed forces
Sen. John McCain in
Kyiv, Ukraine, alongside neo-Nazi leader Tyahnybok, declares his support for
the Maidan movement
U.S. Assistant
Secretary of State Victoria Nuland, a neoconservative, smiles with Ukrainian
fascist leaders
A statement of the Party for Socialism and Liberation (U.S.)
The people of the United States are being deliberately misled
and misinformed about the leading role played by the U.S. State Department,
intelligence agencies and neoconservative leaders in bringing neo-Nazis to
power in Ukraine.
The same neoconservative politicians and strategists that drove
the country to war against Iraq in 2003, against Libya in 2011 and nearly
against Syria in 2013 have been neck-deep in a protracted regime change effort
in Ukraine as part of a larger geo-strategic struggle against Russia. The fact
that they have worked hand in glove with armed neo-Nazis in Ukraine—with Sen.
John McCain and Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland literally joining
the protests—speaks volumes about the political nature of the events.
The Maidan protest movement was launched in Kiev in November
2013 when Ukrainian President Yanukovych rejected a European Union economic
plan that would have imposed a harsh austerity regime on Ukraine as the price
for admission into the economic sphere dominated by German banks. The U.S. and
E.U.-backed street protests, supported most fervently by neoconservative
elements inside and outside the Obama administration, began when Yanukovych
instead accepted a $15 billion loan from Russia and an economic plan that did
not require austerity measures but did include discounted prices for Russian
natural gas.
Another case of
imperialist-backed regime change – this time with neo-Nazis
The U.S. government has engineered, financed and fully supported
a classic coup d'état that overthrew a corrupt but democratically elected
government in Ukraine. Joining in the destabilization of the Ukrainian
government were Germany, France, Britain and other NATO powers.
The U.S. State Department funds an international network of
non-governmental organizations and media outlets that are used to create
political opposition and conduct regime change against targeted countries from
Venezuela to Bolivia to Syria to Ukraine and other countries. A principal
vehicle for these U.S. operations is the National Endowment for Democracy
(NED).
A recent article by Robert Parry reports: “NED, a $100
million-a-year agency created by the Reagan administration in 1983 to promote
political action and psychological warfare against targeted states, lists 65
projects that it supports financially inside Ukraine, including training
activists, supporting ‘journalists’ and promoting business groups, effectively
creating a full-service structure primed and ready to destabilize a government
in the name of promoting ‘democracy.’”
The new coup-led government was selected by a rump session of
the parliament when many elected members could not show up to vote for fear of
physical attack. It is filled with fascist and semi-fascist forces, as well as
powerful billionaire oligarchs. The fascist forces promote hatred toward
Russians, Jews, Poles and other minorities.
During the past year these forces have been vandalizing the
anti-fascist monuments and memorials that honor the Ukrainian and other Soviet
military veterans who gave their lives to defeat Nazism in World War II. The
new coup government immediately initiated laws to ban the Communist Party of
Ukraine as many of its offices were torched around the country. The new
government also banned the use of Russian, Hungarian, Romanian, Greek, Tatar
and others as officially recognized minority languages.
The Maidan movement took shape in the form of street protests in
November 2013 demanding that the now toppled government of Yanukovych sign onto
an agreement that would “integrate” Ukraine into the economic sphere of
influence of Germany and the other E.U. countries.
The Maidan movement started as a broad-based politically
eclectic mix of fascist, centrist and some leftist organizations. The fascist
and semi-fascist organizations, specifically the armed wings of the Svoboda
Party and Right Sector, became the dominant political force as the protest
movement was sustained over several months. Both Svoboda and Right Sector use
the iconography of the pro-Nazi Ukrainians who fought with Hitler’s divisions
in the invasion of the Soviet Union and carried out massacres of Jews, Poles
and communists. After the ouster of Yanukovych, Svoboda Party leaders were
appointed to the deputy prime minister position — now held by a notorious
anti-woman bigot — and four other ministries. A founder of the Social-National
Party, which became Svoboda, is now Secretary of the National Security and
Defense Council, which controls Ukraine’s armed forces, and his top deputy is
from the Right Sector.
Imperialist Strategy
toward the former Soviet Republics
The right-wing coup government in Ukraine is trying to integrate
the country into an E.U./IMF-sponsored austerity regime that will lead to the
deep impoverishment of the Ukrainian working classes. The tremendous resources
of Ukraine are seen as a huge prize for the enrichment of the biggest banks and
corporations in Western Europe and the United States. These resources include
major deposits of coal, iron ore, manganese, nickel and uranium. It holds the
largest sulfur and second-largest mercury reserves in the world, and vast, rich
agricultural lands and forests. In addition, Ukraine has large-scale heavy
industry, particularly in the eastern part of the country.
Since the collapse of the Soviet Union most of the former
socialist bloc countries of Central and Eastern Europe have been integrated
into a NATO and E.U. sphere of influence. Of the 28 member nations of the E.U.,
22 so far have been incorporated into NATO.
Western imperialism has targeted all the countries in Eastern
Europe and the other non-Russian former Soviet republics, including Ukraine,
for incorporation into a U.S. and NATO-led sphere of influence. Their strategy
is to exploit the land, labor and resources of the targeted countries, while
containing and weakening Russia economically and militarily.
The Crimea and Russia
The Crimean Peninsula was historically an important part of
Russia. In 1954, Crimea was transferred as an administrative unit in the Soviet
Union from the Russian Republic to Ukraine but both were part of one country –
the Soviet Union. The administrative transfer of the Crimea had little
significance and no geo-strategic significance until the counter-revolutionary
overthrow of the Soviet Union in 1991. Then, all of Ukraine and the Crimea
became a primary target for absorption by the U.S. and NATO powers into their
sphere of influence. This was a great threat to Russia. The Crimea was the
headquarters for the Soviet Black Sea Naval Base which became the Russian Black
Sea Naval base after 1991.
The imperialist governments of the world have united to denounce
and condemn the Russian Federation’s decision to send military forces into the
Crimea in the aftermath of the semi-fascist coup that threatens millions of
ethnic Russians living in Ukraine and threatens to turn all of Ukraine into a
NATO staging ground against Russia. Russia denies that the forces deployed in
the Crimea are Russian special forces, suggesting that they are Russian-trained
local defense forces working in tandem with Crimea’s established security
personnel. Crimea’s governor says he is coordinating with the Russian troops at
the Sevastopol base on security matters.
Russia today no longer has a socialist government, nor does it
operate according to a socialist planned economy based on publicly-owned
property. The Russian capitalist class has its own narrow economic interests
and the Russian government protects those interests.
But Russia is not part of the small club of imperialist
countries — the former colonizers of Asia, Africa and Latin America who
continue to control the world financial system, hold a preponderance of
military and political power in global affairs, and stage interventions and
regime change efforts as they please.
In fact, Russia is routinely targeted by this Western
imperialist club because it functions, due to its size and military power, as
an obstacle to their complete hegemonic control over the former Soviet
Republics. It also presents itself as a military, economic and diplomatic
counter-weight in other critical areas, especially in the Middle East and Asia,
not to mention at the United Nations where it maintains a veto within the
Security Council.
It is completely understandable that Russia would project a show
of force in Crimea, not as a premeditated plan of aggression but rather as a
defensive counter-move to the dynamic offensive of Western imperialism and the
pro-Western, fascist gang that seized the state power in Ukraine.
The pro-Russian military presence has been welcomed by huge
numbers of people in Ukraine, both in the south and eastern regions of the country,
where the coup government lacks legitimacy and is seen as a grave danger.
Ukrainian civilians in these areas have been forming their own security
blockades defending government buildings and anti-fascist monuments from being
attacked by ultra-right nationalists. The presence of the pro-Russian military
forces has been a relief to many targeted by the ascending fascist forces.
War-mongers like John Kerry and John McCain condemn Russia for
“aggression” when it defensively acts to blunt the NATO offensive against
Ukraine and Russia. Yet these very figures, and others of their ilk, provoked
this crisis. They worked closely with the most disgusting neo-Nazi forces in
toppling a democratically-elected government in a large country that exists on
Russia’s border. The hypocrisy of their rhetoric is hard to match. These were
the cheerleaders for the massive bombing of Libya in 2011, the invasions and
occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan and the massive aerial bombing of
Yugoslavia in 1999. Yet, today, they feign concern over Ukraine’s sovereignty.
No one should be deceived.
As for German imperialism, this constitutes the third attempt to
forcibly swallow up Ukraine into their sphere of influence. The German army
annexed Ukraine from Russia in 1918. Ukraine only regained its sovereignty when
the German war effort collapsed in 1918. But 23 years later, Nazi Germany
invaded again. Twenty-seven million Soviet citizens died, including millions in
Ukraine. Hitler and the German ruling class wanted Ukraine to be transformed
into a slave society and colony. Because of Russian, Ukrainian and Soviet
heroism, the plans of German imperialism were thwarted. But the prize of
incorporating Ukraine into a zone for super-profits for German, U.S. and other
imperialist bankers and industrialists has always remained a fixed objective.
Washington and its allies have thus far threatened Russia with
“sanctions” and “costs.” But economic sanctions are in fact warfare. There is a
very real danger that the current crisis could escalate into a military war—a
war with unforeseeable consequences—were there to be a U.S.-NATO military
intervention. The anti-war movement and all progressive people should stand
against any U.S. intervention in Ukraine, refuse to join the U.S.-NATO
distortion and propaganda campaign, and demand an immediate end to U.S.-EU
support for fascist forces in Ukraine.
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