By
Moon Of Alabama
November 15, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" -
NBC News
is not impressed by the first day of the
Democrats' impeachment circus. But it fails to note
what the conflict is really about:
It was substantive, but it wasn't dramatic.
In the reserved manner of veteran diplomats
with Harvard degrees, Bill Taylor and George
Kent opened the public phase of the House
impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump
on Wednesday by bearing witness to a scheme they
described as not only wildly unorthodox but also
in direct contravention of U.S.
interests.
"It is clearly in our national interest to
deter further Russian aggression," Taylor, the
acting U.S. ambassador to Ukraine and a
decorated Vietnam War veteran, said in
explaining why Trump's decision to withhold
congressionally appropriated aid to the most
immediate target of Russian expansionism didn't
align with U.S. policy.
But at a time when Democrats are
simultaneously eager to influence public opinion
in favor of ousting the president and quietly
apprehensive that their hearings could stall or
backfire, the first round felt more like the
dress rehearsal for a serious one-act play than
the opening night of a hit Broadway musical.
"In direct contravention of U.S. interests" says
the NBC and quotes a member of the
permanent state who declares "it is clearly in our
national interest" to give weapons to Ukraine.
But is that really in the national U.S. interest?
Who defined it as such?
President Obama was against giving weapons to
Ukraine and never transferred any to Ukraine despite
pressure from certain circles. Was Obama's decision
against U.S. national interest? Where are the
Democrats or deep state members accusing him of
that?
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
Which brings us to the really
critical point of the whole issue. Who
defines what is in the "national
interest" with regards to foreign
policy? Here is a point where for once
agree with the right-wingers at the
National Review where Andrew
McCarthy
writes:
[O]n the critical matter of America’s interests
in the Russia/Ukraine dynamic, I think the
policy community is right, and President Trump
is wrong. If I were president, while I would
resist gratuitous provocations, I would not
publicly associate myself with the delusion that
stable friendship is possible (or, frankly,
desirable) with Putin’s anti-American
dictatorship, which runs its country like a
Mafia family and is acting on its revanchist
ambitions.
But you see, much like the policy community,
I am not president. Donald Trump is.
And that’s where the policy community and I
part company. It is the president, not the
bureaucracy, who was elected by the American
people. That puts him — not the National
Security Council, the State Department, the
intelligence community, the military, and their
assorted subject-matter experts — in charge of
making policy. If we’re to remain a
constitutional republic, that’s how it has to
stay.
We have made the very
same point:
The
U.S. constitution "empowers the President of
the United States to propose and chiefly
negotiate agreements between the United States
and other countries."
The constitution does not empower the "U.S.
government policy community", nor "the
administration", nor the "consensus view of the
interagency" and certainly not one Lt.Col.
Vindman to define the strategic interests of the
United States and its foreign policy. It is the
duly elected president who does that.
and:
The president does not like how the 'American
policy' on Russia was built. He rightly believes
that he was elected to change it. He had stated
his opinion on Russia during his campaign and
won the election. It is not 'malign influence'
that makes him try to have good relations with
Russia. It is his own conviction and legitimized
by the voters.
...
[I]t is the president who sets the policies. The
drones around him who serve "at his pleasure"
are there to implement them.
There is another point that has to be made about
the NBC's assertions. It is not in the
interest of Ukraine to be a proxy for U.S. deep
state antagonism towards Russia. Robber baron Igor
Kolomoisky, who after
the Maidan coup had financed the west-Ukrainian
fascists who fought against east-Ukraine, says so
directly in
his recent NYT interview:
Mr. Kolomoisky, widely seen as Ukraine’s most
powerful figure outside government, given his
role as the patron of the recently elected
President Volodymyr Zelensky, has experienced a
remarkable change of heart: It is time, he said,
for Ukraine to give up on the West and turn back
toward Russia.
“They’re stronger anyway. We have to improve
our relations,” he said, comparing Russia’s
power to that of Ukraine. “People want peace, a
good life, they don’t want to be at war.
And you” — America — “are forcing us to be at
war, and not even giving us the money
for it.”
...
Mr. Kolomoisky [..] told The Times in a
profanity-laced discussion, the West has failed
Ukraine, not providing enough money or
sufficiently opening its markets.
Instead, he said, the United States is simply
using Ukraine to try to weaken its geopolitical
rival. “War against Russia,” he said, “to the
last Ukrainian.” Rebuilding ties with Russia has
become necessary for Ukraine’s economic
survival, Mr. Kolomoisky argued. He predicted
that the trauma of war will pass.
...
Mr. Kolomoisky said he was feverishly working
out how to end the war, but he refused to
divulge details because the Americans “will mess
it up and get in the way.”
Kolomoisky's interview is obviously a trial
balloon for the policies Zelensky wants to pursue.
He has, like Trump, campaigned on working for better
relations with Russia. He received nearly 73% of all
votes.
Ambassador Taylor and the other participants of
yesterday's clown show would certainly "mess it up
and get in the way" if Zelensky would openly pursue
the policy he promised to his voters. They are
joined in this
with the west-Ukrainian fascists they had used
to arrange the Maidan coup:
Zelenskiy’s decision in early October to accept
talks with Russia on the future of eastern
Ukraine resulted in an outcry from a relatively
small but very vocal minority of Ukrainians
opposed to any deal-making with Russia. The
protests were relatively short-lived, but
prospects for a negotiated end to the war in the
eastern Donbas region became more remote in
light of this domestic opposition.
...
The supporters for war with Russia are
ex-president Poroshenko and two parliamentary
factions, European Solidarity and Voice, whose
supporters are predominantly located in western
Ukraine. Crucially, however, they can also rely
on right-wing paramilitary groups composed of
veterans from the hottest phase of the war in
Donbas in 2014-5.
Only some 20% of the Ukrainians favor to continue
the war against the eastern separatists who Russia
supports. During the presidential election
Poroshenko received just 25% of the votes. His party
European Solidarity won 8.1% of the parliamentary
election. Voice won 5.8%.
By pursuing further conflict with Russia the deep
state of the United States wants to ignore the
wishes not only of the U.S. voters but also those of
the Ukrainian electorate. That undemocratic mindset
is another point that unites them with the Ukrainian
fascists.
Zelensky should ignore the warmongers in the U.S.
embassy in Kiev and sue for immediate piece with
Russia. (He should also investigate
Biden's undue influence.) Reengaging with Russia
is also the easiest and most efficient step the
Ukraine can take to lift its desolate economy.
It is in the national interest of both, the
Ukraine and the United States.
This article was originally published by "Moon
Of Alabama" - -
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==See Also==
Putin and Zelenskiy agree to Paris talks on Ukraine:
Leaders of Ukraine, Russia, Germany and France have agreed to revive their
"Normandy format" Ukraine talks for the first time since 2014
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