War is Peace
in Ukraine
By Margaret Kimberley
February 12, 2015
"ICH"
- "BAR"
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The United States
and the rest of NATO gambled
when they took sides in
Ukraine’s 2014 political crisis.
American fingerprints were
clearly seen on the coup which
sent an elected president into
exile. The West succeeded in
putting Petro Poroshenko in the
presidency, then showered his
nearly bankrupt country with
money and sat back hoping to see
a puppet regime firmly in place
on Russia’s border.
The
machinations haven’t paid off
exactly as they hoped. The
people of the Donbass region
didn’t give NATO permission to
tear their country apart and
fought back against the newly
installed regime. Now the
ghoulish statistics indicate
that 5,000 are dead and 1
million are refugees as the
ruinous western intervention
continues. Unfortunately chaos
is the cost of doing business in
the pursuit of hegemony. The
nightmare for Ukraine is not
likely to end anytime soon.
From the
beginning, the so-called
separatists in the eastern
Donbass region of Ukraine proved
themselves superior to Ukraine’s
army. Ukraine’s willingness to
sign the
Minsk peace accords in
September 2014 were proof that
they were losing militarily. The
situation has gone from bad to
worse for government forces and
the increased desperation shown
by western leaders proves that
point.
First the
American government signaled a
willingness to provide arms and
advisers to the Ukrainians. Less
savvy Republicans in congress
are publicly calling for
military aid while the Obama
administration is a bit more
circumspect. The White House has
to contend with the wishes of
allies like German chancellor
Angela Merkel, who has publicly
stated her opposition to
throwing gasoline on the fire.
She and French
President Francois Hollande were
forced to hold hastily arranged
meetings with Poroshenko and
Russian president Vladimir
Putin. That turn of events would
not have occurred if the
Ukrainians were winning instead
of losing.
Putin is
guilty of an unforgivable sin in
the eyes of NATO. He defends his
country’s sovereignty in the
face of western demands. Russia
uses its veto power in the UN
Security Council to prevent
direct NATO intervention in
Syria and also provides military
aid to that nation. Putin’s
skepticism of NATO intentions is
well founded. For more than
twenty years, NATO reneged on
promises made to Mikhail
Gorbachev not to expand its
membership into eastern Europe.
Twelve eastern European nations
were added to NATO during the
Clinton, Bush and Obama
administrations.
The imminent
Ukrainian defeat sent Merkel and
Hollande to see Putin, the man
they and others kicked out of
the G8 group and labeled a
tyrant. Putin surely felt
personal satisfaction as they
were forced to reckon with the
military victory of Novorussiya
but his problems aren’t over
either.
The capitalist
nations want to make the world
ungovernable in order to secure
their place at the top of the
international food chain. They
must lower the price of oil, not
to help humanity, but to thwart
Venezuela’s efforts to control
its destiny and leave Russia
weak and unable to escape
dollar hegemony.
The United
States and its allies don’t want
peace. They want control but
that desire may ultimately
destroy both Russia and Ukraine.
Ukraine depends on handouts from
its patrons and its currency is
in free fall. Russia’s economy
has been devastated by sanctions
and the Saudi-engineered
fall in oil prices. The damage
done isn’t seen as a problem by
the United States and its
European friends. It is in fact
part of their plan.
Now that they
have been humbled on the battle
field, NATO wants to talk but
still on its own terms. Merkel
and Hollande are demanding an
immediate cease fire and want to
roll back borders to the time
when the Minsk agreement was
signed. Putin will obviously
want to negotiate terms more
favorable to his country, but
the pressure on his economy has
been severe and he is in a
precarious position.
What is bad
news for millions of people in
Ukraine and Russia is considered
good news for NATO. They are
certainly dealing with a setback
but also think long term. They
may have buyer’s remorse
regarding Poroshenko, and some
EU states are starting to speak
up about the impact of sanctions
on their economies. But the big
dog, the United States, can
still call the shots and is
demanding any and every means to
keep imperialism humming along.
America is in
effect waging war against the
rest of the world. Russia is
hurt by sanctions but so are
some of the European nations
forced to go along with the
shake down. Lower oil prices
hurt Russia, Iran and Venezuela
but also hurt Canada, Alaska,
Texas and Louisiana. It doesn’t
matter where the pain falls. For
now the dollar rules the world
and the United States is the
biggest energy producer with the
most powerful military. A budget
shortfall in the state of Alaska
is hardly a concern.
The so-called
Normandy Four countries of
Russia, France, Germany and
Ukraine have just completed a
new round of peace negotiations
in Belarus, but whether a new
cease fire will hold remains
speculative. Ukraine has been
set up for a fall and Russia can
only maneuver and hope to dodge
as many blows as possible.
Mikhail
Gorbachev made the
following observation
recently. “The U.S. has already
dragged us into a new Cold War,
trying to openly implement its
idea of triumphalism. Where will
that lead all of us? Have they
totally lost their heads?” The
response to that last question
is sadly in the affirmative.