Washington Wastes No Time
to Sabotage Minsk
By Finian Cunningham
February 13, 2015 "ICH"
- "SCF"
-
With their noses out of joint and egos
bruised, the United States and its European
lieutenants immediately got to work to
undermine the Minsk ceasefire deal by
twisting the terms of the accord and seeking
to frame Russia for its imminent failure.
A Washington Post headline
set the pace with this headline hours after
the Minsk negotiations wrapped up in the
Belarus capital. ‘Putin announces ceasefire
with Ukraine,’ declared the Post,
mendaciously implicating Russia as a
protagonist in the year-old conflict, which,
it is inferred, is now suing for a peace
settlement.
US Secretary of State John
Kerry, along with trusty British and Polish
allies, warned Russia of more sanctions if
the Minsk truce was not «fully implemented».
«The United States is
prepared to consider rolling back sanctions
on Russia when the Minsk agreements of
September 2014, and now this agreement, are
fully implemented,» Kerry said in a
statement.
In other words, Washington is
still peddling the hoary narrative that
Moscow is an aggressor and is to blame for
the conflict. Rolling back sanctions «when»
Minsk is «fully implemented» is the US
giving itself a licence to covertly sabotage
the ceasefire at every turn and to maintain
its unwarranted sanctions on Russia, as well
as following up on promised supply of
weapons to the Kiev regime.
There seems little doubt that
the Americans are reeling from the
diplomatic coup that Russian President
Vladimir Putin pulled off in Minsk this
week, along with German and French leaders,
Angela Merkel and Francois Hollande.
Amid threats from the US last
week that it was going to flood Ukraine with
more heavy weapons, Putin and his European
counterparts managed to broker a ceasefire
to the conflict after marathon 17-hour
negotiations. The truce is to be implemented
this weekend and, it has to be said,
constitutes only a slim prospect of bringing
the civil war in Ukraine to a halt. It is
fraught with many thorny issues, such as
withdrawal of fighting units on both sides
and the accepted definition of a demarcation
line. The autonomous status of the
separatist Donbas region is also far from
clear, or whether Kiev is prepared to follow
up with mutual negotiations with the
breakaway ethnic Russian population.
Nevertheless, the mere
agreement, in principle, by the Kiev regime
and the pro-separatist rebels of the eastern
Ukrainian region is a welcome chance for a
cessation in violence that has cost nearly
5,500 lives and more than one million
refugees. That Putin, along with Merkel and
Hollande, managed to achieve this tentative
breakthrough is something of a feat in
diplomatic skills and commitment. The
development also tends to negate the
official Western narrative that purports to
paint Russia as an aggressor and threat to
European peace.
The Minsk deal properly
frames the conflict as a civil war between
the Kiev regime and the Donbas separatists,
which Russia is trying to dampen by acting
as a facilitator of negotiations between the
warring sides.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry
Peskov was on the mark when he said after
the Minsk talks that Russia is a guarantor
of the peace deal, not a party obliged to
fulfil its implementation. He reiterated
that Moscow is not a participant in the
conflict, as Western media have, and
continue, to assert.
«Russia is the country that
was called by the parties of the conflict,»
said Peskov. «This is the country that
called on the parties of the conflict to
sign a complex of measures to fulfil the
Minsk agreements. But Russia is not one of
the parties to fulfil these measures. This
is the country that is acting as the
guarantor, that comes forward with a call,
but, obviously, it’s not a party that needs
to take any actions for [the fulfilment]. We
simply can’t do this physically because
Russia is not a participant in the
conflict,» added the Kremlin spokesman.
It was left to the British
premier David Cameron and the ex-Polish
president Donald Tusk to undermine the
latest Minsk chance for peace by casting
aspersions on Russia and re-framing the
conflict as one of external aggression on
Ukraine.
Cameron talked, with typical
British haughtiness, of Putin needing to
change his behaviour, while Tusk added to
the narrative of demonising the Russian
leader by insinuating that he is not
trustworthy.
Cameron, speaking at an EU
summit in Brussels on Thursday, said: «If
this is a genuine ceasefire, then of course
that would be welcome. But what matters most
of all is actually actions on the ground
rather than just words on a piece of paper.
I think we should be very clear that Putin
needs to know that unless his behaviour
changes, the sanctions we have in place
won’t be altered.»
Tusk, who is now the European
Council President, said: «If [the Minsk
agreement] does not happen we will not
hesitate to take the necessary steps. Our
trust in the goodwill of President Putin is
limited. This is why we have to maintain our
decision on sanctions.»
Given that the Western-backed
Kiev regime has serially violated past
ceasefires, which led to the latest
escalation of violence, it would be naive to
expect that the latest peace bid will be
honoured. The Kiev junta has been emboldened
to prosecute its criminal war against the
Donbas population because of the unswerving
political, financial and military support
that Washington has indulged. Massive,
systematic war crimes by Kiev have been
whitewashed and absolved by Washington with
spurious, unfounded claims of «Russian
aggression».
This is because the US-backed
regime-change operation in Ukraine that
brought the Kiev junta to power last
February is fundamentally predicated on
Washington’s long-term objective of
destabilising Russia. That is why the
prospects of a ceasefire being implemented
are something of an oxymoron. A peace
settlement in Ukraine would only be an
impediment to Washington’s geopolitical
objective of undermining Russia.
The criminal regime in Kiev
has become something of a specialist in
committing false flag terrorist atrocities,
which it and its Western sponsors then duly
attribute to «Russian-backed rebels». The
massacre in Donetsk on January 21, in
Mariupol on January 24, and this week in
Kramatorsk, in which up to 17 people were
killed from Smerch rockets, have all the
hallmarks of false-flag operations
perpetrated by the US-backed, trained and
equipped Kiev regime forces.
In the Kramatorsk incident,
on the eve of the Minsk summit, the Kiev
regime claimed that the Smerch rockets were
fired from separatist-held Gorlovka, which
is 80 kilometres away, and the outer limit
of the munition’s range. The separatists
denied the attack, saying that they do not
target civilian areas. Hours after the
massacre, Kiev President Petro Poroshenko
arrived in Kramatorsk for
photo-opportunities with victims lying on
hospital beds. That Poroshenko would hurry
to a town that is under fire is doubtful if
the rebel threat was real. Also speaking as
if from a script, he said: «It is savages
who use cluster bombs against civilians. It
is a crime against humanity when civilians
are killed by Russian weapons in their
homes.»
The next day, the «outraged»
Poroshenko was in Minsk warmly shaking hands
with Putin. So much for Russia war crimes.
To say that the latest
ceasefire will be easily sabotaged is an
understatement, given the past conduct of
the Kiev regime. All it has to do is to keep
fighting and committing crimes and that will
be «evidence» of Russia not implementing
Minsk. That will then allow Washington and
its dutiful British and Polish allies, along
with the obliging Western news media
propagandists, to blame Russia for the
failure in «fully implementing» the
ceasefire. More American weapons can then be
funnelled into Ukraine and more sanctions
ratcheted up.
Russian President Vladimir
Putin deserves huge credit for showing
statesmanlike leadership over the Ukraine
crisis. The trouble is that the Americans
are playing a very different and dirty game
in which there are no rules to abide by.
© Strategic Culture
Foundation