The Putin-Did-It
Conspiracy Theory
A new truce agreement in Ukraine rekindles
hope that the bloodshed can be reduced if
not stopped, but Official Washington’s gross
misunderstanding of the crisis, blaming
everything on Russia’s President Putin,
raises doubts and portends a potentially
grave catastrophe, writes Robert Parry.
By Robert Parry
February 14, 2015 "ICH"
- "Consortium
News" - The
original falsehood behind the Iraq War was
that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass
destruction and intended to use them against
America either directly or by giving them to
al-Qaeda. The opening lie about the Ukraine
crisis was that Russian President Vladimir
Putin instigated the conflict as part of
some Hitlerian plan to conquer much of
Europe.
Yet, while the Hussein-WMD
claim was hard for the common citizen to
assess because it was supposedly supported
by U.S. intelligence information that was
kept secret, the Putin-Ukraine lie collapses
under the most cursory examination based
simply of what’s publicly known and what
makes sense.
Nevertheless, the New York
Times – much as it did when it was falsely
reporting breathlessly about “aluminum
tubes” for Iraq’s non-existent nuclear
weapons program – continues to promote U.S.
government propaganda about Ukraine as fact
and dismisses any rational assessment of the
situation as crazy.
On Friday, the Times
concluded its
lead editorial with the assertion
that: “What remains incontrovertible is that
Ukraine is Mr. Putin’s war.” But the point
is anything but “incontrovertible.” Indeed,
the crisis was most certainly not instigated
by Putin.
The actually
“incontrovertible” facts about the Ukraine
crisis are these: The destabilization of
President Viktor Yanukovych’s elected
government began in November 2013 when
Yanukovych balked at a proposed association
agreement promoted by the European Union. He
sought more time after the sticker shock of
learning from Kiev economic experts that the
deal would cost Ukraine $160 billion in lost
revenue by cutting trade with Russia.
It was German Chancellor
Angela Merkel, not Vladimir Putin, who
pushed the EU agreement and miscalculated
the consequences, as the German newsmagazine
Der Spiegel
has
reported. Putin’s only role in
that time frame was to offer a more generous
$15 billion aid package to Ukraine, not
exactly a war-like act.
Yanukovych’s decision to
postpone action on the EU association
prompted angry demonstrations in Kiev’s
Maidan square, largely from western
Ukrainians who were hoping for visa-free
travel to the EU and other benefits from
closer ties. Putin had no role in those
protests – and it’s insane to think that he
did.
In February 2014, the
protests grew more and more violent as
neo-Nazi and other militias organized in the
western city of Lviv and these 100-man units
known as “sotins” were dispatched daily to
provide the muscle for the
anti-Yanukovych uprising that was taking
shape. It is frankly nutty to suggest that
Putin was organizing these militias. [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “When
Is a Putsch a Putsch.”]
Evidence of Coup
Plotting
By contrast, there is
substantial evidence that senior U.S.
officials were pushing for a “regime change”
in Kiev, including
an
intercepted phone call and
various public statements.
In December 2013,
Assistant Secretary of State Victoria
Nuland, a neocon holdover, reminded
Ukrainian business leaders that the United
States had invested $5 billion in their
“European aspirations.” In early February,
she discussed with U.S. Ambassador Geoffrey
Pyatt who the new leaders of Ukraine should
be. “Yats is the guy,” she declared,
referring to Arseniy Yatsenyuk. [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “Who’s
Telling the Big Lie on Ukraine?”]
The Maidan uprising gained
momentum on Feb. 20, 2014, when snipers
around the square opened fire on police and
protesters touching off a violent clash that
left scores of people dead, both police and
protesters. After the sniper fire and a
police retreat — carrying their wounded —
the demonstrators surged forward and
some police apparently reacted with return
fire of their own.
But the growing evidence
indicates that the initial sniper fire
originated from locations controlled by the
Right Sektor, extremists associated with the
Maidan’s neo-Nazi “self-defense” commandant
Andriy Parubiy. Though the current Ukrainian
government has dragged its feet on an
investigation, independent field reports,
including
a
new one from BBC, indicate that
the snipers were associated with the
protesters, not the Yanukovych government as
was widely reported in the U.S. media a year
ago.
The worsening violence led
Yanukovych to agree on Feb. 21 to a deal
guaranteed by three European countries. He
accepted reduced powers and agreed to early
elections so he could be voted out of
office. Yet, rather than permit that
political settlement to go forward,
neo-Nazis and other Maidan forces overran
government buildings on Feb. 22, forcing
Yanukovych and his officials to flee for
their lives.
The U.S. State Department
quickly deemed this coup regime “legitimate”
and Nuland’s choice, Yatsenyuk, emerged as
Prime Minister, with Parubiy put in charge
of national security.
In other words, there is
plenty of evidence that the Ukraine crisis
was started by the EU through its
mishandling of the association agreement,
then was heated up by the U.S. government
through the work of Nuland, Pyatt and other
officials, and then was brought to a boil by
neo-Nazis and other extremists who executed
the coup.
A Nutty Conspiracy
Theory
But there is zero evidence
that Putin engineered these events. There is
no evidence that he got Merkel and the EU to
overplay their hand; no evidence that he
organized the neo-Nazi militias in Lviv; no
evidence that he manipulated U.S. officials
to manipulate the “regime change” behind the
scenes; no evidence that he ordered the
Maidan militants to attack.
Is the New York Times
really suggesting that Putin pulled the
strings on the likes of Merkel and Nuland,
secretly organized neo-Nazi brigades, and
ruthlessly deployed these thugs to Kiev to
provoke violence and overthrow Yanukovych,
all while pretending to try to save
Yanukovych’s government – all so Putin could
advance some dastardly plot to conquer
Europe?
The Times often makes fun
of “conspiracy theorists,” but the Times’
narrative is something that would make even
the most dedicated “conspiracy theorist”
blush. Yet, the Times not only asserts this
crazy conspiracy theory but calls it
“incontrovertible.”
Beyond the lack of
evidence to support this conspiracy theory,
there is no rational motive for Putin to
have done what the Times claims that he did.
In the actual chronology
of event, Putin was preoccupied with the
Winter Olympics in Sochi when the Ukraine
crisis took its turn for the worst a year
ago. He was fearful that the Olympics would
be marred by Chechen or other terrorism and
thus was personally overseeing security.
Putin had spent some $40
billion on making the Olympics a glamorous
show to introduce the new Russia to the
world as a country ready to join the West.
I’m told that he was very proud of Russia’s
position in the G-8 and felt he had built a
constructive relationship with President
Barack Obama by helping him resolve crises
in Syria and Iran in 2013.
The last thing Putin
wanted to do was provoke a crisis in
Ukraine. Nor is there any intelligence that
he had designs on the Baltic States, as the
conspiracy theory contends.
However, when a right-wing
regime seized power in a violent coup in
Ukraine on Russia’s border and then took
provocative actions against Ukraine’s ethnic
Russians, Putin responded to calls from
Crimea – both from its parliament and a
referendum – to take the peninsula back into
Russia.
Putin also feared that the
new powers in Kiev might give the historic
Russian naval base at Sevastopol to NATO
with its nuclear-armed submarines. In other
words, as much as the New York Times has
bandied about claims of a Russian “invasion”
of Crimea, the Crimeans requested Russia’s
intervention and up to 25,000 Russian troops
were already there in the agreement with
Ukraine over the naval base.
Reactor, Not
Instigator
But the key point is that
Putin was reacting to the Ukraine crisis,
not instigating it. As even former Secretary
of State Henry Kissinger
explained to Der Spiegel, “The
annexation of Crimea was not a move toward
global conquest. It was not Hitler moving
into Czechoslovakia.”
Kissinger added, “Putin
spent tens of billions of dollars on the
Winter Olympics in Sochi. The theme of the
Olympics was that Russia is a progressive
state tied to the West through its culture
and, therefore, it presumably wants to be
part of it. So it doesn’t make any sense
that a week after the close of the Olympics,
Putin would take Crimea and start a war over
Ukraine.”
In this case, Kissinger is
clearly right. It never made any sense for
Putin to provoke the Ukraine crisis. Yet,
that became the lie upon which the United
States has built its increasingly aggressive
policies over the past year, with
politicians of all stripes now shouting that
America must stand up to the madman Putin
and “Russian aggression.”
This is a dangerous “group
think” for a number of reasons, not the
least the disturbing fact that both the
United States and Russia have lots of
nuclear weapons. On a less existential
level, the “Putin-is-Hitler” analogy has
prompted a major miscalculation on the right
approach for the Obama administration to
take vis a vis Putin.
As Harvard Professor
Stephen M. Walt has
noted, the most effective
response to a crisis is different if a
foreign leader is an aggressor on the march
or if the leader feels cornered. The former
calls for a “deterrence model,” i.e., a
tough reaction. But a tough response in the
latter case will only make the beleaguered
leader more belligerent like a cornered
animal, thus spinning the crisis into more
dangerous territory under what’s known as
the “spiral model.”
“When insecurity is the
taproot of a state’s revisionist actions,
making threats just makes the situation
worse,” Walt wrote. “When the ‘spiral model’
applies, the proper response is a diplomatic
process of accommodation and appeasement
(yes, appeasement) to allay the insecure
state’s concerns.” [See Consortiumnews.com’s
“‘Realists’
Warn Against Ukraine Escalation.”]
Perhaps the new ceasefire
agreement in Minsk – spearheaded by German
Chancellor Merkel – will finally help defuse
the crisis, with the legitimate concerns of
the various sides being taken into account
rationally rather than letting the past
year’s hysteria continue to control events.
But the Times’ editorial
doesn’t give much reason for hope that
America’s upside-down “group think” has
righted itself in any meaningful way. In the
mainstream media’s latest repeat of the
Iraq-WMD fiasco, the Times and virtually
every other major news outlet remain
committed to a dangerous misreading of the
facts about Ukraine.
And anyone who dares point
out the real history of the crisis is
immediately shouted down with the
anti-intellectual riposte: “Putin
apologist!” — just as in 2002-2003, when
anyone who doubted the certainty about
Iraq’s WMD was a “Saddam apologist.”
Investigative reporter Robert
Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories
for The Associated Press and Newsweek in the
1980s. You can buy his latest book,
America’s Stolen
Narrative, either in print
here or
as an e-book (from
Amazon
and
barnesandnoble.com).
You also can order Robert Parry’s trilogy on
the Bush Family and its connections to
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