"
- It has been just over a year of growing
and escalating crisis in Europe since the
Maidan Square protests in Kiev succeeded in
toppling Ukrainian president Viktor
Yanukovych in February 2014.Those
protests, which people in eastern Ukraine
consider to have been the basis of a coup
that brought down their government and thus
trampled over their rights, were openly and
materially supported by the West. It saw the
likes of US Senator John McCain – a man
whose quest for a new Vietnam War never ends
– travelling to the country to personally
urge on the demonstrators in Kiev alongside
Britain’s Catherine Ashton, representing the
EU.
With this in mind, just imagine the
reaction if Russian politicians had
travelled to Mexico to urge on an anti-US
protest movement to topple the elected
government there and replace it with a
pro-Russian alternative. And imagine too
that at the head of this movement to topple
said government were avowed neo-Nazis and
fascists. Imagine what the reaction of the
United States would have been then.
Then we have the open admission by the US
State Department’s Victoria Nuland, another
visitor to Maidan Square during the
protests, that the US had ‘invested’
$5billion dollars to help secure Ukraine’s
‘democratic future’ since 1991, combined
with the staggering contents of a taped
telephone conversation she conducted in
early February 2014 with the US ambassador
to Ukraine, Geoffrey Pyatt, during which
they discuss whom they would like to see
‘appointed’ the new Ukrainian president,
anticipating Yanukovych’s imminent demise.
Is there anybody who seriously believes,
given the aforementioned, that the US and
its European allies were not engaged in a
nefarious attempt to destabilize and
undermine an elected government?
Ukraine’s history is inextricably linked
to Russia’s. In the east of the country
especially, cultural, ethnic, economic, and
historical links with Russia are deeply
entrenched. It describes a fissure between
east and west in which one half of Ukraine
favors close and fraternal ties to Russia on
the basis of those links, while in western
Ukraine the dominant political current is
anti-Russian and pro-West.
Professor of Russian and European
Politics, Richard Sakwa, explores the two
competing models of statehood that have
arisen on the basis of this fissure in his
recent book, Frontline Ukraine (IB Taurus
2015). He describes the first of these as
monist nationalism, involving the assertion
of an ethnocentric identity that underpins a
regeneration of the nation’s culture and
social values along rigid and exclusionary
nationalist lines. The second he refers to
as a pluralist model, denoting an inclusive
Ukrainian identity that embraces the
disparate and diverse peoples and ethnic
groups who make up the country, a
consequence of its “long history of
fragmented statehood.”
These two contested models of statehood
are being played out in the current
Ukrainian conflict, which has been ramped up
by the geopolitical stakes involved as
Washington and its allies seeks to ‘contain’
Russia in a struggle over the continuation
of the unipolarity enjoyed by the West since
the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, or
the multipolar alternative which Russia’s
re-emergence as a global power demands.
With over 5000 people killed and over a
million displaced in the ensuing conflict in
eastern Ukraine, the need for a political
solution is self evident. Yet, judging by
the intensity of the demonization of
Vladimir Putin and Russia by the British
political and media establishment recently,
it is clear that an intensification of the
conflict is the preferred option of those
who refuse to accept that the British Empire
no longer exists.
When he’s not being compared to Hitler, a
particularly offensive caricature for
historical reasons, the Russian leader is
being accused of harboring ambitions of
forging a ‘Russian Empire’. Britain’s
Defence Secretary Michael Fallon recently
went so far as to make the ludicrous
assertion that Putin constitutes as great a
threat to Europe as Islamic State, further
evidence of a political class that has
suffered intellectual collapse.
That such accusations stem from a nation
whose government has played a key part in
reducing Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya to a
state of chaos in recent years, only makes
them all the more hypocritical if not
downright noxious.
But then this should come as no surprise,
as we’ve been here before, haven’t we?
Remember when Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez was
being similarly demonized and held up as a
dictator? His crime when he came to power
and remained there on the back of numerous
democratic elections was his refusal to
allow Venezuela’s wealth to continue to be
shipped out of the country, as it had been
for decades, by a small group of
Western-supported oligarchs.
What the crisis and conflict in Ukraine
has done is remind us that we live in a
world in which the West’s interests and
rights are the only ones deemed legitimate.
This is what drives the repeated attempts by
Washington and its allies, especially the
UK, to push a hegemonic agenda. And whether
in the Middle East or in Europe, it is this
agenda that has been the root cause of
instability and conflict that is unfolding
in eastern Ukraine at present and which has
pushed the Middle East into an abyss of
carnage and barbarism.
The US is a global hegemon. With over
1,000 military bases covering the planet, 11
navy battle carrier groups, and a military
budget exceeding that of every other major
industrialized nation combined, the
challenge facing the world is not how to
contain Russia but rather how to contain
Washington.
Vladimir Putin and Russia’s crime is to
dare resist this US Empire, taking a stand
against the hypocrisy, double standards, and
complete lack of respect for other
countries, cultures, and values it
represents. The concerted attempt to expand
NATO and an ever more militant EU all the
way up to Russia’s border has nothing to do
with democracy and everything to do with the
projection of imperial power masquerading as
democracy.
Successive British governments have made
a virtue out of attaching itself to
Washington’s coattails. Indeed it is no
exaggeration to state that when Washington
sneezes Britain is ready with a handkerchief
to blow its nose. It is a sordid and
eminently dishonorable relationship that has
allowed the UK to parade itself as a first
rate power when in truth it hardly qualifies
as third rate.
An escalation of the conflict in eastern
Ukraine benefits no one, least of all
Russia. But the principle at stake is one
that must be upheld – namely an end to the
West dictating orders to the rest of the
world and thereby spreading destabilization
rather than stability, war instead of peace,
and chaos at the expense of respect for
international law. Only when the proponents
of ‘democratism’, an ideology not to be
confused with democracy, understand that the
world is not theirs to control will there be
an end to the never-ending spiral of
conflict that shows no sign of abating
anytime soon.
The enemy is not Russia or Vladimir
Putin. The enemy is hypocrisy.
John
Wight is the author
of a politically incorrect and irreverent
Hollywood memoir – Dreams
That Die – published by Zero Books. He’s
also written five novels, which are
available as Kindle eBooks. You can follow
him on Twitter at @JohnWight1