Are NGOs Agents of
Subversion?
By Patrick J. Buchanan
March 24, 2015 "ICH"
- Though “Bibi” Netanyahu won
re-election last week, the Senate Permanent
Subcommittee on Investigations will still
look into whether the State Department
financed a clandestine effort to defeat him.
Reportedly, State funneled
$350,000 to an American NGO called OneVoice,
which has an Israeli subsidiary, Victory 15,
that collaborated with U.S. operatives to
bring Bibi down.
If we are now secretly
pumping cash into the free elections of
friendly countries, to dump leaders
President Obama dislikes, Americans have a
right to know why we are using Cold War
tactics against democracies.
After World War II, my
late colleague on CNN’s “Crossfire,” Tom
Braden, delivered CIA cash to democratic
parties in Europe imperiled by communist
parties financed from Moscow.
But that was done to
combat Stalinism when Western survival was
at stake in a Cold War that ended in 1991.
Hopefully, after looking
into OneVoice and V15, the Senate will
expand its investigation into a larger
question: Is the U.S. using NGOs to subvert
regimes around the world? And, if so, who
decides which regimes may be subverted?
What gives these questions
urgency is the current crisis that has
Moscow moving missiles toward Europe and
sending submarines and bombers to probe NATO
defenses.
America contends that
Vladimir Putin’s annexation of Crimea and
backing for pro-Russian rebels in Ukraine is
the cause of the gathering storm in
Russian-NATO relations.
Yet Putin’s actions in
Ukraine were not taken until the overthrow
of a democratically elected pro-Russian
regime in Kiev, in a coup d’etat in which,
Moscow contends, an American hand was
clearly visible.
Not only was John McCain
in Kiev’s Maidan Square egging on the crowds
that drove the regime from power, so, too,
was U.S. Assistant Secretary of State
Victoria Nuland.
In an intercepted phone
call with our ambassador in Kiev, Nuland
identified the man we preferred when
President Viktor Yanukovych was ousted.
“Yats,” she called him. And when Yanukovych
fled after the Maidan massacre, sure enough,
Arseniy Yatsenyuk was in power.
Nuland also revealed that
the U.S. had spent $5 billion since 1991 to
bring about the reorientation of Ukraine
toward the West.
Now, bringing Ukraine into
the EU and NATO may appear to Nuland & Co. a
great leap forward for freedom and progress.
But to Russia it looks
like the subversion of a Slavic nation with
which she has had intimate ties for
centuries, to bring Ukraine into an economic
union and military alliance directed against
Moscow.
And if NATO stumbles into
a military clash with Russia, the roots of
that conflict will be traceable to the coup
in Kiev that Russians believe was the dirty
work of the Americans.
If the U.S. had a role in
that coup, the American people should know
it and the Senate should find out whether
Nuland & Co. used NGOs to reignite a Cold
War that Ronald Reagan brought to an end.
And if we are now using
NGOs as fronts for secret operations to dump
over regimes, we are putting all NGOs abroad
under suspicion and at risk.
Not in our lifetimes has
America been more distrusted and disliked.
And among the reasons is that we are seen as
constantly carping at governments that do
not measure up to our standards of
democracy, and endlessly interfering in the
internal affairs of nations that do not
threaten us.
In this new era, U.S.
foreign policy elites have boasted of the
“color-coded” revolutions they helped to
foment in Belgrade, Kiev, Tbilisi. In 2003,
we helped to overthrow the Georgian regime
of Eduard Shevardnadze in a “Rose
Revolution” that brought to power Mikheil
Saakashvili. And Saakashvili nearly dragged
us into a confrontation with Russia in 2008,
when he invaded South Ossetia and killed
Russian peacekeepers.
What vital interest of
ours was there in that little nation in the
Caucasus, the birthplace of Stalin, to
justify so great a risk?
Nor is it Moscow alone
that is angered over U.S. interference in
its internal affairs and those of its
neighbor nations.
President Abdel Fattah
al-Sisi of Egypt has expelled members of
U.S. NGOs. Beijing believes U.S. NGOs were
behind the Occupy-Wall-Street-style street
blockages in Hong Kong.
If true, these U.S.
actions raise a fundamental question:
What is the preeminent
goal of U.S. foreign policy?
Is it to protect the vital
interests and national security of the
Republic? Or do we believe with George W.
Bush that, “The survival of liberty” in
America “depends on the success of liberty
in other lands.”
If it is the latter, then
our mission is utopian – and unending.
For if we believe our
liberty is insecure until the whole world is
democratic, then we cannot rest until we
witness the overthrow of the existing
regimes in Russia, China, North Korea,
Vietnam, Iran, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Egypt,
Belarus, most of the Arab and African
nations, as well as Venezuela and Cuba.
And if that is our goal,
our Republic will die trying to achieve it.
Patrick J. Buchanan is
the author of the new book "The Greatest
Comeback: How Richard Nixon Rose From Defeat
to Create the New Majority." To find out
more about Patrick Buchanan and read
features by other Creators writers and
cartoonists, visit the Creators Web page at
www.creators.com.
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