The Mess that Nuland Made
Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland engineered Ukraine’s
“regime change” in early 2014 without weighing the likely chaos and
consequences. Now, as neo-Nazis turn their guns on the government,
it’s hard to see how anyone can clean up the mess that Nuland made.
By Robert Parry
July 14, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"Consortium
News" - As the Ukrainian army squares off
against ultra-right and neo-Nazi militias in the west and violence
against ethnic Russians continues in the east, the obvious folly of
the Obama administration’s Ukraine policy has come into focus even
for many who tried to ignore the facts, or what you might call “the
mess that Victoria Nuland made.”
Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs “Toria” Nuland was
the “mastermind” behind the Feb. 22, 2014 “regime change” in
Ukraine, plotting the overthrow of the democratically elected
government of President Viktor Yanukovych while convincing the
ever-gullible U.S. mainstream media that the coup wasn’t really a
coup but a victory for “democracy.”
Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs Victoria
Nuland, who pushed for the Ukraine coup and helped pick the
post-coup leaders.
To sell this latest neocon-driven “regime change”
to the American people, the ugliness of the coup-makers had to be
systematically airbrushed, particularly the key role of neo-Nazis
and other ultra-nationalists from the Right Sektor. For the
U.S.-organized propaganda campaign to work, the coup-makers had to
wear white hats, not brown shirts.
So, for nearly a year and a half, the West’s
mainstream media, especially The New York Times and The Washington
Post, twisted their reporting into all kinds of contortions to avoid
telling their readers that the new regime in Kiev was permeated by
and dependent on neo-Nazi fighters and Ukrainian ultra-nationalists
who wanted a pure-blood Ukraine, without ethnic Russians.
Any mention of that sordid reality was deemed
“Russian propaganda” and anyone who spoke this inconvenient truth
was a “stooge of Moscow.” It wasn’t until July 7 that the Times
admitted the importance of the neo-Nazis and other
ultra-nationalists in waging war against ethnic Russian rebels in
the east. The Times also reported that these far-right forces had
been joined by Islamic militants. Some of those jihadists have been
called “brothers” of the hyper-brutal Islamic State.
Though the Times sought to spin this remarkable
military alliance – neo-Nazi militias and Islamic jihadists – as a
positive, the reality had to be jarring for readers who had bought
into the Western propaganda about noble “pro-democracy” forces
resisting evil “Russian aggression.”
Perhaps the Times sensed that it could no longer
keep the lid on the troubling truth in Ukraine. For weeks, the Right
Sektor militias and the neo-Nazi Azov battalion have been warning
the civilian government in Kiev that they might turn on it and
create a new order more to their liking.
Clashes in the West
Then, on Saturday, violent clashes
broke out in the western Ukrainian town of Mukachevo,
allegedly over the control of cigarette-smuggling routes. Right
Sektor paramilitaries sprayed police officers with bullets from a
belt-fed machinegun, and police – backed by Ukrainian government
troops – returned fire. Several deaths and multiple injuries were
reported.
Tensions escalated on Monday with President Petro
Poroshenko ordering national security forces to disarm “armed cells”
of political movements. Meanwhile, the Right Sektor dispatched
reinforcements to the area while other militiamen converged on the
capital of Kiev.
While President Poroshenko and Right Sektor leader
Dmitry Yarosh may succeed in tamping down this latest flare-up of
hostilities, they may be only postponing the inevitable: a conflict
between the U.S.-backed authorities in Kiev and the neo-Nazis and
other right-wing fighters who spearheaded last year’s coup and have
been at the front lines of the fighting against ethnic Russian
rebels in the east.
The Ukrainian right-wing extremists feel they have
carried the heaviest burden in the war against the ethnic Russians
and resent the politicians living in the relative safety and comfort
of Kiev. In March,
Poroshenko also fired thuggish oligarch Igor Kolomoisky
as governor of the southeastern province of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast.
Kolomoisky had been the primary benefactor of the Right Sektor
militias.
So, as has become apparent across Europe and even
in Washington, the Ukraine crisis is spinning out of control, making
the State Department’s preferred narrative of the conflict – that
it’s all Russian President Vladimir Putin’s fault – harder and
harder to sell.
How Ukraine is supposed to pull itself out of what
looks like a death spiral – a possible two-front war in the east and
the west along with a crashing economy – is hard to comprehend. The
European Union, confronting budgetary crises over Greece and other
EU members, has little money or patience for Ukraine, its neo-Nazis
and its socio-political chaos.
America’s neocons at The Washington Post and
elsewhere still rant about the need for the Obama administration to
sink more billions upon billions of dollars into post-coup Ukraine
because it “shares our values.” But that argument, too, is
collapsing as Americans see the heart of a racist nationalism
beating inside Ukraine’s new order.
Another Neocon ‘Regime Change’
Much of what has happened, of course, was
predictable and indeed was predicted, but neocon Nuland couldn’t
resist the temptation to pull off a “regime change” that she could
call her own.
Her husband (and arch-neocon) Robert Kagan had
co-founded the Project for the New American Century in 1998 around a
demand for “regime change” in Iraq, a project that was accomplished
in 2003 with President George W. Bush’s invasion.
As with Nuland in Ukraine, Kagan and his fellow
neocons thought they could engineer an easy invasion of Iraq, oust
Saddam Hussein and install some hand-picked client – in Iraq, Ahmed
Chalabi was to be “the guy.” But they failed to take into account
the harsh realities of Iraq, such as the fissures between Sunnis and
Shiites, exposed by the U.S.-led invasion and occupation.
In Ukraine, Nuland and her neocon and
liberal-interventionist friends saw the chance to poke Putin in the
eye by encouraging violent protests to overthrow Russia-friendly
President Yanukovych and put in place a new regime hostile to
Moscow.
Carl Gershman, the neocon president of the
U.S.-taxpayer-funded National Endowment for Democracy, explained the
plan in a Post op-ed on Sept. 26, 2013. Gershman called Ukraine “the
biggest prize” and an important interim step toward toppling Putin,
who “may find himself on the losing end not just in the near abroad
but within Russia itself.”
For her part, Nuland passed out cookies to anti-Yanukovych
demonstrators at the Maidan square, reminded Ukrainian business
leaders that the U.S. had invested $5 billion in their “European
aspirations,” declared “fuck the EU” for its less aggressive
approach, and discussed with U.S. Ambassador Geoffrey Pyatt who the
new leaders of Ukraine should be. “Yats is the guy,” she said,
referring to Arseniy Yatsenyuk.
Nuland saw her big chance on Feb. 20, 2014, when a
mysterious sniper – apparently firing from a building controlled by
the Right Sektor – shot and killed both police and protesters,
escalating the crisis. On Feb. 21, in a desperate bid to avert more
violence, Yanukovych agreed to a European-guaranteed plan in which
he accepted reduced powers and called for early elections so he
could be voted out of office.
But that wasn’t enough for the anti-Yanukovych
forces who – led by Right Sektor and neo-Nazi militias – overran
government buildings on Feb. 22, forcing Yanukovych and many of his
officials to flee for their lives. With armed thugs patrolling the
corridors of power, the final path to “regime change” was clear.
Instead of trying to salvage the Feb. 21
agreement, Nuland and European officials arranged for an
unconstitutional procedure to strip Yanukovych of the presidency and
declared the new regime “legitimate.” Nuland’s “guy” – Yatsenyuk –
became prime minister.
While Nuland and her neocon cohorts celebrated,
their “regime change” prompted an obvious reaction from Putin, who
recognized the strategic threat that this hostile new regime posed
to the historic Russian naval base at Sevastopol in Crimea. On Feb.
23, he began to take steps to protect those Russian interests.
Ethnic Hatreds
What the coup also did was revive long pent-up
antagonisms between the ethnic Ukrainians in the west, including
elements that had supported Adolf Hitler’s invasion of the Soviet
Union during World War Two, and ethnic Russians in the south and
east who feared the anti-Russian sentiments emanating from Kiev.
First, in Crimea and then in the so-called Donbas
region, these ethnic Russians, who had been Yanukovych’s political
base, resisted what they viewed as the illegitimate overthrow of
their elected president. Both areas held referenda seeking
separation from Ukraine, a move that Russia accepted in Crimea but
resisted with the Donbas.
However, when the Kiev regime announced an
“anti-terrorism operation” against the Donbas and dispatched
neo-Nazi and other extremist militias to be the tip of the spear,
Moscow began quietly assisting the embattled ethnic Russian rebels,
a move that Nuland, the Obama administration and the mainstream news
media called “Russian aggression.”
Amid the Western hysteria over Russia’s supposedly
“imperial designs” and the thorough demonizing of Putin, President
Barack Obama essentially authorized a new Cold War against Russia,
reflected now in new U.S. strategic planning that could cost the
U.S. taxpayers trillions of dollars and risk a possible nuclear
confrontation.
Yet, despite the extraordinary costs and dangers,
Nuland failed to appreciate the practical on-the-ground realities,
much as her husband and other neocons did in Iraq. While Nuland got
her hand-picked client Yatsenyuk installed and he did oversee a
U.S.-demanded “neo-liberal” economic plan – slashing pensions,
heating assistance and other social programs – the chaos that her
“regime change” unleashed transformed Ukraine into a financial black
hole.
With few prospects for a clear-cut victory over
the ethnic Russian resistance in the east – and with the
neo-Nazi/Islamist militias increasingly restless over the stalemate
– the chances to restore any meaningful sense of order in the
country appear remote. Unemployment is soaring and the government is
essentially bankrupt.
The last best hope for some stability may have
been the Minsk-2 agreement in February 2015, calling for a
federalized system to give the Donbas more autonomy, but Nuland’s
Prime Minister Yatsenyuk sabotaged the deal in March by
inserting a poison pill that essentially demanded that
the ethnic Russian rebels first surrender.
Now, the Ukraine chaos threatens to spiral even
further out of control with the neo-Nazis and other right-wing
militias – supplied with a bounty weapons to kill ethnic Russians in
the east – turning on the political leadership in Kiev.
In other words, the neocons have struck again,
dreaming up a “regime change” scheme that ignored practical
realities, such as ethnic and religious fissures. Then, as the blood
flowed and the suffering worsened, the neocons just sought
out someone else to blame.
Thus, it seems unlikely that Nuland, regarded by
some in Washington as the new “star” in U.S. foreign policy, will be
fired for her dangerous incompetence, just as most neocons who
authored the Iraq disaster remain “respected” experts employed by
major think tanks, given prized space on op-ed pages, and consulted
at the highest levels of the U.S. government.
[For more on these topics, see Consortiumnews.com’s “Obama’s
True Foreign Policy Weakness” and “A
Family Business of Perpetual War.”]
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
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You also can order Robert Parry’s trilogy on the Bush Family and its
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