Insanity or
Lies?
NATO Reaffirms Its Bogus Russia Narrative
President
Obama and NATO leaders signed on to the false
narrative of a minding-its-own-business West getting
sucker-punched by a bunch of Russian meanies, a
storyline that suggests insanity or lies.
By Robert Parry
July 12,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Consortium
News"
- It’s
unnerving to realize that the NATO alliance –
bristling with an unprecedented array of weapons
including a vast nuclear arsenal – has lost its
collective mind. Perhaps it’s more reassuring to
think that NATO simply feels compelled to publicly
embrace its deceptive “strategic
communications” so gullible Western citizens
will be kept believing its lies are truth.
But here
were the leaders of major Western “democracies”
lining up to endorse a Warsaw Summit Communiqué
condemning “Russia’s aggressive actions” while
knowing that these claims were unsupported by their
own intelligence agencies.
The leaders
– at least the key ones – know that there is no
credible intelligence that Russian President
Vladimir Putin provoked the Ukraine crisis in 2014
or that he has any plans to invade the Baltic
states, despite the fact that nearly every
“important person” in Official Washington and other
Western capitals declares the opposite of this to be
reality.
But there
have been a few moments when the truth has surfaced.
For instance, in the days leading up to the
just-completed NATO summit in Warsaw, General Petr
Pavel, chairman of the NATO Military Committee,
divulged that the deployment of NATO military
battalions in the Baltic states was a political,
rather than military, act.
“It is not
the aim of NATO to create a military barrier against
broad-scale Russian aggression, because such
aggression is not on the agenda and no intelligence
assessment suggests such a thing,” Pavel
told a news conference.
What Pavel
blurted out was what I have been told by
intelligence sources over the past two-plus years –
that the endless drumbeat of Western media reports
about “Russian aggression” results from a clever
demonization campaign against Putin and a classic
Washington “group think” rather than from a careful
intelligence analysis.
Ironically,
however, just days after the release of the British
Chilcot report documenting how a similar propaganda
campaign led the world into the disastrous Iraq War
– with its deadly consequences still reverberating
through a destabilized Mideast and into an unnerved
Europe – NATO reenacts the basic failure of that
earlier catastrophe, except now upping the ante into
a confrontation with nuclear-armed Russia.
The Warsaw
communiqué – signed by leaders including President
Barack Obama, German Chancellor Angela Merkel,
French President Francois Hollande and British Prime
Minister David Cameron – ignores the reality of what
happened in Ukraine in late 2013 and early 2014 and
thus generates an inside-out narrative.
Instead of
reprising the West’s vacuous propaganda themes,
Obama and the other leaders could have done
something novel and told the truth, but that
apparently is outside their operating capabilities.
So they all signed on to the dangerous lie.
What Really Happened
The real
narrative based on actual facts would have
acknowledged that it was the West, not Russia, that
instigated the Ukraine crisis by engineering the
violent overthrow of elected President Viktor
Yanukovych and the imposition of a new
Western-oriented regime hostile to Moscow and
Ukraine’s ethnic Russians.
In late
2013, it was the European Union that was pushing an
economic association agreement with Ukraine, which
included the International Monetary Fund’s demands
for imposing harsh austerity on Ukraine’s already
suffering population. Political and propaganda
support for the E.U. plan was financed, in part, by
the U.S. government through such agencies as the
National Endowment for Democracy and the U.S. Agency
for International Development.
When
Yanukovych recoiled at the IMF’s terms and opted for
a more generous $15 billion aid package from Putin,
the U.S. government threw its public support behind
mass demonstrations aimed at overthrowing Yanukovych
and replacing him with a new regime that would sign
the E.U. agreement and accept the IMF’s demands.
As the
crisis deepened in early 2014, Putin was focused on
the Sochi Winter Olympics, particularly the threat
of terrorist attacks on the games. No evidence has
been presented that Putin was secretly trying to
foment the Ukraine crisis. Indeed, all the evidence
is that Putin was trying to protect the status quo,
support the elected president and avert a worse
crisis.
It would be
insane to suggest that Putin somehow orchestrated
the E.U.’s destabilizing attempt to pull Ukraine
into the association agreement, that he then
stage-managed the anti-Yanukovych violence of the
Maidan protests, that he collaborated with neo-Nazi
and other ultra-nationalist militias to kill
Ukrainian police and chase Yanukovych from Kiev, and
that he then arranged for Yanukovych to be replaced
by a wildly anti-Russian regime – all while
pretending to do the opposite of all these things.
In the real
world, the narrative was quite different: Moscow
supported Yanukovych’s efforts to reach a political
compromise, including a European-brokered agreement
for early elections and reduced presidential powers.
Yet, despite those concessions, neo-Nazi militias
surged to the front of the U.S.-backed protests on
Feb. 22, 2014, forcing Yanukovych and many of his
officials to run for their lives. The U.S. State
Department quickly recognized the coup regime as
“legitimate” as did other NATO allies.
On a
personal note, I am sometimes criticized by
conspiracy theorists for not accepting their
fact-free claims about nefarious schemes supposedly
dreamed up by U.S. officials, but frankly as
baseless as some of those wacky stories can be, they
sound sensible when compared with the West’s loony
conspiracy theory about Putin choreographing the
Ukraine coup.
Yet, that
baseless conspiracy theory roped in supposedly
serious thinkers, such as New York Times columnist
Paul Krugman, who conjured up the notion that Putin
stirred up this trouble so he could pull off a land
grab and/or distract Russians from their economic
problems.
“Delusions
of easy winnings still happen,” Krugman wrote in a
2014
column. “It’s only a guess, but it seems
likely that Vladimir Putin thought that he could
overthrow Ukraine’s government, or at least seize a
large chunk of its territory, on the cheap, a bit of
deniable aid to the rebels, and it would fall into
his lap. …
“Recently
Justin Fox of the Harvard Business Review
suggested that the roots of the Ukraine
crisis may lie in the faltering performance of the
Russian economy. As he noted, Mr. Putin’s hold on
power partly reflects a long run of rapid economic
growth. But Russian growth has been sputtering, and
you could argue that the Putin regime needed a
distraction.”
Midwifing This Thing
Or, rather
than “a guess,” Krugman could have looked at the
actual facts, such as the work of neocon Assistant
Secretary of State for European Affairs Victoria
Nuland conspiring to organize a coup that would put
her hand-picked Ukrainians in charge of Russia’s
neighbor. Several weeks before the putsch, Nuland
was caught plotting the “regime change” in an
intercepted phone call with U.S.
Ambassador to Ukraine Geoffrey Pyatt.
Regarding
who should replace Yanukovych, Nuland’s choice was
Arseniy “Yats is the guy” Yatsenyuk. The phone call
went on to muse about how they could “glue this
thing” and “midwife this thing.” After the coup was
glued or midwifed on Feb. 22, 2014, Yatsenyuk
emerged as the new prime minister and then
shepherded through the IMF austerity plan.
Since the
coup regime in Kiev also took provocative steps
against the ethnic Russians, such as the parliament
voting to ban Russian as an official language and
allowing neo-Nazi extremists to slaughter anti-coup
protesters, ethnic Russian resistance arose in the
east and south. That shouldn’t have been much of a
surprise since eastern Ukraine had been Yanukovych’s
political base and stood to lose the most from
Ukraine’s economic orientation toward Europe and
reduced economic ties to Russia.
Yet,
instead of recognizing the understandable concerns
of the eastern Ukrainians, the Western media
portrayed the ethnic Russians as simply Putin’s
pawns with no minds of their own. The U.S.-backed
regime in Kiev launched what was called an
“Anti-Terrorist Operation” against them, spearheaded
by the neo-Nazi militias.
In Crimea –
another area heavily populated with ethnic Russians
and with a long history of association with Russia –
voters opted by 96 percent in a referendum to secede
from Ukraine and rejoin Russia, a process supported
by Russian troops stationed in Crimea under a prior
agreement with Ukraine’s government.
There was
no Russian “invasion,” as The New York Times and
other mainstream U.S. news outlets claimed. The
Russian troops were already in Crimea assigned to
Russia’s historic Black Sea naval base at
Sevastopol. Putin agreed to Crimea’s annexation
partly out of fear that the naval base would
otherwise fall into NATO’s hands and pose a
strategic threat to Russia.
But the key
point regarding the crazy Western conspiracy theory
about Putin provoking the crisis so he could seize
territory or distract Russians from economic
troubles is that Putin only annexed Crimea because
of the ouster of Yanukovych and the installation of
a Russia-hating regime in Kiev. If Yanukovych had
not been overthrown, there is no reason to think
that Putin would have done anything regarding Crimea
or Ukraine.
Yet, once
the false narrative got rolling, there was no
stopping it. The New York Times, The Washington Post
and other leading Western publications played the
same role that they did during the run-up to the
Iraq invasion, accepting the U.S. government’s
propaganda as fact and marginalizing the few
independent journalists who dared go against the
grain.
Though
Obama, Merkel and other key leaders know how
deceptive the Western propaganda has been, they have
become captives to their governments’ own lies. For
them to deviate substantially from the Official
Story would open them to harsh criticism from the
powerful neoconservatives and their allied media
outlets.
Even a
slight contradiction to NATO’s “strategic
communications” brought down harsh criticism on
German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier
after he said: “What we shouldn’t do now is inflame
the situation further through saber-rattling and
warmongering. … Whoever believes that a symbolic
tank parade on the alliance’s eastern border will
bring security is mistaken.”
Excoriating Russia
So, at the
Warsaw conference, the false NATO narrative had to
be reaffirmed — and it was. The communiqué
declared, “Russia’s aggressive actions,
including provocative military activities in the
periphery of NATO territory and its demonstrated
willingness to attain political goals by the threat
and use of force, are a source of regional
instability, fundamentally challenge the Alliance,
have damaged Euro-Atlantic security, and threaten
our long-standing goal of a Europe whole, free, and
at peace. …
“Russia’s
destabilising actions and policies include: the
ongoing illegal and illegitimate annexation of
Crimea, which we do not and will not recognise and
which we call on Russia to reverse; the violation of
sovereign borders by force; the deliberate
destabilisation of eastern Ukraine; large-scale snap
exercises contrary to the spirit of the Vienna
Document, and provocative military activities near
NATO borders, including in the Baltic and Black Sea
regions and the Eastern Mediterranean; its
irresponsible and aggressive nuclear rhetoric,
military concept and underlying posture; and its
repeated violations of NATO Allied airspace.
“In
addition, Russia’s military intervention,
significant military presence and support for the
regime in Syria, and its use of its military
presence in the Black Sea to project power into the
Eastern Mediterranean have posed further risks and
challenges for the security of Allies and others.”
In the
up-is-down world that NATO and other Western
agencies now inhabit, Russia’s military maneuvers
within it own borders in reaction to NATO maneuvers
along Russia’s borders are “provocative.” So, too,
is Russia’s support for the internationally
recognized government of Syria, which is under
attack from Islamic terrorists and other armed
rebels supported by the West’s Mideast allies,
including Saudi Arabia, Qatar and NATO member
Turkey.
In other
words, it is entirely all right for NATO and its
members to invade countries at will, including Iraq,
Libya and Syria, and subvert others as happened in
Ukraine and is still happening in Syria. But it is
impermissible for any government outside of NATO to
respond or even defend itself. To do so amounts to a
provocation against NATO – and such hypocrisy is
accepted by the West’s mainstream news media as the
way that the world was meant to be.
And those
of us who dare point out the lies and double
standards must be “Moscow stooges,” just as those of
us who dared question the Iraq WMD tales were
dismissed as “Saddam apologists” in 2003.
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). |