Western
Propaganda for a New Cold War
Western propaganda portrays Russia as the aggressor
and NATO as the victim, but the reality looks almost
opposite from the ground level, Rick Sterling found
on a recent fact-finding trip.
By Rick Sterling
July 14, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
- "Consortium
News"
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Recently I
went on a 15-day visit to Russia organized by the
Center for Citizen
Initiatives. The group visited Moscow, the
Crimean peninsula, Krasnodar (southern Russia) and
St. Petersburg. In each location we met many locals
and heard diverse viewpoints.
CCI has a
long history promoting friendship and trying to
overcome false assumptions between citizens of the
USA and Russia. The founder Sharon Tennison has
focused on making people-to-people connections
including the business community, Rotary clubs, etc.
This delegation was organized because of concern
about escalating international tensions and the
danger of a drift toward world threatening military
conflict.
We were in
Russia in late June as Russians were commemorating
the 75th anniversary of the Nazi invasion
of the Soviet Union. They call it the Great
Patriotic War where 27 million Soviet citizens died.
In Russia it’s a very sober occasion in which they
pay tribute to the fallen, acknowledge the heroes
and underscore the horrors of war. Virtually
everyone in Russia lost family members in World War
Two and there seems to be a deep understanding of
what war and invasion mean.
It is
alarming to see the constant drumbeat in Western
media that Russia is “aggressive,” that Russia
“invaded” Crimea, Russia is “a threat.” Hardly a day
goes by that The New York Times does not have an
editorial or news story with the assertion or
insinuation that Russia is “aggressive”.
Thursday’s op-ed
by Andrew Foxall is an example. A director of the
neocon Henry Jackson Society think tank, Foxall
bemoans the British departure from the European
Union and suggests, without evidence, that Russian
President Putin may be behind it:
“Mr. Putin
has spent the past 16 years trying to destabilize
the West. … After Brexit, the union has lost not
only one of its most capable members, but also one
of its two nuclear powers and one of its two seats
at the United Nations Security Council. … Mr. Putin
checked the European Union’s expansion when he
invaded Ukraine in 2014. The Continent’s security
order is now in a perilous plight: If Mr. Putin
senses weakness, he will be tempted into further
aggression.”
It is now
common to hear the claim that Russia “invaded”
Ukraine and is “occupying” Crimea. The U.S. and its
European allies have imposed
sanctions on Russia because of Crimea’s
decision – supported by a referendum with nearly 90
percent participation and a 96 percent favorable
vote – to separate from Ukraine and rejoin Russia.
Because of
the sanctions, tourist cruise ships no longer stop
at Crimean ports and international airlines are
prohibited from flying directly to the international
airport at the Crimean capital, Simferopol. Students
from Crimean universities cannot transfer their
academic credits to universities internationally.
Despite the
sanctions and problems, Crimea appears to be doing
reasonably well. In the past two years, the airport
has been rebuilt and modernized. The streets of
Balaclava, Sevastopol, Simferopol and Yalta are busy
and bright. No doubt things could be much better and
residents want the sanctions lifted, but there were
no evident signs of shortages or poverty.
On the
contrary, kids were enjoying ice cream, parks were
full and streets busy late into the night. The
famous Artek Youth Camp near Yalta is being
refurbished with new dormitories, state of the art
swimming pool and gymnasium. Right now they are
handling 3,000 youth in the camp at one time with
30,000 kids from all over Russia this year.
A 12-mile
bridge connecting Crimea to southern Russia is now
half complete. A impressive video showing the design
is
here.
What Provoked Crimea?
After 22
years as part of independent Ukraine following the
breakup of the Soviet Union, what drove the people
of Crimea to overwhelmingly support a referendum
calling for “re-unification” with Russia? Was this
the result of intimidation or an “occupation” by
Russia?
We received
a very strong sense from talking with many different
people in Crimea that they are happy with their
decision. The impetus was not aggression from
Russia; the impetus came from the violence and
ultra-nationalism of the foreign-backed coup in
Ukraine overthrowing the democratically elected
President Viktor Yanukovych, who was strongly
supported by Crimea’s voters.
U.S.-supported protests against Ukraine’s Yanukovych
government began in November 2013 in the “Maidan”
(central square) in Kiev. Protesters included
right-wing nationalist and Nazi sympathizers hostile
to the Yanukovych government. A significant faction
in the Maidan glorified the Ukrainian Nazi
collaborator
Stepan Bandera.
The U.S.
was deeply involved in promoting the “Maidan”
protests and strategizing how to bring a new
government to power. Assistant Secretary of State
Victoria Nuland demanded the Yanukovych government
do nothing to stop or prevent the increasing
vandalism, attacks and intimidation. With thugs in
the street increasingly clashing with police, U.S.
officials pressed the Ukrainian government to break
economic ties with Russia as a condition for closer
relations with Europe and loans from the
International Monetary Fund.
On the
surface, the U.S. was encouraging Ukraine to
strengthen ties with the European Union but in
reality Nuland’s goals were about expanding NATO and
undermining Russia. This was dramatically revealed
in a secretly recorded
phone call between Nuland and the U.S.
Ambassador to Ukraine, Geoffrey Pyatt.
Nuland and
Pyatt discussed who should and should not be in the
coup government two weeks before the coup
happened. As they conspired over the phone, Nuland
expressed her displeasure with the European Union’s
reluctance to push the coup. “Fuck the E.U.,” Nuland
said.
When the
audio recording of Nuland and Pyatt discussing how
to “midwife” the Kiev coup was revealed, the State
Department’s spokesperson was
grilled about it. She responded “That’s
what diplomats do.”
Six weeks
before the phone call – at a conference of
U.S.-Ukrainian business leaders sponsored by Chevron
– Nuland spoke glowingly of Ukraine’s “European
aspirations” and the U.S. investment in promoting
“democracy” in Ukraine.
In that
Dec. 13, 2013
speech, Nuland said “Since Ukraine’s
independence in 1991 the United States has supported
Ukrainians as they build democratic skills and
institutions, as they promote civic participation
and good governance, all of which are preconditions
for Ukraine to achieve its European aspirations. We
have invested over $5 billion to assist Ukraine in
these and other goals.” (approximately 7:30 into the
recording of the U.S.-Ukraine Foundation
conference).
In
mid-December 2013, hundreds of Crimeans traveled to
Kiev in buses to join peaceful protests in
opposition to the Maidan protests seen on
television. They stayed in Kiev through January and
into February until the violence exploded on Feb.
18, 2014. Altogether, 82 persons were killed
including 13 police and 1,100 injured.
At that
point, the Crimeans decided peaceful protest was
useless and to return home. The bus caravan departed
Kiev on Feb 20 but was stopped at night near the
town of Korsun. The buses were torched and the
Crimean travelers brutalized, beaten and seven
killed. When news of this reached Crimea, it was yet
another cause for alarm.
A
video titled “The Crimes of Euromaidan
Nazis” documents the events and includes interviews
with numerous passengers. These atrocities against
unarmed Crimeans were committed on a public highway
with no intervention from local Ukrainian police.
Rejecting Compromise
On Feb 21,
the Yanukovych reached a compromise brokered by
three European governments, calling for reduced
presidential powers and early elections so
Ukrainians would have the opportunity to elect a new
leader. But those concessions did not appease the
most violent Maidan protesters or their supporters.
A parliamentarian was beaten in broad daylight and
threats issued.
President
Yanukovych fled for his life and a new government,
led by Victoria Nuland’s choice Arseniy Yatsenyuk,
took charge. The U.S. and its Western allies quickly
recognized the new government as “legitimate” while
Russia objected to it as an illegal coup. In the
first days of the new government, a
bill was passed to make Ukrainian the
sole official language of the country despite the
fact that many Ukrainians speak Russian.
Indeed,
there was aggression and violence in Ukraine but it
was not from Russia. Rather, the evidence shows that
the violence was instigated by the forces that led
the coup. This was revealed in an
intercepted phone conversation between
British representative to the European Union,
Catherine Ashton, and the Estonian Foreign Minister,
Urmas Paet.
Paet
reported that he had been to Kiev and “there is a
stronger and stronger understanding that behind
snipers it was not Yanukovych, it was somebody from
the new coalition.” Ashton responded, “Oh gosh …. We
will need to look into that” and quickly moved on.
Nearly 2½ years later, the post-coup regime in Kiev
has failed to conduct a serious investigation into
the sniper attacks.
While this
history is largely ignored by the U.S. and Western
media –
The New York Times won’t even admit that there
was a “coup” – the reality is well known in
Crimea and other ethnic Russian areas of Ukraine.
Crimeans whom we spoke with described their shock
and outrage at the events that unfolded in the
winter of 2013-14.
In just
four months they witnessed violent Maidan protests,
the overthrow of the elected government, beatings
and killings of citizens returning from Kiev, and
then a parliamentary vote to remove Russian as an
official language.
In
response, local leaders recommended a Crimea wide
referendum with the option to officially re-unite
with the country that Crimea had been part of for
over two centuries. A
referendum was held on March 16. Turnout was
89 percent with 96 percent voting in favor of the
“reunification of Crimea with Russia.”
With the
violent overthrow of the Kiev government and clear
proof of U.S. involvement in the coup, it seems
highly inaccurate to say that Russia “invaded” or is
“occupying” Crimea. (Russian troops were already
stationed in Crimea as part of the lease agreement
for the Sevastopol naval base.) On the contrary, it
seems to be the U.S. and its allies were the
“aggressive” ones.
The same
reversal of reality is going on with the
expansion of NATO. In recent weeks, NATO
has placed armed forces in Poland, Estonia, Latvia
and Lithuania while complaining about Russia
engaging in threatening military deployments
inside Russia.
NATO
military expenses are already 13 times greater than
that of Russia yet NATO plans to increase military
spending even more. Meanwhile the U.S. unilaterally
withdrew from the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM)
Treaty in 2002 and is busy building and installing
ABM sites in Alaska and now Eastern Europe. With a
serious face, U.S. officials have previously claimed
these sites are being installed because of the
danger of “Iranian missiles” but only a fool could
take that seriously.
There is
the additional risk that the same sites could be
converted from anti-ballistic missiles to contain
nuclear warheads.
Are NATO
and the U.S. preparing for war? The public should be
asking hard questions to our political and military
leaders as they waste our tax dollars and risk
global conflagration. And, enough of the nonsense
about Russian “aggression” when the evidence
indicates it’s the U.S. and its allies that are
destabilizing other countries, escalating a new arms
race and promoting conflict instead of diplomacy.
Rick Sterling
is an independent writer/researcher. He can be
reached at rsterling1@gmail.com |