Stephen
Cohen is, in my mind, the foremost US commentator on Russia. Add him
to the list of knowledgeable experts who are being ignored.
The
Silence of American Hawks About Kiev’s Atrocities
The
regime has repeatedly carried out artillery and air attacks on city
centers, creating a humanitarian catastrophe—which is all but
ignored by the US political-media establishment.
Stephen
F. Cohen
30
June, 2014
For
weeks, the US-backed regime in Kiev has been committing atrocities
against its own citizens in southeastern Ukraine, regions heavily
populated by Russian-speaking Ukrainians and ethnic Russians. While
victimizing a growing number of innocent people, including children,
and degrading America’s reputation, these military assaults on
cities, captured on video, are generating pressure in Russia on
President Vladimir Putin to “save our compatriots.”
The
reaction of the Obama administration—as well as the new cold-war
hawks in Congress and in the establishment media—has been twofold:
silence interrupted only by occasional statements excusing and thus
encouraging more atrocities by Kiev. Very few Americans (notably, the
independent scholar Gordon Hahn) have protested this shameful
complicity. We may honorably disagree about the causes and resolution
of the Ukrainian crisis, the worst US-Russian confrontation in
decades, but not about deeds that are rising to the level of war
crimes, if they have not already done so.
*
* *
In
mid-April, the new Kiev government, predominantly western Ukrainian
in composition and outlook, declared an “anti-terrorist operation”
against a growing political rebellion in the Southeast. At that time,
the rebels were mostly mimicking the initial Maidan protests in Kiev
in 2013—demonstrating, issuing defiant proclamations, occupying
public buildings and erecting defensive barricades—before Maidan
turned ragingly violent and, in February, overthrew Ukraine’s
corrupt but legitimately elected president, Viktor Yanukovych. (The
entire Maidan episode, it will be recalled, had Washington’s
enthusiastic political, and perhaps more tangible, support.) Indeed,
the precedent for seizing official buildings and demanding the
allegiance of local authorities had been set even earlier, in
January, in western Ukraine—by pro-Maidan, anti-Yanukovych
protesters, some declaring “independence” from his government.
Considering
those preceding events, but above all the country’s profound
historical divisions, particularly between its western and eastern
regions—ethnic, linguistic, religious, cultural, economic and
political—the rebellion in the southeast, centered in the
industrial Donbass, was not surprising. Nor were its protests against
the unconstitutional way (in effect, a coup) the new government had
come to power, the southeast’s sudden loss of effective political
representation in the capital and the real prospect of official
discrimination. But by declaring an “anti-terrorist operation”
against the new protesters, Kiev signaled its intention to “destroy”
them, not negotiate with them.
On
May 2, in this incendiary atmosphere, a horrific event occurred in
the southern city of Odessa, awakening memories of Nazi German
extermination squads in Ukraine and other Soviet republics during
World War II. An organized pro-Kiev mob chased protesters into a
building, set it on fire and tried to block the exits. Some forty
people, perhaps many more, perished in the flames or were murdered as
they fled the inferno. A still unknown number of other victims were
seriously injured.
Members
of the infamous Right Sector, a far-right paramilitary organization
ideologically aligned with the ultranationalist Svoboda party, itself
a constituent part of Kiev’s coalition government, led the mob.
Both are frequently characterized by knowledgeable observers as
“neo-fascist” movements. (Hateful ethnic chants by the mob were
audible, and swastika-like symbols were found on the scorched
building.) Kiev alleged that the victims had themselves accidentally
started the fire, but eyewitnesses, television footage and social
media videos told the true story, as they have about subsequent
atrocities.
Instead
of interpreting the Odessa massacre as an imperative for restraint,
Kiev intensified its “anti-terrorist operation.” Since May, the
regime has sent a growing number of armored personnel carriers,
tanks, artillery, helicopter gunships and warplanes to southeastern
cities, among them, Slovyansk (Slavyansk in Russian), Mariupol,
Krasnoarmeisk, Kramatorsk, Donetsk and Luhansk (Lugansk in Russian).
When its regular military units and local police forces turned out to
be less than effective, willing or loyal, Kiev hastily mobilized
Right Sector and other radical nationalist militias responsible for
much of the violence at Maidan into a National Guard to accompany
regular detachments—partly to reinforce them, partly, it seems, to
enforce Kiev’s commands. Zealous, barely trained and drawn mostly
from central and western regions, Kiev’s new recruits have
reportedly escalated the ethnic warfare and killing of innocent
civilians. (Episodes described as “massacres” soon also occurred
in Mariupol and Kramatorsk.)
Initially,
the “anti-terrorist” campaign was limited primarily, though not
only, to rebel checkpoints on the outskirts of cities. Since May,
however, Kiev has repeatedly carried out artillery and air attacks on
city centers that have struck residential buildings, shopping malls,
parks, schools, kindergartens and hospitals, particularly in
Slovyansk and Luhansk. More and more urban areas, neighboring towns
and even villages now look and sound like war zones, with telltale
rubble, destroyed and pockmarked buildings, mangled vehicles, the
dead and wounded in streets, wailing mourners and crying children.
Conflicting information from Kiev, local resistance leaders and
Moscow make it impossible to estimate the number of dead and wounded
noncombatants—certainly hundreds. The number continues to grow due
also to Kiev’s blockade of cities where essential medicines, food,
water, fuel and electricity are scarce, and where wages and pensions
are often no longer being paid. The result is an emerging
humanitarian catastrophe.
Another
effect is clear. Kiev’s “anti-terrorist” tactics have created a
reign of terror in the targeted cities. Panicked by shells and
mortars exploding on the ground, menacing helicopters and planes
flying above and fear of what may come next, families are seeking
sanctuary in basements and other darkened shelters. Even The New York
Times, which like the mainstream American media generally has deleted
the atrocities from its coverage, described survivors in Slovyansk
“as if living in the Middle Ages.” Meanwhile, an ever-growing
number of refugees, disproportionately women and traumatized
children, have been fleeing across the border into Russia. In late
June, the UN estimated that as many as 110,000 Ukrainians had already
fled to Russia and about half that many to other Ukrainian
sanctuaries.
It
is true, of course, that anti-Kiev rebels in these regions are
increasingly well-armed (though lacking the government’s arsenal of
heavy and airborne weapons), organized and aggressive, no doubt with
some Russian assistance, whether officially sanctioned or not. But
calling themselves “self-defense” fighters is not wrong. They did
not begin the combat; their land is being invaded and assaulted by a
government whose political legitimacy is arguably no greater than
their own, two of their large regions having voted overwhelmingly for
autonomy referenda; and, unlike actual terrorists, they have not
committed acts of war outside their own communities. The French adage
suggested by an American observer seems applicable: “This animal is
very dangerous. If attacked, it defends itself.”
*
* *
Among
the crucial questions rarely discussed in the US political-media
establishment: What is the role of the “neo-fascist” factor in
Kiev’s “anti-terrorist” ideology and military operations?
Putin’s position, at least until recently—that the entire
Ukrainian government is a “neo-fascist junta”—is incorrect.
Many members of the ruling coalition and its parliamentary majority
are aspiring European-style democrats or moderate nationalists. This
may also be true of Ukraine’s newly elected president, the oligarch
Petro Poroshenko. Equally untrue, however, are claims by Kiev’s
American apologists, including even some academics and liberal
intellectuals, that Ukraine’s neo-fascists—or perhaps
quasi-fascists—are merely agitated nationalists, “garden-variety
Euro-populists,” a “distraction” or lack enough popular support
to be significant.
Independent
Western scholars have documented the fascist origins, contemporary
ideology and declarative symbols of Svoboda and its fellow-traveling
Right Sector. Both movements glorify Ukraine’s murderous Nazi
collaborators in World War II as inspirational ancestors. Both, to
quote Svoboda’s leader Oleh Tyahnybok, call for an ethnically pure
nation purged of the “Moscow-Jewish mafia” and “other scum,”
including homosexuals, feminists and political leftists. And both
hailed the Odessa massacre. According to the website of Right Sector
leader Dmytro Yarosh, it was “another bright day in our national
history.” A Svoboda parliamentary deputy added, “Bravo, Odessa….
Let the Devils burn in hell.” If more evidence is needed, in
December 2012, the European Parliament decried Svoboda’s “racist,
anti-Semitic and xenophobic views [that] go against the EU’s
fundamental values and principles.” In 2013, the World Jewish
Congress denounced Svoboda as “neo-Nazi.” Still worse, observers
agree that Right Sector is even more extremist.
Nor
do electoral results tell the story. Tyahnybok and Yarosh together
received less than 2 percent of the June presidential vote, but
historians know that in traumatic times, when, to recall Yeats, “the
center cannot hold,” small, determined movements can seize the
moment, as did Lenin’s Bolsheviks and Hitler’s Nazis. Indeed,
Svoboda and Right Sector already command power and influence far
exceeding their popular vote. “Moderates” in the US-backed Kiev
government, obliged to both movements for their violence-driven
ascent to power, and perhaps for their personal safety, rewarded
Svoboda and Right Sector with some five to eight (depending on
shifting affiliations) top ministry positions, including ones
overseeing national security, military, prosecutorial and educational
affairs. Still more, according to the research of Pietro Shakarian, a
remarkable young graduate student at the University of Michigan,
Svoboda was given five governorships, covering about 20 percent of
the country. And this does not take into account the role of Right
Sector in the “anti-terrorist operation.”
Nor
does it consider the political mainstreaming of fascism’s
dehumanizing ethos. In December 2012, a Svoboda parliamentary leader
anathematized the Ukrainian-born American actress Mila Kunis as “a
dirty kike.” Since 2013, pro-Kiev mobs and militias have routinely
denigrated ethnic Russians as insects (“Colorado beetles,” whose
colors resemble a sacred Russia ornament). More recently, the
US-picked prime minister, Arseniy Yatsenyuk, referred to resisters in
the Southeast as “subhumans.” His defense minister proposed
putting them in “filtration camps,” pending deportation, and
raising fears of ethnic cleansing. Yulia Tymoshenko—a former prime
minister, titular head of Yatsenyuk’s party and runner-up in the
May presidential election—was overheard wishing she could
“exterminate them all [Ukrainian Russians] with atomic weapons.”
“Sterilization” is among the less apocalyptic official musings on
the pursuit of a purified Ukraine.
Confronted
with such facts, Kiev’s American apologists have conjured up
another rationalization. Any neo-fascists in Ukraine, they assure us,
are far less dangerous than Putinism’s “clear aspects of
fascism.” The allegation is unworthy of serious analysis: however
authoritarian Putin may be, there is nothing authentically fascist in
his rulership, policies, state ideology or personal conduct.
Indeed,
equating Putin with Hitler, as eminent Americans from Hillary Clinton
and Zbigniew Brzezinski to George Will have done, is another example
of how our new cold warriors are recklessly damaging US national
security in vital areas where Putin’s cooperation is essential.
Looking ahead, would-be presidents who make such remarks can hardly
expect to be greeted by an open-minded Putin, whose brother died and
father was wounded in the Soviet-Nazi war. Moreover, tens of millions
of today’s Russians whose family members were killed by actual
fascists in that war will regard this defamation of their popular
president as sacrilege, as they do the atrocities committed by Kiev.
*
* *
And
yet, the Obama administration reacts with silence, and worse.
Historians will decide what the US government and the “democracy
promotion” organizations it funds were doing in Ukraine during the
preceding twenty years, but much of Washington’s role in the
current crisis has been clear and direct. As the Maidan mass protest
against President Yanukovych developed last November-December,
Senator John McCain, the high-level State Department policymaker
Victoria Nuland and a crew of other US politicians and officials
arrived to stand with its leaders, Tyahnybok in the forefront, and
declare, “America is with you!” Nuland was then caught on tape
plotting with the American ambassador, Geoffrey Pyatt, to oust
Yanukovych’s government and replace him with Yatsenyuk, who soon
became, and remains, prime minister.
Meanwhile,
President Obama personally warned Yanukovych “not to resort to
violence,” as did, repeatedly, Secretary of State John Kerry. But
when violent street riots deposed Yanukovych—only hours after a
European-brokered, White House–backed compromise that would have
left him as president of a reconciliation government until new
elections this December, possibly averting the subsequent
bloodshed—the administration made a fateful decision. It eagerly
embraced the outcome. Obama personally legitimized the coup as a
“constitutional process” and invited Yatsenyuk to the White
House. The United States has been at least tacitly complicit in what
followed, from Putin’s hesitant decision in March to annex Crimea
and the rebellion in southeastern Ukraine to the ongoing civil war.
How
intimately involved US officials have been in Kiev’s
“anti-terrorist operation” is not known, but certainly the
administration has not been discreet. Before and after the military
campaign began in earnest, CIA director John Brennan and Vice
President Joseph Biden (twice) visited Kiev, followed, it is
reported, by a continuing flow of “senior US defense officials,”
military equipment and financial assistance to the bankrupt Kiev
government. Despite this crucial support, the White House has not
compelled Kiev to investigate either the Odessa massacre or the
fateful sniper killings of scores of Maidan protesters and policemen
on February 18–20, which precipitated Yanukovych’s ouster. (The
snipers were initially said to be Yanukovych’s, but evidence later
appeared pointing to opposition extremists, possibly Right Sector.
Unlike Washington, the Council of Europe has been pressuring Kiev to
investigate both events.)
As
atrocities and humanitarian disaster grow in Ukraine, both Obama and
Kerry have all but vanished as statesmen. Except for periodic
banalities asserting the virtuous intentions of Washington and Kiev
and alleging Putin’s responsibility for the violence, they have
left specific responses to lesser US officials. Not surprisingly, all
have told the same Manichean story, from the White House to Foggy
Bottom. The State Department’s neocon missionary Nuland, who spent
several days at Maidan, for example, assured a congressional
committee that she had no evidence of fascist-like elements playing
any role there. Ambassador Pyatt, who earlier voiced the same opinion
about the Odessa massacre, was even more dismissive, telling obliging
New Republic editors that the entire question was “laughable.”
Still
more shameful, no American official at any level appears to have
issued a meaningful statement of sympathy for civilian victims of the
Kiev government, not even those in Odessa. Instead, the
administration has been unswervingly indifferent. When asked if her
superiors had “any concerns” about the casualties of Kiev’s
military campaign, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki has
repeatedly answered “no.” Indeed, at the UN Security Council on
May 2, US Ambassador Samantha Power, referring explicitly to the
“counterterrorism initiative” and suspending her revered
“Responsibility to Protect” doctrine, gave Kiev’s leaders a US
license to kill. Lauding their “remarkable, almost unimaginable,
restraint,” as Obama himself did after Odessa, she continued,
“Their response is reasonable, it is proportional, and frankly it
is what any one of our countries would have done.” (Since then, the
administration has blocked Moscow’s appeal for a UN humanitarian
corridor between southeastern Ukraine and Russia.)
Contrary
to the incessant administration and media demonizing of Putin and his
“agents” in Ukraine, the “anti-terrorist operation” can be
ended only where it began—in Washington and Kiev. Leaving aside how
much power the new president actually has in Kiev (or over Right
Sector militias in the field), Poroshenko’s “peace plan” and
June 21 cease-fire may have seemed such an opportunity, except for
its two core conditions: fighters in the southeast first had to “lay
down their arms,” and he alone would decide with whom to negotiate
peace. The terms seemed more akin to conditions of surrender, and the
real reason Poroshenko unilaterally ended the cease-fire on July 1
and intensified Kiev’s assault on eastern cities.
The
Obama administration continues to make the situation worse. Despite
opposition by several NATO allies and even American corporate heads,
the president and his secretary of state, who has spoken throughout
this crisis more like a secretary of war than the nation’s top
diplomat, have constantly threatened Russia with harsher economic
sanctions unless Putin meets one condition or another, most of them
improbable. On June 26, Kerry even demanded (“literally”) that
the Russian president “in the next few hours…help disarm”
resisters in the Southeast, as though they are not motivated by any
of Ukraine’s indigenous conflicts but are merely Putin’s private
militias.
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In
fact, from the onset of the crisis, the administration’s actual
goal has been unclear, and not only to Moscow. Is it a negotiated
compromise, which would have to include a Ukraine with a
significantly federalized or decentralized state free to maintain
longstanding economic relations with Russia and banned from NATO
membership? Is it to bring the entire country exclusively into the
West, including into NATO? Is it a vendetta against Putin for all the
things he purportedly has and has not done over the years? (Some
behavior of Obama and Kerry, seemingly intended to demean and
humiliate Putin, suggest an element of this.) Or is it to provoke
Russia into a war with the United States and NATO in Ukraine?
Inadvertent
or not, the latter outcome remains all too possible. After Russia
annexed—or “reunified” with—Crimea in March, Putin, not Kiev
or Washington, has demonstrated “remarkable restraint.” But
events are making it increasingly difficult for him to do so. Almost
daily, Russian state media, particularly television, have featured
vivid accounts of Kiev’s military assaults on Ukraine’s eastern
cities. The result has been, both in elite and public opinion,
widespread indignation and mounting perplexity, even anger, over
Putin’s failure to intervene militarily.
We
may discount the following indictment by an influential ideologist of
Russia’s own ultra-nationalists, who have close ties with Ukraine’s
“self-defense” commanders: “Putin betrays not just the People’s
Republic of Donetsk and the People’s Republic of Lugansk but
himself, Russia and all of us.” Do not, however, underestimate the
significance of an article in the mainstream pro-Kremlin newspaper
Izvestia, which asks, while charging the leadership with “ignoring
the cries for help,” “Is Russia abandoning the Donbass?” If so,
the author warns, the result will be “Russia’s worst nightmare”
and relegate it to “the position of a vanquished country.”
Just
as significant are similar exhortations by Gennady Zyuganov, leader
of Russia’s Communist Party, the second-largest in the country and
in parliament. The party also has substantial influence in the
military-security elite and even in the Kremlin. Thus, one of Putin’s
own aides has publicly urged him to send fighter planes to impose a
“no-fly zone”—an American-led UN action in Qaddafi’s Libya
that has not been forgotten or forgiven by the Kremlin—and destroy
Kiev’s approaching aircraft and land forces. If that happens, US
and NATO forces, now being built up in Eastern Europe, might well
also intervene, creating a Cuban missile crisis–like confrontation.
As a former Russian foreign minister admired in the West reminds us,
there are “hawks on both sides.”
Little
of this is even noted in the United States. In a democratic political
system, the establishment media are expected to pierce the official
fog of war. In the Ukrainian crisis, however, mainstream American
newspapers and television have been almost as slanted and elliptical
as White House and State Department statements, obscuring the
atrocities, if reporting them at all, and generally relying on
information from Washington and Kiev. Most Americans are thereby
unknowingly being shamed by the Obama administration’s role. Those
who do know but remain silent—in government, think tanks,
universities and media—share its complicity.
Thom Hartmann and Stephen Cohen spend the hour together
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