Obama
Sidelines Kerry On Ukraine Policy
Eric
Zuesse
7
June, 2015
Submitted
by investigative historian Eric Zuesse
Obama
Sidelines Kerry On Ukraine Policy
On
May 21st, I headlined "Secretary
of State John Kerry v. His Subordinate Victoria Nuland, Regarding
Ukraine,”
and quoted John Kerry’s May 12th warning to Ukrainian President
Petro Poroshenko to cease his repeated threats to invade Crimea and
re-invade Donbass, two former regions of Ukraine, which had refused
to accept the legitimacy of the new regime that was imposed on
Ukraine in violent clashes during February 2014. (These were regions
that had voted
overwhelmingly
for the Ukrainian President who had just been overthrown. They didn’t
like him being violently tossed
out and replaced by his enemies.)
Kerry
said then that, regarding Poroshenko, "we would strongly urge
him to think twice not to engage in that kind of activity, that that
would put Minsk in serious jeopardy. And we would be very, very
concerned about what the consequences of that kind of action at this
time may be.” Also quoted there was Kerry’s subordinate, Victoria
Nuland, three days later, saying the exact opposite, that we
"reiterate our deep commitment to a single Ukrainian nation,
including Crimea, and all the other regions of Ukraine.” I noted,
then that, "The only person with the power to fire Nuland is
actually U.S. President Barack Obama.” However, Obama instead has
sided with Nuland on this.
Radio
Free Europe, Radio Liberty, bannered, on June 5th,
"Poroshenko:
Ukraine Will 'Do Everything' To Retake Crimea',”
and reported that, “President Petro Poroshenko has vowed to seek
Crimea's return to Ukrainian rule. … Speaking at a news conference
on June 5, … Poroshenko said that 'every day and every moment, we
will do everything to return Crimea to Ukraine.’” Poroshenko was
also quoted there as saying, "It is important not to give Russia
a chance to break the world's pro-Ukrainian coalition,” which
indirectly insulted Kerry for his having criticized Poroshenko’s
warnings that he intended to invade Crimea and Donbass.
Right
now, the Minsk II ceasefire has broken down and there are accusations
on both sides that the other is to blame. What cannot be denied is
that at least three times, on April 30th, then on May 11th, and then
on June 5th, Poroshenko has repeatedly promised to invade Crimea,
which wasn’t even mentioned in the Minsk II agreement; and that he
was also promising to re-invade Donbass, something that is explicitly
prohibited in this agreement. Furthermore, America’s President,
Barack Obama, did not fire Kerry’s subordinate, Nuland, for her
contradicting her boss on this important matter.
How
will that be taken in European capitals? Kerry was reaffirming the
position of Merkel and Hollande, the key shapers of the Minsk II
agreement; and Nuland was nullifying them. Obama now has sided with
Nuland on this; it’s a slap in the face to the EU: Poroshenko can
continue ignoring Kerry and can blatantly ignore the Minsk II
agreement; and Obama tacitly sides with Poroshenko and Nuland,
against Kerry.
The
personalities here are important: On 4 February 2014, in the very
same phone-conversation
with Geoffrey Pyatt,
America’s Ambassador in Ukraine, in which Nuland had instructed
Pyatt to get “Yats” Yatsenyuk appointed to lead Ukraine after the
coup (which then occured 18 days later), she also famously said “F—k
the EU!” Obama is now seconding that statement of her.
In
effect, Obama is telling the EU that they can get anything they want
signed, but that he would still move forward with his own policy,
regardless of whether or not they like it.
Kerry,
for his part, now faces the decision as to whether to quit — which
would force the EU’s hand regarding whether to continue with U.S.
policy there — or else for Kerry to stay in office and be
disrespected in all capitals for his staying on after having been so
blatantly contradicted by his subordinate on a key issue of U.S.
foreign policy. If he stays on while Nuland also does, then, in
effect, Kerry is being cut out of policymaking on Europe and Asia
(Nuland’s territory), altogether, and the EU needs to communicate
directly with Obama on everything, or else to communicate with Nuland
as if she and not Kerry were the actual U.S. Secretary of State. But
if Kerry instead quits, then the pressure would be placed on EU
officials: whether to continue with the U.S., or to reject U.S.
anti-Russia policy, and to move forward by leaving NATO, and all that
that entails?
If
they then decide to stay with the U.S., after that “F—k the EU!”
and then this; then, the European countries are clearly just U.S.
colonies. This would be far more embarrassing to those leaders than
John Kerry would be embarrassed by his simply resigning from the U.S.
State Department. It might even turn the tide and force the Ukrainian
Government to follow through with all of its commitments under the
Minsk II accords.
It
would be the most effective thing for Kerry to do at this stage. But,
it would lose him his position as a (now merely nominal) member of
Obama’s Cabinet.
The
way this turns out will show a lot, about John Kerry. The nations of
Europe already know everything they need to know about Barack Obama.
If Kerry quits, he’ll have respect around the world. If he stays,
he’ll be just another Colin Powell.
The ball is in Kerry’s court, and everyone will see how he plays it — and what type of man he is (and in’t).
----------
Investigative
historian Eric Zuesse is the author, most recently, of They’re
Not Even Close: The Democratic vs. Republican Economic Records,
1910-2010, and of CHRIST’S
VENTRILOQUISTS: The Event that Created Christianity,
and of Feudalism,
Fascism, Libertarianism and Economics.
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