CrossTalk: Exploding Kiev
Violence has again returned to the streets of Kiev – the internal contradictions of the Maidan coup are on view for all to see. Since the forced ouster of the previous elected government, Ukraine has been long on intolerance and short on compromise. What’s next for this divided country? CrossTalking with Dmitry Babich and Mark Sleboda
Ukraine Rightists Kill Police - New York Times Blames Putin
You
can't make this stuff up. The New York Times again proves equal
to the task - ofshowing how
Ukraine far-right nationalists attacking police and leaving 3 dead
and 100 injured is really Putin's fault
Robert
Parry
Putin did it' reaches new levels of absurd
2
September, 2015
This
article originally
appearedat Consortium News
As
I read the latest example of The New York Times’ propagandistic
coverage of the Ukraine crisis on Tuesday, it struck me that if these
same reporters and editors were around in 1953, they would have
cheered the coup against Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh as
a popular “revolution” putting the beloved and benevolent Shah
back on the Peacock Throne.
Similarly
in 1954, these credulous journalists would have written about another
people’s “revolution” in Guatemala removing President Jacobo
Arbenz and restoring law and order behind well-regarded military
commanders. The Times would have airily dismissed any suggestions of
U.S. manipulation of events.
And,
for decades, that was how the Central Intelligence Agency wanted
American journalists to write those stories – and the current
crop of Times’ journalists would have fallen neatly into line. Of
course, we know historically that the CIA organized and financed the
disorders in Tehran that preceded Mossadegh’s removal and pulled
together the rebel force that drove Arbenz from office.
And,
the evidence is even clearer that U.S. government operatives,
particularly Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland and U.S.
Ambassador Geoffrey Pyatt, helped orchestrate the 2014 coup that
overthrew Ukraine’s elected President Viktor Yanukovych. Indeed,
journalists knew more about the coup-plotting in Ukraine in real-time
than we did about the coups in Iran and Guatemala six decades ago.
In
the Ukraine case, there was even an
intercepted phone call just
weeks before the Feb. 22, 2014 coup revealing Nuland handpicking the
new Ukrainian leaders – “Yats is the guy,” she said referring
to Arseniy Yatsenyuk, who would become the post-coup prime minister –
as Pyatt pondered how “to midwife this thing” and Nuland
dismissed the European Union’s less aggressive approach with
the pithy remark, “Fuck the EU!”
Several
months earlier, on Sept. 26, 2013, Carl Gershman, president of the
National Endowment for Democracy (a U.S. government-funded operation
that was financing scores of Ukrainian activists, journalists and
business leaders), stated in a Washington Post op-ed that Ukraine was
“the biggest prize” and would serve as a steppingstone toward
eventually destabilizing Russia and removing Russian President
Vladimir Putin.
After
Gershman’s op-ed pronouncement, Nuland and Sen. John McCain
personally cheered on anti-government protesters in Kiev’s Maidan
square. Nuland literally passed out cookies, and McCain, standing on
stage with right-wing extremists from the Svoboda Party, told the
crowd that the United States was with them in their challenge to the
Ukrainian government. Meanwhile, Pyatt advised the coup-makers from
the U.S. Embassy.
The
U.S. interference was so blatant that George Friedman, founder of the
global intelligence firm Stratfor, called Yanukovych’s
ouster “the most blatant coup in history.”
Blatant
to anyone, that is, who wasn’t part of the U.S. government’s
propaganda team, which included the foreign desk of The New York
Times and virtually every mainstream U.S. media outlet. Following the
script of the State Department’s propagandists, the Times and the
MSM saw only a glorious people’s “revolution.”
Resistance
to the Coup
However,
ethnic Russians from Crimea and eastern Ukraine, the key bases of
support for Yanukovych, resisted the new order in Kiev. The people of
Crimea organized a referendum in which 96 percent of the voters
favored seceding from Ukraine and rejoining Russia, ties that went
back to the Eighteenth Century. When Putin and Russia agreed to
accept Crimea, the Times and the MSM announced a “Russian
invasion,” although in this case the Russian troops were already
stationed in Crimea under the Sebastopol port agreement.
Ethnic
Russians in eastern Ukraine also rose up demanding independence or at
least autonomy from the hostile regime in Kiev. The new government
responded by labeling the dissidents “terrorists” and mounting an
“Anti-Terrorist Operation,” which killed thousands and was
spearheaded by neo-Nazi and Islamist militias.
Although
the Times at times would acknowledge the
key role played
by the neo-Nazis and other ultra-nationalists, that troublesome
information – along with the Nuland-Pyatt phone call and other
evidence of the coup – would disappear into the Memory Hole when
the Times was summarizing the Ukraine narrative or was decrying
anyone who dared
use the word “coup.”
As
far as the Times was concerned, what has happened since February 2014
was simply a glorious “revolution” with “pro-democracy” Ukrainian
idealists on one side and propaganda-deluded ethnic Russian
automatons on the other, depersonalized and ready for the killing.
And behind all the bloodshed was the evil Putin.
Putin Blamed
The
Times reprised its propagandistic narrative on Tuesday in an
article by
Andrew E. Kramer, who tried to put the best face possible on a
violent protest by neo-Nazis and other right-wing nationalists
against a proposed constitutional change that would grant more
autonomy to eastern Ukraine as part of the Minsk II peace agreement
reached last February between German, French, Ukrainian and
Russian leaders.
Authorities
identified a member of Sych, the militant arm of the right-wing
Svoboda Party (John McCain’s old friends), as the person who threw
a grenade that killed three police officers, but the Times made clear
that the real villain was Vladimir Putin. As Kramer wrote:
“The
[autonomy] measure is fiercely opposed by Ukrainian nationalists and
many others, who loathe any concession to Mr. Putin and see him as
the driving force behind a civil war that has claimed more than 6,500
lives. President Petro O. Poroshenko had conceded the constitutional
change, which is included in the text of the Minsk agreement, with a
metaphorical gun to his head: thousands of Ukrainian soldiers
surrounded by Russian-backed rebels near the Ukrainian railroad town
of Debaltseve.
“Supporters
of the change say granting special status to the eastern regions of
Donetsk and Luhansk would co-opt the rebels’ major selling point,
blunting the drive for separatism. Yet the war has angered Ukrainians
to such an extent, opinion polls show, that members of Parliament are
struggling to win support from voters for any concession.”
While
the Times’ narrative paints Putin as the instigator of all the
trouble in Ukraine, it also portrays him as a villain who is on the
run because his “aggression” led to Western sanctions, which
along with lower oil prices, are collapsing the Russian economy.
Kramer
wrote: “Hopes for a peaceful settlement of the Ukraine crisis
have been rising lately in Europe as oil prices have sunk, increasing
financial pressure on Mr. Putin. With the Russian economy reeling,
the thinking goes, he should be more willing to compromise on eastern
Ukraine, the source of damaging Western economic sanctions. But that
thinking was not shared by many in Ukraine. …
“As
Parliament approved the concessions, protesters outside the building
scuffled with police, and shouted, ‘Shame! Shame!’ The
demonstrators grew more agitated. Some tore helmets from the riot
police and threw them on the paving stones. ‘They are trading in
our blood and our corpses,’ said a veteran of the war in the east,
Volodymyr Natuta, referring to members of Parliament who supported
the measure. ‘They sold out Ukraine.’…
“It
[the right-wing killing of the first police officer on Monday] was
the first death in politicized street violence in the capital since
the 2014 revolution … Officially, the Russian government denies
having any hand in propping up the two enclaves in eastern Ukraine.
But Ukrainians — not to speak of virtually every Western government
and NATO — universally reject that, holding Moscow responsible for
all the carnage in the east.”
So,
having brushed aside the evidence of a U.S.-backed coup and ignoring
the role of right-wing Ukrainian nationalists in both overthrowing an
elected leader and launching attacks against ethnic Russians, the New
York Times has settled on the only permissible view of the crisis:
that it is all Vladimir Putin’s fault. Perhaps history will
know better.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.