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Ukraine Crisis:
Vladimir Putin, the World's Last True
Statesman
By John Chuckman
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, March 15, 2014
Everywhere you look in the West, you find political pygmies
rather than statesmen. In France, we see a pathetic man whose own people
intensely dislike him, François Hollande, attempt to speak as though he were
something other than a dry, pompous school teacher-like purveyor of American
views. Almost forgotten are the strong, independent voices of a de Gaulle or
a Chirac. In Britain, the Prime Minister, David Cameron, is wishy-washy man
of little integrity and less ability, again a purveyor of American views,
and I’m sure he goes to sleep every night fantasizing about the last Prime
Minister who faithfully served American interests, Tony Blair, being
showered with gold, resembling something from the Arabian Nights, every year
since his retirement. The United States is represented by a man of not one
achievement, unless you count instituting an industrial-scale system of
extrajudicial killing, sending missiles against women and children and mere
suspects, a man who serves the American military-intelligence complex as
doggedly as George Bush, surely the most ignorant and cowardly man ever to
be called President. Germany has a leader of considerable ability in Angela
Merkel, but, as few people understand, Germany acts only under the most
onerous secret agreements imposed by America after World War II, its
independence still heavily constrained nearly three-quarters of a century
later. No, Putin stands out, for his independence of mind, keen
intelligence, ability to make decisions, and his readiness to act in
proportion to the threat of a situation. In Syria he blunted America’s
effort to bomb its government into submission, a la Libya. In Ukraine, he
has acted appropriately and without excess, quietly taking steps to secure a
region whose population includes a majority of Russians and where Russia has
a major naval base and longstanding interests and relationships. The
bellowing we hear from the United States about “Russia is committing a
breach of international law,” or “You just don’t invade a country on phony
pretext in order to assert your interest!” should amuse the world rather
than arouse it. These words come from the folks who slaughtered 3 million
Vietnamese, precipitated the deaths of more than a million Cambodians
through de-stabilizing secret invasions, killed a million Iraqis, killed
tens of thousands in Afghanistan, invaded Grenada, invaded Haiti, invaded
Panama, overturned democratic governments in Chile, Iran, and Guatemala,
fought a years-long secret terror war against Cuba, supported the 1965
genocide in Indonesia with lists of names of communist suspects for killing
after the fall of Sukarno, and today finds itself murdering strangers by the
thousands in Yemen, Somalia, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. It tolerates brutal
suppression in Israel, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and other places. The
establishment in Washington, publically lecturing Russia despite its own
blood-soaked record, apparently has utter contempt for the public’s
intelligence, viewing them much as 1984’s Inner Party viewed Plebs.
Going back to that Russian naval base on the Black Sea, I am reminded of
Guantanamo, Cuba. In case Americans forget, Guantanamo is Cuban territory.
Decades ago, America’s long-term lease - extracted after the
Spanish-American War, another American-engineered war used to grab desirable
territory - ran out, and the government of Cuba asked that the territory be
returned. America refused and still it keeps this military base against the
wishes of the Cuban government, having used it over the last decade for its
infamous torture camp for people captured after 9/11 and proved guilty of
nothing. To hear Obama and the droning, tiresome John Kerry talk,
you’d think Putin had recklessly hurled the world into danger. Of course,
what their strained rhetoric really is telling us is that, just after a
round of champagne toasts and patting themselves on the back over the
presumed success of having secretly de-stabilized Ukraine for Western
interests, they are seriously annoyed by Putin acting swiftly and decisively
to secure an insecure situation. Most people don’t like being shown up in
public, but when you get to the level of a Kerry or an Obama, being shown up
in public is plainly infuriating. And, of course, it makes so much sense to
be cutting off avenues of discussion, such as Russia’s G-8 meeting, talking
of “going to the hilt” as Kerry has foolishly done, and threatening serious
reprisals if Russia fails to do as Washington wishes The
“revolution” in Ukraine is the product of years of effort by the (Western
intelligence agencies) to exploit weaknesses there and gain a major foothold
on Russia’s border. Whether you like the man’s views or not, Viktor
Yanukovich, a democratically-elected president was ousted, and some
extremely unpleasant people have re-entered the national spotlight,
including Yulia Tymoshenko - a founder of the right wing outfit, The
Fatherland Party, once one of the wealthiest people in Ukraine, someone who
had charges of bribery and embezzlement swirling about her and her husband,
and someone who served 3 years in prison for abuse of office. Tymoshenko’s
public image, with heavy (bleached) blond braids wrapped around her head as
a crown, reminds me of nothing so much as 1930s images of Germanic womanhood
promoted by the Nazis in books and films. And then there’s Oleh Tyahnybok,
leader of the All Ukrainian Union Svoboda Party, an unapologetically fascist
organization. There are still other extreme right wing groups at work too,
including The Right Sector Party, again a genuinely fascist organization.
There is, and has long been, a strong streak of fascism in Ukraine. Ukraine,
much as Baltic states such as Latvia, was at the forefront of supporting
Hitler’s invasion of the Soviet Union and violence against Jews, the
infamous massacre at Babi Yar having been committed in part by Ukrainian
police. Ukraine provided the infamous Galicia Division to serve as a unit of
the Waffen-SS. During “the revolution” right wingers
provided most of the street thugs and snipers, and there is considerable
evidence that they continue some of their violence against peaceful
protesters. Already, many unpleasant legislative acts are being considered
by those now running Ukraine, including a law offering a penalty of ten
years in prison for dual-nationality Ukrainians who insist on holding
Russian passports. One of the first acts of the new government was to repeal
a law allowing minorities to conduct business and education in their own
languages. The coup has thrown the country into serious economic
uncertainty, leaving it unable to pay many sizeable debts. "We’ll regain our
status as a nuclear power and that’ll change the conversation. Ukraine has
all the technological means needed to create a nuclear arsenal – which would
take us about three to six months,” threatened Svoboda Party MP, Mikhail
Golovko. Can you just imagine the reaction in Washington were such
activities underway in Mexico or Canada? An invasion in force with no pause
for diplomatic niceties would be swift. It is not the slightest
exaggeration to say that Putin’s prompt and low-key action stands in sharp
contrast to the shrill, hypocritical voices coming from Washington and being
echoed in Paris and London. We all know that Washington’s readiness to
threaten or bomb those who disagree with it is exceeded only by the
monstrousness of its hypocrisy when speaking about law or rights or
democratic values. It is perfectly represented by that genuine American
Gothic, Senator John McCain, a fossilized, corrupt old reprobate who flies
off here and there, sticking his nose into other people’s countries, trying
to stoke up the fires of war in every difficult place he thinks an American
advantage is to be had, a much diminished version of what he once did in
Vietnam where he flew jets to bomb civilians. We cannot know what
Ukraine is going to experience given America’s support of extremists and
cutthroats to overturn an elected government, a situation somewhat
resembling what was intended for Syria through support of extremists and
terrorists there, including the supply even of small quantities of Sarin gas
used to produce atrocities inviting American intervention. The Syrian effort
has collapsed into a hellish situation for which the United States takes no
responsibility. So too the situation in Libya, another American-manufactured
disaster, but I am confident in the ability of Mr. Putin to outplay the
current crop of uninspired politicians in the West at geopolitical chess,
especially where Russia’s vital interests are at stake, and we should all
wish him well to prevent anything like Syria or Libya being repeated in
Ukraine. The fact is that we will have a better world where there
are independent actors able enough to thwart a world bully from kicking sand
into everyone’s eyes, an activity which appears now to have become a
favorite American pastime. How is a world dictator-nation any less
contemptible and dangerous than a country dictator-leader? It’s not.
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