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443465


Date: October 30, 2024 at 05:57:22
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Coup Maven Nuland & shill Maddow back at red string conspiracy board

URL: https://responsiblestatecraft.org/unrwa-israel-gaza/


Sociopath Victoria Nuland & corporate/goverment shill, Rachel Maddow back at
the red string conspiracy board

The former State Department official tells MSNBC that Trump, Elon, and Putin are
"all on the same team"

KELLEY BEAUCAR VLAHOS
OCT 30, 2024
Victoria Nuland, whose infamous words “f-ck the EU” epitomized American
primacy as it worked to mold the Ukrainian government after the 2014 revolution
and helped to set up the country for a brutal showdown with Russia’s Vladimir
Putin, now says that Russia is trying to elect Donald Trump, again.

"He's at it again!" Nuland told Rachel Maddow, the MSNBC host whose red string
conspiracy board was a regular feature for years during Trump’s tenure and
Russiagate, until she wasn’t. Now she is back, and hosting the old gang.

“It’s good to be back with you Rachel to talk to you about this as we did in 2016
as well as 2020,” said Nuland, without a trace of irony. She retired this year from
the State Department.

"And (Putin) has more sophisticated tools... He's got a brand new, very powerful
tool, which is Elon Musk and X. In 2020, the social media companies worked hard
with the U.S. government to try to do content moderation, to try to catch this stuff
as it was happening. This time, we have Elon Musk talking directly to the Kremlin
and ensuring that every time the Russians put out something, it gets five million
views before anyone can catch it."

Nuland was talking about a report in the New York Times on Tuesday that said
that Russia, China, and Iran were all meddling in the presidential election. It said
their tactics have “matured into a consistent and pernicious threat, as the
countries test, iterate and deploy increasingly nuanced tactics, according to U.S.
intelligence and defense officials, tech companies and academic researchers.
The ability to sway even a small pocket of Americans could have outsize
consequences for the presidential election, which polls generally consider a
neck-and-neck race.”

Nuland was right that the government warned about the same thing in 2020, and
that social media companies “worked” with the government to address what they
said was pernicious meddling. But she fails to mention (not surprisingly) that
beginning in 2017 government agencies including the FBI, DHS, intel community,
and yes, State Department, put these companies under tremendous pressure to
“acknowledge” the meddling in 2016, forcing untold posts and accounts to be
deleted and millions of dollars spent fo “due diligence” in monitoring posts and
activity through the 2020 election. This was all in the Twitter files. It has been
acknowledged as much by Mark Zuckerbeg, CEO of Facebook (now Meta), who
reaffirmed the pressure not once but twice (the second time was more about
COVID) since the last election.

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Nevertheless, a NYU study last year said that the meddling likely had little impact
on votes in 2016.

But let’s talk about the meddling that did have an impact. Like U.S. government-
led democracy promotion, and quasi-government efforts, including the National
Endowment for Democracies (for which Nuland is a newly minted board
member), helping to foment the anti-Russian Orange revolution, then Maidan
revolution that overturned the elected government in Ukraine in 2014. Nuland
was on the ground there and can be seen in photographs handing out
sandwiches to demonstrators. After President Viktor Yanukovych was tossed out,
Nuland was recorded in a conversation with U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine,
Geoffrey Pyatt, plotting who was in or out of the mix as the new Ukraine
government was being assembled. This is where she made her infamous “you
know, f-ck the EU” comment.

When Russia invaded Crimea and then Ukraine in 2022, rather than see this as
dangerous escalation, if not blowback to the aggressive “democracy promotion”
policies in the former Soviet sphere that she had supported, first during the
Obama Administration, then under Biden, it was an affirmation. She has said only
when Putin is gone will Ukraine be safe (a sentiment shared by Biden at the
beginning of the war).

No doubt she feels the same way about Trump, telling Maddow, "Trump is taking
Putin lessons, as autocrats around the world are." But meanwhile, hundreds of
thousands of Ukrainians are dead or wounded, the population has shrunk 25%
and the war is not only far from over, Ukraine is by all metrics, losing. How many
Ukrainians must fight for the crusades of ideologues thousands of miles away?
Ask Maddow and Nuland.

They are stuck in the narratives of 2016 and 2020 because an election is just
days away, and as I wrote back January, their Russian “malign influence” story
“helped to get the public’s buy-in for a new Cold War with Russia by normalizing
the idea that Russians not only helped to elect Donald Trump, but were actively
trying “‘to destroy U.S. democracy.’”

We will have to decide whether it is in Americans’ best interest to indulge this
again, given all that has happened in the last four years.

Kelley Beaucar Vlahos
Kelley Beaucar Vlahos is Editorial Director of Responsible Statecraft and Senior
Advisor at the Quincy Institute.


Responses:
[443470] [443502] [443488] [443466]


443470


Date: October 30, 2024 at 09:59:22
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Coup Maven Nuland & shill Maddow back at red string conspiracy...


"The former State Department official tells MSNBC that Trump, Elon, and Putin are "all on the same team""

seems to be an accurate statement to me...


Responses:
[443502] [443488]


443502


Date: October 30, 2024 at 11:33:18
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Coup Maven Nuland & shill Maddow back at red string conspiracy...


and hitler was an artist, so never mind about the rest. lol


Responses:
None


443488


Date: October 30, 2024 at 11:00:13
From: Redhart, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Coup Maven Nuland & shill Maddow back at red string conspiracy...


Ayup. Agreed.


Responses:
None


443466


Date: October 30, 2024 at 05:59:50
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: A US-Backed, Far Right–Led Revolution in Ukraine Helped Bring Us..

URL: https://jacobin.com/2022/02/maidan-protests-neo-nazis-russia-nato-crimea?s=08


A US-Backed, Far Right–Led Revolution in Ukraine Helped Bring Us to the Brink
of War

BY
BRANKO MARCETIC
In 2014 Ukraine, great power gamesmanship, righteous anger at a corrupt status
quo, and opportunistic far-right extremists toppled the government in the Maidan
Revolution. Today’s crisis in Ukraine can’t be understood without understanding
Maidan.

Protesters throw Molotov cocktails at Ukrainian troops during the Maidan
protests on January 19, 2014. (Mstyslav Chernov / Wikimedia Commons)
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SHAWN FAIN
It’s January. A defiant crowd of protesters, a jumble of bodies where far-right
extremists rub shoulders with everyday people, wants the head of the elected
president. They chant anti-government slogans, occupy government buildings,
and carry arms — some of them makeshift melee weapons, some of them
hunting rifles and Kalashnikovs. By the time it’s all said and done, the
demonstrations will lead to the death and hospitalization of both protesters and
police.


It’s not the Capitol riot in Washington that so horrified Americans and foreign
observers in 2021. This was the Ukrainian Maidan Revolution (or Euromaidan),
which right around this time eight years ago actually succeeded in toppling the
country’s elected government, sending then president Viktor Yanukovych fleeing
for his life to neighboring Russia.

Nearly a decade on, the 2014 Revolution of Dignity, as it’s known in Ukraine,
remains one of the more widely misunderstood episodes of recent history. Yet
understanding it is critical to understanding the ongoing standoff over Ukraine,
which can largely be traced back to this polarizing event — depending on who
you ask, an inspiring liberal revolution or a far-right coup d’état.

Great Power Groundwork for Rebellion

Like today’s Russia-NATO tensions more broadly, at the heart of the Maidan
protests was the push by some Western governments, especially the United
States, to isolate Russia by supporting the integration of peripheral parts of the
former Soviet Union into European and Atlantic institutions — and Moscow’s
pushback against what it saw as an encroachment on its sphere of influence.

In 2014, the man forced to navigate these tensions, Viktor Yanukovych, was
taking his second crack at the Ukrainian presidency. He had first been ousted
after the 2004 Orange Revolution that followed widespread charges of vote-
rigging in the election that brought him to power. Before running again six years
later, Yanukovych had worked to rebuild his reputation, becoming the country’s
most trusted politician.

By 2010, international monitors had declared the most recent election free and
fair, an “impressive display” of democracy, even. But once in power, Yanukovych’s
rule was again marred by widespread corruption, authoritarianism, and, for some,
an uncomfortable friendliness to Moscow, which had made no secret of its
backing him in the previous election. The fact that Ukraine was starkly divided
between a more Europe-friendly West and Center and a more pro-Russia East —
the same lines that largely determined the election — only added to the
complication.

Yanukovych was in a tricky spot. Ukraine relied on cheap gas from Russia, but a
plurality of the country — not, crucially, an absolute majority — still wanted
European integration. His political career was caught in the same bind: with his
party formally allied to Vladimir Putin’s own United Russia party, his pro-Russia
base wanted to see closer relations with its neighbor; but the oligarchs who were
the real reason he had gotten anywhere near the presidency were financially
entangled with the West, and they feared competition to their grip on the country
from across the Russian border. All the while, two geopolitical powers in the form
of Washington and Moscow hoped to use these cleavages to draw the country
into their respective orbits.

Nearly a decade on, the Maidan Revolution remains one of the more widely
misunderstood episodes of recent history.
So, for four years, Yanukovych toed a fine line. He pleased his base with symbolic
and cultural measures, like talk of unity or cooperation with Moscow in key
industries — even if much of it went nowhere — along with more serious steps
like making Russian an official language, rejecting NATO membership, and
reversing his pro-Western predecessor’s move to glorify Nazi collaborators as
national heroes in school curricula.

His biggest sop to Moscow, though, came early in his term, when he struck a deal
letting the Russian Black Sea Fleet use Crimea as a base until 2042, in exchange
for discounted Russian gas. Its hurried passage was marked by fistfights and
smoke bombs in the Ukrainian parliament.

For all the charges then and since that he was a Kremlin puppet, though, there
was a hard ceiling to Yanukovych’s eastward turn. His noncommittal stance on
joining a Russian-led customs union of former Soviet republics, even when Putin
dangled the prospect of even cheaper gas prices, frustrated Moscow. So did his
outright rejection of Putin’s proposal to merge the two nations’ respective state-
owned gas giants, effectively handing Moscow control of the Ukrainian pipelines
it used to ferry almost all of its gas exports to Europe. In turn, Moscow refused to
renegotiate the hated and one-sided 2009 gas contract between the two that
had been struck by the last Ukrainian government.

Meanwhile, Yanukovych worked with and publicly encouraged Western
involvement in updating Ukraine’s natural gas infrastructure and insisted again
and again that “European integration is the key priority of our foreign policy.” He
kept working toward European Union membership, and to that end pursued a free
trade agreement with the EU as well as the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
loan the West urged him to take.

That financial lifeline came with a heavy price familiar to the many poor countries
that have turned to the West for bailouts: the elimination of tariffs, a wage and
pension freeze, spending cuts, and the end of gas subsidies to Ukrainian
households. The grim potential of such Western-imposed austerity, on display for
all to see in Greece at the time, was presumably worth it to Yanukovych if it kept
Moscow’s nose out of his business.

It was all this that led the liberal Brookings Institution to describe Yanukovych’s
foreign policy as “more nuanced” than his pro-Russian leanings had first
suggested. It was also what wound up sealing his fate.

To halt this drift to the West, Putin performed a one-man good-cop, bad-cop
routine, offering Yanukovych a no-strings-attached loan the same size as the
IMF’s, while squeezing him with what amounted to a mini–trade blockade. With
the EU failing to offer anything that would match the catastrophic loss of trade
with Russia that Ukraine was looking at, Yanukovych made the calculated choice
to go with Moscow’s offer. In November, he abruptly reneged on the EU deal,
sparking the protests that would topple him from power.

Axis of Convenience

While the deal’s rejection was the spark — with protesters crying “treason” and
chanting “Ukraine is Europe” — the protests were about much more. As one Kyiv
resident told the press, “If the deal is signed now, I won’t leave the protest.”

Demonstrators were fed up with the nepotism and corruption that pervaded
Ukrainian society — one of Yanukovych’s sons is a dentist who somehow ended
up among the country’s wealthiest men, another was an MP — as well as the
increasingly authoritarian nature of Yanukovych’s rule. In fact, the other major
sticking point for the deal was Europe’s demand that Yanukovych’s leading rival
be released from prison over trumped-up charges, which he resisted.

Yanukovych’s response to the movement only further doomed him, first with a
brutal crackdown in November that saw riot police violently disperse protesters
from Kyiv’s Maidan (or Independence Square, in Ukrainian), then ramming
through a set of oppressive anti-protest laws in January. Both moves only drew
more people to take part, with state violence against the protesters and their
release from prison becoming, respectively, the leading motivator and demand of
participants by December.

But righteous though their cause may have been, the movement’s critics had a
point, too. For one thing, the Maidan protests didn’t have majority support, with
the Ukrainian public split along the regional and sociocultural lines that have long
defined so many of the country’s political difficulties. While the western regions
— where most of the protesters came from, and which had historically been ruled
by other countries, some as late as 1939 — backed the protests, the Russian-
speaking East, ruled by Russia since the seventeenth century, were alienated by
their explicit anti-Russian nationalism, especially only one year out from the
chance to vote Yanukovych out.

Demonstrators were fed up with the nepotism and corruption that pervaded
Ukrainian society.
And they were resorting to force. Whatever one thinks of the Maidan protests, the
increasing violence of those involved was key to their ultimate victory. In response
to a brutal police crackdown, protesters began fighting with chains, sticks, stones,
petrol bombs, even a bulldozer — and, eventually, firearms, all culminating in what
was effectively an armed battle in February, which left thirteen police officers and
nearly fifty protesters dead. The police “could no longer defend themselves’ from
protesters’ attacks,” writes political scientist Sergiy Kudelia, causing them to
retreat, and precipitating Yanukovych’s exit.

The driver of this violence was largely the Ukrainian far right, which, while a
minority of the protesters, served as a kind of revolutionary vanguard. Looking
outside Kyiv, a systematic analysis of more than 3,000 Maidan protests found
that members of the far-right Svoboda party — whose leader once complained
Ukraine was run by a “Muscovite-Jewish mafia” and which includes a politician
who admires Joseph Goebbels — were the most active agents in the protests.
They were also more likely to take part in violent actions than any group but one:
Right Sector, a collection of far-right activists that traces its lineage to genocidal
Nazi collaborators.

Svoboda used its considerable resources, which included thousands of
ideologically committed activists, party coffers, and the power and prominence
afforded to it as a parliamentary party, to mobilize and keep the protests alive,
while eventually leading the occupation of key government buildings in both Kyiv
and the western regions. This was particularly the case in the western city of Lviv,
where protesters took over a regional administration building that soon came to
be partially controlled and guarded by far-right paramilitaries. There, they
declared a “people’s council” that “proclaimed Svoboda-dominated local councils
and their executive committees the only legitimate bodies in the region,” writes
Volodymyr Ishchenko, fueling the crisis of legitimacy that ended in Yanukovych’s
ouster.

But this was by no means limited to Ukraine’s West. Right Sector led the January
19 attacks on police in Kyiv that even opposition leaders criticized, with one
protester saying the far-right bloc had “breathed new life into these protests.”
Andriy Parubiy, the unofficial “commander of Maidan,” founded the Social-
National Party of Ukraine — a barely even winking allusion to Nazism — that later
became Svoboda. By January 2014, even NBC was admitting that “right-wing
militia-type toughs are now one of the strongest factions leading Ukraine’s
protests.” What was meant to be a revolution for democracy and liberal values
ended up featuring ultranationalist chants from the 1930s and prominent
displays of fascist and white supremacist symbols, including the American
Confederate flag.

January 6 in February

The far right, of course, cared nothing for democracy, nor did it have any love for
the EU. Instead, the popular uprising was an opportunity. Dmytro Yarosh, the
Right Sector leader, had urged his compatriots in 2009 to “start an armed
struggle against the regime of internal occupation and Moscow’s empire” if pro-
Russian forces took control. As early as March 2013, Tryzub, one of the
organizations that formed Right Sector, had called for the Ukrainian opposition to
move “from a peaceful demonstration to a street-revolutionary plane.”

They may also have played an even more sinister role in the events that unfolded.
One enduring mystery of the Maidan Revolution is who was behind the February
20 sniper killings that set off the final, most bloody stage of protests, with
accusations against everyone from government forces and the Kremlin to US-
backed mercenaries. Without precluding these possibilities, there’s now
considerable evidence that the same far-right forces who piggybacked on the
protesters’ cause were also at least among the forces firing that night.

At the time, men resembling protesters had been witnessed shooting from
protester-controlled buildings in the capital, and multiple Maidan medics had said
the bullet wounds in police and protesters looked to have come from the same
weapon. A Maidan protester later admitted to killing two officers and wounding
others on the day, and crates of empty Kalashnikov bullets were found in the
protester-occupied Ukraina Hotel, the same place a decorated military pilot and
anti-Russian resistance hero later said she had seen an opposition MP leading
snipers to. The government’s investigation, meanwhile, which focused only on the
protester murders, started out filled with serious flaws and irregularities.

The University of Ottawa’s Ivan Katchanovski has analyzed evidence that’s come
out in the course of the investigation and trial into the murders. According to
Katchanovski, a majority of wounded protesters testified they either saw snipers
in protester-controlled buildings or were shot by bullets coming from their
direction, testimony backed by forensic examinations. Closure on the matter is
unlikely, though, since the post-Yanukovych interim government, in which leading
far-right figures took prominent positions, swiftly passed a law giving Maidan
participants immunity for any violence.

The far right cared nothing for democracy, nor did it have any love for the EU.
Instead, the popular uprising was an opportunity.
For a brief period, it looked like the spiraling crisis might actually be resolved
peacefully, when Yanukovych and opposition parties signed a Europe-brokered
deal the next day on February 21, agreeing to scale back the president’s powers
and hold new elections that December. But the deal was met with outrage from
the increasingly militant street movement.

Thousands stayed in Maidan demanding Yanukovych’s exit, booing the now
apologetic opposition leaders for signing the agreement. Protesters decried the
deal as not enough, some gathering near Parliament, and demanded
Yanukovych’s resignation and prosecution. They cheered as an ultranationalist
threatened an armed overthrow if Yanukovych wasn’t gone by morning. (That
speaker was later elected an MP, where he joined a far-right party and made a
habit of physically assaulting his opponents).

“If I was [President Yanukovych], I would try and flee the country,” said one
protester in Lviv, where hundreds had gathered in the wake of the deal’s signing.
“Otherwise, he’ll end up like [Muammar] Gaddafi or with a life sentence or the
electric chair. He will not leave the country alive.”

Panic gripped the capital. Rumors swirled that the hundreds of firearms seized
days earlier by protesters raiding police stations in Lviv were on their way to Kyiv
for a final, bloody stage to the insurrection. When Yanukovych’s own party voted
to order troops and police to their barracks, both security forces and,
subsequently, Yanukovych flew the city, expecting bloodshed.

The day after the deal was signed, Parliament ratified what was effectively an
insurrection, voting to strip the presidency from Yanukovych, to the praise of the
US ambassador. Protesters stood outside Parliament and attacked an MP from
Yanukovych’s party, before overrunning the presidential palace. A prominent rabbi
urged Jews to leave the city and even the country, while the Israeli embassy
advised them to stay inside their homes.

Free Market Democracy Promotion

There’s one more critical piece to the Euromaidan puzzle: the role of Western
governments.

For decades, Washington and allied governments have pursued their strategic
and economic interests under the cover of promoting democracy and liberal
values abroad. Sometimes that’s meant funneling money to violent reactionaries
like the Nicaraguan contras, and sometimes it’s meant supporting benign pro-
democracy movements like those in Ukraine.

“External actors have always played an important role in shaping and supporting
civil society in Ukraine,” Ukrainian scholar Iryna Solonenko wrote in 2015,
pointing to the EU and the United States, through agencies like the National
Endowment for Democracy (NED) and US Agency for International Development
(USAID), whose Kyiv headquarters were in the same compound as the US
embassy. “One can argue that without this external support, which has been the
major source of funding for Ukrainian civil society since independence, Ukrainian
civil society would not have become what it now is.”

This was the case in the 2004–5 Orange Revolution, where foreign NGOs
changed little about Ukraine’s corruption and authoritarianism, but achieved the
crucial goal of nudging Ukraine’s foreign policy westward. As the liberal Center for
American Progress put it that year:

Did Americans meddle in the internal affairs of Ukraine? Yes. The American
agents of influence would prefer different language to describe their activities —
democratic assistance, democracy promotion, civil society support, etc. — but
their work, however labeled, seeks to influence political change in Ukraine.
US officials, unhappy with the scuttled EU deal, saw a similar chance in the
Maidan protests. Just two months before they broke out, the NED’s then
president, pointing to Yanukovych’s European outreach, wrote that “the
opportunities are considerable, and there are important ways Washington could
help.” In practice, this meant funding groups like New Citizen, which the Financial
Times reported “played a big role in getting the protest up and running,” led by a
pro-EU opposition figure. Journalist Mark Ames discovered the organization had
received hundreds of thousands of dollars from US democracy promotion
initiatives.

While it may be a long time before we know its full extent, Washington took an
even more direct role once the turmoil started. Senators John McCain and Chris
Murphy met with Svoboda’s fascist leader, standing shoulder to shoulder with
him as they announced their support to the protesters, while US assistant
secretary of state Victoria Nuland handed out sandwiches to them. To
understand the provocative nature of such moves, you only need to remember
the establishment outrage over the mere idea Moscow had used troll farms to
voice support for Black Lives Matter protests.

Later, a leaked phone call showed Nuland and the US ambassador to Ukraine
maneuvering to shape the post-Maidan government. “Fuck the EU,” Nuland told
him, over its less aggressive intervention into the country. “Yats is the guy who’s
got the economic experience,” she said, referring to opposition leader Arseniy
Yatsenyuk, who backed the devastating neoliberal policies demanded by the
West. You can probably guess who became prime minister in the post-Maidan
interim government.

It’s an overstatement to say, as some critics have charged, that Washington
orchestrated the Maidan uprising. But there’s no doubt US officials backed and
exploited it for their own ends.

Revolution Unfulfilled

Much as in 2004, the outcome of the Maidan Revolution, through no fault of the
majority of well-meaning, frustrated Ukrainians who had helped drive
Yanukovych out, was neither peace and stability, nor a move toward liberal values
and democracy. In fact, almost all of the protesters’ demands have gone
unfulfilled.

The same far right that had led the charge in toppling Yanukovych, including
Parubiy, found themselves with plum roles in the interim government that
followed, while the winner of the 2014 snap presidential election — Ukraine’s
seventh-richest man, Petro Poroshenko — had a history of corruption. His interior
minister soon incorporated the Azov Regiment, a neo-Nazi militia, into Ukraine’s
National Guard, with the country now a Mecca for far-right extremists around the
world, who come to learn and get training from Azov — including, ironically,
Russian white supremacists who were hounded from their country by Putin.

Despite far-right parties ultimately losing seats in Parliament, ultranationalist
movements successfully shifted the country’s politics to the extreme right, with
Poroshenko and other centrists backing measures to marginalize the speaking of
Russian and glorify Nazi collaborators. Even so, far-right candidates have entered
Parliament on non-far-right tickets, and extremists like former Azov commander
Andriy Biletsky have taken high-ranking law enforcement positions. While far-
right vigilantism spread through the country, Poroshenko himself granted
citizenship to a Belarusian neo-Nazi and engaged in some borderline anti-
Semitism of his own.

There’s no doubt US officials backed and exploited Euromaidan for their own
ends.
Little to nothing has changed about Ukrainian corruption or authoritarianism,
under either Poroshenko or current president Volodymyr Zelensky, elected in
2019 as an outsider change agent. Each has governed like an autocrat, using
their powers to go after political opponents and weaken dissent, and have been
embroiled in personal enrichment scandals that remain endemic to the Ukrainian
political class.

Not that it stopped either from being feted by Washington and flooded with
American support. In fact, this new imperial patron has only added to these
problems, with the current US president’s family being personally embroiled in
one of the country’s major corruption scandals, before using his position to install
a markedly corrupt prosecutor general.

Meanwhile, Ukraine’s been embroiled in a mini–civil war since Maidan. After Putin
moved to secure the Crimean naval base from NATO control, using the Russian
military presence and a dubious referendum to illegally annex the majority-
Russian region shortly after Yanukovych’s exit, pro-Russian separatists began
mobilizing in the country’s east, first into protest, then into armed groups. After
the interim government sent armed forces to put down the rebellion, Moscow
sent its own troops in, and the entire region has been a deadly powder keg ever
since.

But one crucial thing did change. With Yanukovych out, the interim government
and Washington’s handpicked prime minister signed the EU deal whose rejection
had started it all, solidifying Ukraine’s move to the West, and ushering in the
brutal austerity measures demanded by the IMF. Over the years, Yanukovych’s
successor signed off on a round of privatization, raised the pension age, and
slashed gas subsidies, urged on by then vice president Joe Biden. Unsurprisingly,
angry Ukrainians both voted with their feet and threw him out in a landslide.

Shadows and Lies

The 2014 revolution in Ukraine was an enormously complicated affair. Yet for
most Western observers, many of its basic, well-documented facts have been
either excised to push a simplistic, black-and-white narrative, or cast as
misinformation and propaganda, like the crucial role of the far right in the
revolution.

In truth, the Maidan Revolution remains a messy event that isn’t easy to
categorize but is far from what Western audiences have been led to believe. It’s a
story of liberal, pro-Western protesters, driven by legitimate grievances but
largely drawn from only one-half of a polarized country, entering a temporary
marriage of convenience with the far right to carry out an insurrection against a
corrupt, authoritarian president. The tragedy is that it served largely to empower
literal neo-Nazis while enacting only the goals of the Western powers that
opportunistically lent their support — among which was the geopolitical
equivalent of a predatory payday loan.

It’s a story tragically common in post–Cold War Europe, of a country maimed and
torn apart when its political and social divisions were used and wrenched further
apart in the tussle of great power rivalry. And the Western failure to understand it
has led us to a point where Washington continues to recklessly involve itself in a
place full of shadowy motives, shifting allegiances, and where little is what it
seems on the surface.

Western involvement helped bring the country to this crisis. There’s little reason
to think it’ll now get it out.


Responses:
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