15.06.2018 Author: Deena Stryker
Column: Politics
Region: Russia
in the World
Since I
left France for a return to the US almost twenty years ago, I’ve noticed that
both the French and the Italian so-called progressive press repeat the same
lies as the US, in stark contrast to the period of the Vietnam War, when there
was still a real anti-war, anti-capitalist left in Europe. The dumbing down of
the ‘free’ press goes hand in hand with that of their respective government
overseers. When President Trump chided his colleagues at the G7 for continuing
to blackball Russia, they responded in conformity with previous US policy:
’Putin annexed Ukraine!’ The apparent ease with which these words tripped off
the tongues of men and women whose education was based on a reverence for
history, is appalling.
The first
world war left a defeated Germany an economic basket case, where wheelbarrows
of worthless currency were needed to buy a loaf of bread. Soon Hitler came
along and declared that Germany needed more ‘room to live’ (Lebensraum). In
particular, he took up the claims of Germans living in southern Bohemia, known
as the Sudetenland, for equality with Czechs. In March 1938, the future allies
against Nazi Germany, England France, etc., allowed him to take over the area.
A year later, he invaded the rest of Czechoslovakia, setting off World War II.
Fast
forward to 2014: the eastern and southern parts of Ukraine are inhabited mainly
by Russians. A US-backed coup replaced the pro-Russian government in Kiev with
one backed by militias aping those who fought alongside the Nazis in World War
II, which, among other undemocratic moves, demanded that the largely
Russian-speaking populations in the country’s eastern provinces speak and learn
only in Ukrainian. Visceral opposition to this and other laws soon led to a
separatist movement in the Donbas, paired with a referendum in the southern
peninsula of Crimea to again become part of Russia. Although the
self-proclaimed People’s Republics of Lugansk and Donetsk would have liked to
become part of Russia, President Putin, who has a degree in international law,
refused: the Donbas had historically been part of Ukraine. His support has been
limited to turning a blind eye to Russian volunteers.
Boundaries
between Poland, Ukraine, the Baltic States, Russia and Turkey had constantly
changed over a thousand year history. Most durably, during her thirty-four year
reign in the second half of the eighteenth century, Catherine the Great wrested
Crimea, a peninsula on the Black Sea, from the neighboring Ottoman Empire,
securing Russia’s vital access to southern waters. She built a major port at
Sebastopol, which the Ottomans, allied with the French and British tried
to take back in a famous battle in 1854.
After the
2014 coup against the legally elected Ukraine government, the largely Russian
(and Cossack) inhabitants of Crimea held a referendum under the watchful eyes
of 25,000 Russians stationed at the Sebastopol naval base under a 40 year
treaty signed in 1997 between the two post-Soviet governments.
These and
other easy to verify facts have been discarded by Western governments seeking
the ultimate overthrow of Vladimir Putin. Obediently echoed by its ‘free’ press
they declared either that Russia had ‘invaded Crimea’ or its variant, that it
‘invaded Ukraine’, never mentioning the right of the Russian-speaking
inhabitants of eastern Ukraine and Crimea to be treated as second
class citizens by the US-installed coup government in Kiev — or that of
Russia to protect its only warm water naval base from an illegal takeover by
the fascist-friendly government in Kiev.
Although
hardly worth mentioning in a Cold War context, the demand that Russians living
in Ukraine speak and learn only in Ukrainian is a reflection of a centuries-old
inferiority complex: Across the shifting marshy boundaries of Northeastern
Europe, Ukrainian remained largely a locally spoken language in competition
with Polish and Bela Russian. Meanwhile, Russian produced a world-renowned
literature and is spoken from the Urals to the Pacific. No more needful of
Ukraine than of the tiny Baltic States, Russia covers nine time zones and
possesses some of the world’s largest reserves of precious metals and minerals.
To refer to its solidarity vis a vis its people as ‘invasions’ is to disrespect
the memories of those who died under the Nazi boot.
Deena Stryker is an
international expert, author and journalist that has been at the
forefront of international politics for over thirty years, exlusively for the
online journal “New
Eastern Outlook”.
https://journal-neo.org/2018/06/15/to-the-g7-russia-did-not-invade-crimea-or-any-part-of-ukraine/
https://journal-neo.org/2018/06/15/to-the-g7-russia-did-not-invade-crimea-or-any-part-of-ukraine/
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