The New York Times would like to clear up your misunderstandings about Joe Biden and Ukraine via the following
“When Russia invaded Ukraine in early 2014, Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. pressed President Barack Obama to take decisive action, and fast, to make Moscow ‘pay in blood and money’ for its aggression. The president, a Biden aide recalled, was having none of it.”
Of course, here in the real world, the people of Crimea voting to rejoin Russia was not somebody’s act of aggression, although it did follow on an aggressive coup promoted by the United States — a coup created by Russia no more or less than this week’s coup in Bolivia.
“Mr. Biden worked Mr. Obama during their weekly private lunches, imploring him to increase lethal aid, backing a push to ship FGM-148 Javelin anti-tank missiles to Kiev. The president flatly rejected the idea and dispatched him to the region as an emissary, cautioning him ‘about not overpromising to the Ukrainian government,’ Mr. Biden would later write in a memoir.”
In English, what this means by “lethal aid” is not aid of any sort, but deadly weapons. Obama’s State Department had pushed for a coup that empowered dangerous fascistic elements in Ukraine, and Biden was impatient to start supplying free missiles — with apparently no Serious Responsible Adult hesitation about how to pay for such lavish gifts.
“So, Mr. Biden threw himself into what seemed like standard-issue vice-presidential stuff: prodding Ukraine’s leaders to tackle the rampant corruption that made their country a risky bet for international lenders — and pushing reform of Ukraine’s cronyism-ridden energy industry.
“’You have to be whiter than snow, or the whole world will abandon you,’ Mr. Biden told the country’s newly elected president, Petro O. Poroshenko, during an early 2014 phone call, according to former administration officials.”
Whether Biden, given his history, should really be using whiteness as a term for goodness I’m not sure, but I am sure that even Poroshenko was sure that Biden meant his recommendation as one of appearances, not reality. Biden’s government had just helped facilitate a coup that created Poroshenko’s government. And then there’s this:
Biden’s agenda was to make Ukraine look worthy of free deadly weapons at U.S. expense, and to keep the world safe for fossil fuel deals. His son getting free money from a Ukrainian gas company was not a threat to undermine that agenda.
“Thanks to President Trump and his lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani, that subplot has now swallowed the story line. Their efforts to press Ukrainian officials to investigate unsubstantiated charges against the Bidens have propelled Mr. Trump to the brink of impeachment. They have also put Mr. Biden on the defensive at a critical moment in the Democratic presidential primary campaign. As the impeachment hearings go public this week, the Republicans are hoping to redirect the spotlight onto the Bidens.
“A look at what the former vice president actually did in Ukraine (he visited six times and spent hours on the phone with the country’s leaders) tells a different story, according to interviews with more than two dozen people knowledgeable about the situation. It casts light on one of Mr. Biden’s central arguments for himself in the primary: his eight years of diplomacy as Mr. Obama’s No. 2.
“Mr. Biden dived into Ukraine in hopes of burnishing his statesman credentials at a time when he seemed to be winding down his political career, as his elder son, Beau, was dying and his younger one, Hunter, was struggling with addiction and financial problems. It turned out to be an unforgiving landscape — threatened by Russia, plundered by oligarchs, plagued by indecisive leaders and overrun by outsiders hoping to make a quick buck off the chaos.”
Inconceivable!
“Writing in his 2017 memoir, Mr. Biden said Ukraine gave him a chance to fulfill a childhood promise to make a difference in the world. It also came to serve a political purpose, as ‘a legacy project, something he could run on,’ said Keith Darden, an associate professor at American University who studies Ukraine policy.”
Because what does your average U.S. voter care about more than successful coups never called that, the expansion of NATO, free deadly weapons for Nazis, and fossil fuel deals in distant places?
“In the end, it was an unglamorous holding action, but one that suited Mr. Biden’s Mr. Fix-It approach to the vice presidency — and his view of Ukraine as the front line in a larger battle to contain the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin.
“’People forget it now, but at that time period, 2014 and 2015, it wasn’t clear Ukraine would survive,’ Mr. Darden said. ‘They were teetering on the brink of bankruptcy. They had only 8,000 battle-ready troops.’
“A key to Mr. Biden’s relevance as vice president was his willingness to take jobs nobody else wanted. In early 2014, as others on Mr. Obama’s team raced to finish big-splash deals with Cuba and Iran, Mr. Biden told the president he wanted to take on three of the most unappetizing foreign-policy tasks left undone: containing the Islamic State, curbing immigration from Central America and keeping Russia from devouring Ukraine.”
Well, one out of three ain’t bad, except that Russia wasn’t devouring anything.
“Mr. Biden had deep contacts in Europe, and as a senator in the 1990s had had some success persuading President Bill Clinton to take action in the Balkans.”
Needless to say, Clinton had taken many actions in the Balkans. What counts as “action” to the New York Times is deadly and disastrous war — something that makes up a good part of Joe Biden’s resume.
“He considered himself to be among the few people in Mr. Obama’s orbit who understood Europe and were willing to challenge Mr. Putin — a counter to the national security adviser, Susan E. Rice, who repeatedly warned the president against escalating a conflict with Russia that the United States could not win.”
Joe Biden: More War Mad Than Susan Rice. It has a winning ring to it.
“Yet on Ukraine, as elsewhere, Mr. Biden was less an architect of policy than the empowered executor of Mr. Obama’s policy.
“‘He was the vice president, not the president,’ said Senator Jeanne Shaheen, Democrat of New Hampshire, part of a bipartisan group of lawmakers allied with Mr. Biden who pressured Mr. Obama to help Ukraine’s military.
“Indeed, the drive to provide lethal aid to Kiev was a group effort, pushed by senators and two powerful State Department officials: Geoffrey R. Pyatt, who was the ambassador in Kiev, and Victoria J. Nuland, then the hawkish assistant secretary for European and Eurasian affairs.
“Ms. Nuland was overheard telling Mr. Pyatt they needed Mr. Biden ‘for an attaboy’ to encourage Ukrainian leaders to fulfill their promises, during a 2013 phone conversation about Ukraine, bugged and released to the media.”
This was a phone conversation about a planned coup. It implcates Biden. If anyone in the United States considered this a crime, they wouldn’t have to argue over transcripts, as the audio is available.
“Bribes, Shakedowns and ‘Sweetheart Deals’
“Mr. Biden applied his Amtrak charm to local players like Ukraine’s embattled president, Viktor Yanukovych, with limited effect. Former White House aides recall watching an agitated Mr. Biden ducking in and out of a secure phone booth outside the situation room in early 2014, trying to reach Mr. Yanukovych on his cellphone.”
Are we to believe that something called Amtrak charm has ever worked on anyone?
“‘Where the hell is this guy?’ he kept asking, before learning that Mr. Yanukovych had fled Kiev, ultimately for Russia, as huge street protests erupted against his regime’s corruption and his pivot away from Europe and toward Moscow.
“Mr. Putin then rushed in, annexing Crimea and backing paramilitaries who invaded the country’s east. While Mr. Biden’s pitch for missiles was rebuffed, he eventually helped sell Mr. Obama on sending about 100 American service members to train Ukraine’s security forces.”
Vote Biden. WWIII is going to be charming!
“Things seemed to be looking up in May 2014 with the election of Mr. Poroshenko, an oligarch who billed himself as a reformer. At first, the vice president’s hard-edged messages to him on corruption were coated with kibbitz — demands accompanied by Bidenesque inquiries like whether the puffy-eyed president was getting enough sleep, aides recalled.
“Within months, though, the State Department began suspecting that the office of Mr. Poroshenko’s first prosecutor general was accepting bribes to protect Mykola Zlochevsky, the oligarch owner of Burisma Holdings, the gas company where Hunter Biden was a board member. In a February 2015 meeting in Kiev with a deputy prosecutor, a State Department official named George P. Kent demanded to know ‘who took the bribe and how much was it?’
“The prosecutor general was fired soon after. But it wasn’t long before the new prosecutor, Viktor Shokin, was drawing allegations of corruption, including from State Department officials who suspected he was shaking down targets and intentionally slow-walking investigations to protect allies.
“Mr. Giuliani has claimed, without evidence, that Mr. Biden’s push to oust Mr. Shokin was an attempt to block scrutiny of his son’s actions. In fact, Mr. Biden was just one of many officials calling for Mr. Shokin to go. Good-government activists were protesting his actions in the streets, as were eurozone power players like Christine Lagarde, then the managing director of the International Monetary Fund, along with Ms. Nuland and Senate Republicans.
“‘The position regarding getting rid of Shokin was not Vice President Biden’s position; it was the position of the U.S. government, as well as the European Union and international financial institutions,’ said Amos J. Hochstein, former coordinator for international energy affairs at the State Department and one of the few administration officials who directly confronted Mr. Biden at the time about his son.”
I wonder what Russia’s position was on dumping the U.S. Attorney General at the time . . . WHAT!? HERESY! TREASON! Russia doesn’t get to have a position on firing a U.S. official – WTF? ARE YOU CRAZY? . . . Well, exactly, but Biden’s position on firing Shokin is totally acceptable because it’s a U.S. government position. Also, the question of what Biden did to pressure Ukraine on this seems not even to come up here.
“Ukraine’s energy industry, the country’s geopolitically crucial economic engine, was a central point of contention between the Obama administration and Kiev. Mr. Biden and Mr. Hochstein, echoing a similar effort by European officials, pressured Mr. Poroshenko to reform the operations of the state-owned natural gas company Naftogaz, which controlled about two-thirds of the country’s energy resources.
“(Burisma, a smaller, privately owned company, played no role in Mr. Biden’s pressure campaign, and administration officials could not recall whether the company was even mentioned in meetings the vice president attended on energy matters.)
“By late 2015, American officials had grown so frustrated with Mr. Poroshenko’s sluggish response on all fronts that Mr. Biden was dispatched to make the case publicly for reforms to the Ukrainian Parliament.
“His words, like his work in Ukraine over all, were important but hardly decisive.
“‘A lot of good things would not have happened if Biden hadn’t been focused on Ukraine, but his work did not fundamentally change the overall institutional corruption,’ said Edward C. Chow, an expert on geopolitics and energy policy at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a nonpartisan Washington think tank. ‘And having his son doing what he did was a distraction that undermined his message.’
“Mr. Shokin was eventually fired, but only months later, after I.M.F. officials threatened to withdraw funding.”
Oh, well, in that case, the U.S. clearly had nothing to do with it.
“In the intervening years, there has been much churn and less change. Mr. Putin, facing sanctions, has mostly stayed in check. Mr. Poroshenko was beaten at the polls by Volodymyr Zelensky in April, and remains bitter toward Mr. Biden for calling him out over his handling of Naftogaz during a meeting shortly before the 2016 elections, according to a person to whom he recently complained.
“Some reforms have been put in place at the energy giant: Ukrainian officials agreed to appoint an international oversight board (Mr. Hochstein is now a paid I.M.F. appointee to the panel), but the issue of sweetheart deals remains unresolved.
“The battle over Naftogaz has also become wrapped up in the House impeachment inquiry. Two of Mr. Giuliani’s associates in his pressure campaign against the Bidens — Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman — were part of an effort to remove Mr. Pyatt’s successor as ambassador to Kiev, Marie L. Yovanovitch, who had called for reforms to the energy giant.
“For his part, Hunter Biden remained on Burisma’s board until his term expired in April.
“Handling the Story
“Mr. Biden wants to move on.
“But he did not take advantage of a chance to eliminate the distraction four years ago, when the threat resurfaced — in the form of questions from The New York Times and follow-ups from other news organization — as he flew to Kiev on Air Force Two to deliver the anti-corruption speech to Parliament.
“Several aides recalled a surreal split-screen of activity onboard, as Mr. Biden’s team focused mostly on the speech (he urged them to make it tougher), but peeled off for intermittent huddles on how to handle the Hunter story (Mr. Biden dismissed the story as a distraction, and did not engage). The group defaulted to the pushback plan used the year before when the story had first emerged, issuing a statement that Hunter Biden was ‘a private citizen and a lawyer.‘
“They emphasized “private citizen,” many former aides said, because the vice president would not even discuss taking the step that could make all questions vanish: asking his son to quit the Burisma board, as editorial boards and Ukraine experts were suggesting.
“Mr. Biden’s advisers say that he and his son had informally agreed years earlier not to discuss anything pertaining to the younger Mr. Biden’s business activities, as a way to insulate them both.
“Bob Bauer, former Obama White House counsel and Biden adviser, said that even pressuring Hunter Biden to quit the board would have constituted a breach of that firewall, and suggested that was one of the reasons the vice president chose not to do it. ‘The independent activities of an adult child simply don’t create a ‘conflict of interest’ for the parent who is a public official,’ he said. ‘And as a matter of sound ethical practice, it is important for officials in this position to maintain that distance: to be able to show that, in doing their jobs, they could not have been affected by discussions or involvement with their adult children relating to private business matters. Their posture has to be, ‘Whatever you decide to do, I am going to do what I have to do.””
Get it? If your son is corruptly profiting from your position you can make it acceptable literally by not telling him to stop, whereas if you tell him to stop, then it becomes corruption. Whiter than snow!
“Mr. Biden has said he first learned of his son’s activities in Ukraine when the story broke in 2014. He told his son, ‘I hope you know what you are doing,‘ according to Hunter Biden’s account of their discussion in The New Yorker earlier this year.
“If that settled matters between father and son, Hunter Biden’s activities struck many of the officials working on Ukraine policy as an unnecessary distraction, or worse. Mr. Biden’s own aides were so worried about the optics, they enlisted State Department officials to gather facts to determine how to handle the story, according to people who worked with his office.
“Yet few, if any, had raised the issue with Mr. Biden directly when it first arose. Most viewed the revelation — unseemly, but not illegal or a violation of ethics rules — as simply not worth risking a scolding from Mr. Biden, who had reacted angrily when Mr. Obama’s aides raised the issue of his son’s lobbying during the 2008 campaign. One person who briefly discussed the matter with Mr. Biden said he was anguished by his son’s personal problems and unsure how to help him recover.
“Mr. Hochstein, reflecting the concerns of State Department officials, including Mr. Pyatt, tried to get several of Mr. Biden’s aides to broach the subject with him in 2014. When they declined, he took matters into his own hands, according to three Obama administration officials with knowledge of the situation. It is not clear how Mr. Biden responded; Mr. Hochstein did not disclose details of their interaction.
“But former administration officials involved in the response to the story, speaking on the condition of anonymity, cited one reason above all others for backing off: the vice president’s shaky emotional state over Beau’s illness and death. Mr. Kent, now the deputy assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs, told House investigators that his concerns had not been addressed by a White House official, who told him that Mr. Biden lacked the ‘further bandwidth to deal with family-related issues at that time.’
“Mr. Biden’s mood in 2019 is no longer grief but anger. His aides accuse the news media of abetting Mr. Trump by aiming the story, now the catalyst for impeachment, back at the former vice president.
“‘Let’s not forget that this was covered on A22 of The Times in 2015, because it did not fall outside the White House’s ethical guidelines and was simply not a major story,’ said Kate Bedingfield, the Biden campaign’s communications director.
“She added: ‘What’s different now? It’s that Donald Trump is aggressively lying about it every day in the hopes that it winds up on the front page.'”
So, the good news is that Biden’s staff is afraid to tell him anything that might make him angry, and his mood has now shifted to anger. So, he’s well informed, tanned, rested, and open for business.
And the New York Times is eager to make sympathy for Joe Biden the appropriate response to disgust for Trump. The paper wildly underestimates our capacity for disgust.
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