December
25, 2019
Crimea’s
breakaway from Ukraine and rejoining Russia is treated in the U.S.-and-allied
world as being justification for the explosive re-emergence in 2014 of
America’s Cold War NATO alliance as being a restored war against Russia; and,
so, whether or not that ‘justification’ is truthful is the paramount
geopolitical issue in our era; and it will therefore be discussed and (via the
links here) documented in this article.
Though
international law is generally an unenforced mess that is interpretable far
more by partisanship than by any clearly applicable principles of law, the U.S.
Government does quite blatantly violate it on a routine basis, by means of
coups and invasions against countries that never invaded nor threatened to
invade the United States. If anything at all is clear in international law, it
is that Crimea’s breaking away from Ukraine and rejoining Russia in 2014 was
entirely and unquestionably legitimate, as will be documented here, by exposing
the lies that are adduced on the U.S. side, in order to allege that it’s not legitimate.
First,
however, will be a bit of essential historical background, which is commonly
ignored in arguments by the pro-U.S.-regime liars on this matter: From 1783 to
1954, Crimea was part of Russia. Crimea was arbitrarily transferred from Russia
to Ukraine in 1954 by the dictator of the Soviet Union, Nikita Khrushchev, who
was a Ukrainian and didn’t consult the residents of Crimea about this handover
of them to Ukraine. Crimeans were so opposed to being ruled from the foreign-language-speaking
and largely pro-Nazi (and anti-Semitic and anti-Russian) Ukrainians to their
north, so that as soon as the Soviet Union broke up in 1991, the only way that
Crimeans would tolerate any continuation of their formal association with Ukraine
was by being declared Ukraine’s “autonomous republic” (the only one) in
Ukraine. This situation of partial Crimean independence continued until Ukraine
was conquered (via coup) by the U.S. regime, in order to be handed over first
to the European Union, and then, after the EU would accept Ukraine, to NATO, which military alliance with the U.S. was
extremely unpopular in Ukraine until the American conquest and the immediately
subsequent takeover of Ukraine by pro-U.S. oligarchs, who were eager to buy
more privatized and formerly Soviet state-owned properties, in basically
insider deals with the now U.S.-controlled Ukrainian Government. Those
oligarchs’ ‘news’-media successfully propagandized most Ukrainians to switch
from being anti-NATO to pro-NATO. Furthermore, Crimeans were strongly favorable
toward Russia and strongly unfavorable toward the United States. Right at the time of the coup, Crimeans demonstrated
in Kiev against the CIA-organized Maidan demostrations, and on the day of the coup, February 20th, those
Crimeans in Kiev were forced by the U.S.-supported nazis to flee there, but the
eight buses carrrying them were blocked en-route, and an unknown number of the
fleeing Crimeans were killed, mainly clubbed to death. Many of the surviving ones
were permanently injured. Crimeans were terrified, and some of them wrote to friends in the West
regarding the terror and their fears. All of this information is ignored by the proponents
of the illegality of Crimea’s separation from Ukraine, because, clearly, the
basic human rights of Crimeans were then under very palpable and severe threat
by the U.S.-imposed forces; and, so, any ‘legal’ argument for forcing Crimeans
to remain Ukrainians was and is fake. But, still, legal
arguments for forcing Crimeans to be Ukrainians again are presented; and, so,
here is a quick introduction to those frauds, so that the fraudulence of The West’s entire
case against Russia may
be made unquestionably clear.
The least
politicized of the pro-Western (i.e., pro-U.S.-regime) articles regarding the
relevant international laws on this topic concern not Crimea but the separatist
movements of Kurdistan and Catalonia, because in the U.S.-and-allied
international dictatorship (that is, the countries that are ruled by
billionares who are allied with U.S. billionaires), no unanimity exists
regarding those two breakaway-movements (Kurds and Catalonians); so, the legal
principles aren’t such a threat to the U.S.-and-allied lies about Russia. (The
U.S. isn’t trying to conquer Kurds and Catalonians.) Here are highlights from
this law-article, and I boldface what I consider key
statements there:
—
https://www.asil.org/insights/volume/22/issue/1/self-determination-and-secession-under-international-law-cases-kurdistan
ASIL [American Society of International Law] Insights,
v. 22, issue 1
Milena
Sterio, 5 January 2018
The theory
of self-determination, as justifying the secession of a people from its
existing mother state as a matter of last resort only, in situations where the
people is oppressed or where the mother state’s government does not
legitimately represent the people’s interests, has remained constant throughout
the 20th century development of international law. Two United Nations’
declarations, in addition to the United Nations Charter itself, have addressed
the issue of self-determination. …
Both
declarations …
envisioned self-determination leading to secession as a matter of last resort
only within the decolonization paradigm: here, both conditions for a right to
self-determination were met insofar as colonized peoples were oppressed and
their colonial governments did not adequately represent their interests. Both
declarations also confirmed the importance of the principle of territorial
integrity of existing states, [8] and thus embraced the idea that
self-determination could lead to the territorial disruption of existing states
only in extreme instances of oppression or colonization. …
Peoples who
are oppressed or colonized,
however, have the right to external self-determination, which they may
exercise through secession from their mother state.[9] This view of
self-determination was confirmed in 1998, in the Canadian Supreme Court opinion
regarding the proposed secession of Quebec from Canada, where the Court held
that all peoples are entitled to various modes of internal self-determination,
but that only some peoples, such as those subjected to conquest, colonization,
and perhaps oppression, may acquire the right to external self-determination
through remedial secession.[10] Today, it may be concluded that international
law bestows on all peoples the right to self-determination, but that the right
to external self-determination, exercised through remedial secession, only
applies in extreme circumstances, to colonized and severely persecuted peoples.
While
international law embraces the principle of self-determination, it does not
contain a right of secession.[11] It may be argued that international law
merely tolerates secession in instances of external self-determination, where a
people is colonized or oppressed (like in the case of Kosovo). In addition, secession
is prohibited under international law if the secessionist entity is attempting
to separate by violating another fundamental norm of international law, such as
the prohibition on the use of force (like in the case of Northern Cyprus).[12]
In other instances of attempted secession, where the relevant people is not
oppressed, as in Quebec or Scotland, international law is neutral on
secession—it does not support a right to secession nor does it prohibit
secession. Instead, the secessionist dispute is left to the realm of domestic
law and to political negotiations between the mother state and the secessionist
entity.[13]
—
Following
are two influential articles reaffirming the U.S. regime’s view, that the
breakaway was and is illegitimate. In the first, the lie is simply presumed true that the overthrow
of the democratically elected President of Ukraine, Viktor Yanukovych, during
20-26 February 2014, was a domestic democratic revolution, instead of a
foreign-imposed coup. In the second, international law, as was just summarized above
here, is simply ignored.
—
#1:
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40802-015-0043-9
Netherlands
International Law Review
December
2015, Volume 62, Issue 3, pp 329–363| Cite as
Simone F.
van den Driest [whose 404-page 2013 Ph.D dissertation, at Netherlands’ Tilburg
University, was “Remedial Secession”], First Online: 30 November 2015
16k
Downloads
Abstract
This
article considers the (il)legality of Crimea’s unilateral secession from
Ukraine from the perspective of public international law. It examines whether
the right to self-determination or an alleged right to (remedial) secession
could serve as a legal basis for the separation of the Crimean Peninsula, as
the Crimean authorities and the Russian Federation seem to have argued. The article explains that beyond the context of
decolonization, the right to self-determination does not encompass a general
right to unilateral secession and demonstrates that contemporary international
law does not acknowledge a right to remedial secession. With respect to the
case of Crimea, it argues that even when assuming that such a right does exist,
the threshold in this regard is not met. In the absence of a legal entitlement,
the article subsequently turns to the question whether Crimea’s unilateral
secession was prohibited under international law. It contends that while the
principle of territorial integrity discourages unilateral secession, it does
not actually prohibit it. Nonetheless, there are situations in which an attempt
at unilateral secession is considered to be illegal in view of the
circumstances. It is argued that it is precisely this exception that is
relevant in the case of Crimea. …
[Text
now:] The Russian Federation (implicitly) relied on the doctrine of
remedial secession, which is seen to encompass a right to unilateral secession
in case of serious injustices suffered by a people. [which were unquestionably
present] President Putin advanced remedial arguments in his speech of 18 March,
contending that
those
who opposed the coup were immediately threatened with repression. Naturally,
the first in line here was Crimea, the Russian-speaking Crimea. In view of this,
the residents of Crimea and Sevastopol turned to Russia for help in defending
their rights and lives […]. [N]aturally, we could not leave this plea unheeded;
we could not abandon Crimea and its residents in distress.7
To the same
effect, the Russian Federation claimed in the Security Council that there had
been ‘threats of violence by ultranationalists against the security, lives and
legitimate interests of Russians and all Russian-speaking peoples’ in Crimea
and Eastern Ukraine and that ‘the issue is one of defending our citizens and
compatriots, as well as the most import[ant] human right—the right to life’.8
The
accuracy of these views presented, however, is highly questionable under
contemporary international law [and all the rest of the article discusses none
of the allegations that Putin asserted there, but only international law. Not even once in
this article is anything like the word “coup” used in relation to the overthrow
of Yanukovych — the overthrow that had sparked Crimeans to demand
restoration to Russia. Instead the article simply assumes that there was no
coup whatsoever: “The Ukrainian Revolution of 2014, which was initiated by the
Euromaidan movement in the capital of Kiev, had significant effects in Crimea.”
That’s all. However, that statement was false: It was no “revolution,”
and it clearly
was a coup.
Furthermore: even if it had been a “revolution,” it was not “initiated by the
Euromaidan movement in the capital of Kiev — it was initiated by the Barack Obama
Administration in the summer of 2011, and started to be implemented inside the
U.S. Embassy in Kiev on 1 March 2013. The Euromaidan movement started on 21 November 2013. So, this author is merely assuming that “the
Euromaidan movement” wasn’t part of a coup-operation by the U.S. regime.]
CONCLUSION
All in all,
it should be concluded that the arguments involving an alleged right to
self-determination and (remedial) secession as advanced by the Crimean and
Russian authorities in attempting to justify the events on the Crimean
Peninsula cannot be upheld. On the contrary: Crimea’s unilateral
secession from Ukraine clearly was illegal under international law.
#2:
https://content.sciendo.com/view/journals/lasr/14/1/article-p11.xml
Lithuanian
Annual Strategic Review,
2015-2016, v. 14 [published by General Jonas Žemaitis Military Academy of
Lithuania]
Erika
Leonaitė & Dainius Žalimas, both of Vilnius University
it is
essential to point out that a coup d’etat and the issues of
constitutionality in general are matters of national rather than international
law. In terms of international law, importance falls not on the
constitutionality of the government, but on its effectiveness, i.e. its
capability to efficiently control the territory of the state and to ensure
compliance with international commitments. [In other words: any
national government that can suppress and crush a secession movement is adhering
to international law, according to these writers.] Even where the government is
unable to carry out effective control (in political science, the concept of a
“failed state” is used to refer to these cases), relations with such a state
must be continued based on the principles of sovereign equality, the
prohibition of the use of force [the writers mean “use of force” by any foreign
govertnment, not “use of force” by the given nation’s government in order to
suppress and crush any secession movement], respect for territorial integrity,
and other fundamental international legal principles; other states are not
released from the obligations with respect to this state [in other words:
foreign nations must never side with nor support a secession movement within a
country. Blatantly false allegations like that are publishable by General Jonas
Žemaitis Military Academy of Lithuania.]
—
In June
2013 (well before the ‘democratic revolution’ in Ukraine started), NAVFAC, the
U.S. Naval Facilities Engineering Command, published on its website, a “Project
Description” for “Renovation of School#5, Sevastopol, Ukraine,” under the
euphemistic title “EUCOM Humanitarian Assistance
Program”.
EUCOM is the U.S. European Command — it is purely military, not “humanitarian,”
at all. The 124-page request for proposals (RFP) showed extensive photos of the
existing school, and also of the toilets, floor-boards, and other U.S.-made
products, that the U.S. regime was requiring to be used in the renovation (by
some American corporation, yet to be determined) of that then-Ukrainian school
in Crimea, which at that time was a Ukrainian Government property, not at all
American-owned or operated. So: why were U.S. taxpayers supposed to fund this
‘humanitarian’ operation, by the U.S. military?
The U.S.
accuses Russia of trying to “seize” land, but the U.S. does that routinely, and
today’s Russia certainly does not. The great threat to world peace is not
Russia; it is the imperialistic and lying U.S. regime, itself. The EU and other
cooperators with it are accessories to enormous crimes, and likewise lie
profusely.
—————
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