Mark Ames on Ossetia, NATO, Kosovo
Mark Ames,
author of “The
Cold War that Wasn’t” in The Nation, discusses the
dominant narrative and ideological underpinnings in the U.S. press regarding the
recent Georgian attack on South Ossetia and subsequent Russian counterattack on
Georgia, the attempt to portray Russia as the aggressor by floating the idea of
a first-strike cyber war despite the lack of any evidence, the alleged poisoning
of Ukraine’s Victor Yushchenko and the current dispute between Yushchenko
and Yulia Timoshenko over her reaction to the Georgia war, the poisoning of
Alexander Litvinenko, NATO expansion into Eastern Europe, the precedent set by
U.S. intervention in Kosovo, the danger of putting “defensive”
missiles in Eastern Europe while the U.S. foreign policy establishment contemplates
first strike capability, U.S. NED support for the Russian National
Bolsheviks, the “shock therapy” robbery of Russian resources under
Yeltsin’s autocracy in the 1990s and the
consequences.MP3 here.
(64:25)Mark Ames is a
journalist who has written for several publications including the New York
Press, The Nation and GQ Russia and is the founding editor and regular
contributor of the Moscow-based newspaper The eXile. He is the author of Going
Postal: Rage, Murder and Rebellion From Reagan’s Workplaces to
Clinton’s Columbine and Beyond and The eXile: Sex, Drugs and Libel in the
New Russia.
Posted: Fri - October 31, 2008 at 01:38