THE FACTS ON THE UKRAINIAN MELODRAMA
....All facts which contradict this
morality tale were suppressed, says Laughland. Thus a story had been widely
circulated that Yushchenko was poisoned during the electoral campaign, allegedly
because the government wanted to kill him, but no English language outlet has
carried the interview by the chief physician of the Vienna clinic which treated
Yushchenko for his mystery illness: "The clinic released a report declaring
there to be no evidence of poisoning, after which, said the chief physician, he
was subjected to such intimidation by Yushchenko's entourage—who wanted
him to change the report—that he was forced to seek police
protection.
You
see the whole apparat," says our source, "a conclave of governments, friendly
(and government funded) NGOs, and contract opportunities. Something for
everybody—and all for ‘democracy.' Y'gotta love
it!"
-- by Srdja
Trifkovic
Find the original here
NEWS & VIEWS
EXCLUSIVE:THE
FACTS ON THE UKRAINIAN
MELODRAMAby Srdja
TrifkovicThe
media myth: An East European "pro-Western,
reformist democrat" is cheated of a clear election victory by an old-timer
commie apparatchik. A wave of popular protest may yet ensure another Triumph of
Democracy a
la Belgrade and Tbilisi, however.
The
fact: neither the winner of the presidential
election in the Ukraine, Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych, nor his
Western-supported ultranationalist rival Viktor Yushchenko, are "democrats" or
"reformers" in any accepted sense. They differ, however, on the issue of the
Ukrainian identity and destiny in what is a deeply divided country. Ukraine is
like a large Montenegro, split between its Russian-leaning half (the south, the
east) and a strongly nationalist west and north-west that defines its identity
in an unyielding animosity to Moscow.
The prediction:
"The West"—the United States, the
European Union, and an array of Sorosite "NGOs"—will fail to rig this
crisis in favor of Yushchenko: the critical mass that worked in Serbia in
October 2000, and in Georgia in 2003—the complicity of the security
services and mafia money—is simply not
present. The
myth is
virulently Russophobic. It implicitly recognizes the reality of Ukraine's
divisions but asserts that those Ukrainians who want to maintain strong links
with Russia are either stupid or manipulated. This view has nothing to do with
the well-being or democratic will of 50 million Ukrainians. It is strictly
geopolitical, in that it sees Moscow as a foe and its enemies (Chechen
Jihadists
included) as friends. Radek Sikorski of the
American
Enterprise Institute even hinted that Washington may have to take up
arms to face the threat from a reconstituted empire. Three days before the
election Georgie
Ann Geyer asserted that the Ukrainian vote "will decide whether
Vladimir Putin's Russia can again be a formalized, or informalized, empire," and
demanded action to prevent such outcome. Complaining that America is too
"obsessively sidetracked" by Iraq to pay attention to this momentous election,
Ms. Geyer stated the alleged options. The Ukrainians "have a clear choice.
They can vote for Viktor Yuschenko, the
reformist candidate who stands for joining the European Union, the World Trade
Organization, and NATO as soon as possible, for strengthening Ukrainian
nationalism, and for the interests of Western Ukrainian Christians and the
Ukrainian diaspora in the West. His people [are] mirroring the idea of the
‘Velvet Revolution' that freed the Czech Republic from its Soviet era. Or
they can vote for Viktor Yanukovych, the candidate of the Eastern Ukraine, where
many Ukrainians speak a language called Surzhik, a bastardized combination of
Ukrainian and Russian. Here, the huge Soviet-era enterprises like Donetz steel
still dominate the economic state, and Moscow still dominates the mind-set?
Putin's dreams of a renewed Russian empire cannot be fulfilled without the
Ukraine. It's the pivotal piece in that puzzle of nations, the linchpin between
East and West—and it could be the revolt of the borderlands against the
metropole, should Yuschenko win." This
theme was replicated a thousand-fold on both sides of the Atlantic: Yushchenko
good, Yanukovich bad. It is telling that later in the article Ms. Geyer referred
to "the progressive Ukrainians," implying that there are those who are on the
side of History in its forward march, and the rest. (Her reference to the
southern Russian dialect widely spoken in the southern and eastern half of
Ukraine as "a bastardized combination of Ukrainian and Russian" was scandalous,
on par with calling Sicilianu a
bastardized
combination of Italian and Arabic, or Yiddish a
bastardized variety of German.) Propaganda disguised as fact was rampant. Votes
in the heavily pro-Russian Donetsk and other eastern regions were
deemed "probably falsified" but we were not informed of equally
credible claims that vote-rigging was rampant in Yushchenko's western Ukrainian
strongholds, including turnouts in excess of 100 percent of registered voters,
total local media control, and multiple voting by persons in possession of
numerous IDs belonging to Ukrainians residing in western
Europe. The attempted
technique
was well rehearsed. Yushchenko has rejected Yanukovich's victory and claims
fraud, pointing to exit polls by his supporters as evidence. He even proclaimed
himself president, and tens of thousands of his followers have taken to the
streets of Kiev in support of his claim. Their campaign of civil disobedience
relies on expectation of support from Washington and the EU. The White House
declared that Ukrainian authorities should not certify results "until
investigations of organized fraud are resolved." Jan Peter Balkenende, the Dutch
Prime Minister, whose country holds the rotating presidency of the European
Union, called outgoing President Leonid Kuchma to express the EU's "serious
concerns." NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer summoned the Ukrainian
ambassador to express the alliance's "disappointment" with the way the election
was handled. The German Chancellor, Gerhard Schroder, declared that the election
showed massive fraud. Vaclav Havel, the former Czech president and leader of the
1989 "Velvet Revolution," urged Ukrainians to keep up their
protests. Strong Western bias in
Yushchenko's favor has been evident throughout the campaign. The monitoring of
election abuses has focused exclusively in areas favorable to Yanukovych but it
has ignored or even suppressed documented abuses in pro-Yuschchenko areas. A
seasoned Western analyst who visited western Ukraine reported that the news
media "is all under Yushenko's control, even state
TV": "During our three days in
Transcarpathia we never saw Mr. Yanukovich once on the TV! They showed Yushenko,
Kuchma voting but ...not him!! Completely out of order programme on Saturday
night (during the so-called election silence) with ‘experts'
talking about the likelihood of fraud interspersed with stars, rock
singers, beards etc. wearing orange ribbons and rooting for Yushenko. In fact,
Yushenko and the mob control Kiev and all points
West." Reports like this one are so
unpopular with those who control Western media and NGO purse strings that we
have to protect our source with anonymity. USAID's grant for election monitors
went only to activists known for their hostility to Yanukovych; they delivered
predictable results. It is ironic that some of those activists are also funded
by billionaire George Soros—President Bush's arch-enemy—whose
investment in Yushchenko's victory is said to be $75 million. "Two generations
ago we had the Comintern," says a Western analyst familiar with the situation.
"Now we have the
Demintern
and its related NGOs which have an increasing global
reach."
The "Community of Democracies" illustrates
the point. According to the State Department, "The
United States is a strong supporter of The Community of Democracies (CD), a
unique forum that brings together those nations committed to promoting and
strengthening democracy worldwide." It has a symbiotic relationship with a
number of NGOs through which the U.S. Government promotes "democracy" in foreign
countries—meaning political candidates favored by the U.S.
government. These NGOs (see this list) include the Open Society Institute that in a
domestic context are anything but supportive of the Bush administration. Some
are creatures of the National Endowment for Democracy (e.g.,
http://www.wmd.org)
while others had begun as projects of the Open Society Institute, e.g.,
http://www.demcoalition.org/html/home.html.
It also should be noted that CD is itself handing out U.S. government money to
these NGOs, and even had advertised
a current solicitation. Bogus
NGOs, such as the Committee of Ukrainian Voters, use Western funds to employ
presentable, educated English speakers. As John Laughland noted in
the
Spectator,
"Because they speak English, the political activists in such organisations can
easily nobble Anglophone Western reporters. Contrary allegations—such as
those of fraud committed by Yushchenko-supporting local authorities in western
Ukraine, carefully detailed by Russian election observers but available only in
Russian—go unreported. So too does evidence of crude intimidation made by
Yushchenko supporters against election
officials." All facts which contradict
this morality tale were suppressed, says Laughland. Thus a story had been widely
circulated that Yushchenko was poisoned during the electoral campaign, allegedly
because the government wanted to kill him, but no English language outlet has
carried the interview by the chief physician of the Vienna clinic which treated
Yushchenko for his mystery illness: "The clinic released a report declaring
there to be no evidence of poisoning, after which, said the chief physician, he
was subjected to such intimidation by Yushchenko's entourage—who wanted
him to change the report—that he was forced to seek police
protection. "You see the whole apparat,"
says our source, "a conclave of governments, friendly (and government funded)
NGOs, and contract opportunities. Something for everybody—and all for
‘democracy.' Y'gotta love
it!"The
reality is
that the apparat will fail on this occasion. A Serbian or Georgian scenario
cannot work in a country in which the key elements of power—the police,
the army, and the business community—have not decided to support the
opposition. The key to Milosevic's downfall was a secret deal between his
political enemies and Serbia's key security chiefs
in advance
of public protest. Even if the authorities in Kiev accede to Western demands and
investigate fraud or conduct a recount, the results are unlikely to change
because they reflect a political landscape too complex to be reduced to the NGO
black and white paradigm. It includes the unreported fact that Yushchenko's
supporters included notoriously anti-Semitic skinheads from the "Ukrainian
National Self-Defense" (Unso), a semi-paramilitary movement whose members enjoy
posing for the cameras carrying rifles and wearing fatigues and balaclava
helmets.The influence of UNA-UNSO among
Yushchenko's supporters is well
documented. In June 2004,"400
members of UNA paraded through Kiev dressed in Nazi-like uniforms and carrying
flags with SS-style inscriptions. UNA leader Eduard Kovalenko reportedly called
for an end to 'the dominance of Yids in key positions of the government.' The
UNA also came out strongly in support of Our Ukraine and
Yushchenko."These youths rely on a rich
tradition. Tens of thousands of western Ukrainians collaborated enthusiastically
with the Nazis, supplying volunteers for the "Nightingale" Police Battalion and
the Ukrainian Waffen SS Division "Galizien." Useless as a fighting force against
the Red Army, these volunteers were highly effective in terrorizing Jews, Poles,
and "unreliable" Ukrainians. Many were deemed reliable enough to serve as
auxiliaries in key extermination camps such as Sobibor and Treblinka. Today the
UNA-UNSO members use their grandfathers' insignia. Their former leader Andry
Shkil was elected to the Ukrainian parliament in a single ticket election in the
Lvov region with the support of Yushchenko's Our Ukraine. A Jewish organization
points out that at the time elections were held he had been in jail for a year,
accused of organizing mass anti-government riots. Having been
elected, however, "Shkil was granted immunity to criminal
prosecution." As John Laughland notes,
"Were nutters like this to be politically active in any country other than
Ukraine or the Baltic states, there would be instant outcry in the US and
British media; but in former Soviet republics, such bogus nationalism is
considered anti-Russian and therefore
democratic." About a half of all
Ukrainians who voted for Yanukovych did not do so solely on the grounds of his
pro-Russian outlook, however. As the
Financial Times
noted on
November 19, strong economic growth of 13
percent has helped his campaign of "peace and stability." This year's grain
harvest will reach 45m tones, the highest since Ukraine gained independence from
the Soviet Union in 1991. Increasing social spending, including payment of
pensions and state salaries, are attributed to the Prime Minister's policies. By
contrast Yushchenko's stronghold in western Ukraine is an economic wasteland.
Nikolas Gvosdev was a rare Western commentator to point
out that for many in central and eastern Ukraine increased links with
Russia translate into greater prosperity: trade turnover in goods and services
between the two countries is expected to reach $20 billion in 2004,
one-half
of Ukraine's current GNP. By contrast, its trade with the EU accounts for only a
fifth of the total. "Many Western observers lament Ukraine's continuing economic
and political ties to Russia," Gvosdev says, "but U.S. and European governments
have done little to provide more concrete economic incentives for change."
Yushchenko's campaign was not helped by a statement earlier this year by the
president of the European Commission Romano Prodi that Ukraine will "never" be a
member of the EU. Despite all the rhetoric supporting a "European" the scenario
of Ukraine's Euro-Atlantic integration was not seriously entertained in any
important Western capital. It was unrealistic to expect the Ukrainians to make a
plunge without any concrete promises of what they'd get in
return. Washington would be well advised
to accept the result with equanimity. As Doug Bandow of CATO Institute says, the
United States and Europe aren't going to "lose" Ukraine: it will continue to
expand its commercial and political ties with the West regardless
of outcome. On the other hand, excessive insistence on the preordained
outcome would unnecessarily alienate Russia at a time when her cooperation is
sorely needed in the war against
Jihad.
Posted: Fri - November 26, 2004 at 10:01 AM
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Published On: Nov 04, 2007 08:44 AM
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