Obama Ignores Russia’s Valid National Security Worries
By Eric Zuesse
18 June, 2016
Strategic-culture.org
Strategic-culture.org
When the democratically elected President of Ukraine was violently overthrown in February 2014 and replaced by a rabidly anti-Russian regime,
not only the residents in the areas of Ukraine that had voted heavily
for him (Crimea having voted 75% for him, and Donbass having voted 90%
for him) were terrified by what they viewed to be a bloodthirsty new
regime, but Russians were, too, because the dictators who were installed
made clear their hatred of Russians
and even of speakers of the Russian language — one of their first
legislative initiatives was to outlaw the Russian language, but the blatant hatred there made the proposal die in Ukraine’s parliament because
this new regime needed outside support, and outlawing a language spoken
by around half of the nation’s population would have sparked
international condemnation.
Shortly after Crimeans voted
overwhelmingly on 16 March 2014 to separate from Ukraine and to rejoin
Russia, of which Crimea had been a part until the Soviet dictator Nikita
Khrushchev arbitrarily transferred Crimea to Ukraine in 1954, the top
military commander at NATO, U.S. General Philip Breedlove, said that
because Russia had protected Crimeans from invasion by the newly
installed Ukrainian regime, which was threatening Crimeans if they were
to hold a referendum to separate from Ukraine, "now it is very clear that Russia is acting much more like an adversary than a partner”,
and he speculated sarcastically about the "next place where
Russian-speaking people may need to be incorporated” into Russia — as if
the people of Crimea didn’t have good reason to fear the new regime,
and as if speakers of the Russian language in all countries were in the
same situation and needed the same protection; and as if NATO itself
had any right to comment about this matter at all, since Ukraine isn’t
even a member-nation of NATO anyway. Ukraine is a nation that shares a
long border with Russia, but does this give NATO a right to ‘defend’
Ukraine from ‘Russian aggression’? Is NATO trying to provoke a Russian
invasion in order for NATO to have a pretext to launch a full-scale
nuclear war?
Why was the top military commander of
NATO commenting on this at all? He was representing the U.S. President,
not the people of Ukraine, and certainly not the people of Crimea. The
people of Crimea had good reason to be terrified by the new regime, but
Obama’s general who was running NATO’s military operations, didn’t care
about that at all.
And the threat that the United States
and its allies were posing to Russian-speaking populations in other
countries that border Russia was also being ignored by the U.S. and its
allies.
Today, the West’s continued advance is tearing apart the countries on Russia’s borders. It has already led to territorial splits in Moldova and Georgia, and Ukraine is now splintering before our very eyes. Divisive cultural boundaries cut through the hearts of these countries, such that their leaders can maintain unity only by accommodating the interests of both those citizens attracted to Europe and those wanting to maintain their traditional ties to Russia. The West’s lopsided support for pro-Western nationalists in the former Soviet republics has encouraged these states to oppress their Russian-speaking populations – a problem to which Russia could not remain indifferent. Even now, more than two decades after the collapse of the Soviet Union, more than six percent of the population in Estonia and more than 12 percent of the population in Latvia, most of them ethnic Russians, do not have the full rights and privileges of citizenship. They cannot vote in national elections, enroll in Russian schools, or, for the most part, access Russian media. The EU, despite its emphasis on human rights outside its borders, has turned a blind eye to this clear violation of basic rights within them.
Why does the U.S. government not care
about the rights of ethnic Russians in countries which border on
Russia, and which treat like dirt, people whose families had moved there
from Russia? Is the U.S. government trying to goad Russia into
protecting those people, too?
Why was General Breedlove (who hardly
breeds love for oppressed people of Russian descent) mocking Russian
President Vladimir Putin about the "next place where Russian-speaking
people may need to be incorporated”?
Is Obama trying to force Putin to
either lose face at home, or else to force Putin to ‘provoke’ a NATO
invasion, in order to provide NATO an ‘excuse’ to attack?
On 4 May 2016, Breedlove’s successor,
U.S. General Curtis M. Scaparrotti, took over from Breedlove, and he
condemned “an aggressive Russia … a resurgent Russia trying to project
itself as a world power.” If the U.S. government has a right to “project
itself as a world power,” then why doesn’t the Russian government
possess the same right — especially in order to defend itself? The
headline of that news report from the U.S. Department of ‘Defense’ was
"'Resurgent Russia' Poses Threat to NATO, New Commander Says”,
but precisely what ‘threat’ Russia poses to NATO wasn’t even suggested
there, other than the vague charge of a "resurgent Russia striving to
project itself as a world power.”
Is General Scaparrotti trying to goad Putin to either lose face at home, or else ‘provoke’ a NATO invasion?
But now NATO is staging Operation Atlantic Resolve, their biggest-ever military maneuvers on Russia’s borders. This includes nuclear weapons.
When the Soviet dictator Nikita
Khrushchev tried to plant Soviet missiles 90 miles from the U.S. in
1962, the American President, John Fitzgerald Kennedy was ready to go to
a nuclear attack against the Soviet dictatorship; this was the Cuban
Missile Crisis. Will Russian President Vladimir Putin soon be ready to
go to a nuclear attack against the new American dictatorship, which is
moving much farther against Russia’s democracy now, than the Soviet
dictatorship ever did against America’s democracy then?
Does Obama think he’s playing some
kind of game here? Khrushchev didn’t think it was any game; nor did
Kennedy. Khrushchev backed down, in a deal in which the previous U.S.
President’s, Dwight Eisenhower’s, initiation of installation of U.S. missiles in Turkey against the Soviet Union
were also removed. Kennedy negotiated an elimination of both
Eisenhower’s and Khrushchev’s provocative and dangerous acts, in a
nuclear-armed world. Putin has been careful not to do anything that
threatens the U.S., except to protect Russia from what by now is clearly
U.S. aggression. But the fact that a democratic Russia has not violated
a now dictatorial U.S., constitutes no excuse for U.S. Presidents continuing the aggression that U.S. President George Herbert Walker Bush started against democratic Russia.
Meanwhile, we have blatant NATO propaganda spread on German public television, asking “Is NATO expansion to blame for Crimean crisis?”
and answering: not only no, but "just change NATO's name” and we all
should ignore Russia’s worries about the hostile U.S. military alliance
that has spread right up to Russia’s borders and that’s intent upon
posting nuclear missiles minutes from Moscow.
Do Western leaders really think that
Western publics are stupid and callous enough to believe that? Is the
leaders’ presumption, about this, correct? Is this the reason why
nuclear war is getting perilously close while Western publics are
worried about it little if at all?
Investigative historian Eric Zuesse is the author, most recently, of They’re Not Even Close: The Democratic vs. Republican Economic Records, 1910-2010, and of CHRIST’S VENTRILOQUISTS: The Event that Created Christianity.
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