Cancelled Conferences - in Tehran & Budapest; Dugin denied a
visa
Dugin explains that his Eurasia philosophy is embraced by many
Slavs,
Turks and other peoples of the Russian Republic. In my view, it's
civilizational rather than race-based. American "patriots" should learn
from him.
Newsletter published on 8 October 2014
(1) "Anti-Semitic" conference in Tehran on Zionism & US
imperialism
(2) Another conference that nearly got cancelled - in
Hungary
(3) Another conference that nearly got cancelled - Report from
Budapest
(4) Alexander Dugin's speech intended for Budapest conference
(5)
Alexander Dugin: Orthodox Eurasianism
(6) Alexander Dugin: Letter to the
American People on Ukraine
(7) Gennady Zyuganov: The Crisis in Ukraine and
its Deep Roots
(1) "Anti-Semitic" conference in Tehran on Zionism &
US imperialism
From: "Israel Shamir adam@israelshamir.net [shamireaders]"
<shamireaders@yahoogroups.com>
Date:
Wed, 08 Oct 2014 03:31:24 +0200
Subject: [shamireaders] Eric Walberg's report
from Tehran conference of
free thinkers [8 Attachments]
New Horizon
Conference: Meeting of minds in Tehran
Written by Eric
Walberg
Tuesday, 07 October 2014 10:08
http://www.crescent-online.net/2014/10/meeting-of-minds-in-tehran-eric-walberg-4674-articles.html
DELEGATES
O'KEEFE, ESCOBAR, OLIVIER
The 2nd conference "New Horizon: the
International Conference of
Independent Thinkers" was held in Tehran,
September 29--October 1 2014,
including over 30 journalists, writers and
academics from around the
world presenting papers and arguing issues of
world geopolitics, with a
focus on the Middle East. I represented Canada,
along with University of
Lethbridge Globalization Studies Professor Anthony
Hall, author of/Earth
into Property: Colonization, Decolonization, and
Capitalism/(2010). It
was greeted in western media by hysterical
denunciations, in the first
place by the American Jewish Committee which
accused it of "promoting
hatred of Jews and Israel" and the Anti-Defamation
League which accused
it of "promoting anti-Semitic propaganda".
The
conference almost didn't take place at all, having been officially
cancelled, supposedly as a gesture to the West, after the new Iranian
President Hassan Rouhani was elected last year. But after a flood of
criticism at Iranian websites sympathetic to the organizers, the Iranian
Foreign Ministry reversed itself. Nader Talebzadeh, the principal
organizer, had had to lobby hard to reinstate the conference, calling
the cancellation of the conference "a major mistake on the part of our
government". "Have our leaders given in so much to the world that they
are even afraid of a conference that might hurt Mr Obama's feelings?"
asked one blogger sarcastically.
The 1st New Horizon Conference in
September 2012 was denounced in the
West when it was addressed by the
previous president Mahmoud
Ahmedinejad, probably best remembered in the West
for his 2005 soundbyte
that Israel should be "wiped off the map", referring
to Ayatollah
Khomeini's prediction that "the regime occupying Jerusalem must
vanish
from the page of time." The translation of the Persian text was later
corrected but this was ignored in the West, where Ahmedinejad was
further accused of "holocaust denial" for suggesting the figure of six
million as the number of Jews who died in the holocaust was exaggerated,
and mocked for suggesting that 9/11 was a conspiracy.
Indeed, most
Iranians see 9/11 as involving some degree of conspiracy by
the US and/or
Israel, but then so do, for instance, 55% of Egyptians.
So, not
surprisingly, prominent at the New Horizon Conference this year
was the
world's leading 9/11 conspiracy theorist, France's Theirry
Meyssan, who in
2002 published what is still considered the classic work
on the topic,/9/11:
The Big Lie (L'Effroyable imposture),/translated
into 28 languages, arguing
that the//attacks were organized by a faction
of "the US military industrial
complex in order to impose a military
regime." Meyssan also argues that the
attack against the Pentagon was
not carried out by a commercial airliner but
by a missile. Also present
was American filmmaker Art Olivier, who produced
the feature film
"Operation Terror" (2012), whose scenario followed
Meyssan's.
In a YouGov poll last year, 60% of Americans rejected the
official
explanation as published in the/9/11 Commission Report/(2004), so
Meyssan's call for a UN investigation of 9/11 and the recent petition
signed by 100,000 New Yorkers for an investigation of the collapse of
World Trade Center building 7 are surely legitimate, though they have
been blocked by politicians as "absolutely ridiculous" and "wild
fantasies".
Iran's current President Rouhani was not associated
directly with this
year's conference, instead embroiled in a controversy
with UK Prime
Minister David Cameron, who both extended his hand in
friendship to
Rouhani at the UN General Assembly in a "historic meeting",
and then
slapped him in the face from the UN General Assembly podium,
attacking
Iran for its "support for terrorist organizations, its nuclear
program,
its treatment of its people", called it "part of the problem in the
Middle East".
"On the contrary," said a peeved Rouhani in his address
to the UN,
blaming the West and Saudi Arabia for sowing the seeds of
extremism in
the Middle East with "strategic blunders" that have given rise
to the
Islamic State and other violent jihadist groups. He also criticized
the
West's sanctions on Iran's nuclear program and reiterated his
government's desire to resolve the dispute, stating that no cooperation
with the West against ISIS is possible until the sanctions are lifted.
He called Cameron's comments at the UN "wrong and
unacceptable."
Appropriately, the New Horizon Conference opened with the
book launch of
the Persian edition of US journalist Gareth
Porter's/Manufactured
Crisis: The Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear
Scare/(2014). Porter told
me, "Through painstaking checking with experts and
an IAEA official, I
discovered that the documents submitted to the IAEA,
which supposed
showed Iranian plans to put nuclear warheads on their
missiles, were
fabricated by the terrorist group People's Mojahedin of Iran
and were
passed on the IAEA by Mossad. They were contradictory---clearly
doctored
blueprints for an obsolete missile system." Porter was awarded the
UK
Gellhorn Prize for investigative journalism in 2012 for exposing
official lies concerning US policies in Afghanistan and Pakistan. With
this latest expose, Porter did for the Iranian nuclear dossier what he
and others did after 2003 in exposing the lies that prompted the US
invasion of Iraq.
The sessions were varied. "The Gaza War and the BDS
Movement Strategies"
was addressed by Code Pink activist Medea Benjamin, who
has been
arrested dozens of time for her plucky protests at Congressional
hearings against the war in Iraq, and who famously interrupted a speech
by President Barack Obama in May 2013 protesting his continued use of
drones against civilians. (She is barred from entering Canada.) Benjamin
suggested a new project to highlight illegal Israeli settlements:
activists hope to target one of the largest US-based real estate firms,
RE/MAX, which "operates in over 90 countries, including Israel, where it
sells homes complete with swimming pools in the West Bank to Israeli
settlers in defiance of international law." Every Sunday tens of
thousands of "open houses" are held by RE/MAX around the world. Benjamin
hopes activists will picket these open houses to embarrass RE/MAX into
ceasing their West Bank activities.
A session on Islam and the West,
"Postsecularism and its Discontents",
emphasized the importance of ethics in
Islamic civilization which makes
subservience to market diktat unacceptable,
and is a major stumbling
block to understanding between the West and the
Muslim world. "There is
no teleology in western society, no guiding
morality, only an obsession
with materialism, with logos," argued organizer
Arash Darya-Bandari. "We
believe it is necessary to control the negative
tendencies in culture,
such as pornography, alcohol, drugs, prostitution, to
strive towards a
more moral and justice society."
"The 'Islamic'
State Meme, its Precursors, and the US-Israel-Saudi
Triangle" heard
frontline reports from Meyssan and others about the
intentional destruction
of the Iraqi and Syrian states by the invasion
of Iraq and ongoing western
and Israeli support for insurgents in Syria,
directly resulting in ISIS's
phenomenal success. "The West has abetted
Sunni-Shia differences in the
process to keep Muslims divided and allow
continued western penetration and
control of the growing chaos there,"
charged Meyssan. Rouhani's comment at
the UN---"Certain intelligence
agencies [who] have put blades in the hands
of madmen, who now spare no
one,"---is hard to argue with.
In the
session "The Israeli Lobby in England", Stephen Sizer, Anglican
vicar and
author of/Christian Zionism---Road Map to Armageddon?/(2004),
explained that
the vast majority of Zionists are not Jewish, but
Christian. This prompted
him in 2006 to draft what became known as the
Jerusalem Declaration on
Christian Zionism signed by four of the Heads
of Churches declaring
Christian Zionism a heretical belief, both immoral
and a contradiction of
faith. The rector of the University of Middlesex
was pressured to rescind
Sizer's PhD but the examination committee
wouldn't budge. Nor has Sizer been
cowed by constant harassment,
including a break-in and the theft of his
computer. At the same time, on
his visits to Tehran, Sizer lobbies on behalf
of Iranian religious
minorities and always brings Persian-language New
Testaments as "gifts".
"My intent is to show the Iranians that genuine
Christians are not a
threat to anyone, but bring the message of peace and
love."
Contrary to the shrill cries in the western media that the
conference
was anti-Semitic, it was unique in my experience in addressing
Zionism
and US imperialism forthrightly and intelligently, without a hint of
racism. The issue of anti-Semitism was addressed and dismissed, as
"There is no issue with Jewish people or the Jewish religion," explained
Darya-Bandari, "but rather with Zionism, that secular distortion of
Judaism that itself is racist, and has been used as a pretext to
dispossess and kill Palestinians."
The American Defense League
loudly attacked the conference for focusing
on Zionist control of western
media and the outsize influence of the
Zionist Lobby in the US and around
the world. So what's wrong with that?
There is more than enough documented
proof of this, as I discover when I
researched/Postmodern Imperialism/. The
ADL labelled several of the
delegates as anti-Semitic, including ex-US
Marine Ken O'Keefe, who has
led several relief convoys to Gaza, has appeared
several times on BBC's
Hardtalk in support of Gaza, and famously renounced
his US citizenship
in view of US crimes around the world. It should be
remembered that the
ADL was successfully sued in the 1990s for false
accusations of
anti-Semitism.
The conference issued a resolution
condemning ISIS, Zionism, US
unconditional support of Israel, Islamophobia,
and calling for
activismlocally to boycott Israeli goods and to promote
understanding
between the West and the Muslim world, and to fight
sectarianism. "This
was a great opportunity to meet anti-imperialist
activists from around
the world, to bring Russians, Poles, western
Europeans, North Americans
together with Iranians and other Muslims, both
Sunni and Shia, in a
forum without sectarianism, truly supporting peace and
understanding,"
said delegate Mateusz Piskorski, director of the European
Centre of
Geopolitical Analysis in Warsaw and former MP in the Polish
Sejm.
(2) Another conference that nearly got cancelled - in
Hungary
Date: Mon, 6 Oct 2014 00:33:11 -0700
From: Archer Frey <archerc@sbcglobal.net>
Subject:
Fw: Tom Sunic Reporting briefly : Concerning Budapest Congress
Hi
all,
By now I am sure you have heard about the disruption of the
conference
in Budapest. Tom Sunic it appears is now back in Croatia. We
await his
report
For those interested in more information go to Dr.
Kevin MacDonald's site
The Silencing of the NPI in Budapest, Kevin
MacDonald on October 4, 2014
http://www.theoccidentalobserver.net/2014/10/the-silencing-of-the-npi-in-budapest/
and
The
Silencing of the NPI in Budapest: Update, Kevin MacDonald on October
5,
2014
http://www.theoccidentalobserver.net/2014/10/the-silencing-of-the-npi-in-budapest-updated/
Archer
-----
Forwarded Message -----
From: Stan Hess <eamerica123@roadrunner.com>
Sent:
Sunday, October 5, 2014 9:39 PM
Subject: Tom Sunic Reporting briefly :
Concerning Budapest Congress
All,
I’ve just made it safely back to
Croatia in my rented car -- across
Slovenia from Hungary.Long trip. I
wanted to avoid questioning at the
much closer Hung-Cro border crossing --
as a safe measure and just in
case.
I must tell you I had been worried
sick prior to my departure for
Hungary on Oct 3, and especially after the
arrest of Richard NPI on Oct
3. And even this morning when driving back
from Budapest to Croatia. The
whole atmosphere reminded me of the communist
Yugoslav times, or worse,
of the Bella Kuhn recap softer version.
But
it was worth a shot. I am sure it will send a clear signal to all
white US
-European would- be nationalists that fighting solely behind
the computer
keyboards is another form of self-delusion. We have to be
physically
present.
I am sure you heard comments about the good dinner talks (70 guests
)(
by T Sunic, Jared Taylor) from different European sources. Also our
interviews to the BBC and mine in German with Die Welt.
Richard can
henceforth serve as a role model for similar conference set
ups in the EU
and the USA.
I guess the Budapest event, however curtailed, was a historic
meeting.
In my capacity as US citizen and former professor and former
diplomat I
will send a short note to the US Ambassador in Hungary and the
Hungarian
ambassador in Zagreb, complaining about the repression of free
speech.
I will consult about the wording with friends, prof. Kevin McDonald
and
W. Johnson.esq.
I am trying now to put my thoughts
together.
Regards
Tom
keep in touch
(3) Another
conference that nearly got cancelled - Report from Budapest
Date: Mon, 6
Oct 2014 12:22:51 -0700
From: Archer Frey <archerc@sbcglobal.net>
Subject:
Jared Taylor, American Renaissance, Report from Budapest
Report from
Budapest
Jared Taylor, American Renaissance, October 5, 2014
http://www.amren.com/news/2014/10/report-from-budapest/
A
full report on the "forbidden" NPI conference.
It was a bold idea from
the beginning. The National Policy Institute
(NPI), an American
organization, was to hold a conference in Budapest on
“The Future of
Europe.” In addition to well-known identitarians such as
Philippe Vardon of
France, Markus Willinger of Germany, and myself, the
controversial Russian
academic Alexander Dugin, was to take part.
Hungary’s Jobbik party would
would provide essential support on the
ground, and one of its elected
representatives was to address the meeting.
However, about two weeks
before the conference, Prime Minister Victor
Orban came under pressure from
the Hungarian Socialist Party and
condemned the conference. His statement
mentioned Prof. Dugin by name,
and characterized NPI as a “xenophobic and
exclusionary” organization.
Those of us scheduled to take part began to
worry that pressure would
build on the Larus Event Center to cancel its
contract to host the
conference.
Things got worse. A little more than
a week before the conference, the
Interior Ministry issued a statement
forbidding the meeting, and warning
that all speakers would be stopped at
the border or deported if found
within Hungary. Again, Prof. Dugin was cited
as a particularly offensive
speaker, but others were cited as “racists” who
might violate the
Hungarian fundamental law that forbids “violating the
human dignity of
others.”
I arrived on September 29, the Monday
before the weekend of the
conference, and had no trouble with border
control. Others were not so
lucky. William Regnery, the NPI board chairman,
was scheduled to fly in
for a Tuesday meeting with the general manager of
the Novotel City
Center hotel, where a number of conference events were
planned. Mr.
Regnery had asked me to attend the meeting with him, but when I
got to
the hotel, I was dismayed to learn that Mr. Regnery had not arrived.
The
hotel manager confirmed that the Larus Center had canceled its contract.
He also said that many people attending the conference were booked at
the hotel and that since the meeting was now forbidden, he had to make a
decision about whether to hold the rooms.
Later that day I later
learned that Mr. Regnery had been stopped at the
Hungarian border by the
police, put in a detention cell overnight, and
deported to London. That
same day, the hotel manager unilaterally
canceled all the room reservations
and planned events.
Likewise on Tuesday, I was shocked to learn that
Jobbik support had
completely melted away, and that no one was looking for
an alternate
venue. I knew that Jobbik representative Marton Gyongyosi, who
had been
scheduled to speak, had withdrawn, accusing the organizers of
“racism,”
but I assumed we still had some local Hungarian support. I was
wrong. We
had no one. Mr. Regnery telephoned from London and asked me to
find a
suitable venue. We were also in contact with Richard Spencer, the
director of NPI, who asked me to find a private room in a restaurant for
a dinner–for an estimated 70 people.
The forbidden conference was now
big news. The press was full of stories
about Russian extremists and
American “racists” about to converge in
Budapest. I was afraid it would
arouse suspicions if an American phoned
up restaurants trying to book a
last-minute dinner for 70. I decided to
wait until the next day, when I knew
a Hungarian-American would be
arriving, who could make calls in
Hungarian.
We finally got to work on Wednesday, and found a charming,
traditional
restaurant that was willing to serve as many as 100 people in a
private
room. We took a taxi to the restaurant, worked up a menu, and made a
down payment. We had a venue!–so long as we could keep it secret. We
scouted the neighborhood and established a redirection point nearby so
that we could tell people to meet there and be taken to the restaurant
rather than reveal its name and address in advance. Mr. Spencer was thus
able to send e-mail messages to everyone registered for the conference,
telling them that the event was still on, and that they were to meet
Saturday evening at the redirection point.
Mr. Spencer was to arrive
the next day, and we were all worried he would
get the same treatment as Mr.
Regnery, but he slipped across the
Austrian-Hungarian border by train
without attracting attention. He gave
a number of interviews to the press,
and he and I met Thursday evening
to toast to the success of the
conference.
Disaster struck the next day. Mr. Spencer had sent a message
to a number
of supporters inviting them to meet him informally at the Clock
Café in
Budapest that evening. Late that night, an estimated 40 police
officers
descended on the café and locked it down for two hours, while they
asked
for identification papers and grilled people.
Some 20 people
who did not have papers were taken outside for
interrogation. Mr. Spencer,
who did not have his passport with him, was
arrested and asked police to let
everyone else go. He was detained along
with French-American journalist
James Willy, whom the authorities appear
to have thought had some role in
organizing the conference. We have
since heard from Mr. Spencer that he is
safe and unhurt, but is likely
to be in detention until Monday, when he will
be deported. Fortunately,
I was not at that gathering; otherwise, I suspect
I would be sharing a
cell with Mr. Spencer.
The arrest was a terrible
blow. We don’t know how the police knew to go
to the Clock Café, so we
didn’t know how much our security was breached.
I felt sure the police did
not know about the restaurant, but did they
know about the redirection
point? This was a forbidden meeting. Would
they arrest everyone who showed
up?
Mr. Regnery had planned to come back to Hungary at the last minute
for
the dinner but after Mr. Spencer’s arrest, he decided that would be
foolish. On Saturday morning we consulted by phone and had to make some
hard decisions. Cancel for fear the police would break up the meeting?
Tell only trusted people the name of the restaurant and tell everyone
else the dinner was off?
I met with a trusted associate of Richard
Spencer. We looked over the
list of 65 or so people who said they planned to
come to the redirection
point and recognized only about 20 names. It didn’t
make sense to have a
small dinner for people we already knew. We sent them a
message with the
name and address of the restaurant, but told everyone else
to go to the
redirection point. I went directly to the restaurant, and
another man
went to the redirection point early, to keep an eye out for the
police.
If there were no police, he was to bring people to the restaurant.
How
much did the police know? I packed a change of clothes and a toothbrush
in my briefcase in case I had to spend a night in a cell.
As it
happened, there were no police at the redirection point, and
people were
skillfully in groups to the restaurant. Before long, we had
76 people in
all–more than half the original number of
registrants–including guests from
Sweden, Germany, Austria, Holland,
Belgium, Denmark, Switzerland, Australia,
Slovakia, Britain, Ireland,
Croatia, the United States, Spain, Canada,
Russia, and even Mexico and
Japan. To my disappointment there was only one
Hungarian. He explained
that the conference had been virtually unknown in
Hungary until the
scandal broke, and that a few others who had registered
dropped out when
the police prohibited the meeting.
We admitted three
journalists who had been cleared in advance by Mr.
Spencer, but kept out
half a dozen more who showed up but had not been
cleared. I stepped outside
and answered their questions for 20 minutes,
but decided not to let them
cover the event.
(4) Alexander Dugin's speech intended for Budapest
conference
https://www.stormfront.org/forum/t1067408/
Alexander
Dugin released the speech he intended to deliver at the NPI's
European
Congress conference.
Comment (Peter M.):
The speech is a Youtube at
the above link. It was a bit too
existentialist for me;
I watched about
half of it. It was not at all racist - why was this man
denied a visa by the
Hubgarian government?
(5) Alexander Dugin: Orthodox Eurasianism
http://openrevolt.info/2014/09/01/alexander-dugin-orthodox-eurasianism/
Posted
on September 1, 2014 by AnonAF
Translated for Open Revolt by
Venator
1 – The term “Orthodox Eurasianism” is increasingly used by the
junta in
Kiev to describe the worldview of the Republic of Novorossia. While
it
is clear that this element of language was designed in Washington, it is
however, in my view, quite correct.
2 – Almost all historical
Eurasists were Orthodox Russian patriots.
However,unlike Slavophiles and
Leontiev, they were skeptical about the
possibility of uniting all Slavs
because they felt that cultural,
religious and historical differences
between them were more important
than their ethno-linguistic proximity. At
the same time, they emphasized
that Russian civilization had integrated into
a unity of destiny a
number of non-Slavic peoples (Turks, Caucasians, people
of Siberia)
which were in geographical contact us.
3 – As early as
the 1990s, under our influence, Eurasianism integrated
into its corpus
geopolitics (thalassocracy against tellurocracy, Eurasia
against the
Atlantic world, Eurasians against Atlanticist) and
traditionalism (Tradition
against the modern and postmodern world).
4 – All of this is in fact the
ideological foundation of the Republic of
Novorossia. First, it is at the
forefront of the Orthodox religious
identity in a cultural sense (against
Ukrainian nationalism and the
Uniate Church and against liberal theory of
human rights and protection
of sexual minorities) . Secondly, there is an
opposition in the
geopolitical choice, Euromaïdan being purely Atlanticist.
Thirdly, the
Republic of Novorossia is following an anti-liberal and social
orientation, and in favor of traditional values. Fourthly, the symbolic
presence in the ranks of it’s army of Ossetians or Chechens volunteers,
corresponds to the unity of destiny cited above.
5 – More
interestingly, in the current acute civilizational
confrontation causing
tens of thousands of deaths, air strikes and
artillery fire against the
civilian population are ordered by the
Atlanticist junta in Kiev in order to
punish the Republic of Novorossia
seen as a bastion of Orthodoxy and Eurasia
opposing Atlanticism,
liberalism and Nazism, while in the minds of the
leaders of the Republic
of Novorossia and its citizens the same pattern
prevails: they are at
the front line of a battle between Russia and the
West, Orthodoxy and
the anti-religious modernity, Eurasia and the Atlantic
world.
Is there the same understanding of the situation In Russia? Yes,
for the
grassroot patriots, but not in the elite. A considerable part of it
is
liberal, Atlanticist and postmodernist. Its members do not think of
themselves as citizens of a great nation, but as the inhabitants of a
small country, and they are not a fifth column that would act in secret,
but a sixth, openly integrated into the global network of Atlanticism,
liberalism, capitalism and postmodernity. They no longer think as
members of a people but only as members of this network.
6 – In
Russia, Orthodox Eurasianism remains in a passive and implicit
state, it
does not become conscious because it does not face a direct
existential and
straightforward enemy. Russia is a huge country and the
daily lives of
Russians is filled with a myriad of technical details
that do not allow most
to have an overall view of the situation. Trying
to raise awareness, even
approximately, is as difficult as explaining a
koan. But when, as in the
Republic of Novorossia, citizens are faced
with a will to destroy their
culture, religion and ethnicity, it becomes
urgent to establish their own
identity. That is why othodoxe Eurasianism
has grown from an implicit to
explicit state. There, it is no longer a
matter of words, but of war, it is
a vital issue.
7 -Thus was born the dissonance between modern Russian
elite and the
Republic of Novorossia. There are more and more conflict
between them,
hence the delays and failures of concrete assistance from
Russia to the
Republic of Novorossia and the explanation of precedents like
the failed
action spin doctors (since fired ) in the Kremlin, who began to
marginalize those who were conservative, patriotic, Orthodox or
Eurasisans. Thus, the contradiction between the ideology of the elite of
the Russian world and that of the majority of the inhabitants of
Novorossia and Russia is becoming more and more apparent. The sixth
column has particularly revealed itself in it’s hysterical hostility
towards the volunteer army of the Republic of Novorossia, it can be
clearly defined ideologically (ie by it’s cultural and geopolitical
religious positions) as a rejection of Orthodox Eurasianism.
8 – Now,
it is inevitable that the Orthodox Eurasianism becomes the
ideological
paradigm of the Republic of Novorossia. Orthodoxy is the
spiritual core of
identity, Eurasianism it’s geopolitical, cultural and
civilizational marker.
Since Novorossia, this ideology will only grow
and widen the scope of it’s
struggle. Accordingly, facing the Republic
of Novorossia, Moscow will have
to deal with the Orthodox eurasians of
the Russian state. The volunteers of
the Russian Federation fighting in
the militia of the Republic of
Novorossia, by confronting their true
spiritual and geopolitical enemy,
discovered that identity and they go
back home with it. Now the words of the
priests who officiate in Russian
Orthodox churches, history and geopolitical
books will be perceived
differently: both as an existential issue that
involves life, death and
blood, and as a backbone. Thanks to those who will
be engaged in the
defense of the Republic of Novorossia and who experience
this particular
Eurasian Orthodox identity, the rest of the Russian
population will
learn more about its ideological identity. At the same time,
the
achievements of the Soviet Union will not be excluded but included in a
broader context rid of orthodox Marxism, materialism and atheism. That
is the Eurasian ideology: it mainly includes the legacy of orthodoxy of
the Byzantine monarchy and Russian nationalism, not to mention the
Russian interpretation of Soviet history as briefly expressed in
National Bolshevism. Orthodox Eurasianism incorporates the theories of
Ustrialov’s review “Change of direction” and integrates them in a
general paradigm opposing Atlanticism, the West, liberalism and
postmodernism. We can write that it is the “natural organic ideology” of
the great Russian nation. Fighting every day, even in Russia, for the
Republic of Novorossia, strengthens eurasian orthodox positions.
9 –
This analysis explains why the sixth column in Russia is so alarmed
and
tries to discredit all patriotic political initiatives in favor of
the
Republic of Novorossia. If they fail to eradicate the new stream of
Orthodox
Eurasianism, it will increase its influence in Russian society
and become a
serious threat to the entire liberal and Atlanticist
network of the Russian
elite. This explains everything, including my
recent exclusion from the
university. We are dealing with symbolic acts
that are of great importance:
hitting Orthodox Eurasians is beneficial
to the Liberal
Atlanticists.
10 – Where is the place of Putin in this ideological
pattern? He always
preferred to be above the fray of liberals and
conservatives,
Atlanticist and Eurasists, agents of the enemy and patriots.
This is his
mysterious tactics. Usually Putin himself speaks ambiguously, so
that
his words can be interpreted either as Eurasian or as Atlanticist.
Similarly, the support or opposition to Putin are not structured
ideologically : his supporters and opponents are indiscriminately
Eurasists, Orthodox, liberal and Atlanticist. However, the vast majority
of Orthodox Eurasians are in favor of Putin and the vast majority of
Atlanticist liberals are hostile to him. Putin is not fundamentally
opposed to Orthodox Eurasianism as, alas, he has no objection to liberal
Atlanticism. He does not reveal his own ideology. He makes evasive
statements that are immediately interpreted in one way or another. Putin
does not follow a straight line and it does not make sense to ask who he
supports, Atlanticists or Eurasians. He is above the fray. He is now
familiar in the role of the mysterious and unpredictable ruler, whose
speeches are like contradictory koans, but when the time comes to act,
he does what needs to be done and, in critical situations, it is always
the right thing in terms of Orthodox Eurasianism.
Until recently, in
the the elite, the Atlanticist liberals dominated the
ideological and
technological fields, and they had the media monopoly of
the interpretation
of the presidential speech. Now, that monopoly is in
danger because of the
events in Ukraine and the time has come for the
Orthodox Eurasian
interpretation.
(6) Alexander Dugin: Letter to the American People on
Ukraine
http://openrevolt.info/2014/03/08/alexander-dugin-letter-to-the-american-people-on-ukraine/
Letter
to the American People on Ukraine
by Alexander Dugin
Posted on
March 8, 2014 by AnonAF
In this difficult hour of serious trouble on our
Western borders, I
would like to address the American people in order to
help you
understand better the positions of our Russian patriots which are
shared
by the majority of our society.
Difference Between the two
Meanings of Being American (In the Russian View)
1. We distinguish
between two different things: the American people and
the American political
elite. We sincerely love the first and we
profoundly hate the
second.
2. The American people has its own traditions, habits, values,
ideals,
options and beliefs that are their own. These grant to everybody the
right to be different, to choose freely, to be what one wants to be and
can be or become. It is wonderful feature. It gives strength and pride,
self-esteem and assurance. We Russians admire that.
3. But the
American political elite, above all on an international
level, are and act
quite contrary to these values. They insist on
conformity and regard the
American way of life as something universal
and obligatory. They deny other
people the right to difference, they
impose on everybody the standards of so
called “democracy”,
“liberalism”, “human rights” and so on that have in many
cases nothing
to do with the set of values shared by the non-Western or
simply not
North-American society. It is an obvious contradiction with inner
ideals
and standards of America. Nationally the right to difference is
assured,
internationally it is denied. So we think that something is wrong
with
the American political elite and their double standards. Where habits
became the norms and contradictions are taken for logic. We cannot
understand it, nor can we accept it: it seems that the American
political elite is not American at all.
4. So here is the
contradiction: the American people are essentially
good, but the American
elite is essentially bad. What we feel regarding
the American elite should
not be applied to the American people and vise
versa.
5. Because of
this paradox it is not so easy for a Russian to express
correctly his
attitude towards the USA. We can say we love it, we can
say we hate it –
because both are true. But it is not easy to always
express this distinction
clearly. It creates many misunderstandings. But
if you want to know what
Russians really think about the USA you should
always keep in mind this
remark. It is easy to manipulate this semantic
duality and interpret
anti-Americanism of Russians in an improper sense.
But with these
clarifications in mind all that you hear from us will be
much better
understood.
A Short Survey of Russian History
1. The American
Nation was born with capitalism. It didn’t exist in the
Middle Ages. The
ancestors of Americans had not experienced an American
Middle Age, but a
European one. So that is a feature of America. Maybe
that’s the reason why
Americans sincerely think that Russian Nation was
born with communism, with
the Soviet Union. But that is a total
misconception. We are much older than
that. The Soviet period was just a
short epoch in our long history. We
existed before the Soviet Union and
we are existing after the Soviet Union.
So in order to understand
Russians (and Ukrainians as well) you should take
into consideration our
past.
2. Russians consider Ukraine as being
part of the Greater Russia. That
was historically so – not by the conquest,
but by the genesis of Russian
Statehood that started precisely in Kiev.
Around Kiev our people and our
State were constructed in the IX century. It
is our center, our first
beloved capital. Later in the XII-XIII centuries
different parts of
Kievian Russia were more or less independent with two
main rivals – the
Western principalities Galitsia and Wolyn and the Eastern
principality
of Vladimir (which later became Moscow) existing. All of these
areas
were populated by the same nation, Eastern Slavs, all of whom were
Orthodox Christian. But the princes of the West were more engaged in
European politics and they had more direct contact with Western
Christianity and relatively less with the Eastern branches. The title of
Great Princes was held in the East by royalty who were considered the
masters of the whole of Russia (not always de facto but de jure). In the
Mongol period the West as well as the East of our Russian principalities
were held under the Golden Horde. Eastern Russia was more or less solid
and its power grew around the new capital Moscow. After the fall of the
Tartars the rule of the Moscow principality affirmed itself as a
regional hegemon that was confirmed by the fall of Byzantine Empire.
Hence the doctrine of Moscow as the Third Rome.
The destiny of the
Western area was quite different. It was incorporated
first in a Lithuanian
State that later became Polish. The Orthodox
western Russians we put under
Catholic rule. The earlier main
principalities – Galitsia and Wolyn were
fragmented and have lost any
trace of independence. Some parts were under
Lithuania, others under
Austria and Hungary, a third belonged to Romania.
But all that concerns
us now is only the Right-Bank of modern Ukraine. The
Left Bank was
peopled by Cossacks – the nomad population common to the all
lands of
Novorossia, space that include Eastern and South-Eastern Ukraine
and
South Western Russia. Crimea was at that time under Ottoman
rule.
3. The growth of the Moscowit Empire integrated first all the
Cossack
lands (Novorossia) and little by little other territories peopled by
Western Russians liberating them from the Poles and Germans. The
Moscowit princes believed that they were restoring Old Russia, Kievan
Russia uniting all Orthodox Slavs – Eastern and Western in this unique
Kingdom.
4. During the XVIII – XIX century the unification of the
Western Russian
lands was accomplished and in many battles the Moscowit
Emperors had
finally taken Crimea from the Ottoman Turks.
5. In WWI
the Germans conquered the Western Russian lands. It didn’t
last long. After
that came the October Revolution and the Empire was
split into many parts
with new nations being born into existence. There
was an attempt to
construct a Ukrainian nation by different people –
Petlyura, Makhno and
Levitsky who tried to found three ephemeral States.
These States were
attacked by Whites and Reds and fought among
themselves. Finally the
Bolsheviks restored the lands of the Tsarist
Empire and proclaimed the
Soviet Union. The Soviet Union then
artificially created the Ukrainian
Republic consisting of Western Russia
(Galitsia, Wolyn) and Southern Russia
(Novorossia). Later in the 1960’s
to that the Republic of Crimea was added.
So in this Republic were
united three main ethnic groups: Western Russians,
the descendants of
the Galitsia / Wolyn principalities; the Cossacks / Great
Russian
population of Novorossia; the Crimea peopled by Great Russians and
the
rest of the pre-Russian Tartars. This Ukrainian Soviet Socialist
Republic was created by the Bolsheviks and was the origin of modern
Ukraine. This Ukraine declared independence in 1991 after the split of
the USSR. More than that the declaration of independence provoked this
split.
6. So modern Ukrainians have three lines of descent – Western
Russian,
Cossacks, Great Russian and a small Tartar minority in the
Crimea.
Ukrainian Identity and the two Geopolitical Options
1. The
contradiction of Ukraine consists in the multiplicity of
identities. Just
after the declaration of the new state – the modern
Ukraine in 1991 – the
question of pan-Ukrainian identity arose. Such a
State and nation never
existed in history. So the nation had to be
constructed. But the three main
identities were very different. Crimea
populated by Greater Russians along
with most parts of Novorossia which
were clearly attracted to the Russian
Federation. The Western Russians
claimed to be the core of a very specific
“Ukrainian nation” that they
imagined in order to serve their cause. The
Western Russians who partly
supported Hitler in WWII (Bandera, Shukhevich)
possessed and still
possess strong ethnic identity where the hatred toward
Great Russians
(as well as toward Poles to a lesser scale) plays a central
role in this
identity. This can be traced to the past rivalry of the two
Russian
feudal principalities projected onto imperial times and followed by
Stalin’s purges. These purges were directed against all ethnic groups,
but Western Russians read it as the revenge of the Great Russians on
them (Stalin was Georgian and the Bolsheviks were internationalists). So
the chosen identity of the newly created State of Ukraine was
exclusively Western Russian (purely Galitsia / Wolyn style) with no
place for a Novorossia and Great Russian identity.
2. This
particularity was expressed in two opposite geopolitical
options: Western or
Eastern, Europe or Russia. The Western lands of
Ukraine were in favor of
European integration, the Eastern and Crimea in
favor of strengthening
relations with Russia. The men from Galtsya were
dominant in the political
elite presenting a Ukraine with only one
identity – a Western one – and
denying any attempt of the South and East
to express their own vision. In
the Western Ukraine anti-sovietism was
deeply rooted as well as certain
complaisance with the ideas of Bandera
and Shukhevich who were considered as
national heroes of a new Ukraine.
The hatred toward Great Russians was
dominant and all anti-Russian
xenophobic rhetoric hailed.
3. In the
East and South soviet values were still solid and Great
Russian identity was
in turn the overwhelming feeling. But the East and
South were passive and
their political power was limited. Still the
population regularly expressed
their choice giving their votes to
pro-Russian or at least not so openly
Russo-phobic or pro-Western
politicians.
4. The challenge for
Ukrainian politicians therefore was how to keep
this contradictory society
together always balancing between these two
opposite parts. Each part
demanded completely irreconcilable choices.
The Westerners insisted on a
European direction, Easterners and
Southerners on a Russian one. All of the
Presidents of the new Ukraine
were unpopular, almost to the point of being
hated precisely because
they were absolutely unable to resolve this problem
that had no solution
at all. If you please one half of the population
immediately you are
hated by the other half. In this situation Westerners
were more active
and vigorous and partly succeeded in imposing their version
of a
pan-Ukrainian identity on all of the political space of the country –
with the considerable help of Western Europe and above all the
USA.
Events and Their Meaning
1. Now we have approached the
present crisis. The Orange revolution of
2004 was made by Westerners who
challenged the legal victory of Victor
Yanukovitch who was considered the
candidate of the East. A Third round
of elections (against all democratic
norms) was revolutionary imposed in
order to give the power to the Western
candidate (Yustchenko). Four
years later new elections gave the Western
President only 4% of the
votes and the Eastern candidate Yanukovitch was
elected. This time his
victory was so obvious that nobody could challenge
it.
2. Yanukovitch led the politics of balance. He was not really
pro-Russian but didn’t respond to all demands of the West either. He was
not very lucky and effective, trying to trick Putin and Obama,
disappointing both as well as Ukrainians of any side. He was an
opportunist without a real integral strategy, which was almost
impossible to develop in a society with a split personality and a split
identity. He reacted more than acted.
3. Next, when he made a
hesitating and reluctant step toward Russia,
abstaining from signing the
preparation Treaty of a distant entrance in
EU, the opposition (Westerns)
revolted. That was the reason Maidan was
founded. The revolt was initially
that of the West against the East and
South. So its russophobic and Nazi
nostalgic features are essential to
its existence.
4. The opposition
received huge support from the Western countries –
above all from the USA.
The role of America in all these events was
decisive and the will to
overthrow a pro-Russian President was shown by
American representatives to
be firm and strong. Now the fact that
snipers who killed most of victims in
the rioting were not those of
Yanukovitch is exposed. It is clear that they
were part of the USA’s
plan for revolution in the Ukraine and part of a plot
to escalate the
conflict.
5. The Maidan opposition waged revolution,
overthrew Yanukovitch who ran
from the country to Russia, and quite
illegally seized power in Kiev.
There was an illegal putsch that brought the
completely illegal junta to
power.
6. The first steps of the Westerns
after seizure of power were:
* declaration of wishing entrance into
NATO
* attacks on the use of the Russian language
* a plea to be
accepted in the EU
* a refusal for Russia to continue to have a Navy
base in Sebastopol
(Crimea)
* the appointment of corrupted tycoons
as governors in the East and
South Ukraine.
7. In response to these
things Putin took control over Crimea based on
on the decrees of the only
legal President of the Ukraine, Yankovitch.
He also received from the
Russian Parliament the right to deploy in
Ukraine the Russian army. Crimean
authorities were recognized by Moscow
as the representatives of their land
and Putin has plainly refused any
relations with the Kiev junta.
8.
So now we are here.
Short Prognosis
1. Where will this lead?
Logically Ukraine as it was during the 23 years
of its history has ceased to
exist. It is irreversible. Russia has
integrated Crimea and declared herself
the guarantor of the liberty of
the freedom of choice of the East and South
of Ukraine (Novorossia).
2. So in the near future there will be the
creation of two (at least)
independent political entities corresponding to
the two identities
mentioned earlier. The Western Ukraine with their
pro-NATO position and
at the same time a ultra-nationalist ideology and
Novorossia with a
pro-Russian (and pro-Eurasian) orientation (apparently
without any
ideology, just like Russia herself). The West of Ukraine will
protest
trying to keep hold over the East and South. It is impossible by
democratic means so the nationalists will try to use violence. After a
certain time the resistance of the East and South will grow and / or
Russia will intervene.
3. The USA and NATO countries will support by
all means the Westerns and
the Kiev junta. But in reality this strategy will
only worsen the
situation. The essence of the problem lays here: if Russia
intervenes in
the affairs of the State whose population (the majority)
regard this
intervention as illegitimate, the position of the USA and NATO
States
would be natural and well founded. But in this situation the
population
of the East and South of Ukraine welcomes Russia, waits for it,
pleads
for Russia to come. There is a kind of civil war in Ukraine now.
Russia
openly supports the East and South. The USA and NATO back the West.
The
Westerns are trying to get all Ukraine to affirm that not all the
population of the East and South is happy with Russia. This is quite
true. Also true is that not all of the population of the West is happy
with Right Sector, Bandera, Shukhevich and the rule of tycoons. So if
Russia would invade the Western parts of Ukraine or Kiev that could be
considered as a kind of illegitimate aggression. But the same aggression
is in present circumstances the position of the USA that strives to help
the Kiev junta take the control of the East and South. It is perceived
as an illegitimate act of aggression and it will provoke fierce
resistance.
Conclusion
1. Now here is what I would say to the
American people. The American
political elite has tried in this situation as
well as in many others to
make the Russians hate Americans. But it has
failed. We hate the
American political elite that brings death, terror, lies
and bloodshed
everywhere – in Serbia, in Afghanistan, in Iraq, in Libya, in
Syria –
and now in Ukraine. We hate the global oligarchy that has usurped
America and uses her as its tool. We hate the double standard of their
politics where they call “fascist” innocent citizens without any feature
resembling fascist ideology and in the same breath deny the open
Hitlerists and Bandera admirers the qualification of “Nazi” in the
Ukraine. All that the American political elite speaks or creates (with
small exceptions) is one big lie. And we hate that lie because the
victims of this lie are not only ourselves, but also you the American
people. You believe them, you vote for them. You have confidence in
them. But they deceive and betray you.
2. We have no thoughts of or
desire to hurt America. We are far from
you. America is for Americans as
President Monroe used to say. For
Americans interests and not for others.
Not for Russians. Yes, this is
quite reasonable. You want to be free. You
and all others deserve it.
But what the hell you are doing in the capital of
ancient Russia,
Victoria Nuland? Why do you intervene in our domestic
affairs? We follow
law and logic, lines of history and respect identities,
differences. It
is not an American affair. Is it?
3. I am sure that
the separation line between Americans and the American
political elite is
very deep. Any honest American calmly studying the
case will arrive to the
conclusion: “let them decide for themselves. We
are not similar to these
strange and wild Russians, but let them go
their own way. And we are going
to go our own way.” But the American
political elite has another agenda: to
provoke wars, to mix in regional
conflicts, to incite the hatred of
different ethnic groups. The American
political elites sacrifice American
people to causes that are far from
you, vague, uncertain and finally very
very bad.
4. The American people should not choose to be with Ukrainians
(Western
Russians – Galitsya,Wolyn) or with Russians (Great Russians). That
is
not the case. Be with America, with real America, with your values and
your people. Help yourselves and let us be what we are. But the American
political elite makes the decisions instead of You. It lies to you, it
dis-informs you. It shows faked pictures and falsely stages events with
completely imagined explanations and idiotic commentary. They lie about
us. And they lie about you. They give you a distorted image of yourself.
The American political elite has stolen, perverted and counterfeited the
American identity. And they make us hate you and they make you hate
us.
5. This is my idea and suggestion: let us hate the American political
elite together. Let us fight them for our identities – you for the
American, us for the Russian, but the enemy is in both cases the same –
the global oligarchy who rules the word using you and smashing us. Let
us revolt. Let us resist. Together. Russians and Americans. We are the
people. We are not their puppets.
Alexander Dugin (b. 1962) is
one of the best-known writers and political
commentators in post-Soviet
Russia. In addition to the many books he has
authored on political,
philosophical and spiritual topics, he currently
serves on the staff of
Moscow State University, and is the intellectual
leader of the Eurasia
Movement. For more than a decade, he has also been
an adviser to Vladimir
Putin and others in the Kremlin on geopolitical
matters.
His first
English language book, the Fourth Political Theory, is
available
here.
(7) Gennady Zyuganov: The Crisis in Ukraine and its Deep
Roots
http://openrevolt.info/2014/09/10/gennady-zyuganov-the-crisis-in-ukraine-and-its-deep-roots/
Posted
on September 10, 2014 by AnonAF
Gennady Zyuganov, Chairman of the Central
Committee of the Communist
Party of the Russian Federation
(CPRF)
Today, war is raging in the vast territories of the Lugansk and
Donetsk
people’s republics. For the first time since Ukraine’s liberation
from
the Nazis 70 years ago, civilian towns and villages are shelled and
bombed. The dead and wounded number thousands and the refugees tens of
thousands. Entire residential neighbourhoods, orphanages and schools,
outpatient clinics and hospitals, power generation and water supply
facilities have been destroyed. A number of cities, where hundreds of
thousands of people live, are being strangled by the blockade.
The
Banderaists at power, their patrons in the West and yes-men in the
Russian
liberal camp openly hush up the war crimes that are being
committed in
Novorossiya / New Russia. This is because the ongoing
destruction of towns
and villages is in direct violation of
international norms and customs of
war. The 1949 Geneva Conventions
specifically prohibit the use of artillery
and combat aircraft against
undefended populated areas. Meanwhile, the junta
that seized power in a
coup in Kiev is pursuing a most vile and cowardly
strategy for its death
squads are invariable losers in direct combat with
the Self-Defence
Forces of Novorossiya/New Russia.
Forces and private
armies of the oligarchs are deliberately destroying
the civilian population.
This is ethnic cleansing. The Russian-speaking
population is being squeezed
out of their historic homeland. That is a
grave crime against
humanity.
The historical roots of recent developments
Russia’s
attention to the Ukrainian developments and the anguish that we
feel in
connection with the war blazing there are natural. Ukraine is
not just a
part of the Slavic world. The Ukrainian land and its people
are integral
part of the Russian consciousness, of Russian history. The
thing at point is
the deepest spiritual and cultural bond between our
peoples, their
historical inalienability from each other. When attempts
are made to set us
at loggerheads for the sake of the interests of the
West, it is like cutting
us to the quick, causing a deep wound both to
Russian society and to all the
citizens of Ukraine, including those who
are befuddled by anti-Russian
propaganda. For it is only in alliance
with Russia that Ukraine can reach
the heights of prosperity which many
people in Ukraine have considered
possible only in alliance with Europe.
An alliance that has eternally
brought about trouble.
It has always been so. Both in the 12ththrough the
14th centuries when
the Chermnaya (Red) Rus’ nestled around Lvov was severed
from the
historic core of Russia and was torn to pieces by her western
neighbours
and in the16th and the 17th centuries, when the Polish gentry
sought to
wipe out by fire and sword from the Ukrainian soil the very spirit
of
freedom and Orthodox Christianity along with the memory of the great
all-Russia unity. It also happened in the 18th century, when a handful
of traitors gathered around Mazepa (to whom Peter the Great seriously
intended to award a two-stone “Medal of Judah” to wear on his neck as a
sort of reward for betrayal). At the beginning of the 20th century,
during the Civil War, the local samostiitsy (Ukrainian separatists)
relied on German bayonets. All this turned the Ukrainian land into a
scene of gory battles. The rescue came solely with Russia’s
help.
The current terrific developments have borne out V.I. Lenin’s
statement
that a free Ukraine was only possible if Great Russia’s and
Ukraine’s
proletarians joined in action and it was out of the question
without
such unity. It is appropriate to recall here that all of the major
high-tech industries in Ukraine, not only in the Donetsk and Lugansk
regions, but also in the Kharkov, Dnepropetrovsk, Zaporozhe, and other
regions, were built in the Soviet era at the expense of the Union
budget, of which 70% came from Russia, i.e. from Russian people.
So a
fraternal alliance with the Ukrainian people at the time of
terrible trials
is our common cause and our common duty.
It might seem that a civil war
broke out in Ukraine overnight. Six
months ago, the country was one of the
many states experiencing
difficult economic and social problems but
preserving its political
stability. The people’s discontent was
accumulating. However, there were
no signs of heavy shocks coming. It would,
however, be ill-advised to
assume that a social explosion occurred all of a
sudden, like a bolt
from the blue.
The Russian leadership,
admittedly, responded to this threat quite
adequately by bringing the Crimea
back into Russia in time for the 70th
anniversary of the liberation of the
peninsula from the Nazis and
preventing, in fact, an outbreak of a major
war.
To better understand the origins of the tragedy of Ukraine, it is
necessary to see the historical roots in their development, to
understand the mechanisms of the severe crisis originating in the
brotherly country. It is necessary to see the recent external symptoms
of a bloody fratricidal war surfacing in Ukraine, as well as the deeper
historical, economic, class, ethnic, cultural, religious and other
prerequisites of these developments. Only an integrated analysis will
enable correct identification of the driving forces in the crisis in
Ukraine, prediction of the further course of events and elaboration of
strategies and tactics for the resolution of this dire conflict.
For
us Communists, what is happening in the sister republic is not of a
mere
theoretical interest. We are not political scientists, who
impassively watch
any developments. We have an obligation to draw
lessons from the most severe
social confrontation into which the
neighbouring country has plunged. It is
therefore necessary to analyze
the events in Ukraine, bearing in mind that
similar events could also be
repeated in one form or another in
Russia.
Of course, our attention and sympathy focus primarily on
Novorossiya
that is emerging in the struggle. However, it is equally
important to
understand the sources and driving forces of the opposing side
– the
resurgent Neo-Nazism. For this purpose it is necessary to analyze the
historical origins and formation of the Bandera movement as a form of
Ukrainian ethnic nationalism in its most extreme forms. It is necessary
to understand on what ideological foundation the movement rested and in
what way nationalism coupled with Russophobia is being fuelled in
Ukraine today.
The origins of radical nationalism
It is
crucial to understand that Ukraine, with the exception of the
Soviet period,
never had its own statehood and no other periods in
history that were
identical for the entire Ukrainian people. Over the
centuries, when European
powers were emerging, Ukraine was never once an
independent state, nor a
unified whole entity in the structure of other
states. What is modern-day
Ukrainian territory was always divided
between different European powers. In
the middle of the 17th century, as
a result of a voluntary union with
Russia, its eastern half found itself
under Russia’s wing, wherein a history
of Malorossiya or Rus’ Minor
(Lesser Russia) began to take form, while the
western Ukrainian
territories were under the rule of Poland and then
Austro-Hungary.
Poland’s policy towards the Ukrainian population was
extremely cruel,
often sadistic. Western Ukrainians, as a part of the Polish
state
population, were second-class citizens. That was the key reason why a
radical Ukrainian nationalism began to emerge in western Ukraine; it was
in part similar to the ideas of racial exclusiveness, enshrined in the
“Third Reich.”
The then Bandera followers did not just enter into a
strategic coalition
with the German occupiers, but participated most
actively in their
punitive actions, including against the native Ukrainian
population.
They carried on the same practice in western Ukraine after the
war upon
going underground. Not only more than 25 thousand Soviet soldiers
and
security officers but also more than 30 thousand innocent Ukrainians
were killed in the battles with Bandera followers lasting until the
mid-1950s. Those clashes came at a high cost to the Banderovites, too:
they lost more than 60 thousand men dead over the years.
The
Bandera-style nationalism did not evolve into a national liberation
idea but
into a totalitarian sect of crazed fanatics who killed
primarily native
Ukrainians. Characteristics of an analogous
totalitarian sect are inherent
in West Ukrainian Uniate church, which is
formally in communion with Rome.
Sticking with it were the Bandera
followers who did not want to take into
account the fact that the vast
majority of Ukrainians embraced Eastern
Orthodox Christianity. The
ideology of the Uniates (Eastern Rite Roman
Catholics) has in fact very
little to do with Catholicism. It is rather an
extreme, sectarian form
of Protestantism mixed with Baptism. Not accidental
are the relations to
the sectarians of the key top figures in Kiev – Baptist
Turchinov and
Yatseniuk who is friends with scientologists.
Every
victory scored by extremist, low zoological-scale nationalists has
resulted
from a deep crisis of the government, whose hostility society
is
increasingly aware of and reacting radically to its ugly
manifestations. The
only way for the forces at power to keep afloat is
through an alliance with
the radical nationalist ideology, thanks to
which the former top heads are
reportedly retaining their posts, already
under new banners.
The new
“elite”, wholly emerging from the previous series, enjoys the
use of
Banderaite instruments and of Bandera followers as “cannon
fodder” in order
to once again fool the millions of people after
performing a clan castling
within the power circles. As a result, the
oligarchs have not only
maintained but also strengthened their
positions. They will now carry out
the same or even more brutal economic
policies under the Banderaite banners
with a harsh tutelage from the
West and in the same “alliance with the
devil” against Moscow, that will
bring no relief from Ukraine’s troubles and
problems but certainly their
aggravation.
An unbiased, scientific
approach guides one to a conclusion that both
the Western policy-makers and
the current Kiev rulers, who are seeking
to cut the age-old ties with
Russia, have shunned in every way. This
conclusion is that the people of
Central and Eastern Ukraine are, in
fact, connected with Russia in a much
stronger way than with West
Ukraine. Any attempts to steer Ukraine into a
pro-Western, anti-Russia
channel are directed not only against Russia, but
against most of the
Ukrainian people. They are inherently anti-Ukrainian,
anti-national
actions cloaked in nationalist demagogy.
Objectively,
everything is just so, even though not all the residents of
the central and
western regions of Ukraine are yet aware of it. History
of the Bandera
movement has already revealed the tragic paradox, which
is now being played
out again through the fault of the new Banderovites
who seized power. While
allegedly upholding the interests of the
Ukrainian people, these figures are
infringing on the interests of the
greater part of Ukrainians, the interests
which cannot be implemented
outside of close ties with Russia. It is what
Bandera and his associates
did not want to understand and what Ukraine’s
current “elite”, which is
under the auspices of Washington, does not want to
hear about.
The Bandera-style nationalism as an extreme manifestation of
Russophobia
The Ukrainian radical nationalists’ choice in favour of the
fight
against “Soviet occupation” was neither their fault, nor forced, nor a
temporary tactical move. It was natural and inevitable, and for
Ukrainian nationalists it still remains as such today. For them, the
only possible choice is in favor of an anti-Russia alliance with any,
even the worst enemy of Ukraine. Without such an unnatural union no
“independent” Ukraine is possible in isolation from Russia.
Of
course, in the past there occurred political and cultural imbalances
in the
actions of Russia’s central authorities in the Ukrainian
territories as
parts of the Russian Empire. But the original language
and cultural
closeness of our peoples, the similarity of their thinking,
traditions and
customs mitigated that problem. It is impossible to
describe that period of
history as occupation of Ukraine. Descriptions
of that sort are rooted in
ignorance and vile speculation. It is right
to speak about a centuries-long
common history of Russia, Eastern and
Central Ukraine and say that, as a
result of our union, a uniform
political nation was formed.
But
Bandera and his followers transferred their hatred of the former
oppressors
on to the Soviet regime after it began to assert itself in
West Ukraine.
They did not want to see that the principles of Soviet
government had
nothing to do with the colonial order imposed by Polish
pans/lords. They did
not want to see that within the structure of the
Soviet state East and
Central Ukraine were already receiving more de
facto independence than in
the Russian Empire and the advent of the
Soviet regime in the western part
of Ukraine was not a sort of new
colonization but liberation from
colonization.
But why do the ideologues of Russophobia manage, even
nowadays, to fool
a large part of society? The explanation lies in the fact
that many
Ukrainians repeatedly see radical nationalism as a panacea for
their
ills, an alternative to what oppressed and humiliated them in the
past.
But their troubles and humiliation are now associated with a new
reality. It is not tantamount to the violent Polish outrage of the past
centuries. Now it is the tyranny of the oligarchs and highhandedness of
gangster capitalists.
Arising upon the collapse of the Soviet Union
in 1991, a permanent
economic and moral crisis arose in Ukraine bringing
along with it cases
of deepening social injustice and inequality that became
a catalyst for
radical nationalist sentiments which splashed out first in
2004 and then
at the turn from 2013 to 2014. Without these factors, no
sentiments of
the kind would have found fertile soil in Ukraine, just as
they lacked
it during the heyday of the Soviet country, within whose
structure the
interests of the Ukrainians were being implemented to the
maximum
extent. Suffice it to say that for most of the second half of the
twentieth century, the Soviet Union was led by figures that were closely
linked with Ukraine: Nikita S. Khrushchev and Leonid I.
Brezhnev.
However, the Russophobes in the West, the anti-Soviet liberals
in Russia
and the new Ukrainian nationalism ideologists put forth a false
thesis
insisting that even though the Soviet government gave more freedom to
the Ukrainian people, it still was, in fact, an occupational force, as
Ukraine remained under the control of an empire – this time the Soviet
empire.
Consequently, the struggle of Bandera and his associates
against the
Soviet authorities was to them still the same struggle for
liberation.
Nowadays, in trying to finally break free from the Russian
influence,
the new Ukrainian nationalists allegedly follow the same
principles of
the struggle for independence and are driven by a desire to
consolidate
independence within the framework of a Ukraine that has achieved
statehood.
The fundamental falsity of this thesis is made clear by
history and
today’s developments in which history is largely repeated. The
fact is
that radical nationalists have never acted as an independent
national
political force. Liberation of Western Ukraine from Polish
oppression
was not an achievement of theirs, but that of the Soviet
government. The
struggle against it guided the Ukrainian nationalists
straight to a
direct alliance with the Nazi occupiers.
But as soon as
the idea of Ukrainian statehood was paired with an
orientation to the West
and estrangement from Russia, that sort of
statehood turned out to be a
fiction and the shaky unity begot unrest.
The reason for this is that
Ukraine has had little experience of
independent statehood. Nowadays, it is
simply unable to exist outside
the area of influence from more powerful
states.
Meanwhile, in an anti-Russia alliance with Ukraine’s outright
enemies,
who are capable of concealing their true hostile intentions only
for a
short while, the Ukrainian people have no chance of true independence.
“The National Movement” in Ukraine is a path leading to no liberation
but in the opposite direction. It is an anti-nation way.
This is felt
today by millions of Ukrainians, many of whom have risen up
in arms against
the new Bandera-style nationalism. Their struggle is a
genuine national
resistance movement because they said a resounding “no”
to the intent to
break the age-old ties with Russia, with the Russian
people. In response
they got aerial bombings and artillery shelling of
residential
neighbourhoods. The Banderovites acted similarly in the
1930-1950 period
against the Ukrainians who had become aware of the
destructive nature of
their “nationalism”. They who are moved by a truly
national idea and really
care for their people cannot do that with their
compatriots.
The
immediate causes of the coup in Ukraine
Thewatershed that split Ukraine’s
contemporary history came with
President Yanukovich’s decision last autumn
to give up associate
membership in the European Union and move in the
direction of the
Customs Union with Russia and other countries. The decision
was quite
justified from an economic point of view. The Russian negotiators
with
the Ukrainian side argued for many months but failed to convince their
partners in Kiev that the drive toward the West is fraught with a
complete breakdown of the Ukrainian economy that is still closely linked
with the Russian economy.
However, the ruling circles in Kiev kept
sticking to a purely
pro-Western ideological course. It was only at the last
moment, when the
final decision was to be determined, that the Ukrainian
leadership
recognized the economic realities and announced their intention
to join
the Customs Union. By that moment public opinion had, through the
efforts of numerous “social organizations” and the media outlets created
by the West and under its control, already been steered to a
pro-European direction. The people did not have reliable information
about the inevitable hardest consequences of a second-class membership
in the European Union. But the dream of “reunification with Europe” had
long been befuddling the brains of intellectuals and ordinary people who
passionately and fondly hoped that the associated membership in the E.U.
would automatically take the Ukrainians to the European level of
well-being.
The decision to join the Customs Union with Russia,
semi-despicable in
the eyes of “zapadenskoi”/West Ukrainian/intelligentsia,
was seen by
many in Ukraine as shattering their crystal dreams. Mass
irritation
spilled out on the streets of the capital, which had long fallen
under
the influence of vociferous activists from West
Ukraine.
However, the Maidan that flared up last November wilted
gradually. By
January of this year, two or three hundred fanatics and
homeless tramps
were still there in scattered groups, having found a way of
self
expression and a source of free mess of pottage in the centre of the
capital. Meanwhile, any reduction in the level of opposition heat was
clearly not in the plans of those who actually ran the developments in
Ukraine. Western politicians and agents of intelligence services began
to hurl sizable amounts of combustible material into the fading fire of
public discontent and create an incendiary mix for flares of radicalism,
skilfully directed against Russia.
But it would be wrong to see the
situation at a narrow angle as
resulting only from the machinations of
Western politicians and
intelligence agencies. Mr. Yanukovich and his team
are to take a
considerable part of the blame for the fire breaking out. Upon
rising to
power that “team”, or rather the family of the former president
began
aggressively to convert political power into money. Greed of the
“Donetskites”, as they were nicknamed by many people, had no limits. A
huge number of small and large businesses were squeezed for tributes.
Business take-overs became commonplace. So the popular discontent over
the steadily worsening economic situation merged with sharp resentment
on the part of a very active population segment – small and medium-sized
businesses – in connection with the “grabilovka” (plundering) by
Yanukovich’s friends and relatives.
Meanwhile, Mr. Yanukovich for
tactical purposes diligently portrayed
himself as a supporter of
rapprochement with Russia, although his real
stance was openly pro-Western.
In public opinion Yanukovich was
therefore, associated with Russia. Hence
the Maidan anti-Russian
overtones. But do we have the moral right to condemn
the Ukrainian
people for its majority lacking the awareness of the need to
revive a
fraternal union with Russia? We might have such a right, if the RF
were
setting an example of a welfare state, if it had eradicated oligarchy,
total corruption and the gangster capitalism principles. That’s when the
Ukrainian people would have stood up without hesitation under the same
banners with Russia – the banners that had led to salvation in the
past.
The explosive mix, which led to a social explosion in Ukraine,
included
several basic elements: the legitimate grievances of the bulk of
the
people due to the steady deterioration of their financial positions;
resentment of small and medium-sized businesses over the raids by
Yanukovich’s team; the desire of “zapadenskiye” (Western Ukrainian)
intellectuals to ride public opinion still harder, along with the
intrigues of pro-American politicians and secret services aiming to
enhance the split between Ukraine and Russia
Meanwhile, Russia’s
ruling group saw and still sees Ukraine primarily as
a territory in which a
gas pipeline is laid. Therefore, the policy of
the upper RF authorities
focused almost exclusively on ensuring a smooth
flow of gas to Europe.
Public sentiments in Ukraine were not only a mere
subject of interest and
influence for the Russian “elite”, but were
completely ignored as a factor
fully irrelevant against the background
of intrigues around the gas pipeline
at the “top” of the authorities of
the two countries, for which the peoples
of the fraternal republics
subsequently had to pay a heavy price.
The
coup and its aftermath
The attempts of the Ukrainian leadership to
restore basic order in the
streets of the capital, including through
negotiations, met with fierce
resistance from the well-trained fighters who
had been recruited in the
western regions. In mid-February, the American
technology of
pseudo-popular revolutions began to be used in Kiev,
including, the
seizure of power by street crowds with massive external
support, tested
during the coups in Yugoslavia, Georgia, Ukraine (2004), and
in Libya,
as well as during the “Arab Spring” events in a number of
countries in
the Middle East and North Africa.
Simultaneously, the
Ukrainian leadership became an object of outright
pressure from the West.
The European Union threatened the creation of a
“black list” of officials,
against whom a variety of sanctions would be
imposed. The Yanukovich clan
members were thinking primarily about their
own accounts in Western banks
and offshore funds. That made the
Ukrainian leadership particularly
vulnerable to the West’s blackmail.
The head of state’s faintness resulted
in a paralysis of the law
enforcement agencies and the betrayal of the
political elite, who failed
to fulfil their constitutional
obligations.
Meanwhile, representatives of the opposition, supposedly
fighting for
democracy against an authoritarian regime and for a bright
future for
Ukraine under the auspices of the European Union, demonstrated,
in fact,
habits of their Banderaite, fascist predecessors. “Peaceful”
protesters
seized government buildings and attacked police forces, pelting
them
with Molotov cocktails. President Yanukovich kept shying away from
decisive action and was handing power, step by step, to the neo-Nazi
elements. The process culminated in a coup d’état. Genuine battles with
the use of firearms began on the streets of Kiev February 18. In three
days the death toll had reached 100 casualties and more than 600 were
hospitalized. On February 23, Yanukovich fled from Kiev.
The heirs of
the Nazi henchman Bandera seized power and immediately
launched a campaign
of suppression against their political opponents and
the Russian-speaking
population. The intimidated deputies of the
Verkhovna Rada passed a decision
repealing the law allowing the use of
Russian as the second state language
in a number of regions of Ukraine.
Pogroms started against the premises of
the Communist Party of Ukraine,
and the Communist Party was banned in some
regions. Members of
Parliament from the Communist Party and the Party of
Regions were
physically abused along with the policemen who remained
faithful to the
oath.
The Banderovites started attacks on historical
memory with widespread
destruction of monuments to Lenin and Soviet soldiers
who fell during
the liberation of Ukraine from Nazi occupation. By toppling
monuments to
Lenin, the rioters were destroying not only the historical
heritage, but
also the symbols of Ukrainian statehood, because the Decree on
the
establishment of the Ukrainian Republic was signed by Lenin. That orgy
of destruction resulted in the rise of the resistance movement in the
south-east of the country and, ultimately, in the Civil War.
The
Class-related nature of the conflict in Ukraine
The inherent nature of
the events in Ukraine is difficult to understand
without an analysis of the
alignment of its class forces. It must first
of all be noted that as a
result of the 1990 – 2000 wild, destructive
privatization of the economy of
Ukraine in the interests of the
oligarchs and the newly-minted
deindustrialization in the interests of
Western competitors, the industrial
proletariat numbers declined
sharply. Accordingly, the level of its
organization was reduced. With
the destruction of collective and state farms
the rural proletariat was
virtually eradicated. This changed the balance of
class forces.
However, the pro-western top authorities of Ukraine failed
to completely
destroy the working class, especially in the most
industrialized
south-east regions. It is therefore no accident that the
Bandera-style
junta received the most powerful rebuff in those regions. The
industrial
proletarians of Novorossiya are well aware of the fact that the
cut of
historical ties with Russia, to which products of their enterprises
were
oriented, must inevitably lead to mass unemployment and poverty. Not
only the national feelings, but also the class consciousness of millions
of people in Novorossiya, though not expressed in relief, formed the
basis for resistance to oligarchic usurpation of power.
An important
feature of the popular revolutionary actions in south-east
Ukraine, and
earlier in Crimea, is that they were directed against the
neo-fascist
usurpers of power in Kiev, who were closely related to the
global
transnational capital, and against the “Donetsk” oligarchic clan,
which
established their political and economic dictatorship in these
regions.
Incidentally, the “early” independence Maidan (November –
December 2013)
was, in this sense, not so much anti-Russia as
anti-oligarchy in
character.
However, as the protest sentiments of the masses had not got
the class
character, they were used in the battle of the two clans of the
big-time
bourgeoisie. That clash was won by the group which had brought
together
the pro-Western, nationalist and extreme right-wing forces, who
benefited from the people’s discontent in the coup.
Usually the
big-time capital controls countries through their hired
servants – state
officials. In Russia in the 1990s, oligarchs initially
dominated the
bureaucrats. Then the top government officials took
precedence, but later
the higher bureaucracy and oligarchy merged.
In Ukraine, too, there was a
struggle between two related class groups –
the state bureaucracy and
oligarchy. And there, as in Russia, there
emerged a symbiosis of these two
class groups. But after the February
2014 revolution, the oligarchs effected
the subjugation of the
bureaucrats. Faced with tough resistance of the
people in Crimea,
Lugansk, Donetsk, Kharkov, Odessa, Dnepropetrovsk and
other cities, the
ruling elite in Kiev went straight to the introduction of
the big-time
capital dictatorship.
Oligarchs, previously hiding in
the shadow of hired politicians from
various “bat’kivshchinas”, “udars” and
“regions” were appointed
governors of several regions. Then the direct
roguish dictatorship of
the oligarchy not cloaked with any “democratic”
trinkets came to reign
supreme in Ukraine.
The billionaires
Poroshenko, Kolomoysky and their ilk did not only
immediately take over the
governing functions, but also created their
own private armies and secret
police forces engaged in kidnapping and
torturing people. Ukraine was
becoming an “in war as in war” banana
republic, ruled not by law but by
complete arbitrariness of a
politically temporary “president” relying on
“death squads”, as well as
on the political and military support from the
United States. The
peoples of Latin America shed their banana republic
labels as a result
of persistent struggle. Unfortunately, that kind of
“state governance”
came to reign in Ukraine.
The class character of
the new government in Ukraine was attested to, in
particular, by I.
Kolomoysky providing funds, according to the press, to
the pro-fascist,
anti-Semitic “Svoboda” party. That fact confirms the
global oligarchy’s
readiness, as it has happened many times in European
history, to rely on the
most diehard Nazis to suppress the people’s
desire for social
justice.
A very active role was played at Maidan by the petty
bourgeoisie,
particularly affected by the excesses of the Yanukovych clan
outrages
and the lumpen elements which appeared in Ukraine in large
quantities as
a result of impoverishment caused by the economic policies of
the
bourgeois regime.
Let us remember that, historically, the petty
bourgeoisie and the
“lumpen-proletariat” represent the most mobile part of
society. History
shows that, under certain circumstances, namely like those
that recently
developed in Ukraine, the petty bourgeoisie and the lumpen
elements can
become a key mass support of fascism. So it was in Germany in
the 30s of
the last century, and could happen in Ukraine at the beginning of
this
century. The lumpen elements recently formed the basis of a variety of
private armies of Bandera-style oligarchs.
The attack on the
Communists as a sign of revival of Nazism
The class-related content of
the present-day government is confirmed by
the fact that the Communist Party
of Ukraine was selected as the first
target for persecution. The Communists
were blamed for the participation
of CPU members in protest actions in the
south-eastern regions. It was
also alleged that the leadership of the
Communist Party was engaged in
discrediting Ukraine within the country’s
borders and abroad through the
Russian media outlets. On that basis, the
demand was put forward to ban
the Communist Party as allegedly posing a
national security threat. It
was particularly striking that the charges of
violating the Constitution
appeared from the mouths of those who had seized
power in a coup d’état.
By the same token, the government accusing the
Communist Party of
violation of the current legislation is, by all measures,
illegitimate.
There is no reason whatever to ban one of the oldest
political parties
in Ukraine. The programme of the Communist Party contains
no provisions
aimed at violating the sovereignty and territorial integrity
of the
country. The Communist Party is not involved in any attempts to seize
power. No one has provided data on financing it by foreign countries.
The CPU is a parliamentary party voted in by about three million voters.
Party representatives were part of the government. Its members are
involved in the work of international parliamentary associations. So
that attempts to represent the Communist Party as an extremist
organization are unlikely to be understood by the world community.
In
fact, the purpose of the efforts to ban the Communist Party is to
ensure the
suppression of dissent in Ukraine, for the CPU is the only
political force
which openly declared its opposition to the rigid policy
drive of the
current ruling group. The preparations for ousting the
Communist Party is
nothing else but an attempt to deprive Ukrainian
citizens of their
constitutional right to enjoy freedom of speech,
demonstrations and
meetings. Behind these moves is the intention to
silence any political and
social forces that do not agree with the
political course of the ruling
group. It dramatically complicates the
possibility of an all-Ukraine
dialogue, which is the only way to pull
out of the crisis and restore peace
and harmony.
The ban on one of the oldest and most influential political
organizations in Ukraine can only mark a step towards the strengthening
of totalitarianism. Any ban on a Communist Party in Europe’s history has
always witnessed the coming of fascism.
Western politics
There
is no doubt that the crisis that caused the civil war in Ukraine
had been
largely provoked by the United States and its allies. Western
policy towards
Ukraine had the character of blatant interference in the
internal affairs of
a sovereign state ever since “Maidan-1?(2004). That
policy has since
changed, not much at all, only in the direction of more
arrogance. A few
months ago, the United States Assistant Secretary of
State Victoria Nuland
said in a burst of candour or rather desiring to
show off the real strength
of American influence, that the United States
spent no less than five
billion dollars on creating Ukrainian domestic
support for U.S. political
moves in Ukraine.
Those enormous (by any measure) amounts of money went
to set up a
powerful system of “social organizations” and “independent”
media
outlets. According to some estimates, the system created by the
American
authorities for public opinion manipulations involves about 150
thousand
people, who – in one way or another –receive Western grants and
allowances.
There is no doubt that the aggressive policy of the
Bandera-style
authorities not only enjoys the full support of the United
States. The
current junta has become a direct tool of America, seeking to
break the
centuries-old ties between our peoples and to draw Ukraine into
its
military-political orbit.
The main objective of the foreign
puppeteers is not to make Ukraine
democratic and prosperous, but to capture
its natural resources: coal,
iron ore, newly discovered shale gas deposits,
as well as getting
control of its markets. A revolution in Ukraine was vital
for the United
States. America’s colossal debt of $17 trillion is pressing
its leaders
ever harder to search for a way out of the disastrous economic
situation. The leadership of the United States sees a way out through
either conquering the European markets or fuelling a war, for which the
conflict in Ukraine can serve as a sort of fuse wire. It is clear that
this kind of policy will result in the eventual collapse of the
Ukrainian economy. It has already triggered an outflow of nearly one
million refugees. Ukraine will cease to be a friendly state of Russia’s
and get squeezed into the NATO gun clip strip, bringing its missile
defence installations and first-strike weapons much closer to Russia’s
borders.
The hypocrisy of the West is made clear in that, on the one
hand, it
forcibly detached the Serbian districts-of Kosovo and Metohija
through
direct aggression and ethnic cleansing from Serbia as a whole. On
the
other hand, it is cynical in not recognizing the expression of the will
of the citizens of Crimea and Novorossiya to reunite with Russia.
Indeed, the West has stubbornly turned a blind eye to the atrocious war
crimes committed by the Kiev junta’s gangs who destroyed cities and
towns by artillery fire. According to the United Nations, they killed
over 2,200 civilians in Novorossiya. In actual fact, the number of
victims is much higher. But Western “humanists” and the media controlled
by them stubbornly try to conceal the humanitarian disaster in the once
prospering areas.
It is significant that the outburst of indignation
in the West upon the
crash of the Malaysian “Boeing” with hundreds of
passengers on board
faded away very quickly, when news began to break that
the plane had
been obviously shot down by Ukraine’s air defences. The crash
investigation was curtailed under the pretext of danger for the life of
experts. Everything was done in order to leave unscathed the true
culprits, who are likely to be found in Washington and
Kiev.
America’s foreign policy is still dominated by the so-called
neo-conservatives, who, while completely ignoring the new realities in
the world, seek the achievement of global domination for the United
States. They have not been stopped by either American foreign policy’s
heavy failures in Iraq and Afghanistan, or the failure of US policy in
Syria. Meanwhile, it would be wrong not to notice some obvious
differences in the Western camp on the “Ukrainian issue”. Europe,
already in the grip of an ever-deepening political and economic crisis,
takes a much less active stand on Ukraine than the United
States.
Moreover, Western politicians and businessmen opposed the
imposition of
sanctions against Russia, knowing that they were a double
edged sword
and that sanctions, particularly economic, could have a very
negative
impact on the state of Europe, which has already been suffering
from
chronic diseases.
There are people in Europe who also understand
that the Americans are
not averse to driving their European partners and
rivals into another
crisis, as was the case in the Balkans in the 1990s, in
order to weaken
the European Union and to preserve the EU’s dependence on
America.
Hence, a more realistic policy of the European Union with regard to
Ukraine. On the other hand, we must not delude ourselves and think that
the conflict of interests between the United States and the EU will
result in a weakening of the anti-Russia policies of the West.
Ultimately, the world oligarchs made European politicians comply with
America’s most aggressive ambitions.
The CPRF and the Russian
policy
The coup d’état in Ukraine and the subsequent punitive operations
against the population of Novorossiya are serious signals for Russia’s
foreign policy-makers, for our government. The CPRF has long been
pointing out that the priority relations with the West at the expense of
the development of relations with the fraternal peoples of the USSR
contradicted Russia’s long-term interests. The Russian Federation’s
policies with regard to Ukraine have for many years been aimed solely at
ensuring the transit of natural gas to Europe. The Communist Party has
repeatedly warned the government about the dangers of having Ukraine on
the periphery of our foreign policy concerns and about appointing Mr.
Zurabov, who previously failed in the Russian ministerial post, Russia’s
ambassador there.
The developments in Crimea and Novorossiya are a
specific example of how
a liberal course is disastrous for Russia. With the
public sector
reduced to a mere 10 percent of the whole in the wake of the
total
privatization drive, our country has found it extremely difficult to
counter the challenges of the time. Its economic potential, for example,
is hardly sufficient for integrating the Crimea. Dominance of private
capital in the financial sector leaves the country without the necessary
funds at the very moment when it is necessary to mobilize resources. It
has to take money from private pension funds and it takes great efforts
to form an armed fist required under the current circumstances, because
the army has been reduced almost to paralysis by the liberal gentlemen.
When one hears about the problems that arose with the ferry crossings to
the Crimea during the 2014 holiday season, it is sad to recall, for
example, the mighty Soviet- era army construction units which were
almost fully written off “as unnecessary” by the government liberals.
But we, the communists, were for years not just warning about the costs
that the liberal breaking of everything would entail but also put
forward our concrete and multilateral programme of urgent measures to
strengthen the might of the state. The authorities’ Indifference and
even hostility towards our proposals largely predetermined the range of
today’s troubles.
Recently, the Russian federal leadership has taken
a position that is
much more consistent with the country’s strategic
national interests.
The foundation was laid by a much firmer stand in
relation to the events
in Syria, where Russia did not let the NATO
member-countries to
intervene and overthrow the friendly Bashar al-Assad
government. The
next step was Moscow’s decisive action on the issue of
reintegration of
Crimea into Russia. The Communist Party supported all these
actions.
We believe that the hard repulse to the Western economic
sanctions is an
important sign that the Russian leadership continues to
follow the
course of realism, the course of protecting the country’s
national
interests. Of course, we know that it is counteracted by the
liberals
who control the economic bloc in the government. But the threats
emanating from the West are so strong and obvious that the country’s top
leaders simply have to follow the course which the Communist Party has
been strongly suggesting for many years. For example, the authorities
have finally realized how dangerous is the situation in which 60% of the
Russian food market is taken by imported products. And they have started
saying that discontinuing agricultural produce supplies from the
European Union will benefit domestic producers, as they alone are
capable of feeding the country under the external sanctions.
We
proceed from the fact that the developments in Ukraine pose an
objective
threat to the security of the Russian Federation. One cannot
passively watch
the way a neo-Nazi regime with a Russophobic and
anti-Semitic ideology is
being formed with the support of the West close
to our borders. Even in the
United States, the analysts who know, for
example, Steve Cohen and Katrina
vanden Heuvel, both well-known in our
country, are today warning right from
the pages of the famous American
magazine “The Nation” that things
unthinkable can now happen quickly in
Ukraine: not just a new “cold war “,
which has already begun, but a real
war between the NATO forces led by the
United States and Russia.”
What is needed is a drastic revision of
Russia’s Ukraine policy.
Required is giving a much more complex character to
our relations with
the brotherly people, so as to strengthen cooperation in
the fields of
economy, science, culture and education.
The situation
requires a stronger support of the political forces and
non-governmental
associations advocating historical friendship between
our peoples. We must
give the green light to all endeavours to support
our compatriots in
Ukraine. Communists from the outset have helped and
will continue to help
Novorossiya in its struggle. To date, we have sent
there more than 1,200
tons of humanitarian aid goods alone. And it is
just the beginning. The
Communist party of the Russian Federation is
actively involved in what can
be called political and diplomatic work.
We are doing our best to draw the
attention of the European governments
to the threat of a new world war. I
warned about the threat, in
particular, in a letter to the leaders of
France, Germany and Italy –
the nations most affected by the horrors of
fascism and World War II.
The CPRF is actively supporting the idea
ofholding a meeting of the
heads of Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Ukraine
in Minsk. This step is
very significant on the eve of the 70th anniversary
of the Great Victory
that seemingly buried fascism
forever.
***
The Communist Party of the Russian Federation expresses
solidarity with
all participants in popular resistance – Russians,
Ukrainians and people
of all nationalities who are bravely and vigorously
opposing the
neo-Nazi Banderovites. We express solidarity with the
Communists of
Ukraine who are subjected to violence by
extremists.
One of the most important features of the Ukrainian citizens
is their
unwillingness to put up with the thieving authorities, their
constant
internal focus on the protest, their willingness to throw off the
pedestal the leaders who have lost trust. These features of the
Ukrainian people made it much easier for the puppeteers to organize
“maidans” and “orange revolutions”, i.e. fictitious protest actions
pursuing other objectives than those inscribed on the slogans and
declared at the meetings.
But these features of Ukrainians also
suggest that the current regime
upheld by Kiev will not be long-living and
that the fierce resistance to
it from the Donbas area and Lugansk will
spread to most of Ukraine and
lead to its downfall. But there is a danger
that as a result of the
“parliamentary elections” in October of this year
the present-day
Ukrainian “elite” will be displaced by even tougher radical
guys
professing Nazism and overt Russophobia. Then a Bandera-style
nationalism will be established in Ukraine as a ruling ideology. And
Ukrainian society, eventually split into irreconcilable camps, will
plunge into an even more violent civil conflict than at present.
A
complete change of the socio-economic system in Ukraine and return to
the
principles of the welfare state, in which Ukraine achieved
prosperity in the
Soviet times, can be the sole salvation-bringing
alternative to the current
situation. We are convinced that the healthy
forces of the Ukrainian society
will prevail and drive the Bandera
successors back into the cave from which
they have crawled out.
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