What Obama Can Do to Save Ukraine

By Robert Parry, Consortium News

07 May 14

 

If President Barack Obama is to help defuse the worsening crisis in Ukraine, he 
will have to show a level of leadership on foreign policy that he has not 
demonstrated in his five-plus years in office. In particular, he will have to 
repudiate the one-sided narrative that has been created by his own State 
Department and the mainstream U.S. media.

 

Obama will have to recognize the complex reality of Ukraine, a society deeply 
divided between the west and east, and acknowledge that the U.S.-backed Maidan 
revolt overthrowing elected President Viktor Yanukovych was indeed spearheaded 
by neo-Nazi militias who continue to brutalize political opponents, including 
the May 2 massacre 
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=882098&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=http%3A%2F%2Fconsortiumnews.com%2F2014%2F05%2F05%2Fukraines-dr-strangelove-reality%2F>
  in Odessa that killed dozens of ethnic Russians.

 

What makes Obama’s position so politically difficult in the United States is 
that the political/media elite has adopted a narrative that excludes the nasty 
reality of what has actually occurred in Ukraine over the past six months. 
Instead, the simplistic U.S. narrative made first Yanukovych and then Russian 
President Vladimir Putin the cardboard villains, and conversely, the Maidan 
protesters the idealistic heroes.

 

The black-hat/white-hat narrative has systematically distorted the depiction of 
Ukraine reaching the American people. So, Obama would have to start back at the 
beginning and explain how the U.S.-backed regime in Kiev is not all sweetness 
and light and how the ethnic Russians in the east, who were the political base 
for Yanukovych, are not just mindless pawns of Moscow.

 

Not only would Obama have to come down off the U.S. “high horse” and admit that 
his own administration has been guilty of spinning the facts – waging 
“information warfare” – but he’d have to recognize that Putin’s cooperation is 
essential to bringing this increasingly bloody crisis under control. Obama 
would also have to admit that Putin was not the cause of the Ukraine mess.

 

That would challenge a powerful “group think” in Washington that has formed 
around the idea that the Ukraine crisis is just a Putin ploy to reclaim land 
lost when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. To believe that conspiracy 
theory, however, one has to suspend all sense of logic.

 

For Putin to have created the Ukraine crisis, he covertly would have had to get 
the European Union to dangle an unrealistic offer of membership to Ukraine, 
then get the International Monetary Fund to demand draconian “reforms” that 
forced Yanukovych to back away, then arrange massive demonstrations in the 
Maidan in support of a European future, then organize neo-Nazi militias to 
carry out the putsch, and then just pretend to help his ally Yanukovych survive 
while really having engaged in this grandiose scheme to drive him from office.

 

The fact that supposedly serious thinkers in Washington are even suggesting 
such a preposterous analysis indicates how far the political/media elite in 
Washington has strayed from sanity, a process that has been underway for 
decades but has accelerated in the neocon-dominated era since the run-up to the 
Iraq War.

 

Whose Disinformation?

 

One of the worst offenders in this deviation from reality has been the New York 
Times, whose coverage of Ukraine must be read like you might read a newspaper 
in a totalitarian society, gleaning a few facts here and there but 
understanding that they have been assembled as propaganda, not truth.

 

For instance, on Tuesday, the Times offered up this example of biased 
journalism: “The [Ukraine] government seemed to be stepping up its efforts to 
counter the pro-Russian disinformation campaign that has flooded the television 
airwaves in the country’s east and portrayed the central authorities as 
illegitimate. [Acting President Oleksandr] Turchynov’s office released a number 
of statements, including one that criticized efforts by those it called 
terrorists to enlist miners from eastern Ukraine in antigovernment actions.”

 

So, the Times has determined as flat-fact that the TV news reaching eastern 
Ukraine is “pro-Russian disinformation,” citing as the only example the 
portrayal of the Kiev regime as “illegitimate.” But the question of legitimacy 
is not a question of fact but of opinion.

 

And, there is no factual doubt that Yanukovych was ousted via 
extra-constitutional means. There was a violent takeover of government 
buildings by neo-Nazi militias on Feb. 22 and there was no impeachment that 
followed the provisions of the Ukrainian constitution. Indeed, much of the 
constitutional court which is supposed to have a role in an impeachment was 
disbanded in the coup.

 

I was told by one senior international diplomat who was on the scene that after 
the Feb. 22 putsch, Western officials scrambled to help the shaken parliament 
cobble together a new government to avoid having a bunch of unsavory right-wing 
thugs become the de facto rulers of Kiev. The niceties of constitutional order 
were thrown out the window amid the crisis.

 

However, that means that the legitimacy of the acting government in Kiev is 
open to debate, not a flat-fact, as the Times would have you believe. But in 
the world of Official Washington, anyone who details this more complicated 
history is engaging in “pro-Russian disinformation.”

 

The other hypocrisy here is that it has been the U.S. government and the U.S. 
media that have actually practiced the dissemination of what appears to be 
disinformation, such as highlighting an anti-Semitic leaflet that was an 
apparent hoax falsely attributed to ethnic Russian protesters in eastern 
Ukraine to discredit them.

 

The Times also fell for a photographic hoax in which the Kiev regime and the 
State Department were palming off photos that purportedly proved that Russian 
troops, who had been photographed “clearly” in Russia, were later seen 
operating in eastern Ukraine (except that a key photo allegedly taken in Russia 
was actually snapped in Ukraine, destroying the story’s premise).

 

Then, when the Times belatedly sent two reporters to eastern Ukraine to 
investigate the ethnic Russian rebels, the Times discovered what appeared to be 
an indigenous force operating without any instructions from Moscow. [See 
Consortiumnews.com 
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=882098&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=http%3A%2F%2Fconsortiumnews.com%2F>
 ’s “Another NYT ‘Sort of’ Retraction on Ukraine 
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=882098&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=http%3A%2F%2Fconsortiumnews.com%2F2014%2F05%2F04%2Fanother-nyt-sort-of-retraction-on-ukraine%2F>
 .”]

 

What Does Putin Want?

 

Still, the U.S. narrative – blaming the crisis almost entirely on Putin – has 
proven powerfully resistant to facts. And that makes Obama’s job of laying out 
a truthful narrative, which could invite Putin’s cooperation in resolving the 
crisis, that much harder.

 

>From my reporting on Putin, I have concluded that Official Washington’s 
>analysis of him is seriously off-target. He is not particularly interested in 
>taking over the economic basket case that is Ukraine. Crimea was a different 
>story because of its strong historic ties to Russia, the presence of a Russian 
>naval base at Sevastopol, and the overwhelming secession vote by the Crimean 
>people. But even the expense of administering Crimea, including building a new 
>bridge or tunnel from the Russian mainland, will tax the Kremlin’s treasury.

 

What Putin wants more than anything, I’m told, is to have Russia accepted as a 
member of the First World and be afforded the accompanying respect and 
respectability. That was one reason why he invested so much in the Sochi Winter 
Olympics. He also appears to have had a fondness for President Obama and was 
eager to work with him in finding diplomatic answers to crises in Syria and 
Iran.

 

But Putin is also a proud man who has been stung by his vilification over the 
Ukraine crisis which he feels was forced on him, not something he sought. The 
insults from Secretary of State John Kerry and other U.S. diplomats have been 
extremely offensive to him – and he feels betrayed by Obama’s unwillingness to 
rein in the excessive rhetoric of his subordinates.

 

Putin is on the verge of forsaking his First World aspirations, I’m told, as he 
has come to view the U.S. government and the EU as sources of endless double 
standards and double talk, places without honor. So, as part of any summit or 
cooperation with Obama over Ukraine, Putin first wants to hear an American 
“statement of intentions,” i.e. a recognition of how valuable U.S.-Russian 
cooperation has been and can be.

 

But the prospect of Obama somehow finding the courage to rise to this occasion 
can’t be considered high. He would have to do something like President John F. 
Kennedy did in his famous address at American University on June 10, 1963, when 
– near the height of the Cold War – Kennedy had the courage to assert the 
common humanity of Americans and Russians.

 

In perhaps his most important words, Kennedy said, “For in the final analysis, 
our most basic common link is that we all inhabit this small planet. We all 
breathe the same air. We all cherish our children’s futures. And we are all 
mortal.”

 

Kennedy followed up his AU speech with practical efforts to work with Soviet 
leader Nikita Khrushchev to rein in dangers from nuclear weapons and to discuss 
other ways of reducing international tensions, initiatives that Khrushchev 
welcomed although many of the hopeful prospects were cut short by Kennedy’s 
assassination on Nov. 22, 1963. [See Consortiumnews.com 
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=882098&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=http%3A%2F%2Fconsortiumnews.com%2F>
 ’s “Can Obama Speak Strongly for Peace? 
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=882098&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=http%3A%2F%2Fconsortiumnews.com%2F2014%2F05%2F04%2Fcan-obama-speak-strongly-for-peace-2%2F>
 ”]

 

The question now regarding Ukraine and the possibility of a new Cold War is 
whether Obama can pick up Kennedy’s torch of peaceful understanding – and see 
the world through the eyes of the ethnic Russians in Donetsk as well as the 
pro-European youth in Kiev – recognizing the legitimate concerns and the 
understandable fears of both.

http://consortiumnews.com/2014/05/06/what-obama-can-do-to-save-ukraine/

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