Posted on 12/10/2013 10:00:43 AM PST by xzins
The massively attended Sunday protest in Kiev, highlighted by the toppling and smashing of the monument to Vladimir Lenin, has apparently forced Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovychs hand. Yesterday, he called for talks with former government leaders and opposition forces aimed at resolving the nations political crisis. It is a crisis ignited by his decision to turn away from Europe and feed Russian strongman Vladimir Putins dreams of a Eurasian Union, which is little more than a thinly-veiled effort to restore Russian hegemony over large swaths of Eastern Europe.
The current standoff is reminiscent of the Orange Revolution that took place in 2004, when a pro-democratic government was swept into power. Thus it was hardly surprising when government officials announced on Sunday that they would undertake an investigation against opposition leaders they accuse of attempting to seize power, and warned demonstrators that they could also be subjected to criminal charges. That investigation will be conducted by the Ukrainian security service SBU, formerly known as the KGB.
Yanukovychs conciliatory gesture, based on former President Leonid Kravchuks call for an all-national round table, that includes three former presidents of Ukraine who favor closer EU ties, was belied by threats of a crackdown. Pro-European demonstrators currently occupying a city government administration building claimed heavily armed riot police broke into their Fatherland Party offices. They reportedly entered through doors and windows and seized computer servers. An additional cadre of riot police have also massed behind barricades erected by protesters to block off Independence Square, and metro stations near the area were closed due to a purported bomb threat.
Sundays demonstration in Kiev, which may have been attended by as many as a million people, was buttressed by demonstrations in other cities around the country. These EuroMaidan protests in favor of establishing closer ties with the European Union have been ongoing for the three weeks following Yanukovychs refusal to sign an agreement with the EU. And while that may have been the initial impetus for the uprising, the protests have become more anti-government in general. Opposition leaders have rejected calls for talks until the police who beat protesters at a demonstration November 30 are arrested, detained demonstrators are released, and the current cabinet is fired. Many are also calling for Yanukovych himself to resign.
Currently the protests remain peaceful, with both opposition party and protest leaders calling for calm. Yet there is differing opinion on what should happen next. Kateryna Kobko, a 19-year-old student, believes the protests should get more radical because Yanukovichs Party of Regions is a malformed structure, and the system built on it must be fully destroyed. Twenty-two-year-old student Roman Bilan believes the peaceful mass protest is the only way to go. Political consultant Taras Berezovets thinks Yanukovych will call for a state of emergency, despite the possibility that his support among the police is on the wane. Yanukovych may through the parliament ask Russia to send peacekeeping troops, he speculated, adding that it would be unlikely absent an escalation.
It may take more than that. Yesterday Sergei Markov, Putin political advisor and vice rector of the Plekhanov Russian University of Economics conceded that the Ukrainian situation is currently too explosive right now and that any linkage between Putins anticipated customs union and Ukraine could take years. But he noted that Putin believes it will happen eventually. Putin believes that time is on his side and Russia will benefit in the end, he added.
The newfound reticence seems surprising, given that Putin met with Yanukovych as recently as last Friday, in an effort to shore up the proposed strategic partnership between the two nations. It is a deal undoubtedly bolstered by Russian threats of trade retaliation against Ukraine, underscored by the reality that Ukraine is on the hook for $17 billion in debt repayments and Russian gas bills due next year. Despite being a key east-west energy transit route, Ukraine currently needs $10 billion to avoid possible default, even as the country remains mired in its third recession since 2008. Yanukovych has repeatedly rejected bailout terms offered by the EUs International Monetary Fund (IMF), but remains enticed by Russias offer of financial aid and cheaper energy prices.
So why does Russia remain non-committal? Russian Economy Minister Alexei Ulyukayev, who yesterday insisted there are no preliminary agreements between the two nations, claimed that any agreement assumes a massive amount of work and a clear desire to join on the part of a country thats a possible candidate. We have seen no such clear desire, he contended.
Nonsense. As The Atlantics Brian Whitmore explains, protests in the Ukraine have galvanized Russian opposition to Vladimir Putins autocratic rule. Protesters have gathered outside the Ukrainian Embassy in Moscow, and 30 high-profile Russians writers and poets wrote an open letter in support of their Ukrainian counterparts, noting that their demonstrations would be a sign that in Russia we too can defend our rights and freedoms. We are with you!
Whitmore further explains that the timing of the current protests is significant in that they are occurring almost exactly two years after Russians engaged in the largest anti-government demonstration since the fall of the Soviet Union. Writing for the New York Times, Moscow journalist Masha Gessen illuminates the significance of Ukraines unrest. Russia is using every kind of pressurefrom threatening economic sanctions to declaring tens of thousands of Ukrainians persona non grataall in order to drag Ukraine back into the Middle Ages with it, she writes. Western Europe, which has many demands of its own, promises a future of openness and progress. She further notes that if the protests succeed, they may change the future of not one but two of the largest countries in Europe.
Putin is keenly aware of the consequences of such success. Eight days ago, he characterized the demonstrations as a pogrom. This internal political process is an attempt by the opposition to destabilize the existing legitimate rule in the country, he said during a visit to the former Soviet nation of Armenia. Yesterday he upped the ante, dissolving the state news agency RIA Novosti. It will be replaced with an entity called Rossiya Segodnya, which will be tasked with the mission of promoting Russias image around the world. It marks Putins second effort in two weeks to accomplish what RIA described as a series of shifts in Russias news landscape which appear to point towards a tightening of state control in the already heavily regulated media sector.
Unsurprisingly, Radio Free Europe reveals that Russian media coverage of the protests in Ukraine have been odd and misleading and have spared no efforts to portray the protesters as a horde of hooligans funded by the West to topple Yanukovych and sow chaos in Ukraine. Leading the effort is Dmitry Kiselyov, tapped to lead the newly-created Rossiya Segodnya. He has accused protestors of ruining Christmas, surviving on lard, and using ancient African military techniques against Ukrainian police. Kiselyov, who has publicly stated that homosexuals should be banned from donating blood, sperm and organs, described Ukrainian boxing champ and opposition leader Vitali Klitschko and his brother, Vladimir, as gay icons.
Klitschko demonstrated why hes a target. We call on people to stand their ground, and peacefully, without using force or aggression, to defend their right to live in a free country, he said according to Reuters. We are expecting the break-up by police of peaceful demonstrators. If blood is spilled during this dispersing, this blood will be on the hands of the person who ordered it: [President Viktor] Yanukovych.
Larger forces remain in play. In the West, European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso emphasized the need for a political solution. Toward that end he has sent EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton to Kiev for a two day visit beginning today. She is tasked with mediating a solution between the two factions. Vice President Joe Biden has spoken with Yanukovych by phone. He noted that violence has no place in a democratic society and is incompatible with our strategic relationship, said the White House in a statement explaining Bidens objective. Barroso also spoke with Yanukovych by phone. Ive asked him to show restraint in the face of the recent developments, to not use force against the people who are demonstrating peacefully, Barroso said.
The Russian side of the equation is illuminated by Financial Times columnist Gideon Rachman. He explains that the demonstrations are both a humiliation and a threat to Mr. Putin, because his main foreign-policy goal is the construction of a sphere of influence for Russia, covering most of the old Soviet Union and Ukraine is meant to be the jewel in the crown. He further notes that because the highly nationalistic Putin views Russia as a unique civilization, he finds the idea that Ukrainians could be more attracted to Europe offensive.
There are darker motives at work as well. Ukraine performs a vital role for the not-so-open elements of the Russian economy, New York University professor and longtime Kremlin-watcher Mark Galeotti contends. Ukraine is an initial pre-wash venue for dirty Russian money. Weve seen the port of Odessa being used for all kinds of dubious arms deals . Losing that would affect not only the Kremlin but also the profitable opportunities of a large number of people whose opinions matter to the Kremlin.
Late yesterday, police began moving against some of the demonstrators, dismantling camps set up in front of government buildings. Prosecutor-General Viktor Pshonka issued a warning, telling the demonstrators to cease creating anarchy and lawlessness by blocking the buildings. As of now, no action has been taken against the crowds occupying Independence Square. How long it will stay that way remains to be seen.
And they are on the streets. while your fat ass sits posting on the internet.
IMF imposed? How many divisions does the IMF have? LOL!
Compare that to Russia's legitimate offer
Wow, you're funny.
What would Russian troops be doing in a Georgian city?
Defending their citizens, who want no part of Georgia, from the depredations of a tie-chewing madman perhaps.
Georgia never attacked Russia. Genocidal Nazi Russia attacked Georgia in support of ethnic separatists and helped those separatists ethnically cleanse thousands of innocent Georgian civilians.
The IMF will lend the money to Ukraine and send the bill to it's member nations, regardless of whether the Ukraine defaults on the loan or fails to abide by its terms. Meanwhile, Ukraine's Russian creditors will get paid in full in Euros for last year's gas bill and this year's as well. The longer Ukraine wears the IMF yoke, the more the Russians get paid, and the more IMF member states pay in to the scheme.
Eventually even an oaf like you will figure out who is getting screwed in that deal.
Sounds like the "yoke" means the "yokers" give money to the "yokee". Sounds awful. Much worse than the Soviet boot, LOL!
Eventually even an oaf like you will figure out who is getting screwed in that deal.
Sounds like the opposite of your original claim, oaf.
Are you actually defending the EU/IMF structures and their proposal for Ukraine or just demonstrating your limited mastery of the 'better/worse' logic paradigm that Wolf Blitzer taught you?
Perhaps you should explain "why" its better for the United States to have some unelected European bureaucracy commit billions of our tax dollars (via another unelected bureaucracy the IMF) to a corrupt and bankrupt eastern European country, in order to "save it" from the dreaded Soviet boot?
I'm sure your answer will be quite amusing.
I must admit, that possibility has crossed my mind.
I'm simply mocking your belief that the Soviets can be trusted more than the EU.
Perhaps you should explain "why" its better for the United States to have some unelected European bureaucracy commit billions of our tax dollars
I can be against the IMF without hanging a Putin poster on my wall. Is he on horseback in your poster?
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