29.09.2016 Author: Phil Butler
US State Department “Coup”
Moves – Is Greece Next?
Column: Politics
Region: Europe
News the US Ambassador to
Ukraine Geoffrey Pyatt was replaced by Marie Yovanovitch was initially
uplifting for half of the world. Then it was tentatively announced that
President Obama suited career diplomat up to take over in Greece. The man
overheard organizing “post coup” Ukraine government with Assistant Secretary of
State for European and Eurasian Affairs Victorian Nuland, will no doubt head up
Athens’ next civil war.
What makes matters even worse
is the fact Yovanovitch has hit the ground running in Kiev, rekindling the
anti-Russia blame game Pyatt helped get started. If putting mediocrity in
places surrounding Russia were not bad enough, guess who is rumored to be
Hillary Clinton’s “Girl Friday” at the US State Department is she is elected.
Yes, F___ the EU Russophobe Nuland. The scary thing about all these postings
for me, is the level of arrogance, illiteracy, and downright incompetence
Washington sends to represent the American People. “Delusional” is the only
word that comes to mind to describe Geoffrey Pyatt, who told Radio Free Europe
the other day:
“The United States had played
an important role in helping the Ukrainian people to take control once again of
their own democracy.”
Whether or not ousted Ukraine
President Viktor Yanukovych (twice with US help) was more corrupt than Petro
Poroshenko is a matter for conjecture, but it’s certain Ukrainians were better
off with him in office. The Obama administration may brag about spreading
democracy, but the intercepted telephone call between Nuland and Pyatt proved
the two State Department officials were discussing removing Yanukovish, and
deciding which U.S. puppet they will put in place. Now Pyatt is headed to
Greece, another border nation dissatisfied with the IMF, bankers in general,
and with its role in NATO. As the Putin-Russia sphere gains friends, US
spoilers are sent to spoil. “Oh boy!” I can just hear Greeks sighing.
Turning back to Ukraine’s woes,
things don’t look to be improving anytime soon with Yovanovitch already forting
up to fight Russia. Even before she was confirmed by the US Senate, she
parroted the same lies Pyatt, Nuland, and President Obama have for months. Now
that she is in Kiev, her proclaiming Lithuania was never considered Russia
(Read the Yalta agreements), among other brilliant remarks, further punctuates
the stereotypes the US puts in place around the world. She told the Senate,
concerning the Minsk agreements:
“Ukraine has lived up to many
Minsk commitments already. But Russia and the separatists have not.”
Meanwhile my colleagues in the
Donbass report on UKROPS artillery raining down almost daily, and Crimea is now
in Poroshenko’s sights as well consider a recent sabotage attempt. Not many
will recall that is was Yovanovitch, then Deputy Assistant Secretary of State
for European Affairs, who helped draft the Strategic Partnership with Romania
that sets ABM weapons systems there, effectively painting a target on the
Romanians. I guess we will see Aegis systems being built in Ukraine next, which
will certainly prompt Russia to roll in 50 divisions. If patters of history
repeat, war is fairly imminent.
Finally, European Commission
President Jean-Claude Juncker’s idea to create a common European military
force has triggered deep concerns among Eastern European leaders. Some
experts, including me, believe the Central European nations intend to create a
sort of “Reich” in the heart of Europe, while leaving poorer and less
formidable Eastern nations to fend for themselves should a major war break out.
In effect, such a central Europe alliance would leave former Soviet satellites
in a kind of “dead zone”. Military theorists have long understood the obvious
in a nuclear age, the scorched Earth the USSR used versus the Germans in WWII,
it was not ignored. Poland and the Baltics, the Black Sea nations, they have
always been the borderlands that suffered first and last.
The news headlines read “Where
will Russia invade next?” In Britain The Mail took a poll to see who Britain
would want for an ally if Russia invaded! On the other end of the détente
spectrum, Slovakia’s Prime Minister Robert Fico told reporters last weekend;
“Ukraine is doing less than Russia to meet its obligations under the Minsk
peace plan.” With the IMF approving yet another $1 billion in loans to Ukraine
recently, news the bankers are worried about ongoing corruption speak louder
the State Department press releases. With Russia nowhere in sight west of the
Donbass, and with Pyatt and other US experts having had years to fix
corruption, just how bad was the country under Viktor Yanukovych?
Let’s just hope Athens is not
in a colorful revolution mood.
Phil Butler, is a policy
investigator and analyst, a political scientist and expert on Eastern Europe,
exclusively for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook”.
http://journal-neo.org/2016/09/29/us-state-department-coup-moves-is-greece-next/
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