Showing posts with label Donetsk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Donetsk. Show all posts

30 June 2023

‘Why are we tempting nuclear annihilation?’ Watch Max Blumenthal address UN Security Council

 Is there anyone sane left on the planet who seriously believes that US/NATO support for Ukraine is motivated by a concern for self-determination?

If there is anyone who believes that NATO, i.e. US support for Ukraine and its supply of advanced weaponry to the Zelensky regime, is on account of its support for that country’s self-determination, then I can only suggest that they consult a psychiatrist.

How can the United States, which launched a war of aggression against Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003 and which supports Israel’s war crimes against the Palestinians, be seriously concerned with the principle of self-determination?

To those who have any doubts about what is happening and the threat it poses to the survival of humanity, I recommend that you watch the video below of a speech by Max Blumenthall of the Grayzone, which was targeted by Paul Mason on behalf of British Intelligence.  I’m not sure how Max managed to address them but the video is well worth watching.

Below the video I have included a transcript of the speech. Please watch and share.

To those who don’t understand the background to what is happening in Ukraine or the possible consequences of provoking a nuclear war, I recommend the two following videos of talks and interviews with John Mearsheimer, Professor of Political Science at Chicago University and a member of the realist school of thought.

Tony Greenstein

Max Blumenthal addresses UN Security Council on Ukraine aid

Thank you to Wyatt Reed, Alex Rubinstein and Anya Parampil for helping me prepare this presentation. Wyatt has first hand experience with the subject as a journalist whose hotel in Donetsk was targeted with a US-made howitzer by the Ukrainian military in October 2022. He was 100 meters away when the strike hit, and was nearly killed.

My friend, the civil rights activist Randy Credico, is also here with me today. He was in Donetsk more recently, and was able to witness regular HIMARS attacks by the Ukrainian military on civilian targets.

I’m here not only as a journalist with over 20 years of experience covering politics and conflict on several continents, but as an American dragooned by my own government into funding a proxy war that has become a threat to regional and international stability at the expense of the welfare of my fellow countrymen and women.

The West's neo-Nazi friends in Ukraine who are also fighting for freedom!

This June 28, as emergency crews worked to clean up yet another toxic train derailment in the United States, this time on the Montana River, that further exposed our nation’s chronically underfunded infrastructure and its threats to our health, the Pentagon announced plans to send an additional $500 million worth of military aid to Ukraine.

The development came as Ukraine’s army enters the third week of a vaunted counter-offensive that CNN describes as “not meeting expectations,” and which even Volodymyr Zelensky says is “going slower than desired.”

As Ukraine’s military failed to breach Russia’s primary defense line, CNN reported that by June 12, Kiev quote “lost” 16 US-made armored vehicles sent to the country.

So what did the Pentagon do? It simply passed that bill down to average US taxpayers like myself, charging us another $325 million to replace Ukraine’s squandered military stock. There was zero effort to consult the US public’s position on the matter; and the vast majority of Americans likely did not even know the exchange took place.

The US policy I just described — which sees Washington prioritize unrestrained funding for a proxy war with a nuclear power in a foreign land while our own domestic infrastructure falls apart before our eyes — exposes a disturbing dynamic at the heart of the Ukraine conflict: an international Ponzi scheme that enables Western elites to seize hard earned wealth out of the hands of average US citizens and funnel itI into the coffers of a foreign government that even the Western-sponsored Transparency International ranks as one of the most corrupt in Europe.

The US government has yet to conduct an official audit of its funding for Ukraine. The American public has no idea where their tax dollars have gone.

That is why this week, The Grayzone published an independent audit of US tax dollar allocation to Ukraine throughout fiscal years 2022 and 2023. Our investigation was led by Heather Kaiser, a former military intelligence officer and veteran of US wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

We found a $4.48 million payment from the US Social Security Admin to the Kiev government.

We found $4.5 billion worth of payments from the United States Agency for International Development to pay off Ukraine’s sovereign debt, much of which is owned by the global investment firm BlackRock.

That alone amounts to $30 taken from every single US citizen at a time when 4 in 10 Americans are unable to afford a $400 emergency.

We found tax dollars earmarked for Ukraine padding the budgets of a television station in Toronto, a pro-NATO think tank in Poland, and, believe it or not, rural farmers in Kenya.

We found tens of millions to private equity firms, including one in the Republic of Georgia, as well as a million dollar payment to a single private entrepreneur in Kiev.

Our audit also revealed the Pentagon’s $4.5 million contract with a company called “Atlantic Diving Supply” to provide Ukraine with unspecified explosives equipment. This is a notoriously corrupt company that Thom Tillis, the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, previously lambasted for its “history of fraud.”

Yet once again, Congress has failed to ensure these shady payments and massive arms deals are properly tracked.

In fact, much of the military and humanitarian aid shipped to Ukraine has simply vanished. Last year, CBS News quoted the director of a pro-Zelensky non-profit in Ukraine who reported that only around 30% of aid was reaching the front lines in Ukraine.

The embezzlement of funds and supplies is at least as troubling as the potential consequences of the illicit transfer and sales of military-grade weapons. Last June, the head of Interpol warned that the massive transfers of arms into Ukraine means “we can expect an influx of weapons in Europe and beyond,” and that “criminals are even now, as we speak, focusing on them.”

This May, a group of anti-Kremlin Russian neo-Nazis outfitted with gear supplied by the Ukrainian government, was hailed by Western politicians for carrying out terrorist attacks in Russian territory using American-made Humvees. Although the group, the so-called “Russian Volunteer Corps,” is led by a man who calls himself the “White King” and includes numerous open admirers of Adolf Hitler, the Western weaponization of this militia against Russian forces has not prompted any outcry from Congress.

And while the Biden administration has promised that it’s keeping tabs on the weapons sent, a State Department cable leaked last December conceded that “kinetic activity and active combat between Ukrainian and Russian forces create an environment in which standard verification measures are sometimes impracticable or impossible.”

The Biden administration not only knows that it can not track the weapons it is shipping to Ukraine, it knows it is escalating a proxy war against the world’s largest nuclear power, and is daring it to respond in kind.

We know they know this because back in 2014, President Barack Obama rejected demands to send lethal offensive weaponry to Kiev because, as the Wall Street Journal put it, he had a “long-standing concern that arming Ukraine would provoke Moscow into a further escalation that could drag Washington into a proxy war.”

When Donald Trump entered office in 2017, he attempted to hold the line on Obama’s policy, but was soon branded a Russian puppet by the Washington press corps and Democratic Party for refusing to send Raytheon’s Javelin missiles to the Ukrainian military. Trump’s reluctance to send the Javelins became part of the basis for his impeachment. He unsurprisingly relented.

As the US-made offensive weaponry began to reach the front lines of the Donbas, the collective West exploited the Minsk Accords to “give Ukraine time” to arm up, as former German Chancellor Angela Merkel put it.

In January 2022, the US announced a $200 million arms package to Ukraine. By the 18th of February, observers from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe reported a doubling in ceasefire violations, with OSCE maps showing the overwhelming majority of targeted sites on the side of the pro-Russian separatist population in Donetsk and Lugansk. Five days later, Russia invaded Ukraine.

And since then, the US and its allies have been scurrying up the escalation ladder at every opportunity.

“Things we couldn’t give in January because it was escalatory were given in February,” a former State Department official complained after meeting with Ukrainian counterparts. “And things we couldn’t give in February we can in April. That has been the distinct pattern, starting with, for crying out loud, Stingers,” they said, referring to shoulder mounted missiles.

President Joe Biden himself said in March 2022, “The idea that we’re gonna send in offensive equipment and have planes and tanks… don’t kid yourself, no matter what you all say, that’s called World War III.”

Just over a year later, Biden changed his tune, backing a plan to provide F-16 fighter jets to Ukraine, and after pressuring Germany to send in the tanks he once feared would provoke World War III.

It would only take two months from receiving HIMARs systems from the US for the Ukrainian military to begin targeting critical infrastructure, using them to strike the Antonovsky Bridge over the Dnipro river, and again, two months later in a test strike on the Kakhovka Dam “to see if the Dnieper’s water could be raised enough to stymie Russian crossings,” as the Washington Post reported.

Three weeks ago, the Kakhovka Dam was destroyed, triggering a major environmental catastrophe that caused mass flooding and contamination of the local water supply. Ukraine, of course, blames Russia for the attack, but has produced no evidence.

Around this time, Ukraine also baselessly accused Russia of planning a provocation at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant. This triggered a resolution by Senators Lindsey Graham and Richard Blumenthal (no relation to me) calling for NATO to intervene directly in Ukraine and attack Russia if such an incident occurred.

The move by Blumenthal and Graham thus established a de facto red line for initiating US military action, much like the one set down in Syria which, as a former US diplomat commented to journalist Charles Glass, “was an open invitation to a false flag.”

Will we see another Douma deception, but this time in Zaporizhzhia?

Why are we doing this? Why are we tempting nuclear annihilation by flooding Ukraine with advanced weapons and sabotaging negotiations at every turn?

We have been told by people like Sen. Dick Durbin that Ukraine is “literally in a battle for freedom and democracy themselves,” and we must therefore supply it with weapons “for as long as it takes,” as President Biden said. Anyone who opposes military aid to Ukraine opposes the defense of democracy, according to this logic.

So where is the democracy in Volodymyr Zelensky’s decision to ban opposition parties, criminalize the media outlets of his legitimate political opponents, to jail his top political rival, round up his top deputies, raid Orthodox Churches and arrest clergymen?

Where is the democracy in the Ukrainian government’s imprisonment of Gonzalo Lira, a US citizen, for questioning the official narrative of their war effort?

And where is the democracy in Zelensky’s recent decision to suspend elections in 2024 on the grounds that martial law has been declared? Well, it seems that Ukraine’s democracy is harder to find these days than its military’s suddenly inconspicuous commander-in-chief, Valeriy Zaluzhny.

Senator Graham has offered a much more grim – and on-the-mark – rationale for supplying Ukraine with billions in weapons. As the senator boasted during a recent visit with Zelensky in Kiev, “The Russians are dying…it’s the best money we’ve ever spent.”

Graham, we should remember, has also said that we, the US, must fight this war to the last Ukrainian. While official casualty numbers are strictly classified, we must worry that Ukraine is well on its way to fulfilling the senator’s ghoulish fantasies.

As a Ukrainian soldier complained this month to Vice News, we don’t know what Zelensky’s “plans are, but it looks like extermination of its own population — like of the combat-ready and working-age population. That’s it.”

Indeed, military cemeteries in Ukraine are expanding almost as rapidly as the Northern Virginia McMansions and beachfront estates of executives from Lockheed Martin, Raytheon and assorted Beltway contractors benefitting from the second highest level of military spending since World War Two.

These are the real winners of the Ukraine proxy war. Not average Ukrainians or Americans. Or Russians or even Western Europeans.

The winners are people like Secretary of State Tony Blinken, who spent his time between the Obama and Biden administrations launching a consulting firm called WestExec advisors which secured lucrative government contracts for intelligence firms and the arms industry. Blinken’s former partners at WestExec advisors include Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines, CIA deputy director David Cohen, former White House press secretary Jen Psaki, and almost a dozen current and former members of Biden’s national security team.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, for his part, is a former and possibly future board member of Raytheon, and ex-partner of the Pine Island Capital investment firm that collaborates with WestExec and which Blinken has advised.

Meanwhile, the current US ambassador to the UN, Linda Thomas Greenfield, is listed as a senior counsel at the Albright Stonebridge Group, a self-described “commercial diplomacy firm” that also finesses contracts for the intelligence sector and arms industry. This firm was founded by the late Madeleine Albright, who infamously declared that the deaths of half-a-million Iraqi children under the US sanctions regime was “worth it.”

So while middle-aged Ukrainian men are ripped off streets by military police and sent to the front lines, the financially and politically connected architects of this proxy war are planning to walk through the revolving door to reap unimaginable profits once their time in the Biden administration is over.

For them, a negotiated settlement to this territorial dispute means an end to the cash cow of close to $150 billion in US aid to Ukraine.

When the United States, a permanent member of this council, has fallen under the control of a government which seeks to perpetuate a proxy war for “as long as it takes,” which considers diplomacy synonymous with unilateral coercive measures to “turn the ruble to rubble,” as Biden has pledged to do; whose leadership subverts negotiations in order to pursue profit while refusing to properly inform its own citizens what they are paying for, and which pushes the sons and brothers of its supposed Ukrainian partners out onto a killing field in order to bludgeon a geopolitical rival; when both Zelensky and members of the US Congress are calling for preemptive strikes on Russia which contravene the spirit of Article 51 of the UN charter, this council must take action to enforce that charter.

Articles 33 – 38 of Chapter VI of that Charter are clear that the security council must use its authority to guarantee a pacific settlement of dispute, particularly when it threatens international security. That should not only apply to Russia and Ukraine. This council has an obligation to strictly monitor and restrain the US and the illegal military formation known as NATO.

John Mearsheimer: The West is playing Russian roulette

“Why is Ukraine the West’s fault”

13 March 2022

The stench of hypocrisy surrounding Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is overpowering.

 If the West is opposed to bombing schools, clinics and peoples’ homes why is it that Palestine Action activists are on bail for trying to stop Elbit Systems making killer drones for use in Gaza and Yemen?

John Mersheimer and Ray McGovern

Last year I was one of 6 Palestine Action activists who were detained by Police on the way to Elbit’s Shenstone Factory which produces drones, missiles and cluster ammunition (although they deny it). The Jewish Chronicle gleefully reported that ‘Greenstein charged with 'possessing an article with the intent to destroy property'.

Elbit funded a book which claims that Bulgaria’s army saved the country’s Jews from deportation. In fact Bulgaria’s army deported 11,000 Jews from  Thrace & Macedonia to Auschwitz. It was the strength of the Left and the Church which prevented the deportation of Bulgaria's 50,000 Jews. But Elbit is more concerned about arms contracts with Bulgaria. Who cares if it falsifies the history of the Holocaust.

There was of course no mention as to whether I was about to vandalise a car or a door to someone’s home. No mention was made of the target being Israel’s Elbit arms factory. It was left to readers to speculate. All that mattered was that I had intended to destroy property, which in the Jewish Chronicle’s eyes is far more reprehensible than killing a few Palestinian children. Given that the article was written by ‘Liar’ Lee Harpin it’s surprising that he even managed to spell my name right!

Of course the JC could have reported why the van that I was driving contained red paint to symbolise the blood of those whose lives have been taken by Elbit Systems but given the psychopathic politics of Editor Stephen Pollard that was never very likely.

That ordinary people are horrified by what is happening is in Ukraine is understandable. The destruction and loss of life is horrific.

Putin has fallen into the trap that Biden and the architects of the United States’s policy towards Ukraine laid for him. No one is likely to be happier at how events have turned out than Biden, Blinken and the rest of the Masters of War in Washington. Not that Putin is any angel. His horrific war in Chechniya and his merciless bombing of civilian populations in Syria (which of course the US was also doing) demonstrates that he is no progressive.

Russia should withdraw its forces immediately from Ukraine before there is even worse carnage. Russia had the right to defend the two breakaway republics of Donetsk and Luhansk. It had no right to invade and try to take over the rest of Ukraine. Unfortunately the result of Putin’s actions is that NATO will be strengthened.

Those who want a background to Russia’s invasion should watch John Mearsheimer’s lecture to King’s College students.

He predicted that Russia would not invade Ukraine based on what is rationale, because Mearsheimer comes from the ‘realist’ school of political science. However our leaders are rarely rational.

The anger of Russia against the encroachment of NATO is understandable and the double dealing of the West, including the arming of neo-Nazi militias and their integration into the Ukrainian military, should be a wake up call for everyone.

Ukraine on Fire

The overthrow, in what was a fascist coup, in 2014 of the democratically elected President, Viktor Yanukovych (See Oliver Stone’s Ukraine on Fire provides the background.

The hypocrisy surrounding Russia’s invasion is nauseating. NATO has condemned Russia’s use of cluster munitions. But here’s a strange thing. Neither the United States nor Ukraine (Israel and Russia) have signed the Convention on Cluster Munitions. Clearly NATO has no principled objection to their use.

Ilan Pappe has written an excellent article on what he terms the  Four Lessons from Ukraine. They can be summed up as:

i.            White Refugees are Welcome; Others Less So.

In Israel this is not true. They are doing their best to deter Ukrainian Jews from even coming to Israel but its not going according to plan. Too many of the ‘wrong sort’ i.e. non-Jews have continued coming, probably unaware that in a ‘Jewish’ racial state they are not welcome.

Israel’s Interior Minister Ayelet Shaked, who Moshe Machover in another excellent article Hypocrisy all round describes as ‘Israel’s double-plus version of Priti Patel’ has been wailing that ‘90% of Ukrainian Refugees Arriving Are non-Jews, Situation 'Cannot Go On'.

You can see Ayelet’s point. The whole point of Israel that it is a state for Jews, not non-Jews. Israel’s Immigration Policy Center likened the current situation to the case of infiltrators [this was a term originally deployed for Palestinian refugees in the 50s who were trying to return by sneaking over the border. Today it is used to refer to asylum seekers from Africa].

The center warned of a "ticking demographic time bomb". It is important for the Jewish ethnic state to maintain a healthy majority over non-Jews. If 90% of Ukrainian refugees are non-Jews then we might end up with a non-Jewish state. God forbid! Concern for demography is integral to all Zionist parties. That is why a Jewish State is inherently racist. Israeli politicians’ worst nightmare is that one day Israel has a non-Jewish majority (which if Palestinians under occupation were allowed to vote would already exist).

It is therefore perfectly understandable that Israel should balk at taking non-Jewish refugees and diluting the racial gene pool. Shaked therefore came up with a brilliant idea. Those entering with the wrong bloodline would have to pay a 10,000 shekel deposit (£2,500) to guarantee that they wouldn’t outstay their welcome (1 month). Zelensky, despite being a Zionist (he is an Israeli citizen), objected.

ii.            The second lesson is that ‘You Can Invade Iraq but not the Ukraine’. This should be obvious. Only the United States has the right to invade countries to engage in regime change. What the hell does Putin think he is doing in challenging Biden’s monopoly on this kind of thing?

iii.         Lesson 3 is particularly important for you to understand. Although none of us like neo-Nazis there are times when Neo-Nazism Can Be Tolerated. In 2014 neo-Nazi militia such as the Azov Battalion were essential to overthrowing a pro-Russian President Yanukovych. That is why the United States, Britain and Israel have been arming them and training them.

The CIA has been secretly training forces for Ukraine since 2015. According to Nation magazine in July 2015 Congressmen John Conyers and Ted Yoho drew up an amendment to the House Defense Appropriations bill that “limits arms, training, and other assistance to the neo-Nazi Ukrainian militia, the Azov Battalion.” Yet by the end of 2015, under pressure from the Pentagon, Congress removed a ban on funding the Azov Battalion from its spending bill.

It’s like Al Qaeda. They are our enemy but if they are also the enemy of our enemy they can become our friend. So in the battle to overthrow Assad in Syria Israel under the ‘Good Neighbour’ programme began funding and arming the Al Qaeda front, al Nusra. Israel even provided hospital facilities for their wounded fighters.

Of course Israel is not overkeen on neo-Nazis, despite having a few in the Knesset, but in the world of realpolitik one can’t be too choosy. And they are certainly preferable to communists since these days their main target is Arabs and Muslims (and now Russians) not Jews. Neo-Nazis are now integrated into the Ukrainian National Guard and armed forces, all courtesy of ‘Jewish’ President Zelensky.

iv.         The fourth and most important lesson is that Hitting High-rise flats is only a War Crime in Europe. So we had the ludicrous situation that clips and images circulating about Russian missile strikes were shown by USA Today and others to have been Israeli attacks in Gaza! As Pappe wrote:

USA Today reported that a photo that went viral about a high-rise in the Ukraine being hit by Russian bombing turned out to be a high-rise from the Gaza Strip, demolished by the Israeli Air Force in May 2021. A few days before that, the Ukrainian Foreign Minister complained to the Israeli ambassador in Kiev that “you’re treating us like Gaza” (Haaretz, February 17, 2022)

USA Today reported that

While the photo in the post is real, it wasn't taken in Ukraine. Agence-France Presse photographer Mahmud Hamsimage took the photo May 10, 2021, in the Gaza Strip.

It is an understandable mistake because the Western media has never had a problem with Israeli air strikes on Gaza’s high rise flats. Even scenes from video games have been passed off as being from Ukraine (see here).

The reaction to Russian excuses for their actions are in themselves noteworthy. Last year Israeli airstrikes in Gaza damaged six hospitals, nine primary health care centres, and a desalination plant that supplies clean water to 250 000 people according to the British Medical Journal, quoting the United Nations. Israel justified this by claiming that Hamas was operating there. Naturally the BBC treats this explanation deferentially.

When Israel announces that Hamas is using civilians as ‘human shields’ Western leaders parrot this nonsense. Presumably this was why Israel used White Phosphorous on schools and civilian targets. And The Hill, which boasts that it is ‘read by the White House and more lawmakers than any other site’ carried an article, not on Israel’s targeting of Palestinian civilians but on How Congress can fight Hamas's use of human shields’ thus buying into Israel’s lying propaganda 100%.

When Russia uses the same excuses then the BBC treats his explanation with the derision they deserve. Double standards are normal BBC fare.

It shouldn’t need repeating but I will for the benefit of those fools who believe that criticism of NATO means that one is a ‘Putin’ supporter. These are the arguments of McCarthyists through the ages. If you criticise any facet of American capitalism then you are a communist or a Russian agent.

There are those who have imbibed this logic with their mother’s milk. They stay glued to the BBC and in case their minds should wander Boris Johnson, at the urging of Starmer, has ensured that there is no alternative news outlet such as RT. Although we are in favour of competition economically, it must never be though that this competition extends to different narratives at the time of war.

We should be grateful to Israel, which at least has had the decency not to condemn Russia too strongly. As Ha’aretz explained there are Three Reasons Why Israel Is Hesitant to Condemn Putin Over Ukraine most notably Israel’s co-ordination with Russia over the bombing of Syria. I imagine that condemning Russia’s attacks on civilians might seem a little like chutzpah, even for Israel’s cynical leaders.

There is also another irony as Pappe pointed outThe Ukrainian establishment does not only have a connection with these neo-Nazi groups and armies, it is also disturbingly and embarrassingly pro-Israeli.’

One of Zelensky’s first acts as President was to withdraw Ukraine from the UN Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People – the only international tribunal that makes sure the Nakba is not forgotten.

Zelensky had no sympathy for the Palestinian refugees, nor did he consider them to be victims of any crime. In interviews after the last Israeli bombardment of Gaza in May 2021, he stated that the only tragedy in Gaza was the one suffered by the Israelis.

As Pappe commented, if what Zelensky says is true then ‘it is only the Russians who suffer in the Ukraine.’ But this too is out of Israel’s playbook of ‘shooting and crying’. Even when Israel murders Palestinians they are the real victims. As Golda Meir said:

“We can forgive the Arabs for killing our children. We cannot forgive them for forcing us to kill their children. We will only have peace with the Arabs when they love their children more than they hate us”

I decided to send a letter to the Guardian. Given its letters page is Freedlandised (after Jonathan Freedland, its Zionist gatekeeper) it won’t appear but it’s good to give it the opportunity to print the truth occasionally.




Ahed Tamimi



Letter to the Guardian

guardian.letters@theguardian.com

Saturday, 12 March 2022

Dear Sir or Madam,

The stench of hypocrisy surrounding Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is overpowering.

Over two dozen of us are presently on bail for the ‘crime’ of trying to prevent Elbit Systems Ltd., an Israeli arms manufacturer, from producing drones and missiles that are then used by Israel, Saudi Arabia and other regimes to murder civilians.

Indeed one of Elbit’s proud boasts to potential buyers is that its weapons are ‘battle tested’ against civilians.

Since we are all now agreed that bombing civilians, hospitals and other civilian infrastructure is a war crime perhaps I could ask whether this only applies in Europe? Are non-European peoples excepted from the protection of international law?

When Israel ‘mows the lawn’ in Gaza, it has no hesitation in attacking health facilities and high rise tower blocks. The excuse given is that Hamas is located in the facility or that civilians are being used as human shields. The BBC takes these explanations seriously but when it comes to Russia these same excuses are treated with derision. Why?

USA Today revealed on February 24 that a widely circulated image on social media of the bombing of Kharkhiv was in fact the bombing of Gaza. USA Today also revealed that a Facebook post that went viral showing a brave Ukrainian girl confronting armed Russian  soldiers was in fact a Palestinian girl, Ahed Tamimi, who in 2017 was gaoled for 8 months for slapping a heavily armed soldier who had just shot her cousin in the head.

And isn’t the continued incarceration of Julian Assange for exposing United States attacks on Iraqi civilians an outrage too far?  Or is there something I have missed?

Yours faithfully,

Tony Greenstein

In addition to Navigating our Humanity: Ilan Pappé on the Four Lessons from Ukraine and Moshe Machover’s Hypocrisy all round I am listing a number of statements which embody a range of different perspectives on the war. The Intercept article Putin’s Criminal Invasion of Ukraine Highlights Some Ugly Truths About U.S. and NATO is particularly important.

Putin’s Criminal Invasion of Ukraine Highlights Some Ugly Truths About U.S. and NATO

The fact that Putin is trying to justify the unjustifiable in Ukraine does not mean we must ignore the U.S. actions that fuel his narrative.

In recent days, U.S. and NATO officials have highlighted Russia’s use of banned weapons, including cluster munitions, and have said their use constitutes violations of international law. This is indisputably true. What goes virtually unmentioned in much of the reporting on this topic is that the U.S., like both Russia and Ukraine, refuses to sign the Convention on Cluster Munitions.

The U.S. has repeatedly used cluster bombs, going back to the war in Vietnam and the “secret” bombings of Cambodia. In the modern era, both Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush used them. President Barack Obama used cluster bombs in a 2009 attack in Yemen that killed some 55 people, the majority of them women and children. Despite the ban, which was finalized in 2008 and went into effect in 2010, the U.S. continued to sell cluster bombs to nations like Saudi Arabia, which regularly used them in its attacks in Yemen. In 2017, President Donald Trump reversed an internal U.S. policy aimed at limiting the use of certain types of cluster munitions, a move which a Human Rights Watch expert warnedcould embolden others to use cluster munitions that have caused so much human suffering.”

Moscow’s argument is that the U.S. and NATO, under the “pretext” of “humanitarian intervention,” and with no United Nations authorization, unilaterally bombed Serbia for more than two months in 1999 followed by a ground incursion into Kosovo. In February, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov suggested, in remarks at the U.N., that the U.S. had set a precedent with the Kosovo war and that this negated the value of Western critiques of Russia’s plans to attack Ukraine. “I have to recall these facts, because some Western colleagues prefer to forget them,” Putin said in his February 24 speech. “When we mentioned the [Kosovo war], they prefer to avoid speaking about international law.”

On March 24, 1999, ignoring opposition from the U.N. and a sizable number of U.S. lawmakers, the U.S. began what would become a 78-day NATO bombing campaign against Serbia and Montenegro that saw civilian targets regularly struck, 16 media workers killed when a TV station was bombed, and internationally banned cluster bombs used, including on a crowded market, in attacks that killed between 90 and 150 civilians. The U.S. also bombed the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade, killing three journalists.

While Biden and his allies claimed that the war was necessary to prevent ethnic cleansing and mass killing operations, the overwhelming majority of Kosovo Albanians killed by Serbian forces were killed after the NATO bombing began. MiloÅ¡ević responded to the airstrikes by unleashing his forces and deploying great numbers of both conventional and special units as well as vicious paramilitaries in a “systematic and deliberately organized” mass killing and forced displacement operation. During the bombing, an estimated 700,000 Kosovo Albanians were forcibly displaced. “The NATO air campaign did not provoke the attacks on the civilian Kosovar population but the bombing created an environment that made such an operation feasible,” a U.N. commission on the war concluded.

It should also be pointed out that the condemnation of Russia for its use of horrific thermobaric weapons and cluster bombs would be a tad more convincing if Britain and the United States hadn’t used them in Syria and Afghanistan.

It never ceases to amaze me how many fools are taken in by Western propaganda like for example the detestable Kay Burley.

Tony Greenstein

Putin’s Criminal Invasion of Ukraine Highlights Some Ugly Truths About U.S. and NATO

Fact check: Viral image does not show 8-year-old Ukrainian girl confronting a Russian soldier

Elbit Systems and the Falsification of the Holocaust's History

The Great Jewish Oligarchs' Escape: ‘The Ground Is Trembling. They Will Stream Into Israel'

Zapatista Statement on Russian Invasion of Ukraine

Our Attitude Towards Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine

By: Chinese Professors February 24, 2022

Compilation of Statements on the Ukraine Crisis

Fedor Ustinov, Nao Hong, Interview with a Leftwing Ukrainian activist in Kyiv

Several Left Parties, Left solidarity with Ukraine

Arab and Middle Eastern Journalists Association (AMEJA), Statement from Arab and Middle Eastern Journalists Association on Ukraine

Social Movement (Ukraine), Appeal from Ukrainian socialists of Social Movement

Global Labour Institute, Worker Activists Call for Solidarity Against war

Croatian Women for Peace, Ukraine: Women’s Appeal for Peace (Croatia)

French Unions, Joint Declaration of French Unions

Mehdi Chebil, Exodus to the Ukraine-Poland border: “They turn us away because we’re black!”

Zapatista Army of National Liberation, Zapatista Statement on Russian Invasion of Ukraine

Open letter from Israel to the Russian Anti-War Movement

Feminist Anti-War Resistance, Russia’s Feminists Are in the Streets Protesting Putin’s War

Women in Black (Madrid), Women in Black Against War (Madrid)

Russian Cultural and Art Workers, An Open Letter from Russian Cultural and Art Workers Against the War with Ukraine

Chuang, Sharing the Shame: A Letter from Internationalists in China

Ignacy Jóźwiak and Witalij Machinko, Interview with Witalij Machinko, Workers’ Solidarity Union (Trudowa Solidarnist, Kiev)

New York State Nurses Association, Statement on Ukraine

Caminar, The absence of solidarity is a mistake and a denial of humanism

Anti-War Round Table of the Left, Resolution of the Anti-War Round Table of the Left forces

transform europe, Stop the War! An Appeal for a Europe of Peace

SUD-Rail and Solidaires, SUD-Rail and Solidaires demand free transport for refugees from Ukraine!

Chinese Professors, Our Attitude Towards Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine

Japan Council against A and H Bombs (Gensuikyo), Letter of protest to President Putin of Russia

CNDP (India), Statement on Ukraine

Hong Kong University students, Statement of Hong Kong University students on the Russian invasion and war on ukraine

Independent Belarusian Labor Union BKDP, Belarusian Labor Union on War in Ukraine

Russian Scientists, A Call from Russian Scientists against War

Confederation of Labor of Russia (KTR), Confederation of Labor Russia, Communique on Ukraine Situation

Autonomous Action, Committee of Resistance, Food Not Bombs, Moscow, Russian and Ukrainian Anarchists Speak Out

Workers’ Initiative Union, Against war – for international workers’ solidarity! Statement of OZZ IP (Poland), member of the International Labor Network of Solidarity and Struggles Network

International Labor Solidarity Network, Stop Russian aggression in Ukraine!

Ukrainian Sectoral Trade Unions, Ukrainian Trade Unions on Situation in Ukraine

Solidarités Suisse, No to Russia’s Imperialist Aggression against Ukraine

Stop the War has always been proud to stand outside this suffocating parliamentary consensus

How Zelensky Made Peace With Neo-Nazis