The West closes its eyes to the truth in Ukraine
November 30, 2004

Did you know enormous rallies have been held in Kiev in support of the Prime
Minister, asks John Laughland.

There was a time when the left was in favour of revolution, while the right
stood unambiguously for the authority of the state. Not any more. In the
past week, two British newspapers - the anti-Iraq war Independent and the
pro-Iraq war Telegraph - excitedly announced a "revolution" in Ukraine,
while stateside, the right-wing Washington Times welcomed "the people versus
the power".

Whether it is Albania in 1997, Serbia in 2000, Georgia last November or
Ukraine now, the Western media regularly peddle the same fairytale about how
youthful demonstrators manage to bring down an authoritarian regime, simply
by attending a rock concert in a central square. Two million anti-war
demonstrators can stream though the streets of London and be politically
ignored, but a few tens of thousands in central Kiev are proclaimed to be
"the people", while the Ukrainian police, courts and government institutions
are discounted as instruments of oppression.

The Western imagination is now so gripped by its own mythology of popular
revolution that we have become dangerously tolerant of blatant double
standards in media reporting. Enormous rallies have been held in Kiev in
support of the Prime Minister, Viktor Yanukovich, but they are rarely shown
on our TV screens: if their existence is admitted, Yanukovich supporters are
denigrated as having been "bussed in". The demonstrations in favour of
Viktor Yushchenko have laser lights, plasma screens, sophisticated sound
systems, rock concerts, tents to camp in and huge quantities of orange
clothing; yet we happily dupe ourselves that they are spontaneous.

Or again, we are told that a 96 per cent turnout in Donetsk, the home town
of Viktor Yanukovich, is proof of electoral fraud. But apparently turnouts
of more than 80 per cent in areas that support Viktor Yushchenko are not.
Nor are actual scores for Yushchenko of well over 90 per cent in three
regions, which Yanukovich achieved in only two. And whereas Yanukovich's
final official score was 54 per cent, the Western-backed President of
Georgia, Mikhail Saakashvili, officially polled 96.24 per cent of the vote
in his country in January. The observers who now denounce the Ukrainian
election welcomed that result in Georgia, saying that it "brought the
country closer to meeting international standards".
We have become dangerously tolerant of blatant double standards in media
reporting.

The blindness extends even to the posters that the "pro-democracy" group,
Pora, has plastered all over Ukraine, depicting a jackboot crushing a
beetle, an allegory of what Pora wants to do to its opponents.

Such dehumanisation of enemies has well-known antecedents - not least in
Nazi-occupied Ukraine itself, when pre-emptive war was waged against the Red
Plague emanating from Moscow - yet these posters have passed without
comment. Pora continues to be presented as an innocent band of students
having fun in spite of the fact that - like its sister organisations in
Serbia and Georgia - Pora is an organisation created and financed by
Washington.

It gets worse. Plunging into the crowd of Yushchenko supporters in
Independence Square after the first round of the election, I met two members
of Una-Unso, a neo-Nazi party whose emblem is a swastika. They were
unembarrassed about their allegiance, perhaps because last year Yushchenko
and his allies stood up for the Socialist party newspaper, Silski Visti,
after it ran an anti-Semitic article claiming that Jews had invaded Ukraine
alongside the Wehrmacht in 1941.

On September 19, 2004, Yushchenko's ally, Alexander Moroz, told JTA-Global
Jewish News: "I have defended Silski Visti and will continue to do so. I
personally think the argument . . . citing 400,000 Jews in the SS is
incorrect, but I am not in a position to know all the facts."

Yushchenko and Moroz, meanwhile, cited a court order closing the paper as
evidence of the Government's desire to muzzle the media. In any other
country, support for anti-Semites would be shocking; in this case, our media
do not even mention it.

Voters in the United States, Britain and Australia have witnessed their
governments lying brazenly about Iraq for more than a year in the run-up to
war, and with impunity. This is an enormous dysfunction in our own so-called
democratic system. Our tendency to paint political fantasies onto countries
such as Ukraine that are tabula rasa for us, and to present the West as a
fairy godmother swooping in to save the day, is not only a way to salve a
guilty conscience about our own political shortcomings; it also blinds us to
the reality of continued brazen Western intervention in the democratic
politics of other countries.

John Laughland is a trustee of http://www.oscewatch.org and an associate of
http://www.sandersresearch.com

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