Ukraine’s Poison Pill for Peace Talks
March 19, 2015
Exclusive: The Ukraine government’s latest maneuver – undermining the Minsk-2 
agreement with a requirement for a rebel surrender – is likely to drive the 
country back into a full-scale civil war and push the U.S. and Russia closer to 
a nuclear showdown, reports Robert Parry.By Robert ParryBy adding a poison pill 
to legislation implementing the latest Minsk agreement, the Ukrainian 
government has effectively guaranteed a resumption of the civil war, which U.S. 
hardliners and the mainstream U.S. media will no doubt blame on ethnic Russian 
rebels and Russian President Vladimir Putin.The U.S. media has focused on the 
so-called Minsk-2 agreement’s cease-fire component, first claiming it was being 
sabotaged by the rebels and Russia but now acknowledging that it is shaky but 
relatively successful. But the larger point of Minsk-2 was that it would 
provide for a political settlement of the civil war by arranging talks between 
Kiev and authorities in the east that would lead to giving those areas 
extensive self-rule by the end of 2015.But the implementing law that emerged 
this week from the Ukrainian parliament in Kiev inserted a clause requiring the 
rebels to first surrender to the Ukrainian government and then letting Kiev 
organize elections before a federalized structure is determined.The Minsk-2 
agreement had called for dialogue with the representatives of these territories 
en route to elections and establishment of broad autonomy for the region, but 
Kiev’s curveball was to refuse any talks with rebel leaders and insist on 
establishing control over these territories before the process can move 
forward, in effect requiring a rebel capitulation.Reflecting that view, Vadim 
Karasyov, director of the independent Institute of Global Strategies in Kiev, 
said: “Ukraine isn’t going to go along with any legalization of those so-called 
people’s republics. We need them to be dismantled,” according to the Christian 
Science Monitor.The leaders of the Donetsk and Luhansk “people’s republics” 
have protested this bait-and-switch tactic, declaring in a statement that the 
change was unacceptable: “We agreed to a special status for the Donbass within 
a renewed Ukraine, although our people wanted total independence. We agreed to 
this to avoid the spilling of fraternal blood.”Kiev’s maneuver – reflecting the 
bellicose position of neocon Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland and 
other U.S. hardliners – puts pressure on German Chancellor Angela Merkel and 
French President Francois Hollande to either get Ukraine’s President Petro 
Poroshenko to return to the original understanding of Minsk-2 or watch the 
fighting resume leading to a potential showdown between nuclear-armed Russia 
and the United States on Russia’s border.The surrender-first-negotiate-later 
stipulation also raises questions about the strength of Merkel and President 
Barack Obama to overcome resistance from America’s powerful neoconservatives 
who have exploited the Ukraine crisis to isolate Russia and drive a wedge 
between Obama and Putin. The two leaders had cooperated to reduce tensions with 
Syria and Iran in 2013 when the neocons were hoping for more “regime 
change.”Following those Obama-Putin collaborations, Nuland and other neocons 
both inside the Obama administration and in Congress took aim at Ukraine, 
egging on public disruptions in Kiev to destabilize the elected government of 
President Viktor Yanukovych during the winter of 2013-14. [See 
Consortiumnews.com’s “The Neocons — Masters of Chaos.“]To a great extent, the 
Ukraine crisis became Nuland’s baby as she rallied Ukraine’s business leaders 
and political activists to challenge Yanukovych and discussed with U.S. 
Ambassador Geoffrey Pyatt in early February 2014 how, in his words, to “midwife 
this thing.”In that same conversation, Nuland expressed her disgust at the 
European Union’s less aggressive approach to the crisis with the pithy 
expression, “Fuck the EU.” She also handpicked new leaders, ruling out some 
politicians and declaring that “Yats is the guy,” a reference to Arseniy 
Yatsenyuk who became the post-coup prime minister. (This past week, it was 
Yatsenyuk who oversaw the insertion of the poison pill into the legislation for 
implementing the Minsk-2 agreement.)Cue in the Neo-NazisThe uprising in Kiev 
reached its peak on Feb. 22, 2014, when a violent coup – spearheaded by 
neo-Nazi militias from western Ukraine – drove elected Yanukovych from office, 
with the U.S. State Department immediately declaring the new regime 
“legitimate.” The coup government then sought to impose its control over the 
ethnic Russian east and south, which had been Yanukovych’s base of 
support.Protected by Russian troops who were already based in Crimea on a 
base-lease agreement, the people of Crimea voted to secede from Ukraine and 
rejoin Russia, an annexation that took place one year ago. Uprisings also 
occurred in the eastern Donbass region with hastily arranged referenda also 
seeking independence from Kiev.The coup regime responded by declaring those 
resisting in the east to be “terrorists” and mounting a punitive 
“anti-terrorist operation” that relied on army artillery to bombard cities and 
neo-Nazi and other right-wing militias to go in for the brutal street-to-street 
fighting.Thousands of ethnic Russians were killed in these offensives as the 
rebels were pushed back into their strongholds of Donetsk and Luhansk. However, 
receiving supplies and other assistance from Russia, the rebels turned the tide 
of the conflict and began driving the Ukrainian military back, inflicting heavy 
losses.To stop the rout of government forces last September, the first Minsk 
ceasefire established a tentative frontline around the rebel strongholds. But 
Kiev continued to squeeze the rebel-held cities by cutting off access to 
banking and other services while neo-Nazi and other militias undertook “death 
squad” operations to kill rebel sympathizers in government-controlled 
zones.When that first cease-fire broke down, the rebels made new gains against 
the Ukrainian military, prompting Merkel and Hollande to broker a second 
ceasefire, which included a structure for resolving the crisis with a political 
settlement to grant eastern Ukraine substantial autonomy.But Nuland and other 
U.S. hard-liners objected to the concessions and trade-offs arranged by Merkel 
and Holland and accepted by Poroshenko and Putin. The U.S. hard-liners began 
plotting how to reverse what they claimed was “appeasement” of “Russian 
aggression.”The German press has reported on some of this U.S. strategy after 
the Bild newspaper obtained details of conversations that Nuland and other U.S. 
officials held behind closed doors last month at a security conference in 
Munich. Nuland was overheard disparaging the German chancellor’s initiative, 
calling it “Merkel’s Moscow thing,” according to Bild, citing unnamed 
sources.Another U.S. official went even further, the report said, calling it 
the Europeans’ “Moscow bullshit.”Talking Themselves into a FrenzyThe tough talk 
behind the closed doors at a conference room in the luxurious Bayerischer Hof 
hotel seemed to be contagious as the American officials, both diplomats and 
members of Congress, kept escalating their rhetoric, according to the Bild 
account.Nuland suggested that Merkel and Hollande cared only about the 
practical impact of the Ukraine war on Europe: “They’re afraid of damage to 
their economy, counter-sanctions from Russia.”Another U.S. politician was heard 
adding: “It’s painful to see that our NATO partners are getting cold feet” – 
with particular vitriol directed toward German Defense Minister Ursula von der 
Leyen as “defeatist” because she supposedly no longer believed in a Kiev 
victory.Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona, got himself worked up into such a lather 
that he started making comparisons to British Prime Minister Neville 
Chamberlain going to Munich to “appease” Adolf Hitler, likening Merkel to 
Chamberlain and Putin to Hitler: “History shows us that dictators always take 
more, whenever you let them. They can’t be brought back from their brutal 
behavior when you fly to Moscow to them, just like someone once flew to this 
city.”According to the Bild story, Nuland laid out a strategy for countering 
Merkel’s diplomacy by using strident language to frame the Ukraine crisis in a 
way that stops the Europeans from backing down. “We can fight against the 
Europeans, we can fight with rhetoric against them,” Nuland reportedly 
said.NATO Commander Air Force Gen. Philip Breedlove was quoted as saying that 
sending more weapons would “raise the battlefield cost for Putin.” Nuland 
interjected to the U.S. politicians present that “I’d strongly urge you to use 
the phrase ‘defensive systems’ that we would deliver to oppose Putin’s 
‘offensive systems.’”Yet, through all of the past year’s scheming and 
maneuvering by Nuland and other U.S. officials, the mainstream U.S. media has 
studiously ignored the coup side of the story, insisting that there was no coup 
and adopting an “I-see-nothing” response to the presence of neo-Nazi militias 
leading the fight against the ethnic Russian east.For the New York Times, the 
Washington Post and the rest of major U.S. press, everything has been explained 
as “Russian aggression” with Putin supposedly having plotted the entire series 
of events as a way to conquer much of Europe as the new Hitler. Even though the 
evidence reveals that Putin was caught off-guard by the coup next door, the 
U.S. media has insisted on simply passing along Nuland’s propaganda 
themes.Thus, it is a safe bet that when the current ceasefire breaks down and 
the killing resumes, all the American people will hear is that it was Putin’s 
fault, that he conspired to destroy the peace as part of his grand scheme of 
“aggression.” And, the Nuland-Yatsenyuk sabotage of Minsk-2 will be the next 
part of this troubling story to disappear into the memory hole.Investigative 
reporter Robert Parry 
https://consortiumnews.com/2015/03/19/ukraines-poison-pill-for-peace-talks/

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