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Anton Shekhovtsov's Blog | 03Feb2014 | Anton Shekhovtsov
http://anton-shekhovtsov.blogspot.de/2014/02/pro-russian-network-behind-anti.html
Pro-Russian
network behind the anti-Ukrainian defamation campaign
There has been a huge tide of false, incorrect and bloated reports that
exaggerate or over-emphasize the significance of the far right in the current Euromaidan
protests in Ukraine. A Moscow-based journalist Alec Luhn
writes in The Nation about "the Ukrainian nationalism at the heart of
‘Euromaidan’", a leftist Seumas Milne argues in The
Guardian that "in Ukraine, fascists, oligarchs and western
expansion are at the heart of the crisis", while a
self-styled "independent geopolitical analyst" Eric Draitser, in his nauseatingly misleading piece for
his own Stop Imperialism (later re-published by The
Centre for Research on Globalization), even goes so far as to
claim that "the violence on the streets of Ukraine [...] is the latest
example of the rise of the most insidious form of fascism that Europe
has seen since the fall of the Third Reich".
These and many other similar articles are all written according to the
same pattern, and their aim is to discredit the Euromaidan protests as
the manifestations of fascism, neo-Nazism or - at the very least -
right-wing extremism.
Every single mass political mobilisation in Ukraine
has been accompanied by the attempts to compromise the popular
uprisings by associating them with the extreme right. And not only
uprisings or protests, but big events too. For example, a few weeks
before the start of the Euro-2012 football championship, British media hysterically accused
Ukrainians of racism and xenophobia, and warned that any
non-White person going to see football matches in Ukraine would
definitely and immediately be killed. After the championship was over,
no British media outlet apologised to the Ukrainian people when it
turned out that not one racist incident
involving Ukraine fans had been reported during the tournament.
The current campaign to defame the Euromaidan protests is so far the
strongest attack on the Ukrainian civil society and democratic
politics. Similar attacks took place in the past too,
although their intensity never reached today's level. During the "Orange revolution", the Ukrainian
semi-authoritarian regime under President Leonid Kuchma was also trying
to defile democratic presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko by
associating him with the extreme right. And here is a story that links
the past and the present.
In the run-up to the 2004 presidential election, which resulted in a
dramatic stand-off between Viktor Yanukovych and Viktor Yushchenko, a
certain Eduard Kovalenko, leader of the virtual far right party Ukrainian
National Assembly (UNA), declared that he and his party would
hold a march in support of Yushchenko as a presidential candidate.
Yushchenko's office immediately replied that they
never needed that support and did their best to distance from
Kovalenko's sordid initiative. Yet Yushchenko's office could not hamper
that march and, on 26 June 2004, Kovalenko proceeded:
[Photo #1 -- Eduard Kovalenko (in the centre) leading theUNA march;
Photo #2; Photo #3]
At the meeting that was held after the march, Kovalenko declared: "We, the right-wing
nationalist party, are supporting the only one candidate from the
right-wing forces: Viktor Yushchenko. One Ukraine, one nation, one
people, one president!". And he gave a Hitler salute.
[Photo #4]
To do all this, Eduard Kovalenko was paid a huge amount of money by
Viktor Medvedchuk, then the Head of the Presidential Administration
(under President Leonid Kuchma), who was later involved in the
electoral fraud in favour of pro-Russian Yanukovych which triggered the
"Orange revolution". Medvedchuk was (and still is) also known for his
close personal relations with Vladimir Putin who is the godfather of
Medvedchuk’s daughter.
Kovalenko's task was simple: by giving support to Yushchenko under the
Nazi-like flags, he was expected to discredit the democratic candidate
in the eyes of Western observers. Luckily for Yushchenko, however, the
Western media largely did not buy into that frame-up and ignored it.
But some Western organisations did not. One of those was the eccentric
- and apparently non-existent today - British Helsinki Human Rights Group
(BHHRG) not affiliated, despite the name, to the Helsinki Committee for
Human Rights. The BHHRG was notorious for claiming
that elections in authoritarian Belarus met democratic standards, that
Latvia had not been occupied by, but incorporated in, the Soviet Union,
that the Romani people of the Czech Republic did not suffer from racism
as generally reported, etc. On 24 November 2004, the BHHRG published
a report "Shadow of Anti-Semitism over Ukraine’s
Disputed Election" in which the authors concluded:
With friends like these [i.e.
Eduard Kovalenko and some others] Mr Yushchenko may feel he
has all the People Power he needs to seize the presidency, but should
OSCE observers, European parliamentarians, Colin Powell and George W.
Bush be undiluted in endorsing a candidate with backing from neo-Nazis
and Holocaust deniers?
One of the first web-sites to re-publish the report was the very same Centre for Research on Globalization
which has recently re-published Eric Draitser's piece on Ukraine to
which I referred in the very beginning. Another web-site that
re-published the BHHRG report, this time in
Russian, was the web-site of the Historical
Perspective Foundation headed by Russian
national-conservative Natalya Narochnitskaya. Since 2008, she has been
heading the Paris-based Institute of Democracy and Cooperation,
together with British eurosceptic journalist John Laughland as director
of studies. Laughland, described as a "right-wing anti-state libertarian and
isolationist", was one of the trustees of the BHHRG.
[Photo #5 -- John Laughland and Natalya Narochnitskaya]
At least three people who were associated with the BHHRG joined
the US-based Ron Paul Institute for Peace and Prosperity:
Daniel McAdams (Executive Director of the Institute), Mark Almond
(former chairman of the BHHRG) and John Laughland.
The web-site of the Ron Paul Institute is full of
misleading articles on Euromaidan associating it with the extreme
right, and various drivels by Mark Almond (who likes to present himself
as "professor of history at Oxford University", but does not even work
at Oxford) are particularly prominent (see for example his "Ukrainian Opposition and the West ‘Playing
with Fire Siding With Extreme Nationalists'").
[Photo #6 -- Mark Almond; Daniel McAdams]
The Canada-based Centre for Research on Globalization
is also interesting. It was founded and is now headed by Michel
Chossudovsky; among the Centre's contributors are Neil Clark, Mahdi D.
Nazemroaya and William Engdahl. Chossudovsky, Nazemroaya and Engdahl
are members of the scientific committee of the
Italian journal Geopolitica,
which also includes John Laughland and Natalya Narochnitskaya. Geopolitica
is edited by Tiberio Graziani, a fervent advocate of the Eurasian
cooperation and a member of the High Council of
the International Eurasian Movement led by Russian
fascist Aleksandr Dugin. In 2008, Dugin
called for the Russian occupation of Georgia, and even made a trip to
South Ossetia together with his followers from the Eurasian
Youth Union.
[Photo #7 -- Alexandr Dugin and his followers in South Ossetia in 2008]
Geopolitica itself is an
off-shoot from the Italian extreme right journal Eurasia,
Rivista di Studi Geopolitici, published and edited
by Italian Nazi-Maoist Claudio Mutti. The scientific board of Eurasia
includes Aleksandr Dugin and William Engdahl. In the early January,
Engdahl published a piece titled "The Belgrade US-Financed Training Group
Behind the Carefully-Orchestrated Kiev Protests".
[Photo #8 -- F. William Engdahl]
Dugin has been promoting the idea of the destruction of Ukraine and its
colonisation by Russia since the early 1990s. He has also been an
inspiration for the foundation of the Italian national-socialist
organisation Stato & Potenza which openly calls for the annexation of Ukraine
to the Russian Federation. Dugin and Mutti have been friends
since 1990; Mutti himself is closely associated with Stato
& Potenza.
[Photo #9 -- Alexandr Dugin and Claudio Mutti in 2012]
All the above-mentioned people and groups form - apparently a small -
part of the wide network which is aimed at promoting anti-Western,
pro-Russian and pro-Eurasianist ideas in the EU and the US and Canada.
Moreover, the following people from this network are official
regular contributors to the Kremlin-sponsored Russia Today
(RT) TV:
And these authors are in the pool of political commentators of yet
another Kremlin-sponsored media service, the Voice of Russia:
- Mark Almond (ex-BHHRG, Ron Paul Institute for Peace and
Prosperity)
- Michel Chossudovsky (Centre for Research on Globalization, Geopolitica)
- Neil Clark
- Eric Draitser (Centre for Research on Globalization, Stop
Imperialism)
- Aleksandr Dugin (International Eurasian Movement, Eurasia)
- William Engdahl (Centre for Research on Globalization, Geopolitica,
Eurasia)
- Tiberio Graziani (Geopolitica)
- John Laughland (ex-BHHRG, Institute of Democracy and
Cooperation, Ron Paul Institute for Peace and Prosperity)
- Daniel McAdams (ex-BHHRG, Ron Paul Institute for Peace and
Prosperity)
- Natalya Narochnitskaya (Institute of Democracy and
Cooperation)
The Voice of Russia's offshoot in France is ProRussia
TV which is linked to the French far right National
Front and headed by Gilles Arnaud, a former National
Front councilor in the Upper Normandy. The National
Front's leader Marine Le Pen has received a warm welcome in Russia last
summer. Then, in particular, she met Vice-Prime Minister Dmitry
Rogozin, who helped found the Institute of Democracy and
Cooperation when he was Russia's ambassador to NATO
(2008-2011). It was during Rogozin's service in the Russian Mission to
NATO when Ukraine and Georgia were denied membership in this
organisation.
[Photo #10 -- Marine Le Pen and Dmitry Rogozin in Moscow, 2013]
Commenting on the Ukrainian government's decision not to sign the
Association Agreement with the EU, Le Pen said that she was
disappointed with the EU interference in the Ukrainian matters and recommended to the Ukrainians not "to join
this nightmare", i.e. the EU (although nobody actually
discussed Ukraine joining the EU). In this
rhetoric, Le Pen was supported by Andreas Mölzer
from the far right Freedom Party of Austria, who
also suggested - when speaking about
Ukraine's rapprochement with the EU - "to take into account the
legitimate interests of Russia [which] is very sensitive to everything
that happens in her immediate neighborhood [that] includes Ukraine,
which, since the time of Peter the Great, was part of the Russian
sphere of influence".
The large network consisting of pro-Russian authors and institutions is
a hard/extreme right breeding-ground of all kinds of conspiracy
theories, Euroscepticism, racism and anti-democratic theories. Today,
this is also one of the main sources of the articles, op-eds and
statements that are one way or another trying to discredit the
Euromaidan protests by associating them either with neo-Nazism or with
the alleged US expansionism. The rhetoric of these authors fully
conforms to the remarks made by Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov
who has recently slammed Western support for Euromaidan and declared: "What does incitement of
increasingly violent street protests have to do with promoting
democracy? Why don’t we hear condemnations of those who seize and hold
government buildings, burn, torch the police, use racist and
anti-Semitic and Nazi slogans?".
Here is a list of selected publications that this Eurasianist
Kremlin-inspired network has produced so far:
I don't know if Alec Luhn writing for The Nation or
Seumas Milne writing for The Guardian are part of
this pro-Eurasianist network. Despite the fact that their message is
similar to that of the many articles produced by the pro-Eurasianist
authors, they may simply not know what they are writing about. But
those people, who have been associated with the British
Helsinki Human Rights Group, Ron Paul Institute for
Peace and Prosperity, Institute of Democracy and
Cooperation, Centre for Research on Globalization,
International Eurasian Movement and - I presume -
many other similar institutions, which are yet to be revealed, are
obviously ideologically driven anti-democratic activists engaged in the
anti-Ukrainian and, eventually, anti-European subversive operations.
COMMENTS:
Dave Dalton: 3 February
2014 11:00
Clark & Milne are Yugoslav/ Soviet nostalgists--examples of
"reactionary socialism", whose version of "anti-imperialism" took years
to build (not by them) in the wake of Iraq and now is set in stone: no
need to do any new research (I don't think Clark is capable of it),
just stuff all new developments into the existing "anti-imperialist"
template. They are fellow travellers of Putinist nationalist.
Tom Czech: 3 February
2014 15:45
Kremlin's fascists spreading propaganda and hatred for all things West.
How cute. But maybe, just maybe they really do not understand what
democracy is all about. It is really not just about being elected in
fair (probably) elections and then establishing yourself as the only
ruler of the country.
Russians obviously cannot understand this because they never had a
democracy in their country.
Lev Havryliv: 3 February
2014 22:33
This is an excellent and timely article. Defamation of Ukrainians and
denigration of Ukrainian nationhood is common in some quarters and I
urge all Ukrainians to respond to such attacks by writing and speaking
out. I have no doubt that most of these propaganda efforts are
Kremlin-inspired. Unfortunately many Russians do not seem capable of
accepting that Ukrainians have the right to live in their own
democratic, independent nation.
Oleg Shenshyn: 4 February
2014 00:26
Human Rights.. Democracy and Cooperation.. Peace and Prosperity.. Wow,
those guys have definitely a talent for inventing nice names!
Author says "[a]ll the above-mentioned people and groups form -
apparently a small - part of the wide network [...]." As far as I
understand the spine of this "wide network" is RussiaToday TV ..or is
there something else?
W.Z. 2014.06.20 Addendum:
Here is one map of portions the network of Putin's Propaganda People developed by Olexander Scherba