Heroic Sen. Rand Paul tells TRUTH about Ukraine and Russia, get predictably blasted by satanists, globalist genocidalists, vaxx murderers

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Guest Columnist

'Ridiculous': Rand Paul's comments on Russia's invasion of Ukraine blasted as echoing Putin's propaganda​

Link: https://www.msn.com/?cobrand=dell.msn.com&OCID=DELLDHP&pc=MDDS


Morgan Watkins, Louisville Courier Journal April 26, 2022
  • Rand Paul
    Rand PaulUnited States Senator from Kentucky

  • Vladimir Putin
    Vladimir PutinPresident of Russia

  • Antony Blinken
    Antony BlinkenAmerican government official and 71th U.S. Secretary of State
Sen. Rand Paul got flak Tuesday for his comments on the Russian invasion of Ukraine, with some people criticizing him for echoing one of Russian President Vladimir Putin's talking points.

During an exchange with Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Paul pointed out that Russia's attacks, in the recent past, have been on countries that were once part of the Soviet Union.

Putin has publicly dismissed Ukraine's right to function as a sovereign nation separate from Russia.

The Kentucky Republican's comments came during a Senate hearing with Blinken, during which Paul raised concerns about U.S. displays of support for Ukraine potentially joining the NATO military alliance, including during former President George W. Bush and President Joe Biden's administrations.

He asked Blinken: "Knowing full well that Ukraine was unlikely to ever join NATO since it had already been 14 years since they said they were going to become members, why was it so important last fall — before this invasion — to continue agitating for Ukraine's admission to NATO?"

More: Sen. Rand Paul backs new Emmett Till Antilynching Act, after holding up the old one
Blinken pushes back when Rand Paul suggests Biden is responsible for Russia's invasion of Ukraine b/c he supported Ukraine's desire to join NATO, pointing out those are "sovereign decisions."

Paul then makes sure to point out he doesn't actually support Russia's invasion. But. pic.twitter.com/DL9iFlD4K7
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) April 26, 2022
Blinken responded: "It's a question of standing up for the basic principle, that we strongly adhere to, that there should be and will be an open-door policy when it comes to NATO membership."

Paul, who repeatedly has opposed U.S. military involvement in other countries during his political career, questioned the decision to push for "something that we knew our adversary (Russia) absolutely hated and said was a red line."

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"Now, there is no justification to the invasion. I'm not saying that. But there are reasons for the invasion," said Paul, who later added he's "proud of how well the Ukrainians have fought" and is supportive of their cause.
Sen. Rand Paul makes an appearance in Louisville on Dec. 6, 2021 to honor the founders of Phocus, a maker of sparkling water energy drinks, as part of Small Business of the week.
Sen. Rand Paul makes an appearance in Louisville on Dec. 6, 2021 to honor the founders of Phocus, a maker of sparkling water energy drinks, as part of Small Business of the week.More

When Blinken noted Russia has, in the recent past, attacked countries that weren't members of NATO — specifically Ukraine, Georgia and Moldova — Paul countered with: "You could also argue the countries they've attacked were part of Russia, or part of the Soviet Union, rather."

Blinken said he disagreed with that proposition, adding: "It is the fundamental right of these countries to decide their own future and their own destiny."

Simil: Rand Paul delayed the historic Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson vote, and people were not happy

"I'm not saying it's not," Paul responded. "But I'm saying that the countries that have been attacked, Georgia and Ukraine, were part of the Soviet Union..."
Blinken jumped in: "That does not give Russia the right to attack them..."

"No one's saying it does," Paul interjected.

Blinken continued: " …When everything came to a head, it is abundantly clear, in President Putin's own words, that this was never about Ukraine being potentially part of NATO, and it was always about his belief that Ukraine does not deserve to be a sovereign, independent country."

Related: Only one lawmaker voted against all recent legislation aimed at Russia. He's from Kentucky

Blowback was swift on Paul's comments​

Paul's exchange with Blinken was quickly met with disapproval online, including in a critical Rolling Stone article about his comments and tweets by figures like Alexander Vindman, a former National Security Council staffer whose testimony was a key part of former President Donald Trump's first impeachment.

"Paul implies that Russia is justified in attacking Ukraine because, UKR was once part of the USSR. By that logic Britain is justified in attacking the U.S. and colonial powers their former holdings. What century does he live in?" Vindman tweeted Tuesday afternoon.
A stunning exchange between @RandPaul & @SecBlinken
Paul implies that Russia is justified in attacking Ukraine because, UKR was once part of the USSR. By that logic Britain is justified in attacking the U.S. and colonial powers their former holdings. What century does he live in? https://t.co/3e36s2JHP9
— Alexander S. Vindman (@AVindman) April 26, 2022
Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., shared a video of Paul's exchange with Blinken and commented: "Rand Paul truly is ridiculous."
Rand Paul truly is ridiculous. He and @TuckerCarlson should bro out. https://t.co/4NgRoWVDft
— Adam Kinzinger (@AdamKinzinger) April 26, 2022
Charles Booker, a well-known Kentucky Democrat who hopes to defeat Paul in the fall election, also criticized the senator's statements Tuesday and asked for campaign donations to help boot him out of office.

"Rand Paul just attempted to justify Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. He is actively pushing Putin’s propaganda in the Senate, and I will remove him from office in November," Booker tweeted.
Rand Paul’s actions are shameful. My name is Charles Booker, I am a lifelong Kentuckian, proud husband, father, and the person who is going to retire Rand Paul this November. Please help me win this race by chipping in today: https://t.co/ADC1y3APe4
— Charles Booker (@Booker4KY) April 26, 2022
Paul's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
 
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Rand Paul Brings Putin’s Core Argument Against Ukraine to Congress​

Link: https://news.yahoo.com/rand-paul-brings-putin-core-181331945.html

Jack Crosbie April 26, 2022, 1:13 PM
  • Rand Paul
    Rand PaulUnited States Senator from Kentucky

  • Vladimir Putin
    Vladimir PutinPresident of Russia

  • Antony Blinken
    Antony BlinkenAmerican government official and 71th U.S. Secretary of State
Senate Blinken - Credit: Al Drago/AP Images
Senate Blinken - Credit: Al Drago/AP Images
At the core of Russia’s recent invasion of Ukraine is the notion of sovereignty — and in particular, whether Ukraine deserves it. Ukrainians, and the vast majority of people and governments in the rest of the world, say it does. Russia, which invaded the country in late February in an attempt to overthrow its government and make it into a subservient vassal state, says it doesn’t. Apparently, U.S. Senator Rand Paul also believes Ukraine isn’t a state, based on this head-scratching exchange with Secretary of State Anthony Blinken.
BLINKEN: If you look at the countries Russia attacked, these were countries that were not part of NATO
More from Rolling Stone
RAND PAUL: You could also argue the countries they've attacked were part of Russia
BLINKEN: I firmly disagree. It's the right of these countries to decide their future pic.twitter.com/4ZeZOVrK0i
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) April 26, 2022
Paul’s position is shocking but not entirely uncommon. Ukraine’s current security situation is the result of years of policy decisions made by Western countries, the Ukrainian government, and Russia, and Paul belongs to a camp that thinks the actions of NATO member states are more responsible for the current war than, say, Russia, the nation that started it. The core of this argument is that NATO’s courtship of Ukraine was the primary accelerant in the current crisis. There are points in this argument’s favor — NATO’s expansionist policies since the early ‘90s have not been exactly stabilizing to the region — but they often overlook the only question that should matter: What do Ukrainians want to do? Since 2014, they’ve overwhelmingly wanted to join NATO.”
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Related video: Secretary of State Blinken says 'Ukrainians have won the battle for Kyiv'​



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Blinken: 'Ukrainians have won the battle for Kyiv'​

Secretary of State Antony Blinken testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, imploring the US "must not let up" in its support for Ukraine and insisting it's critical to ensuring that the war is a “strategic failure” for Russia. (April 26)
Blinken: 'Ukrainians have won the battle for Kyiv'
Scroll back up to restore default view.
The argument, unfortunately, is an easy gateway to what we see in the video, which is a tacit denial that Ukraine has the right to exist as a state. This is also one of the key justifications Russian President Vladimir Putin made when he first announced a “Special Military Operation” against Ukraine.
The exchange between Paul and Blinken perfectly sums up the opposing rhetorical sides of the conflict, which in practice has resulted in the destruction of cities and thousands of deaths. Blinken’s point is that Ukraine is an independent nation, and that if it were in NATO, Russia wouldn’t have attacked it. Paul’s point is that Ukraine — and other post-Soviet republics like Georgia and Moldova — share ties to Russia that make them part of the same state, essentially, and that bringing them into NATO would risk a confrontation between nuclear-armed powers. Paul says he opposes the invasion itself, of course, but his stance on self-determination makes this point basically moot.
Both points are in some ways correct — a conflict between NATO and Russia would be unbelievably disastrous — but in making this point, Paul denies the self-determination of a country of people who did not ask for war. It’s well worth criticizing NATO’s policies in the formation of the current crisis, but only one party in the conflict thus far has violated another nation’s sovereignty and killed its people en masse. The only way to rectify this is to support — preferably by peaceful and diplomatic means — the ability of the Ukrainian people to make decisions on a world stage with their own interests at heart, rather than the interests of a state staring at them down the barrel of a gun.
 

1991: When America Tried to Keep Ukraine In the USSR​

by Ryan McMaken | Mises.org
April 27th 2022, 8:03 am

Link: https://www.infowars.com/posts/1991-when-america-tried-to-keep-ukraine-in-the-ussr/

In the final days of the Soviet Union, the Washington establishment was convinced nationalism was a greater threat than Soviet despotism

Thus, George Bush tried to prop up the USSR and prevent Ukrainian secession

The US government today likes to pretend that it is the perennial champion of political independence for countries that were once behind the Iron Curtain.

What is often forgotten, however, is that in the days following the fall of the Berlin Wall, Washington opposed independence for Soviet republics like Ukraine and the Baltic states.

In fact, the Bush administration openly supported Mikhail Gorbachev’s efforts to hold the Soviet Union together rather than allow the USSR to decentralize into smaller states. The US regime and its supporters in the press took the position that nationalism—not Soviet despotism—was the real problem for the people of Eastern Europe and the Caucasus.

Indeed, in the case of Ukraine, President George H. W. Bush even traveled to Kyiv in 1990 to lecture the Ukrainians about the dangers of seeking independence from Moscow, while decrying the supposed nationalist threat.

Today, nationalism is still a favorite bogeyman among Washington establishment mouthpieces. These outlets routinely opine on the dangers of French nationalism, Hungarian nationalism, and Russian nationalism. One often sees the term nationalism applied in ways designed to make the term distasteful, as in “white nationalism.”

When nationalism is convenient for NATO and its European freeloaders, on the other hand, we are told that nationalism is a force for good. Thus, the US regime and mainstream media generally pretend that Ukrainian nationalism—and even Ukrainian white nationalism—either don’t exit or are to be praised.

In 1991, however, the US had not yet decided that it paid to actively promote nationalism—so long as it is anti-Russian nationalism. Thus, in those days, we find the US regime siding with Moscow in efforts to stifle or discourage local nationalist efforts to break with the old Soviet state. The way it played out is an interesting case study in both Bush administration bumbling and in the US’s foreign policy that existed before the advent of unipolar American liberal hegemony.

The Anti-Nationalist Context​

In the late 1980s, it was already apparent that the Soviet Union was beginning to lose its grip on many parts of the enormous polity that was the USSR. Restive nationalists within the Soviet Union were beginning to assert local control. For example, by 1989, ethnic Armenians and Azeris are already embroiled in the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh that continues to this day. Deadly ethnic violence flared, but Moscow, in its weakened state, put off taking action. Yet, in January 1990, Moscow did act in what is know, in Azerbaijan today as “Black January.” Soviet tanks rolled into the Caspian Sea port city of Baku and killed as many as 150 Azeris—many of them civilians: “The ostensible aim of the intervention was to stop Azeri massacres of Armenians, but the real goal was to prevent the Azerbaijani Popular Front from taking power.”1 The Popular Front was the chief political arm of anti-Moscow nationalism in Azerbaijan, and its leader stated ”The goal is to drive out the army, liquidate the [Moscow-controlled] Azerbaijani Communist Party, establish a democratic parliament.”

Yet instead of Washington pundits instructing Americans to announce “I stand with Azerbaijan,” we were told the real threat was nationalism. As Doyle McManus wrote at The Los Angeles Times in 1990: “An ancient specter is haunting Europe: untamed nationalism … From Baku to Berlin, as the Soviet Bloc has disintegrated, ethnic conflicts that once seemed part of the past have suddenly returned to life.“ These old nationalistic impulses, one official from the State Department averred, are “dangerous ghosts” from Europe’s past. Arch-establishment foreign policy advisor Zbigniew Brzezinki was on hand to claim that ethnic tensions could lead to “geopolitical anarchy.” Bush administration officials were “worried” that smaller national groups might replace the Soviet Union. At the time, it was not uncommon to hear that nationalism in Europe would bring about a situation similar to that which supposedly caused World War I. As one “senior Bush advisor” said, “It’s 1914 all over again.”

So, when the Soviet tanks showed up to crush a potential coup that might free some Soviet subjects from Moscow’s yoke, the feeling in Washington was one of relief rather than dismay at Moscow’s aggression. Washington was clinging to the idea that the answer to nationalism was to ensure the continued exist of—as Murray Rothbard put it—”a single, overriding government agency with a monopoly force to settle disputes by coercion.” That agency was the USSR.

The US Against Independence for Ukraine and the Baltics​

That was in early 1990. By late 1990, on the other hand, it was increasingly apparent that the Soviet state was in deep trouble and events were spiraling beyond the control of either Moscow or Washington. The situation in the Baltics was especially acute. On March 30, 1990, Lithuania declared independence and seceded from the Soviet Union. The Soviet state responded with a blockade. Latvia and Estonia began moving toward independence as well, although these two countries would not formally secede until late August 1991.

Yet, even in early August 1991, Washington under George H.W. Bush was still obsessed with the nationalist “threat.” In early 1990, the Soviets had claimed that Baltic independence was “a threat to European stability,” and this position, according to The Los Angeles Times, “has won considerable sympathy within the Bush Administration and in West European capitals.”

This preference for Moscow-coerced unity and “order” over nationalist decentralization was again on full display on August 1, 1991. This was when George Bush delivered his notorious “Chicken Kiev” speech. In this address to the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian USSR, Bush harangued the Ukrainians on the need to reject nationalism, stating

Yet freedom is not the same as independence. Americans will not support those who seek independence in order to replace a far-off tyranny with a local despotism. They will not aid those who promote a suicidal nationalism based upon ethnic hatred.
In other words, the nationalist bogeyman was invoked to hold the Soviet Union together. Bush’s finger wagging at the secessionists was received well by “moderate” pro-Moscow communists. But it was less well received by Ukrainian nationalists—to put it mildly—and Baltic secessionists were horrified as well. But few were waiting for approval from the Americans. Less than six months later all of the Baltics had seceded from the USSR, and a Ukrainian referendum on independence passed easily. (Lackluster support for secession continued in the Crimea and parts of eastern Ukraine.)

In delivering this speech, Bush was essentially acting as Gorbachev’s message boy, and Bush clearly supported Gorbachev’s “All-Union Treaty” which was supposed to create a new enlightened version of the Soviet Union that would replace the old USSR.

Yet if the Soviet Union was going to hold together, it was going to require the participation of the Ukrainians. That didn’t happen, and Foreign Affairs concluded in 1992 “it was Ukraine, led by President Leonid Kravchuk, that ultimately provoked the unraveling of the Soviet empire: Ukraine’s refusal to sign Mikhail Gorbachev’s union treaty precipitated the collapse of the U.S.S.R.”

Through most of it, the US had repeatedly warned against the dangers of secession and the threat of nationalism. Instead, the party line in Washington appeared to be that the old Soviet Union could be reformed into a new large state where democracy would keep the Lithuanians, the Ukrainians, the Azeris, the Armenians, and countless others in line. After all, from the point of view of Washington, the end of large state is not a rebirth of freedom, but an outbreak of “chaos” and “instability.” Thus, Moscow was treated as a far greater friend of Washington that secessionists in Kiev or Riga.

The panic over nationalism in the former USSR didn’t persist, however. Washington’s about face on all this came when Washington realized it could extend its “unipolar moment” by expanding NATO—in spite of the promise to not extend NATO eastward. But once it became clear that nationalism could be harnessed to serve the ends of NATO expansionists, then nationalism became a feature of “sovereignty” and the “rules-based order.” But as we’ve seen with the badmouthing of Polish and Hungarian efforts to control their borders or assert independence from Brussels, nationalism is intolerable whenever it inconveniences the European Commission or the White House.
 
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Ukraine War: Rand Paul Blames Biden For Invasion And His Reason Makes Sense​

Written By BlabberBuzz | Thursday, 28 April 2022 22:45

Link: https://www.blabber.buzz/blab/pop/1...qADBZLM3hpVkmwJlCp5QQsI-3Jd30ksnl90Gnuy2xio.A

Ukraine War: Rand Paul Blames Biden For Invasion And His Reason Makes Sense


Sen. Rand Paul conflicted with Secretary of State Antony on Tuesday as he claimed the Biden Administration had pushed Vladimir Putin into invading Ukraine by backing its bid to join NATO and that Moscow’s aggression could be clarified by the fact it was striking former Soviet Union members.

His remarks brought quick charges that the Republican was parroting Kremlin talking points. And during a hearing of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Blinken pushed back amid a discussion about Ukraine’s sovereignty. Paul announced the Administration should not have publicly supported Ukraine’s desire to join NATO in September last year.
Blinken and other officials, he announced, had “been beating the drums to admit Ukraine” to the alliance. “There could have been voices before this invasion instead of agitating for something that we knew our adversary absolutely hated and

said was a red line, as recently as last September, before you signed the agreement once again agitating for NATO, Russia said that it was a red line,” announced Paul.

“Now there is no justification for the invasion. I’m not saying that. But there are reasons for the invasion.” The Kremlin and its allies have frequently announced they were concerned about NATO expansion

in eastern Europe and mentioned it as one of the causes of the military buildup around Ukraine before the attack. Paul explained that NATO membership could have meant U.S. soldiers fighting with Russia.

“Had they been or are they to become part of NATO that means U.S. soldiers will be fighting in Ukraine and that’s something I very much oppose,” he stated. Blinken disputed his arguments. “My judgement is different,” he stated.

“If you look at the countries that Russia has attacked over the last years - Georgia, leaving forces in Transnistria, Moldova, and then repeatedly Ukraine - these were countries

that were not part of NATO.” “It has not attacked NATO countries for probably a very good reason.”
Paul replied. “You could also argue the countries they have attacked were part of Russia...” he stated before correcting himself: “Part of the Soviet Union.” Blinken announced: “I firmly disagree with that proposition. It is the fundamental right of these countries to decide their own future and their own destiny.” Paul again states the nations in question had grown to be members of the Soviet Union for decades before its collapse.

“But that does not give Russia the right to attack them,’ said Blinken. ‘On the contrary.” He announced that the U.S. had attempted to engage with Putin about Moscow’s concerns, but it came to nothing.
 

Ukraine Biolab Update: Russia Implicates Pfizer, Moderna, Merck, Obama, Soros, Clintons, Bidens, Rockefellers & Others​

by Kelen McBreen
May 11th 2022, 6:06 pm

Link: https://www.infowars.com/posts/ukra...ma-soros-clintons-bidens-rockefellers-others/

Russian government alleges massive global conspiracy

A statement issued by the Russian Ministry of Defense (MOD) on Wednesday accused a slew of prominent politicians, pharmaceutical companies and government entities of participating in a global conspiracy in Ukraine.

Specifically, the Russian MOD claims the U.S. and other NATO nations have been engaged in illegal military-biological projects within Ukraine.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s former press secretary Iuliia Mendel wrote on Twitter that Russia is spreading “baseless accusations that the U.S. military was developing secret biological weapons in Ukraine, but this time they were helped by the pharmaceutical companies Pfizer and Moderna.”

The Russian Defense Ministry again spread baseless accusations that the U.S. military was developing secret biological weapons in Ukraine, but this time they were helped by the pharmaceutical companies Pfizer and Moderna.
— Iuliia Mendel (@IuliiaMendel) May 11, 2022

Infowars has detailed the DOD-funded biolabs in Ukraine for months now, and the secretive facilities have been confirmed by top U.S. officials.

The U.S. Defense Department’s Biological Threat Reduction Program has provided funding to biolabs in Ukraine since then-Senator Barack Obama struck a deal back in 2005.

In a suspicious move, the US Embassy in Ukraine deleted documents related to the biolabs from its website when the story gained international attention.

The Russian government previously linked Hunter Biden, George Soros, the Pentagon & CDC to the biolabs, claiming, “The main objective of this project was to carry out a molecular analysis of particularly dangerous infections endemic to Ukraine.”

Infowars has confirmed some of these connections in previous reports.

Russia has been complaining to the UN about these facilities for months, and now they have released more information allegedly linking Big Pharma companies to the scheme.

“It should be noted that the ideologues of US military-biological activities in Ukraine are the leaders of the Democratic Party,” Russia’s latest briefing stated. “Thus, through the US executive branch, a legislative framework for funding military biomedical research directly from the federal budget was formed. Funds were raised under state guarantees from NGOs controlled by the Democratic Party leadership, including the investment funds of the Clintons, Rockefellers, Soros and Biden.”

Documents released by the Russian government show a diagram featuring the parties allegedly involved.

Screen-Shot-2022-05-11-at-4.46.09-PM-1024x573.png
Russian MOD Document
The Russian MOD continued, “The scheme involves major pharmaceutical companies, including Pfizer, Moderna, Merck and the US military-affiliated company Gilead. U.S. experts are working to test new medicines that circumvent international safety standards. As a result, Western companies are seriously reducing the cost of research programmes and gaining a significant competitive advantage.”

According to Russia, one benefit of this widespread conspiracy is that “leaders of the Democratic Party” can use it to “generate additional campaign finance and hide its distribution.”

The German government is also named as an entity with biolabs in twelve countries, including Ukraine.

Russia stated, “On the German side, the programme involves the Institute for Armed Forces Microbiology (Munich), the Robert Koch Institute (Berlin), the Loeffler Institute (Greifswald) and the Nocht Institute for Tropical Medicine (Hamburg).”

Vladimir Putin’s government noted, “The involvement of institutions subordinate to the Bundeswehr confirms the military orientation,” of the research Germany is engaged in.

Additionally, Poland was allegedly involved in some Ukrainian biolabs, jointly working alongside US-based Pentagon contractor Battelle Institute.

Russia added to its statement, warning, “provocations are being prepared to accuse the Russian Armed Forces of using weapons of mass destruction, followed by a ‘Syrian scenario’ investigation to fabricate the necessary evidence and assign blame.”

The Kiev administration’s request for personal skin and respiratory protection equipment to protect against toxic chemicals and biological contaminating agents is proof of the impending false flag, according to the Russian MOD.

“The special military operation of the Russian Armed Forces has crossed the US military-biological expansion in Ukraine and stopped criminal experiments on civilians,” the statement concluded.

Infowars articles and programs have been at the forefront of exposing the Ukrainian biolab network.

See the following videos for a brief look at our coverage. [ck site link, above, top]
 
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‘Russia not our enemy’ – US congressman​

by RT
May 13th 2022, 4:13 am

Link: https://www.infowars.com/posts/russia-not-our-enemy-us-congressman/

Amid bipartisan support for arming Ukraine, some GOP lawmakers want the Biden administration to solve problems at home.

Republican Representative Paul Gosar (Arizona) has condemned the push from both parties in Washington to send billions of dollars worth of weapons to Ukraine. “Crippling debt, inflation and immigration problems,” he declared, are not “[Russian President Vladimir] Putin’s fault.”

Gosar, an immigration hardliner and anti-interventionist, was one of 57 GOP lawmakers to vote against a $40 billion economic and military aid bill for Ukraine on Tuesday. While a number of Republicans have been vocal in their opposition to fueling a “proxy war” in Ukraine, the GOP establishment has shouted down these critics, with conservative talk show host Mark Levin on Wednesday referring to the anti-war contingent of the party as “Putin a**-kissers.”

“Calling us names is not a logical position,”
Gosar shot back, stating: “I have no principle to follow but the path of peace and non-intervention. My grown children have known nothing except American war and intervention for naught.”

Ukraine is not our ally. Russia is not our enemy. We need to address our crippling debt, inflation and immigration problems. None of this is Putin's fault.
— Rep. Paul Gosar, DDS (@RepGosar) May 12, 2022

“Ukraine is not our ally,” he continued. “Russia is not our enemy. We need to address our crippling debt, inflation and immigration problems. None of this is Putin’s fault.”

Americans are currently grappling with record gas prices, inflation at a four-decade high, and shortages of vital food products, including baby formula. Furthermore, the expiration of a Trump-era immigration restriction this month will result in up to 18,000 migrants entering the US from Mexico daily, according to estimates from the Department of Homeland Security.

Since the beginning of Russia’s military operation in Ukraine in February, Biden has sent nearly $4 billion worth of weapons and ammunition to Kiev, and revived a World War II-era act allowing a limitless supply of arms to be shipped to Ukraine on credit.

Meanwhile, at home the White House has banned Russian oil and gas imports, and although industry leaders are warning of an imminent diesel shortage, Biden, on Wednesday, canceled the sale of drilling leases in Alaska and the Gulf of Mexico.

Despite the opposition of Gosar and his allies, the $40 billion funding bill passed by 368 votes to 57. It is expected to pass the Senate by next week at the latest, with Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-New York) saying the upper chamber “will move swiftly” to get it to Biden’s desk.
 
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'MY OATH IS TO THE CONSTITUTION, NOT FOREIGN NATIONS': Paul Wants IG Oversight on Ukraine Aid​

posted by Hannity Staff - 5.13.22

Link: https://hannity.com/media-room/my-o...ersight-on-ukraine-aid/?utm_source=socialflow

Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) wants to ensure that the $40 billion dollars en route to Ukraine is being well spent; he wants the bill to expand an Afghanistan inspector general role to include oversight of the aid package, The Hill reports.

And if he can’t have that, the bill will stall.
From The Hill…
Paul blocked the votes because he wants his language inserted into the text of the bill instead of having to take his chance with an amendment vote, which could be blocked. The stalemate will delay the Senate’s passage of the Ukraine package until at least next week, and potentially beyond.
“I think they’re going to have to go through the long way,” Paul told The Hill about what comes next after the floor standoff.
The roadblock comes after senators and staff haggled privately for hours on Thursday to try to find a path toward passing the Ukraine aid before they wrapped up their work for the week. Senators were also eager to avoid making changes to the bill, which would require it to go back to the House for a second vote.
My oath of office is to the U.S. Constitution, not to any foreign nation. Congress is trying yet again to ram through a spending bill – one that I doubt anyone has actually read – and there’s no oversight included into how the money is being spent.
“Americans are feeling the pain [from inflation] and Congress seems intent only on adding to that pain by shoveling more money out the door as fast as they can,” Paul said.
The Senator elaborated on Twitter:
“My oath of office is to the U.S. Constitution, not to any foreign nation. Congress is trying yet again to ram through a spending bill – one that I doubt anyone has actually read – and there’s no oversight included into how the money is being spent. All I requested is an amendment to be included in the final bill that allows for the Inspector General to oversee how funds are spent. Anyone who is opposed to this is irresponsible.”

“While I sympathize with the people of Ukraine, and commend their fight against Putin, we cannot continue to spend money we don’t have. Passing this bill brings the total we’ve sent to Ukraine to nearly $54 billion over the course of two months. It’s threatening our own national security, and it’s frankly a slap in the face to millions of taxpayers who are struggling to buy gas, groceries, and find baby formula.”

The vote could now be pushed out to next week or beyond.
 
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The Leaders of France, Germany, and Italy Favor Negotiations to End Ukraine War​

Link: https://news.antiwar.com/2022/05/16...-italy-favor-negotiations-to-end-ukraine-war/

The US, Britain, and other NATO countries don't hold the same viewby Dave DeCamp Posted onMay 16, 2022CategoriesNewsTagsFrance, Germany, Italy, NATO
In recent weeks, the leaders of the three largest EU countries by population — France, Germany, and Italy — have all come out in favor of negotiations between Kyiv and Moscow as a way to end the fighting in Ukraine.
Unlike President Biden, French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, and Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi have all spoken with Russian President Vladimir Putin since Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24.
The three European leaders have all signed off on sending weapons to the Ukrainians but have also been calling for a ceasefire. After speaking with Putin by phone on Friday, Scholz wrote on Twitter: “There must be a ceasefire in Ukraine as quickly as possible.”
In an address to European Parliament last week, Macron said, “We are not at war with Russia.” He said that Europe’s “duty is to stand with Ukraine to achieve a ceasefire, then build peace.”
Draghi met with President Biden last week, and after the meeting, the Italian leader, who previously discouraged talks with Russia, said it was time to start thinking about a peace deal. “We agreed that we must continue to support Ukraine and put pressure on Moscow, but also begin to ask how to build peace,” Draghi said.
“People … want to think about the possibility of bringing a ceasefire and starting again some credible negotiations. That’s the situation right now. I think that we have to think deeply on how to address this,” Draghi added.
After the Biden-Draghi meeting, the White House still appeared to be uninterested in negotiations. “We feel the most constructive role is to continue to support the Ukrainians’ hands at the negotiating table and support them militarily,” White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said.
Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin recently spoke with his Russian counterpart for the first time since Russia invaded, but Secretary of State Antony Blinken, the US’s top diplomat, has yet to speak with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov. The two diplomats last spoke on February 15.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson shares Washington’s view on negotiations. Johnson recently told Macron in a call that he “urged” Ukraine not to hold talks with Russia and reportedly told Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on April 9 that even if Kyiv was ready to sign a deal with Moscow, the West was not.
Other hawkish NATO countries have come out against talks with Moscow. In early April, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki slammed Macron for speaking with Putin, likening it to “negotiating with Hitler.”
 

Senate Blocks $48 Billion Small Business Aid Package Hours Before Passing $40 Billion In Ukraine Aid​

by Kelen McBreen
May 19th 2022, 5:43 pm

Link: https://www.infowars.com/posts/sena...urs-before-passing-40-billion-in-ukraine-aid/

Weapons manufacturers and Ukrainian oligarchs get bailed out instead of the struggling American middle class

Democrats have officially replaced Republicans as the party of war

U.S. Senators showed their true colors Thursday, blocking a bipartisan bill to provide $48 billion to American small businesses hit by the Covid pandemic hours before approving a $40 billion dollar package to wage war against Russia via Ukraine.

In addition to leaving citizens behind in favor of Ukrainians, the printing of an additional $40 billion dollars will not help America’s already surging inflation rate.


The Senate just passed $40B in emergency aid for Ukraine – the most substantial U.S. commitment yet to help the country fend off Russia’s invasion.

The bill will go to Biden with just enough time to head off a lapse in U.S. weapons shipments to Ukraine.https://t.co/nNZSPOL6Ab
— POLITICO (@politico) May 19, 2022


On same day that the Senate cleared $40 billion more for Ukraine, they rejected a similar bill for American small businesses.

We should be opposed to all big govt bills, but GOP members who voted for Ukraine over American relief have some qs to answer.https://t.co/vPAY4Z1ZIu
— Jordan Schachtel @ dossier.substack.com (@JordanSchachtel) May 19, 2022

Biden bragged the package will allow the US “to send even more weapons and ammunition to Ukraine.”

I applaud Congress for passing the security package I requested and for sending a clear bipartisan message to the world that the U.S. stands with Ukraine. This package will allow us to send even more weapons and ammunition to Ukraine as they defend their democracy and freedom.
— President Biden (@POTUS) May 19, 2022

In fact, Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced the Biden administration approved an additional $100 million in arms to sweeten the deal.

BREAKING: Biden admin adds $100 million in arms for Ukraine on top of $40 billion aid packagehttps://t.co/KCZRxTf8xq
— Dinesh D'Souza (@DineshDSouza) May 19, 2022

Republican critics of the small business aid proposal were concerned the $48 billion would exacerbate inflation, yet every senator who voted against the package voted for the Ukraine aid package.

At least the eleven senators who voted against the Ukraine package stuck to their convictions and also voted against the small business aid.

Speaking about the small business aid package, Senator Rand Paul (R-Ky.) said, “Democrats need to wake up and realize that dumping more money in the economy is simply pouring $5-a-gallon gas on an already out-of-control fire.”

Regarding the Ukraine package, Paul wrote on Twitter, “If Congress really believed giving Ukraine $40B was in our national interest, they could easily pay for it by taxing every income taxpayer $500. My guess is they choose to borrow the $ bc Americans might just decide they need the $500 more to pay for gas.”

If Congress really believed giving Ukraine $40B was in our national interest, they could easily pay for it by taxing every income taxpayer $500. My guess is they choose to borrow the $ bc Americans might just decide they need the $500 more to pay for gas. https://t.co/SWbFt2TELZ
— Rand Paul (@RandPaul) May 19, 2022

Speaking with Newsmax on Thursday, Paul slammed Democrat policies for fueling inflation, saying, “The cause of inflation is borrowing too much money and having the Federal Reserve print the money. You’ve got to quit borrowing it.”

Democrats "say 'oh, inflation is caused by greed.' Well, what a ridiculous notion. Did people just in the last two months all of the sudden decide that people are greedy and never were greedy before?" said @RandPaul on Thursday's "National Report." pic.twitter.com/cjHsAzIPug
— Newsmax (@newsmax) May 19, 2022

The government is spending money like there is no tomorrow; perhaps they know something we don’t.
 

Senator Rand Paul Calls for Spending On Ukraine To Stop, Saying ‘We Borrow Money From China So We Can Send It To Ukraine?’​

STATION GOSSIP 09:50

Link: http://www.stationgossip.com/2022/06/senator-rand-paul-calls-for-spending-on.html

Senator Rand Paul said this week that the nation’s record-setting inflation is directly tied to actions of the U.S. government, such as ...​


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Senator Rand Paul said this week that the nation’s record-setting inflation is directly tied to actions of the U.S. government, such as continuously providing billions of dollars in aid and weapons to Ukraine to assist in their war with Russia.

During an interview with Mobile, AL radio FM Talk 106.5, the Kentucky Republican Senator compared the ongoing aid for Ukraine to any other government expenditures, which he said contribute significantly to the growing government debt.

Paul did express his sympathy for the ongoing conflict and those affected but said that the continued spending on a war that is not ours was nonsensical.

“Inflation is caused by spending money that you don’t have that the Federal Reserve buys the debt,” he said. “So whether it is for Ukraine, whether it is for food stamps here, whether it’s studies of Panamian frogs, it all goes to the debt. And so, it doesn’t make sense, even for a good cause. I’m sympathetic to the Ukrainians. I think the Putin invasion should be condemned. I want the Ukrainians to win.”

“But it doesn’t make sense for me to say, ‘Well, America — why don’t we borrow money from China so we can send it to Ukraine?'” he continued.

“We don’t have any money. It would be like me saying to you, ‘You know there are poor people in Mobile,’ when I know you don’t have any money because you’re barely getting by providing for your family and paying your rent. ‘But why don’t you go down to the bank in Mobile and borrow $1,000 and give it to poor people?'”

“Nobody does that,” he added. “You give out of your surplus. You take care of your family first, and if you have some left over, you try to help your church, and you try to help your community. But you don’t do it by borrowing money. That’s what the United States is doing.”

Paul went on to express his concerns that the war would continue for quite a while and noted that he expects Ukraine to continue petitioning the U.S. for far more financial and logistical resources.

“Ukraine is going to ask for $40 billion more apparently this fall,” Paul explained. “Then it is going to take hundreds of billions to rebuild the country. Look, I have great sympathy, but we do not have hundreds of billions of dollars to rebuild Ukraine. We can’t endlessly supply them with weapons. So, no — to me, it is a fiscal issue, not necessarily a military issue.”

The U.S. has already spent more than $54 billion on efforts to help Ukraine, and President Biden has a habit of continuing to commit more on a consistent basis.
 

‘Ukraine Has Lost This War’: Top Army Colonel Says West ‘Doubling Down on Failure’​

by Jamie White
June 21st 2022, 5:20 pm

Link: https://www.infowars.com/posts/ukra...y-colonel-says-west-doubling-down-on-failure/

Russia controls territory responsible for 80% of Ukraine's gross domestic product and is now preparing to annex it into the Federation, according to Ret. Col. Douglas MacGregor.

Ukraine has lost its war with Russia, but some Western leaders want to keep it going with the “real goal” of pulling the United States into a direct conflict with Russia, warned retired Army Colonel Douglas MacGregor.

“Ukraine has lost this war. I would argue it lost it some time ago,” MacGregor said Tuesday on Judge Andrew Napolitano’s podcast “Judging Freedom.”


“It’s now becoming so apparent that even the most ardent supporters of Ukraine’s war on Russia in London, Berlin, Paris, and Washington can’t really stand up and say anything else. I suppose some will, but the truth is the war is over.”

MacGregor painted a bleak picture of the Ukrainian military’s widespread logistical failures and Russia’s subsequent actions in the Donbas region.

“The Ukrainians are losing on a daily basis somewhere between 500 and 1,000 dead and wounded. Their army is effectively annihilated,” MacGregor explained. “They’re throwing reservists – the equivalent of what we would call National Guardsmen – into the buzzsaw. And the Russians are very calmly and methodically annihilating whatever shows up. The Russians have already begun consolidating their control over 25 to 30% of Ukraine where the Ukrainian forces were previously paused to attack Russia.”

And now that Russia controls the economically vital region of Ukraine, it will soon annex it into the Federation, he predicted.

“They now control territory that is responsible for roughly 80% of Ukraine’s gross national product. So I expect the Russians will hold onto this and incorporate it into Russia. It will be annexed. It was historically Russian, it is again,” MacGregor said.

MacGregor, a former senior adviser to the Secretary of Defense under Trump, warned that Western leaders are still in denial and some even want the war to continue in perpetuity with the “extremely dangerous” end goal of getting the U.S. directly involved in a hot war with Russia.


“As far as how this will end, we have a lot of people who seemed to be determined that it will not end. And that is extremely dangerous because the longer this lasts, the greater the potential for this regional conflict to widen and engulf more countries, and ultimately to drag us in, which some people think is the real goal — as incomprehensible as that may seem.”

Meanwhile, Joe Biden’s cabinet is keeping him in the dark and “running the show” in Ukraine and “doubling down on failure” in the hopes that they can pull off a win to save their credibility, he claimed.

Our friend President Biden is sort of a mushroom: they keep him in a dark place and feed him crap. I think [Domestic Policy Council director] Susan Rice, [National Security Adviser] Jake Sullivan, [Secretary of State Antony] Blinken – oligarchs, frankly, rich powerful figures that control the Democrat party, and let’s face it, the large portions of Republican party who dominate Washington – they all have much more influence now than Americans realize.
They’re running the show. They’re not telling Joe Biden anything they don’t want him to know, but more important, they’re riding this train to oblivion. And they’re not going to get off, and they’re throwing more coal into the locomotive with each passing day. They’re doubling down on failure in the belief that if they just hang on long enough, somehow, miraculously, they’re going to win.
They’re destroying NATO, they’re tearing Europe apart, Europeans are finally beginning to wake up to the disaster. They’ve lost control of Eastern Europe.
“Ukraine is now a failed state. It’s collapsed,” he added. “People are being pushed at gunpoint into Russian fire. The whole thing is a disaster. But no one wants to admit failure because if they admit failure, they lose all credibility.”

This comes as Europeans are beginning to realize the protracted war in Ukraine cannot be won, as Russia reinforces economic ties with China and India, and the ruble hits a 5-year high despite Western sanctions which have so far only managed to hurt regular Americans and Europeans.

French President Emmanuel Macron called for the “Ukrainian president and his leaders” to “negotiate with Russia,” adding that the West has “done all we can.”

A German talk show also admitted that Russia has all but won the war in Ukraine and that Western leaders need to level with the public about that development and seek a diplomatic solution with Russia to end the conflict.

MacGregor first forecasted the Ukrainian military’s path to defeat as early as March 2nd, just a week after Russia first launched its military operation in Ukraine.
 

Ukraine War Crimes Exposed: Civilians Executed, Robbed & Shelled​

by Kelen McBreen
July 1st 2022, 4:26 pm

Link: https://www.infowars.com/posts/ukraine-war-crimes-exposed-civilians-executed-robbed-shelled/

[see vids at site link, above]

Massive thread contains hours of Ukraine war footage

American military veteran and independent journalist Patrick Lancaster continues exposing war crimes committed by the Ukrainian Armed Forces (UAF) as the war with Russia proceeds.

In the last two weeks, Lancaster has documented the UAF shelling civilian neighborhoods, robbing citizens and even executing them.

An extremely graphic video uploaded Wednesday shows a rotting corpse allegedly belonging to a Ukrainian civilian killed by the UAF.

Lancaster explained the body had been decaying for at least several weeks, but the Russian forces had only gained control of that territory days before.

The gruesome footage allows viewers to clearly see three bullet holes in the skull of the deceased person, whose head was wrapped with a plastic bag before being executed.

“This had to happen during the time this territory was controlled by Ukraine forces,” Lancaster told the camera. “So, it appears that Ukraine forces arrested this civilian man, put a plastic bag over his head, wrapped duct tape around his head and executed him and left his body to rot underneath this bridge.”

In the area where the body was found, Ukrainian military equipment and documents were scattered everywhere as they had a base set up under the bridge.

See the full video report below:

A couple of weeks ago, Lancaster documented a chemical plant being struck by a Ukrainian missile before coming under fire from shelling himself.

Reporting from the center of Donetsk, Lancaster filmed the aftermath of shells that struck a steel plant and talked with civilians who confirmed the missiles came from Ukrainian-controlled territory.

While in Donetsk, EMTs were filmed trying to save a civilian man who was injured by the Ukrainian shelling.

Lancaster helped the crew carry the man to safety.

Again, Patrick and his cameraman were caught in the middle of intense shelling while reporting from the center of Donetsk.

On the 19th of June, Lancaster documented constant shelling in Donetsk that resulted in several civilian deaths.

While traveling throughout the city, the wartime journalist walked with a pair of women as bombs exploded around them.

Later that day, Lancaster helped citizens dig through the rubble to try and find dead bodies.

The next day, the American independent journalist explained an estimated 400 shells hit the city of Donetsk on the 19th.

He noted that after he uploaded a report showing the devastation of the shelling, the Ukrainian military hit the same exact area he reported on for a second time.

“There were more shells that came down on this area hours after we made our report,” he said. “For example, this crater right here is new. When Ukraine fired this, they knew these were civilians here that they had killed.”

Continuing, Lancaster showed a grocery store that was hit by Ukrainian shelling soon after he published his report proving the zone was a civilian area.

Days later, Lancaster claimed a HIMARS rocket provided by the US hit another civilian area.

On Monday, Lancaster published a special report as the first English-speaking journalist to film inside the city of Kharkiv after Russia took control of the area.

After Russia took control of the city, locals began seeing the Ukrainian military shell their homes and other buildings.

One man who was asked if Russia or Ukraine destroyed the town more explained that “With airstrikes, Russia has caused a lot of destruction. When there were airstrikes, everything was crushed here.”

“And now, Ukraine is firing, and in fact, recently a man was saved by Russians,” he added.

Next, Lancaster investigated the scene on the streets of another city recently taken by the Russian, DPR & LPR forces.

Just outside the city of Severodonetsk in Donetsk, the American journalist walked past wartorn buildings and asked the few remaining locals for their opinions on the war and the state of their town.

One man interviewed described homes being destroyed by UAF forces in February, before LPR and Russian fighters ever got near the city.

The local said most Ukrainian-sympathizing citizens left the city after the mayor warned them war was approaching.

Because of this, the UAF soldiers assume the remaining people are pro-Russia.

When this person was asked how much damage Russian forces did to his city during the battle to take it over, he said, “Russian forces acted really carefully.”

He also explained the Russian forces didn’t really set up military equipment in the city while UAF soldiers allegedly fired on Russians from inside the civilian area.

Wednesday, Lancaster talked with a civilian back at the Azot steel plant in Severo, Donetsk who claimed English-speaking foreign mercenaries on the Ukrainian side robbed locals.

In a Thursday report, Chechen forces fighting for Russia showed Lancaster around a village they recently took control of.

The Russian and LPR forces delivered food to locals and talked with them about the war in the following report posted on Friday.

While Western media largely ignores the tragic war crimes being committed by Ukraine, Infowars will continue exposing the harsh realities of the war.
 
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Ukraine Is the Latest Neocon Disaster​

July 1, 2022

Link: https://consortiumnews.com/2022/07/01/ukraine-is-the-latest-neocon-disaster/

If Europe has any insight, it will separate itself from these U.S. foreign policy debacles, writes Jeffrey D. Sachs.

52144156789_3a411ee659_b.jpg

President Joe Biden delivering “stand with Ukraine” remarks on May 3 at the Lockheed Martin facility in Troy, Alabama. (White House, Adam Schultz)
By Jeffrey D. Sachs
Common Dreams
screen_shot_2016-10-31_at_5.04.53_pm-100x100.png
T
he war in Ukraine is the culmination of a 30-year project of the American neoconservative movement. The Biden administration is packed with the same neocons who championed the U.S. wars of choice in Serbia (1999), Afghanistan (2001), Iraq (2003), Syria (2011), Libya (2011), and who did so much to provoke Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The neocon track record is one of unmitigated disaster, yet Biden has staffed his team with neocons. As a result, Biden is steering Ukraine, the U.S. and the European Union towards yet another geopolitical debacle. If Europe has any insight, it will separate itself from these U.S. foreign policy debacles.
The neocon movement emerged in the 1970s around a group of public intellectuals, several of whom were influenced by University of Chicago political scientist Leo Strauss and Yale University classicist Donald Kagan. Neocon leaders included Norman Podhoretz, Irving Kristol, Paul Wolfowitz, Robert Kagan (son of Donald), Frederick Kagan (son of Donald), Victoria Nuland (wife of Robert), Elliott Cohen, Elliott Abrams and Kimberley Allen Kagan (wife of Frederick).
The main message of the neocons is that the U.S. must predominate in military power in every region of the world and must confront rising regional powers that could someday challenge U.S. global or regional dominance, most important Russia and China. For this purpose, U.S. military force should be pre-positioned in hundreds of military bases around the world and the U.S. should be prepared to lead wars of choice as necessary. The United Nations is to be used by the U.S. only when useful for U.S. purposes.
Wolfowitz Spelled It Out
This approach was spelled out first by Paul Wolfowitz in his draft Defense Policy Guidance (DPG) written for the Department of Defense in 2002. The draft called for extending the U.S.-led security network to Central and Eastern Europe despite the explicit promise by German Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher in 1990 that German unification would not be followed by NATO’s eastward enlargement.
[Related: The New York Times’ Shift on Victory in Ukraine]
Wolfowitz also made the case for American wars of choice, defending America’s right to act independently, even alone, in response to crises of concern to the U.S. According to General Wesley Clark, Wolfowitz already made clear to Clark in May 1991 that the U.S. would lead regime-change operations in Iraq, Syria and other former Soviet allies.
2966117786_a1d5d9e718_o.jpg

Oct. 2, 1991: Paul Wolfowitz, on right, as under secretary of defense for policy, during press conference on Operation Desert Storm. Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf in center, Gen. Colin Powell on left. (Lietmotiv via Flickr)
The neocons championed NATO enlargement to Ukraine even before that became official U.S. policy under President George W. Bush, Jr. in 2008. They viewed Ukraine’s NATO membership as key to U.S. regional and global dominance. Robert Kagan spelled out the neocon case for NATO enlargement in April 2006:
“[T]he Russians and Chinese see nothing natural in [the ‘color revolutions’ of the former Soviet Union], only Western-backed coups designed to advance Western influence in strategically vital parts of the world. Are they so wrong? Might not the successful liberalization of Ukraine, urged and supported by the Western democracies, be but the prelude to the incorporation of that nation into NATO and the European Union — in short, the expansion of Western liberal hegemony?”
Kagan acknowledged the dire implication of NATO enlargement. He quotes one expert as saying, “the Kremlin is getting ready for the ‘battle for Ukraine’ in all seriousness.”
The neocons sought this battle. After the fall of the Soviet Union, both the U.S. and Russia should have sought a neutral Ukraine, as a prudent buffer and safety valve. Instead, the neocons wanted U.S. “hegemony” while the Russians took up the battle partly in defense and partly out of their own imperial pretensions as well. Shades of the Crimean War (1853-6), when Britain and France sought to weaken Russia in the Black Sea following Russian pressures on the Ottoman empire.
Kagan penned the article as a private citizen while his wife Victoria Nuland was the U.S. ambassador to NATO under George W. Bush, Jr.
Nuland has been the neocon operative par excellence. In addition to serving as Bush’s ambassador to NATO, Nuland was President Barack Obama’s assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian Affairs during 2013-17, when she participated in the overthrow of Ukraine’s pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych and now serves as Biden’s undersecretary of state guiding U.S. policy vis-à-vis the war in Ukraine.
The neocon outlook is based on an overriding false premise: that the U.S. military, financial, technological, and economic superiority enables it to dictate terms in all regions of the world. It is a position of both remarkable hubris and remarkable disdain of evidence.
17664030379_327f816665_k.jpg

May 16, 2015: Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland at the police patrol training site in Kiev, Ukraine. (U.S. Embassy Kyiv)
Since the 1950s, the U.S. has been stymied or defeated in nearly every regional conflict in which it has participated. Yet in the “battle for Ukraine,” the neocons were ready to provoke a military confrontation with Russia by expanding NATO over Russia’s vehement objections because they fervently believe that Russia will be defeated by U.S. financial sanctions and NATO weaponry.
The Institute for the Study of War (ISW), a neocon think-tank led by Kimberley Allen Kagan (and backed by a who’s who of defense contractors such as General Dynamics and Raytheon), continues to promise a Ukrainian victory.
Regarding Russia’s advances, the ISW offered a typical comment:
“[R]egardless of which side holds the city [of Sievierodonetsk], the Russian offensive at the operational and strategic levels will probably have culminated, giving Ukraine the chance to restart its operational-level counteroffensives to push Russian forces back.”
The facts on the ground, however, suggest otherwise. The West’s economic sanctions have had little adverse impact on Russia, while their “boomerang” effect on the rest of the world has been large.
Moreover, the U.S. capacity to resupply Ukraine with ammunition and weaponry is seriously hamstrung by America’s limited production capacity and broken supply chains. Russia’s industrial capacity of course dwarfs that of Ukraine’s. Russia’s GDP was roughly 10X that of Ukraine before the war and Ukraine has now lost much of its industrial capacity in the war.
The most likely outcome of the current fighting is that Russia will conquer a large swath of Ukraine, perhaps leaving Ukraine landlocked or nearly so. Frustration will rise in Europe and the U.S. with the military losses and the stagflationary consequences of war and sanctions.
The knock-on effects could be devastating, if a right-wing demagogue in the U.S. rises to power (or in the case of Trump, returns to power) promising to restore America’s faded military glory through dangerous escalation.
Instead of risking this disaster, the real solution is to end the neocon fantasies of the past 30 years and for Ukraine and Russia to return to the negotiating table, with NATO committing to end its commitment to the eastward enlargement to Ukraine and Georgia in return for a viable peace that respects and protects Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.
Jeffrey D. Sachs is a university professor and director of the Center for Sustainable Development at Columbia University, where he directed The Earth Institute from 2002 until 2016. He is also president of the U.N. Sustainable Development Solutions Network and a commissioner of the U.N. Broadband Commission for Development. He has been adviser to three United Nations secretaries-general and currently serves as an SDG advocate under Secretary-General Antonio Guterres. Sachs is the author, most recently, of A New Foreign Policy: Beyond American Exceptionalism (2020). Other books include: Building the New American Economy: Smart, Fair, and Sustainable (2017) and The Age of Sustainable Development, (2015) with Ban Ki-moon.
This article is from Common Dreams.
 
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