As readers may know—a necessary caveat because the story has
not received wall-to-wall play as, for instance, the resignation of Liz Wray
from RT has attracted—the audio of an intercepted phone call between the
Foreign Minister of Estonia, one Urmas Paet, and Baron Ashton, the EU poobah
in charge of foreign relations and, by extension, the Ukraine mess, made its
way onto the Internet.
Paet is reporting on what he saw and heard in Ukraine near
the height of the crisis, shortly after the sniper attack of February 21 and
the precipitous collapse of the Yanyukovich government.
I will turn to the notes on Paet's comments in the tape as posted by Moon of Alabama:
· here is no trust of the people in the new government (2:35)· all of them in the new government have a dirty past (2:50)· the trust level (towards the new government) is absolutely low (3:20)· enormous pressure against (party of the region) members of parliament (3:40)· "uninvited visitors" enter in the night on party members (3:50)· journalists who were with me saw during the day that one member of parliament was just beaten in front of the parliament (4:00)· people will not leave the street before *real* reforms start, it is not enough that there is just change of government (4:20)· the same Olga (from a civil society group) told me that people killed by snipers on both sides, among policemen and people on the street, that they were the same snipers killing people from both sides, she showed me some photos and said she has a medical doctor and that it is the same handwriting and the same type of bullets and it is disturbing that the new coalition now don't want to investigate (8:25)· There is now stronger and stronger understanding that behind snipers it was not Yanukovich but it was somebody from the new coalition. (8:55)· it discredited itself from the very beginning this new coalition (9:20)
“The same
Olga” is Olga Bogomolets, apparently a very nice, very idealist leader of the
peaceful Maidan protesters, who was in charge of first aid and medical issues
in the square. Not just an anonymous
do-gooder, she was a symbol of the protest hagiographized by The Daily Beast as
“The Mother Teresa of the Maidan”. At one point, the West and the new government
were keen to lure her into the new regime as Health Minister, in order to claim
some of that idealistic Maidan glow for the rather unappetizing collection of
pro-IMF technocrats, refurbished oligarchs, and ultra-nationalist thugs
currently calling the shots. To date
Bogomolets has declined, presumably for the reasons described above.
After the
tape was released, the Daily Telegraph tracked down Bogomolets, who gave this
rather parsed denial:
"Myself I saw only protesters. I do not know the type of wounds suffered by military people," "I think you can only say something like this on the basis of fact. It's not correct and its not good to do this. It should be based on fact."
She added that the new government in Kiev had assured her that a criminal investigation had begun although she had not direct contact with it so far.
"I was a doctor helping to save people on the square. There were 15 people killed on the first day by snipers. They were shot directly to the heart, brain and arteries. There were more than 40 the next day, 12 of them died in my arms," she concluded.
In the
Paet/Ashton tape, Paet told Ashton that Olga told him she had seen photos
(apparently of shot policemen) and “as a doctor” it was the “same handwriting”
and same type of bullets. I would infer
that by “handwriting” Paets meant “signature” i.e. the same pattern—accurate shots
to vital parts of the body—characterized the wounded and dead on both sides.
So, by
limiting herself in her reply to the Telegraph to what she had actually witnessed,
Bogomolets was leaving out the issue of what she had seen in photographs and
videos of the February 21 bloodshed, which exist in huge numbers, including HD
video of the shootings and close-ups of the victims.
In other
words, Bogomolets is hedging a bit here in retreating to a rather lawyerly “I
can only vouch for what I personally witnessed”.
But she
certainly wants an investigation, an investigation that the new government is
apparently dragging its feet on.
The intercepted
tape provides significant support for the thesis that the snipers were
provocateurs.
As to why
provocateurs might come in handy, I refer you to Victoria Nuland’s warning to pre-Yanyukovich oligarchs that their assets in the West would be at risk “if
violence was used against protesters”.
After the
shooting, Yanyukovich’s support in the parliament, presumably including the
oligarch-backed deputies, evaporated, Yanyukovich fled, and the new government
moved in and tried to put an EU-brokered transition agreement (which would have
kept Yanyukovich in power until a new election) behind it.
Moral
issues aside, one might say, so the new government shot its way into power,
possession is nine-tenths of the law, suck on that, Vlad, etc.
There’s a
little more to it, thanks to the Russian power play in Crimea.
Russia
hopes to cast the shadow of illegitimacy over the Kiev regime, thereby
legitimizing its own actions to protect ethnic Russians and Ukrainians in
general.
Russia not
only hopes to legitimize its actions, in my view, it wishes to legalize them.
And that
brings us back to Kosovo, the Albanian enclave that was separated from
pro-Russian Serbia. Kosovo unilaterally
declared independence in 2008, after Russia and its allies had dragged their
feet on the new, foreign-drafted constitution that was intended to give a
veneer of legality to Kosovo’s de facto and, after a decent interval, de jure
independence.
All this
happened while Kosovo was essentially a UN protectorate.
According
to the West, since Yugoslavia had “dissolved”, all sovereign bets were off and
there was no need to respect Serbia’s claims of sovereignty over Kosovo. For bonus points, the Office for Security and
Co-operation in Europe, the same OSCE now being bruited about as observers in
Ukraine, observed the Kosovo elections to the parliament that unilaterally
declared independence.
So Kosovo
declared independence under rather dodgy circumstances in order to sidestep
Russian attempts to influence the process on behalf of the Kosovar Serbs and
brushing aside the UN mandate in the process.
The United States, the EU, and their allies promptly recognized the new
government despite the apparent legal holes in the case, thereby considerably
rankling the Russians.
In the
matter of Ukraine, therefore, the Russian government is giving great weight to
what it regards as the criminality inherent in the seizure of power in Kiev by
the new leadership, as indicated by the Paets/Ashton tape.
If the new
government isn’t legitimate, then Russia has leeway to adopt the Kosovo formula—a
legal reorganization of new republics out of a dissolved state—for its Crimea
shenanigans.
And they
are saying that the Crimean parliament has as much right to determine the
region’s future with Russian support as Kosovo’s parliament did with the
support of the West.
Unsurprisingly,
the US government and prestige media, particularly in the United States, have
shown little appetite for delving into the rather explosive accusation that the
new Kiev regime climbed into power on a ladder of corpses they themselves
created.
The
Western powers, to their considerable discredit, are quite keen to sweep the
revelations under the rug and prop up the oligarch-heavy, IMF-friendly current government as a legitimate
expression of the democratic yearnings of the Ukrainian people, as somewhat
metaphysically if not politically expressed by the Maidan demonstrators. The gymnastics of Western diplomats and journalists to present the current Kiev outfit as anti-oligarch populists, in particular, I think has Putin rolling his eyes in some combination of exasperation and admiration.
At the
same time, the Russians are ostentatiously refusing to any legitimacy-enhancing
contacts with the Kiev regime even when Kiev representatives are brought along
to a meeting, as Secretary of State Kerry did in Paris.
It may
give heartburn to the neo-liberal quadrant, but the Russians are closer to the
truth here.
Dissatisfaction
of the Maidan activists with the new government is palpable, and it is no
coincidence that, when the Crimea crisis emerged, government representatives
visited Maidan and told the activists to please go home now, since the key issue now was
national unity in the face of the Russian threat and not their picky problems
about corruption and governance.
Putin, who
I expect had heard the intercepted phone call prior to its release, repeatedly
alluded in his press conference to the nobility of the Maidan demonstrators and
sympathized with their clear distaste for the neo-oligarchical government (now
with genuine oligarchs running the eastern provinces) as well as Yanyukovich
(the relish with which Putin threw Yanyukovich under the bus was noteworthy. Nothing irritates an imperial boss more than
an inept proxy).
And I
would not be surprised if accusations that the mysterious outburst of sniper
fire (which instead of strengthening the purported perpetrator, Yanyukovich,
actually catapulted the neo-oligarchical opposition into power) was a black job
executed by extremist neo-nationalists gain traction among the genuinely
reformist Maidan activists.
Activists
such as Obomolets perhaps do not want to give Russia public aid and comfort by
endorsing the sniper narrative, at least as long as Russia is threatening
Ukrainian sovereignty. But don’t expect
the activist mood to improve if the new government, in addition to entrenching
oligarchs instead of removing them, concludes an excruciating austerity
agreement with the IMF.
Both the
West and Russia have ample experience in delaying embarrassing investigations,
and then producing long-after-the-fact whitewashes of their skullduggery—and the
new Kiev regime has the added advantage of having ultranationalist thugs on tap
to intimidate witnesses and nosy bureaucrats--so I don’t have any particular
hope that justice will break out and the full story of “snipergate” will come
to light.
But by the
same token, I don’t expect the Russians to let up on the allegations, since
they strike at the very heart of the new regime’s legitimacy. The accusations—and demands that Ukraine
return to the February 21 transition arrangement-- probably won’t go away, at
least on the Russian side, until the Russians gain satisfactory international
recognition of the status of Crimea, whatever that turns out to be.
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