Exposing troubling ties in the U.S. to overt Nazi and fascist protesters in Ukraine
By Max Blumenthal
Reposted from Alternet – Feb 24, 2014
By Max Blumenthal
Reposted from Alternet – Feb 24, 2014
As the Euromaidan protests in the Ukrainian
capitol of Kiev culminated this week, displays of open fascism and neo-Nazi
extremism became too glaring to ignore. Since demonstrators filled the downtown
square to battle Ukrainian riot police and demand the ouster of the
corruption-stained, pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovich, it has been filled
with far-right streetfighting men pledging to defend their country’s ethnic
purity.
White supremacist banners and Confederate flags
were draped inside Kiev’s occupied City Hall, and demonstrators have hoisted
Nazi SS and white power symbols over a toppled memorial to V.I. Lenin. After
Yanukovich fled his palatial estate by helicopter, EuroMaidan protesters
destroyed a memorial to Ukrainians who died battling German occupation during
World War II. Sieg heil salutes and the Nazi Wolfsangel symbol have become an
increasingly common site in Maidan Square, and neo-Nazi forces have established
“autonomous zones” in and around Kiev.
An Anarchist group called AntiFascist Union
Ukraine attempted to join the Euromaidan demonstrations but found it difficult
to avoid threats of violence and imprecations from the gangs of neo-Nazis
roving the square. “They called the Anarchists things like Jews, blacks,
Communists,” one of its members said. “There weren’t even any Communists, that
was just an insult.”
“There are lots of Nationalists here, including
Nazis,” the anti-fascist continued. “They came from all over Ukraine, and they
make up about 30% of protesters.”
[This article omits that the nationalist voices are singling out "Communists and Jews" as well as Russian-speaking Ukrainians as targets of violence; the Communist Party of Ukraine and its symbols have now been declared illegal and have been the direct target of violence in several cities, including ransacking the Party office in Kiev, and attacking the house of the Party's Secretary. Vandalism has also taken place of Soviet and antifascist monuments, tearing down Lenin statues. In some cases Party activists have surrounded Lenin statues with defense lines. The Ukrainian CP has been calling to declare a Ukrainian referendum on the definition of the foreign economic policy of Ukraine's integration with the European Union; political reforms to eliminate the presidency and install a parliamentary or federal republic significantly expanding the rights of territorial communities; and returning to a proportional voting electoral system.]
One of the “Big Three” political parties behind the protests is the ultra-nationalist Svoboda, whose leader, Oleh Tyahnybok, has called for the liberation of his country from the “Muscovite-Jewish mafia.” After the 2010 conviction of the Nazi death camp guard John Demjanjuk for his supporting role in the death of nearly 30,000 people at the Sobibor camp, Tyahnybok rushed to Germany to declare him a hero who was “fighting for truth.” In the Ukrainian parliament, where Svoboda holds an unprecedented 37 seats, Tyahnybok’s deputy Yuriy Mykhalchyshyn is fond of quoting Joseph Goebbels – he has even founded a think tank originally called “the Joseph Goebbels Political Research Center.” According to Per Anders Rudling, a leading academic expert on European neo-fascism, the self-described “socialist nationalist” Mykhalchyshyn is the main link between Svoboda’s official wing and neo-Nazi militias like Right Sector.
Right Sector is a shadowy syndicate of
self-described “autonomous nationalists” identified by their skinhead style of
dress, ascetic lifestyle, and fascination with street violence. Armed with riot
shields and clubs, the group’s cadres have manned the front lines of the
Euromaidan battles this month, filling the air with their signature chant:
“Ukraine above all!” In a recent Right Sector propaganda video [embedded at the
bottom of this article], the group promised to fight “against degeneration and
totalitarian liberalism, for traditional national morality and family values.”
With Svoboda linked to a constellation of international neo-fascist parties
through the Alliance of European National Movements, Right Sector is promising
to lead its army of aimless, disillusioned young men on “a great European
Reconquest.”
Svoboda’s openly pro-Nazi politics have not
deterred Senator John McCain from addressing a EuroMaidan rally alongside
Tyahnybok, nor did it prevent Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland from
enjoying a friendly meeting with the Svoboda leader this February. Eager to
fend off accusations of anti-Semitism, the Svoboda leader recently hosted the
Israeli Ambassador to Ukraine. “I would like to ask Israelis to also respect
our patriotic feelings,” Tyahnybok has remarked. “Probably each party in the
[Israeli] Knesset is nationalist. With God’s help, let it be this way for us
too.”
US Senator McCain addresses rally alongside fascist Svoboda leader |
In a leaked phone conversation with Geoffrey
Pyatt, the US ambassador to Ukraine, Nuland revealed her wish for Tyahnybok to
remain “on the outside,” but to consult with the US’s replacement for
Yanukovich, Arseniy Yatsenyuk, “four times a week.” At a December 5, 2013
US-Ukraine Foundation Conference, Nuland boasted that the US had invested $5
billion to "build democratic skills and institutions" in Ukraine,
though she did not offer any details.
“The Euro-Maidan movement has come to embody
the principles and values that are the cornerstones for all free democracies,”
Nuland proclaimed.
Two weeks later, 15,000 Svoboda members held a
torchlight ceremony in the city of Lviv in honor of Stepan Bandera, a World War
II-era Nazi collaborator who led the pro-fascist Organization of Ukrainian
Nationalists (OUN-B). Lviv has become the epicenter of neo-fascist activity in
Ukraine, with elected Svoboda officials waging a campaign to rename its airport
after Bandera and successfully changing the name of Peace Street to the name of
the Nachtigall Battalion, an OUN-B wing that participated directly in the
Holocaust. “’Peace’ is a holdover from Soviet stereotypes,” a Svoboda deputy
explained.
Revered by Ukrainian nationalists as a
legendary freedom fighter, Bandera’s real record was ignominious at best. After
participating in a campaign to assassinate Ukrainians who supported
accommodation with the Polish during the 1930’s, Bandera’s forces set
themselves to ethnically cleanse western Ukraine of Poles in 1943 and 1944. In
the process, they killed over 90,000 Poles and many Jews, whom Bandera’s top
deputy and acting “Prime Minister,” Yaroslav Stetsko, were determined to
exterminate. Bandera held fast to fascist ideology in the years after the war,
advocating a totalitarian, ethnically pure Europe while his affiliated
Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) carried out a doomed armed struggle against the
Soviet Union. The bloodbath he inspired ended when KGB agents assassinated him
in Munich in 1959.
The Right Connections
Many surviving OUN-B members fled to Western
Europe and the United States – occasionally with CIA help – where they quietly
forged political alliances with right-wing elements. “You have to understand,
we are an underground organization. We have spent years quietly penetrating
positions of influence,” one member told journalist Russ Bellant, who
documented the group’s resurgence in the United States in his 1988 book, “Old
Nazis, New Right, and the Republican Party.”
In Washington, the OUN-B reconstituted under
the banner of the Ukrainian Congress Committee of America (UCCA), an umbrella
organization comprised of “complete OUN-B fronts,” according to Bellant. By the
mid-1980’s, the Reagan administration was honeycombed with UCCA members, with
the group’s chairman Lev Dobriansky, serving as ambassador to the Bahamas, and
his daughter, Paula, sitting on the National Security Council. Reagan
personally welcomed Stetsko, the Banderist leader who oversaw the massacre of
7000 Jews in Lviv, into the White House in 1983.
“Your struggle is our struggle,” Reagan told
the former Nazi collaborator. “Your dream is our dream.”
When the Justice Department launched a crusade
to capture and prosecute Nazi war criminals in 1985, UCCA snapped into action,
lobbying Congress to halt the initiative. “The UCCA has also played a leading
role in opposing federal investigations of suspected Nazi war criminals since
those queries got underway in the late 1970’s,” Bellant wrote. “Some UCCA
members have many reasons to worry – reasons which began in the 1930’s.”
Still an active and influential lobbying force
in Washington, the UCCA does not appear to have shed its reverence for
Banderist nationalism. In 2009, on the 50th anniversary of Bandera’s death, the
group proclaimed him “a symbol of strength and righteousness for his followers”
who “continue[s] to inspire Ukrainians today.” A year later, the group honored
the 60th anniversary of the death of Roman Shukhevych, the OUN-B commander of
the Nachtigall Battalion that slaughtered Jews in Lviv and Belarus, calling him
a “hero” who “fought for honor, righteousness…”
Back in Ukraine in 2010, then-President Viktor
Yushchenko awarded Bandera the title of “National Hero of Ukraine,” marking the
culmination of his efforts to manufacture an anti-Russian national narrative
that sanitized the OUN-B’s fascism. (Yuschenko’s wife, Katherine Chumachenko,
was a former Reagan administration official and ex-staffer at the right-wing
Heritage Foundation). When the European Parliament condemned Yushchenko's
proclamation as an affront to "European values," the UCCA-affiliated
Ukrainian World Congress reacted with outrage, accusing the EU of "another
attempt to rewrite Ukrainian history during WWII." On its website, the
UCCA dismissed historical accounts of Bandera's collaboration with the Nazis as
"Soviet propaganda."
Following the demise of Yanukovich this month,
the UCCA helped organize rallies in cities across the US in support of the
EuroMaidan protests. When several hundred demonstrators marched through
downtown Chicago, some waved Ukrainian flags while others proudly flew the red
and black banners of the UPA and OUN-B. "USA supports Ukraine!" they
chanted.
In western Ukraine Bandera is looked upon as a freedom fighter and hero. The UCCA's main purpose is to support a free and democratic Ukraine. It does not support any neo-Nazi violence in Ukraine.
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