Are Freelancers Running Our Russia Policy?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
Are
the neoconservatives and their neo-liberal collaborators in the
global crusade for democracy pushing America into confrontation
and a second Cold War with Russia? So it would seem.
Ex-CIA director James Woolsey threw out the word "fascist" on FOX
News the other night in describing Putin's Russia. Earlier, he was
quoted as saying, "The Russian government under Putin has moved
to within striking distance of being, essentially, fascist."
Zbigniew
Brzezinski in a Wall Street Journal essay last fall referred
to Putin as "Moscow's Mussolini" and described his regime as "in
many ways ... similar to Mussolini's fascism."
As
Woolsey is a former DCI and Zbig an ex-national security adviser,
Moscow is likely to regard these as fighting words. As would we,
if ex-high-level officials in Russia suddenly began calling George
W. Bush a fascist and our government fascistic.
But
it is not only the insults that have Putin demanding to know if
America intends the encirclement and isolation of Russia.
We
have been pumping millions into former Soviet republics, in the
hallowed name of democracy, to bring down regimes friendly to Moscow
and elect politicians and parties who will break away from Russia,
look to the West and join NATO, the U.S.-dominated alliance.
According
to The Associated Press' Matt Kelley, America funneled $65 million
into Ukraine in two years, with the money directed at dethroning
the regime of President Leonid Kuchma, defeating his prime minister
and designated successor Victor Yanukovich, and electing Viktor
Yushchenko president. While Yushchenko's victory in Sunday's run-off
is being hailed as one of the great events of Ukraine's history,
it looks suspiciously like a product of American electoral engineering.
According
to Kelley, U.S. cash went to Ukraine "to train groups and individuals
opposed to the Russian-backed government candidate people who
now call themselves part of the Orange Revolution."
British
writer John Laughland says the youth group Pora, which took over
Kiev's central square when Yushchenko appeared to have been robbed
of victory in November, is, "like its sister organizations in Serbia
and Georgia, Otmar and Khmara ... an organization created and financed
by Washington."
According
to Ian Traynor of The Guardian, U.S. agencies have perfected an
operation "engineering democracy through the ballot box and civil
disobedience" "so slick that the methods have matured into a
template for winning other people's elections."
While
the operation failed to unhorse Alexander Lukashenko in Belarus,
it succeeded in replacing Milosevic in Serbia, our old friend Edouard
Shevardnadze in Georgia and now Kuchma-Yanukovich in Ukraine.
Among
the agencies and organizations used to assist pro-West and pro-NATO
parties with men, money and training are the U.S. Agency for International
Development, the National Endowment for Democracy and its subsidiaries
the International Republican Institute and the National Democratic
Institute Freedom House and George Soros' assorted charities.
Who
chairs IRI? John McCain. Who chairs NDI? Ex-Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright. Who chairs Freedom House? Ex-CIA Director Woolsey. Did
the White House give these groups a green light to interfere in
and tip the Ukrainian elections to Yushchenko?
Writing
in The Washington Post, Hoover Institution scholar Michael
McFaul concedes, "American agents of influence ... meddle(d) in
the internal affairs of Ukraine," and adds that we have a moral
right to do so.
Pro-democracy
organizations, he says, though financed by the U.S. government,
operate independently. The State Department and White House "have
had almost nothing to do with the design or implementation of democracy
assistance programs."
Bush's
press secretary denies this. "There's accountability in place,"
says Scott McClellan. "We make sure that money is being used for
the purposes for which it's assigned or designated."
What
is the truth? Has Bush surrendered control of Russia policy to freelancers
who detest Putin and want to isolate his government, or is the White
House giving itself plausible deniability, while letting freelancers
do the work done in Cold War days by the CIA?
If
Putin is enraged, can we blame him? How we would react if the Chinese
or French meddled in our elections, and then the EU and Putin denounced
the 2000 Florida recount and 2004 Ohio returns as fraudulent?
Winning
Russia's friendship was among the great achievements of Ronald Reagan
and great dividends of our victory in the Cold War. We ought not
allow unelected, foreign-policy freelancers or rogue agencies,
or non-governmental organizations to put that vital relationship
at risk.
If
President Bush will not get control of NED and its progeny, or defund
the rogues, or assume responsibility for them all, Congress must
hold public hearings. At least let the people know who is steering
us into a new Cold War with Russia and the "World War IV" that ex-Director
Woolsey and his friends have in store for us.
December
29, 2004
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail], former presidential candidate and White House aide,
is editor of The American
Conservative and the author of eight books, including A
Republic Not An Empire and the upcoming Where
the Right Went Wrong.
Copyright
© 2004 Creators Syndicate
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J. Buchanan Archives
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