Neil Clark writes:
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has said
that the Ukraine/Crimea crisis has been “created artificially for purely
geopolitical reasons.” And he’s right.
It's important to understand that this is not a “one-off”
but only the latest in a long line of international “crises” either
deliberately hyped up or artificially created by the western powers to further
their geopolitical interests.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague has said
that Crimea is the “the biggest crisis in Europe in the 21st century.”
But it’s not the first time leading western politicians have talked in such
alarmist terms in recent years.
Exactly 15 years ago, in March 1999, we had the
Kosovo “crisis” – with western leaders claiming that unless NATO took
urgent military action thousands of Kosovan Albanians would be killed by Serb
forces, who we were told were engaged in a brutal genocidal war.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair told the House
of Commons on March 23, 1999: “We must act to save thousands of innocent
men, women and children from humanitarian catastrophe, from death, barbarism
and ethnic cleansing from a brutal dictatorship.”
But it was an artificially-created “crisis”
as what was going on in Kosovo was a low-level conflict between Yugoslav forces
and Kosovan Liberation Army fighters backed by the West.
The KLA’s job was to carry out attacks on
Yugoslav forces, provoke a violent response from Belgrade, which could then be
used as a pretext for NATO intervention to destroy an independent, socialist
country which had resisted globalization.
A “crisis” had to be created
in order to justify the NATO military action.
Four years later, we had the Iraq WMD “crisis.”
Something had to be done about Saddam’s deadly weapons which threatened us all,
western leaders told us. We couldn't wait for the team of UN weapons inspectors
to finish their job.
“If we don't act now, then we will go back to
what has happened before and then of course the whole thing begins again and he
carries on developing these weapons and these are dangerous weapons,
particularly if they fall into the hands of terrorists who we know want to use
these weapons if they can get them,” Blair said.
On April 28, 2003, when Saddam’s WMD hadn’t shown
up, Blair said: “Before people crow about the absence of Weapons of Mass
Destruction, I suggest they wait a bit.”
Eleven years on, and we’re still
waiting.
Throughout the last decade we've also had the
Iranian nuclear “crisis.”
We were told repeatedly by the West’s elite
that the Islamic Republic was developing nuclear weapons which posed a clear
threat not just to the Middle East region but to the whole world.
Dealing with
the Iranian nuclear “threat” was deemed to be our most urgent
priority. In January 2011, British Defense Secretary Liam Fox warned that Iran could have nuclear weapons by the end of
2012.
But 2013 dawned and Iran still didn’t have any
nukes.
Then there was the “crisis” in Libya in
2011.
We were told Colonel Gaddafi's forces were massacring innocent people and
were about to launch a genocidal attack on the civilians in Benghazi. Again, we
had to deal with this urgent “crisis.”
“We simply cannot stand back and let a
dictator whose people have rejected him, kill his people indiscriminately,”
declared British Prime Minister David Cameron, doing his best Tony Blair
impression.
“Confronted by this brutal repression and a
looming humanitarian crisis, I ordered warships into the Mediterranean.
European allies declared their willingness to commit resources to stop the
killing,” said President Barack Obama on March 28, 2011.
As in the case of
the “crisis” in Kosovo and the “crisis” with Iraqi WMDs, the
western response to the “crisis” in Libya was a military attack.
In August 2013, another “crisis” – with
Western claims that the Syrian government had launched a deadly chemical
weapons attack against its own people.
Again, we were told we had to act
quickly and firmly to deal with the “crisis”. It was only the diplomacy of
Russia and public opinion in western countries that prevented a US-led military
attack against Syria.
Now, in March 2014, the new “crisis” is
Putin's “invasion” of Ukraine and the threat Russia poses to
independent, “democratic” Ukraine. This, don’t forget is “the
biggest crisis in Europe in the 21st century.”
In fact, none of the above were real crises –
including Crimea.
There was no genocide in Kosovo. Iraq had no WMDs. Iran had
no nuclear weapons program: it was a Manufactured Crisis, to use the
title of investigate journalist Gareth Porter’s new book.
Gaddafi's forces weren't massacring civilians in
Libya – nor had Gaddafi threatened a massacre of civilians in Benghazi. What
Libyan forces were doing was what Yugoslav forces were doing in 1999, i.e.,
fighting a war against western-backed insurgents.
In Syria, the evidence – as well as logic –
suggests it was the rebels, and not the government which launched the chemical
weapons attack at Ghouta – in order to get a full-scale military intervention
from the western powers.
And there is no Russian “invasion” of
Ukraine.
But – and here's the most important point – the
western responses to these artificially created “crises” did lead to
real crises.
The “crisis” of Kosovo was dealt with by a brutal 78-day
bombardment of Yugoslavia, which wrecked the country's infrastructure, and
which left thousands killed or injured, with NATO’s use of depleted uranium
leading to a spike in cancer rates.
As for human rights, they’ve suffered too.
“Nowhere [in Europe] is there such a level of
fear for so many minorities that they will be harassed or attacked, simply for
who they are,” said a report on Kosovo by Minority Rights Group
International in 2006.
The WMD “crisis” of Iraq led to an
illegal invasion which Iraq has not yet recovered from, or is likely to recover
from for a very long time – with up to 1m killed and a country plagued by violent
sectarian conflict.
Last year was Iraq’s deadliest since 2008, with over 7,000 people killed.
In 2002/3 neocons couldn’t stop talking about the Iraq WMD “crisis” and how urgent action was needed; now, when there is a real crisis in the country, they are silent.
Last year was Iraq’s deadliest since 2008, with over 7,000 people killed.
In 2002/3 neocons couldn’t stop talking about the Iraq WMD “crisis” and how urgent action was needed; now, when there is a real crisis in the country, they are silent.
The Iranian nuclear “crisis” led to
draconian sanctions being posed on the country – which has led to real hardship
for the ordinary people of Iran – (as reported on RT) and
higher oil prices for Europe too, just what we didn’t need at a time of major
recession.
Millions have suffered needlessly due to steps taken to deal with a “crisis”
which never existed in the first place.
The Libyan “crisis” of 2011 led to a
brutal NATO assault on the country which led to thousands of deaths, and now
Libya, like Iraq, is a wrecked country, again plagued
with conflict.
Again, those who couldn’t stop talking about the “humanitarian
crisis” in Libya in 2011, are strangely silent these days.
The Syrian chemical weapons attack “crisis”
almost led to the outbreak of a major regional war, and possibly World War
Three, but in their obsession with toppling the Baathist government, still the
West and its regional allies supports the violent rebels thereby prolonging the
misery of war for millions of Syrians.
Now the serial “crisis” creators are at
it again, this time trying to convince us that a referendum in Crimea and the
possibility of the Crimea where almost 60 percent of the population are ethnic
Russians returning to Russia is a major “crisis”.
And once again the steps that they are proposing
– sanctions on Russia – would lead to more of a crisis than the “crisis”
itself: they would be disastrous for western economies, especially those in
Europe.
At the same time that we’re expected to lose
sleep over artificially created crises like Crimea crisis which affect the
lives of millions of ordinary people in the West and elsewhere are ignored by
western elites.
Global warming. The record numbers of young people without
jobs. The ever-widening gap between rich and poor. The rapid fall in living
standards of ordinary people in the west.
These are crises which proper
democratic governments would be dealing with. Instead the western elite prefer
to invent new ones.
Recent history teaches us that whenever western
leaders and their elite media cheerleaders talk of an international “crisis”
and warn that “something must be done” the best way of avoiding a real
crisis is to do absolutely nothing.
Let’s concentrate on tackling the real
crises like environmental destruction, poverty, inequality and unemployment and
not be fooled by the artificial “crises” that the western elites want
us to focus on.
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