Two British citizens, Shaun Pinner and Aiden Aslin, who went to Ukraine to fight for the now-disbanded “international legion” of foreign mercenaries created by Kyiv in early days of the war and were fighting alongside neo-Nazi Azov militia in Mariupol, were captured by Russian forces and fervently appealed to the British prime minister for their immediate release.
The Britons appeared on Russian state TV on Monday and asked
to be exchanged for Viktor Medvedchuk, a Ukrainian politician who is the leader
of Ukraine's Opposition Platform and an ally of Russian President Vladimir
Putin. He was charged with “high treason” and “aiding terrorism” by the
Zelensky government and was placed under house arrest, from where he escaped
and was rearrested last week. He is currently being held at an undisclosed
location by the SBU, the fearsome Ukrainian intelligence agency being used as a
tool for political persecution by the autocratic regime.
One of the captives wearing a T-shirt bearing the emblem of
Ukraine's infamous Azov battalion, Aiden Aslin, made a direct
appeal to British Prime Minister Boris Johnson: “If Boris Johnson really
does care like he says he does about British citizens then he would help
pressure Zelensky to do the right thing and return Viktor to his family and
return us to our families.”
Asked on Sky News whether a possible swap was something the
government would get involved with, Britain's Northern Ireland minister Brandon
Lewis said on Tuesday: “We're actually going through the process of
sanctioning people who are close to Putin regime, we’re not going to be looking
at how we can help Russia.” Reading between the lines, neither would the Boris
Johnson government be looking at how to help British citizens.
“We always have responsibility for British citizens, which
we take seriously. We've got to get the balance right in Ukraine and that's why
I say to anybody: do not travel illegally to Ukraine,” Lewis added while
conveniently overlooking the fact British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss publicly
acknowledged she supported individuals from the United Kingdom who might want
to go to Ukraine to join an international force to fight.
She told the
BBC on Feb. 27, days after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, it was
up to people to “make their own decisions,” but argued it was a “battle for
democracy.” She said Ukrainians were fighting for freedom, “not just for
Ukraine but for the whole of Europe.” The British government is as criminally
culpable for inciting citizens to join NATO’s crusade in Ukraine as gullible
volunteers who actually joined the fight in the war zone on the call of the
government.
Favoring providing lethal weapons only instead of deploying
British mercenaries as cannon fodder in Ukraine’s proxy war, Defense Secretary
Ben Wallace took a nuanced approach and said with diplomatic overtones Ukraine
would instead be supported to “fight every street with every piece of equipment
we can get to them.” In other words, Ukraine would be made an “ordnance depot”
of NATO powers on Russia’s western flank.
On April 9, Boris Johnson undertook a clandestine
visit to Kyiv amidst much secrecy and tweeted a picture sitting beside
Zelensky after the visit. Johnson’s trip came a day after the EU’s top
executives, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and foreign
affairs chief Josep Borrell, publicly visited Kyiv and met with Zelensky.
British media hailed the “daredevil feat” of taking the
train journey in the war zone by the prime minister and compared him to the
fabled British secret agent, James Bond 007. During the visit, he pledged 120
“armored vehicles” and new “anti-ship missile systems” to Ukraine.
The British government also announced it would be sending
£100 million of military equipment, including more Starstreak anti-aircraft
missiles, helmets, night-vision devices and body armor. The United Kingdom guaranteed
an extra $500 million in World Bank lending to Ukraine, taking the total loan
guarantee to up to $1 billion.
In addition to the clandestine visit to Kyiv, Boris Johnson
is also credited with another highly provocative incident that happened before
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Last June, the British Royal Navy Defender breached
Russia’s territorial waters in the Black Sea and as many as 20 Russian
aircraft conducted “unsafe maneuvers” merely 500 feet above the warship and
Britain also lamented shots were fired in the path of the ship.
“British Prime Minister Boris Johnson would not say whether
he had personally approved the Defender’s voyage but suggested the Royal Navy
was making a point by taking that route,” a Politico
report alleged in June. A Telegraph
report noted that former Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab had raised concerns
about the mission, proposed by defense chiefs, and that Boris Johnson was
ultimately called in to settle the dispute.
Among the 50-page Ministry of Defense documents discovered
at a bus stop in Kent and passed to BBC were papers showing that ministers
knew that sending a Royal Navy warship close to Crimea last June would provoke
Russia, and did it anyway, sparking an international incident.
Looking at these highly escalatory moves by the British
government, it would appear Boris Johnson is perhaps motivated by “humanitarian
concerns” for the suffering of Ukrainian masses, which is farthest from truth.
In fact, he has a personal score to settle with the Russian leader and, being a
vindictive and opportunistic politician, he is taking advantage of Russia’s
vulnerability to exact revenge.
It’s pertinent to recall that on February 7, 2018, US B-52
bombers and Apache helicopters struck a contingent of Syrian government troops
and allied forces in Deir al-Zor province of eastern Syria that reportedly
killed and wounded scores of Russian military contractors working for the
Russian private security firm, the Wagner Group.
The survivors described the bombing as an absolute massacre,
and Moscow lost more Russian nationals in one day than it had lost during its
entire military campaign in support of the Syrian government since September
2015.
Washington’s objective in striking Russian contractors was
that the US-backed and Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) – which are
mainly comprised of Kurdish YPG militias – had reportedly handed over the
control of some areas east of the Euphrates River to Deir al-Zor Military
Council (DMC), which was the Arab-led component of SDF, and had relocated
several battalions of Kurdish YPG militias to Afrin and along Syria’s northern
border with Turkey in order to defend the Kurdish-held areas against the
onslaught of the Turkish armed forces and allied Syrian militant proxies during
Ankara’s “Operation Olive Branch” in Syria’s northwest that lasted from January
to March 2018.
Syrian forces with the backing of Russian contractors took
advantage of the opportunity and crossed the Euphrates River to capture an oil
refinery located to the east of the Euphrates River in the Kurdish-held area of
Deir al-Zor.
The US Air Force responded with full force, knowing well the
ragtag Arab component of SDF – mainly comprised of local Arab tribesmen and
mercenaries to make the Kurdish-led SDF appear more representative and
inclusive in outlook – was simply not a match for the superior training and
arms of the Syrian troops and Russian military contractors, consequently
causing a carnage in which scores of Russian nationals lost their lives.
A month after the massacre of Russian military contractors
in Syria, on March 4, 2018, Sergei Skripal, a Russian double agent working for
the British foreign intelligence service, and his daughter Yulia were found
unconscious on a public bench outside a shopping center in Salisbury. A few
months later, in July 2018, a British woman, Dawn Sturgess, died after touching
the container of the nerve agent that allegedly poisoned the Skripals.
In the case of the Skripals, Theresa May, then the prime
minister of the United Kingdom, promptly accused Russia of attempted
assassinations and the British government concluded that Skripal and his
daughter were poisoned with a Moscow-made, military-grade nerve agent,
novichok.
Sergei Skripal was recruited by the British MI6 in 1995, and
before his arrest in Russia in December 2004, he was alleged to have blown the
cover of scores of Russian secret agents. He was released in a spy swap deal in
2010 and was allowed to settle in Salisbury. Both Sergei Skripal and his
daughter have since recovered and were discharged from hospital in May 2018.
In the aftermath of the Salisbury poisonings in March 2018,
the US, UK and several European nations expelled scores of Russian diplomats
and Washington ordered the closure of the Russian consulate in Seattle. In a
retaliatory move, Russia also expelled a similar number of American, British
and European diplomats, and ordered the closure of American consulate in Saint
Petersburg.
The number of American diplomatic personnel stationed in
Russia drastically dropped from 1,200 before the escalation to 120, and the
relations between Moscow and Western powers reached their lowest ebb since the
break-up of the former Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War in December 1991.
Boris Johnson was the Secretary of State for Foreign and
Commonwealth Affairs in the Theresa May cabinet and held a grudge against
Russian President Putin for treating “Great Britain,” boasting the imperial
legacy, like a “banana republic.”
On Sunday, Russia announced
banning Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Foreign Secretary Liz Truss, Defense
Secretary Ben Wallace, First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon and ten other
British politicians from entering Russia over the United Kingdom’s hostile
stance on the war in Ukraine. Included in the list is the name of Theresa May,
even though she is not a member of the Boris Johnson cabinet.
Besides Britain, Germany has taken the lead in escalating NATO’s
conflict with Russia. On April 15, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz announced
plans to spend an additional €2 billion ($2.16 billion) on military needs,
most of which is aimed at providing weapons to Ukraine.
Approximately €400 million ($432.5 million) of the cash is
being allocated to the European Peace Facility, a funding mechanism through
which military aid is being procured for Ukraine. The remaining part of the
additional funds will be deployed directly towards supplies for Kyiv, among
other needs.
Scholz has pledged €100 billion ($112.7 billion) of the 2022
budget for the armed forces and committed to reaching the target of 2% of GDP
spending on defense that is requested by NATO. Following Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine, Berlin initially provided Ukraine with 1,000 anti-tank weapons and 500
anti-aircraft Stinger missiles. In mid-March, Germany said that due to security
risks it would not disclose further information about supplies of weapons to
Ukraine.
The European Union decided last week to massively increase
financial support for Ukraine’s military to €1.5 billion. Most of that support,
which is also supposed to allow Kyiv to buy weapons, is financed by Germany. The
newly announced financial support would allow Kyiv to directly
buy tanks from German defense companies like Rheinmetall.
Germany was specifically considering sending “Marder” light
tanks, armored vehicles equipped with anti-tank missiles, to Ukraine. The
German defense company Rheinmetall had signaled it could provide 100 such
tanks, which were standing on the firm’s grounds, German officials told
Politico.
Politicians were also discussing whether Berlin could similarly
supply its heavy-combat “Leopard” tanks to Ukraine. Ukraine’s ambassador to
Germany, Andriy Melnyk, told Deutschlandfunk radio on Thursday that Kyiv was
“expecting” Berlin to deliver Marder and Leopard tanks, as well as the
anti-aircraft “Gepard” tank.
One agreed shipment authorized by the German government
includes 56 Czechoslovak-made infantry fighting vehicles that used to be
operated by East Germany. Berlin passed the IFVs on to Sweden at the end of the
1990s, which later sold them to a Czech company that now aims to sell
them to Kyiv, according to German Welt am Sonntag newspaper.
Despite being an industrial powerhouse of Europe, Germany
might have been a sovereign state at liberty to pursue independent foreign
policy during the reign of the Third Reich but, since the defeat of the Nazis
in the Second World War, it has become a virtual colony of the imperial United
States, much like Japan and South Korea in the Far East where 45,000 and 28,500
US troops have been deployed, respectively.
In Europe, 400,000 US forces were deployed at the height of
the Cold War in the sixties, though the number has since been brought down
after European powers developed their own military capacity following the
devastation of the Second World War.
The number of American troops deployed
in Europe now stands at 50,000 in Germany, 15,000 in Italy, 10,000 in the
United Kingdom, and not to mention tens of thousands of additional US troops
that have recently been deployed in Eastern Europe since the escalation of
hostilities with Russia.
Historically, the NATO military alliance, at least
ostensibly, was conceived as a defensive alliance in 1949 during the Cold War
in order to offset conventional warfare superiority of the former Soviet Union.
The US forged collective defense pact with the West European nations after the
Soviet Union reached the threshold to build its first atomic bomb in 1949 and
achieved nuclear parity with the US.
But the trans-Atlantic military alliance has outlived its
purpose following the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 and is now being
used as an aggressive and expansionist military alliance meant to browbeat and
coerce the former Soviet allies, the East European states, to join NATO and its
auxiliary economic alliance, the European Union, or risk international economic
isolation, like Russia.
All the militaries of the NATO member states operate under
the integrated military command led by the Pentagon. Before being elected
president, General Dwight Eisenhower was the first commander of the Supreme
Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE).
The commander of Allied Command Operations has been given
the title Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR), and is always a US
four-star general officer or flag officer who also serves as the Commander US
European Command, and is answerable to the Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Among the European powers, only France has adopted a
relatively flexible stance to the Ukraine conflict and that, too, because
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine happened on the eve of presidential elections in
France, in which President Macron is in a tight race against far-right
candidate Marie Le Pen, with a run-off scheduled to take place on April 24.
Emmanuel Macron said
on Monday that his dialogue with Russian President Vladimir Putin had
stalled after alleged mass killings were discovered in Ukraine: “Since the
massacres we have discovered in Bucha and in other towns, the war has taken a
different turn, so I did not speak to him again directly since, but I don't rule
out doing so in the future.”
It comes as a surprise, though, hearing from the mouth of a Frenchman, whose forebears were responsible for the massacre of millions of Algerians during the Algerian War lasting from 1954 to 1962, that he has abandoned peace dialogue with the Russian president as a protest over alleged “mass killings” in Ukraine.
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