Автор Тема: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)  (Прочитано 21543 раз)

0 Користувачів і 1 Гість дивляться цю тему.

Offline Feral Cat

  • Ветеран форума
  • ******
  • Повідомлень: 46625
  • Never give in!
Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #120 : Серпня 17, 2015, 07:34:03 19:34 »
Forbes: Time is not on Ukraine's Side
http://www.forbes.com/sites/markadomanis/2015/08/14/time-is-not-on-ukraines-side/

Enough people are practicing schadenfreude because Russia's economy is now
under the constraints of economic sanctions and an environment for low
hydrocarbon prices for the next three to five years.

Don't kid yourself: Russia can make it on its own in this time period
because it has fx reserves and something to sell on world markets.

Ukraine can't make it on its own, and is on IMF life-support systems for
a considerabley extended future. Look
at both World Bank and IMF projections, and both institutions forecast
weakness if not contraction for Ukraine's medium-term.

As Mark Adomanis says, "Even as Russiaʼs economy has turned sour, the gap
between Russian and Ukrainian economic performance has grown not shrank.
That is to say that Ukraineʼs economy has not simply fared worse than
Russiaʼs, it has fared increasingly worse."
If you are going through hell, keep going.

Offline Feral Cat

  • Ветеран форума
  • ******
  • Повідомлень: 46625
  • Never give in!
If you are going through hell, keep going.

Offline Kikker

  • Ветеран форума
  • ******
  • Повідомлень: 4850
Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #122 : Вересня 30, 2015, 11:02:44 11:02 »
:Sho_za:

Про причини відставки Евелін немає ні слова. Може вона в декрет пішла.

Offline Бувалий

  • Ветеран форума
  • ******
  • Повідомлень: 47996
  • Стать: Чоловіча
Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #123 : Вересня 30, 2015, 08:01:20 20:01 »
:Sho_za:

Про причини відставки Евелін немає ні слова.
Може вона в декрет пішла.
Як у тому анекдотi
- Я пiшла...
- Куди?
- В декрет можна?..

 :smilie7:

Offline EZelenyk

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Повідомлень: 1543
  • Стать: Чоловіча
  • Львiв'янин з USA
    • AZAM
Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #124 : Вересня 30, 2015, 09:32:33 21:32 »
Местная газета вчера, заголовок на фоне рукопожатия Обамы и Путина, морды кислые у обоих - большими красными буквами -
KISS MY ASS...AD
« Останнє редагування: Вересня 30, 2015, 09:34:23 21:34 від EZelenyk »
Sapere aude

Offline Feral Cat

  • Ветеран форума
  • ******
  • Повідомлень: 46625
  • Never give in!
Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #125 : Жовтня 06, 2015, 01:57:40 01:57 »
Testing Putin’s Intentions
By John E. Herbst

The October 2 Paris Summit with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President François Hollande, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, and Russian President Vladimir Putin produced no breakthrough for peace in Ukraine. But it provided additional proof that, for the moment, Putin wants to lower tensions in the region. The parties spoke about three issues: the withdrawal of armaments, the timing and conditions of elections, and OSCE monitoring of the region controlled by Putin's proxies in eastern Ukraine. The handling of these issues puts most of the onus on Moscow and its agents, and the Kremlin's follow-through should be seen as a test of Putin's intentions.

The parties are supposed pull back tanks and other weapons—a condition of the original Minsk I and Minsk II agreements, which Moscow has flagrantly violated. If the Kremlin removes weapons this time, that will suggest that the lull in fighting since September 1 may be a real lull, not a period to prepare for a future offensive.


Hollande said that holding elections on October 18 and November 1 in Ukraine's rebel-controlled regions as currently planned would be a major breach to the Minsk Agreement. In Paris, Putin appeared to agree that the elections in the so-called Donetsk and Luhansk People's Republics should take place under Ukrainian law. It's not clear if Putin will formally agree, but postponing the elections there would be a clear indication of a new Kremlin policy. Russian Presidential spokesman Dmitriy Peskov said that an envoy would discuss delaying the elections with rebel leaders. In the Kremlin narrative, those leaders can always turn down Putin's "advice." Putin's Minsk partners understand that such a development would be one more example of his bad faith.

Hollande also said that the elections in these areas should take place within ninety days of Ukraine's passage of a law on decentralization. This is the hard issue for Poroshenko, since it's highly controversial and some see it as an unwarranted concession to Moscow. Parliament passed the first reading of this law in the summer amid violent protests. To become the law of the land, it must pass a second time with a two-thirds majority. Its passage is by no means assured. Ukrainian critics of the law should be relieved by the fact that the Kremlin considers this bill inadequate because it would not give Donetsk People's Republic and the Luhansk People's Republic a veto over Ukraine's national security policies.

Finally, the parties in Paris agreed that OSCE monitors should be given access to all parts of the Kremlin-controlled east. This too will be a quick test of Putin's intentions. Allowing the monitors unrestricted access would enable the international community to verify the withdrawal of Russian troops and weapons and make it much harder for the Kremlin to launch a new offensive.


On balance, this is not a bad result. Ukrainians are understandably unhappy that Hollande is now talking as if Minsk II will not be complete by the end of the year, when Ukraine is supposed to regain control over the border. Yet as long as sanctions will be extended in January, significant pressure will remain on the Russian President. His game is to see if the relative calm in the Donbas and easily reversible concessions can lead to a lifting or at least an easing of sanctions in January. So long as Merkel remains firm that any ease in sanctions requires full Kremlin implementation of Minsk, this ploy will fail.

http://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/new-atlanticist/testing-putin-s-intentions?utm_content=buffer09649&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer
« Останнє редагування: Жовтня 06, 2015, 02:00:42 02:00 від Feral Cat »
If you are going through hell, keep going.

Offline Feral Cat

  • Ветеран форума
  • ******
  • Повідомлень: 46625
  • Never give in!
Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #126 : Лютого 05, 2016, 12:06:13 00:06 »
DIRTY WAR02.03.16 12:00 AM ET

The War in Ukraine Is Back—So Why Won’t Anyone Say So?
Violence in East Ukraine is spiking, but Western pols are silent.

Russia’s dirty war in Ukraine is far from frozen, and despite the deteriorating situation, the West appears keen to turn a blind eye.
While the fighting in southeast Ukraine has rumbled on incessantly throughout the winter, inducing conflict fatigue and a drop in media coverage, the last weeks have seen a marked spike in the number of attacks.
Ukrainian officials are reporting up to 71 attacks a day, with most of the fighting concentrated around the separatist-held cities of Donetsk and Gorlovka, as well as the countryside east of the Azov port city of Mariupol.


Both sides accuse each other of daily using heavy mortars, which were supposed to have been withdrawn in accordance over a year ago in accordance with the first Minsk agreement.
According to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), which monitors the ceasefire, last month saw the return of the use of Grad multiple-launch rocket systems and 152 mm artillery. Both were reportedly used on two consecutive days in separatist-held Gorlovka.

Jan. 26 and 27 saw a multitude of reports from Donetsk residents on social media of intense fighting in the north of the city, where the frontline runs alongside the ruins of the airport and the suburbs of Peski and Avdeyevka. Dozens of Twitter and VKontakte (Russia’s Facebook equivalent) users across the city reported a powerful explosion and shockwave on the 27th, for which there is still no credible explanation. Some users claimed that the shelling was the heaviest heard since the final assault on Donetsk Airport at this time last year.
Furthermore, over the last few days, we have seen the targeting of frontier checkpoints, which allow civilians to enter and leave separatist-held territory, by Russian-backed fighters, raising the possibility that the government may be forced to close these vital passages to avoid casualties.
The Jan. 13 call, put forth by the new Russian representative at the Minsk peace talks, Boris Gryzlov, for an immediate, total ceasefire has clearly amounted to nothing.
The Ukrainian and separatist leaderships are pursuing diametrically opposed plans regarding the holding of local elections in the occupied regions of the Donbass—a key element of the Minsk ceasefire agreements.

 
While Kiev, and the text of the Minsk deal itself, says the elections must be held in accordance with Ukrainian law, Aleksandr Zakharchenko, the leader of the self-declared Donetsk People’s Republic (DNR), last week restated his commitment to barring all major Ukrainian political parties and conducting the votes under DNR “law.”
The prospects for another element of the Minsk process—the exchange of prisoners of war, are looking gloomy too. On Jan. 28 the head of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) delegation to Ukraine, Alain Aeschlimann, told reporters that his organization had been allowed access to only four of the 133 Ukrainian prisoners the separatists claim to hold.
On Jan. 25 former President Leonid Kuchma, the lead Ukrainian negotiator in direct talks with the Russian-backed separatists, said that he now thinks that many of those prisoners are already dead. The separatists are, he suggested, using the negotiations over the number of prisoners to stall and buy time.
All this comes amidst a grim backdrop. The ICRC says that over a thousand people are still missing as a result of the conflict in the Donbass, and disease, fostered by a breakdown in infrastructure and thousands of casualties caused by the fighting, is spreading rapidly.

Ukraine (as well as southern Russia) is now in the grips of an epidemic of H1N1 variant flu, which has infected 18 regions of the country and killed at least 171 people. Schools have been closed indefinitely in Kharkiv. In separatist-held Donetsk, well over 2,000 people have turned to doctors with complaints of viral respiratory infections so far this year. The sister Lugansk “People’s Republic” reports an even worse situation, with more than 10,000 people infected and dozens of quarantine zones introduced. Both Eduard Basurin, a DNR military spokesman, and Vadim Solovyov, an MP in the Russian State Duma, have claimed that the flu outbreak in Ukraine originated from an American biological warfare facility in government-controlled Kharkiv.
This of course, combined with a (most likely Russian) cyber attack that caused a blackout late last year and the stand-off at the frontier with occupied Crimea over imports, only adds to the deep-seated mistrust between Kiev and the Russian side.

Yet on Jan. 22, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said that sanctions on Russia could be lifted within “these next months” if the Minsk agreements were implemented in full.
Leaving aside the fact that sanctions were first introduced in response to Russia’s occupation and annexation of Crimea—a completely separate issue on which there is not even a hint of progress, Kerry’s suggestion that Minsk could be fully realized in the space of a few months is absurd.
Poroshenko has said that there must be a ceasefire before the “special status” law, that would establish semi-autonomy for the occupied areas of the Donbass and establish the legal framework for local elections, comes into effect. And even if those highly contested electoral plans come to fruition, the Minsk agreements stipulate the withdrawal of all foreign (i.e. Russian) forces from Ukraine and the return of government control of all of the border with Russia before full implementation looks near.
Kerry’s hint at rapprochement is part of a wider trend.
The German and Finnish governments continue to pursue the Nord Stream 2 pipeline project with the Russian state gas monopoly Gazprom, a policy that flies in the face of moves to achieve European energy independence and is opposed by Ukraine, Poland, and the Baltic states.
In the U.K., despite a devastating conclusion from the public inquiry into the murder of Alexander Litvinenko, which found that the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) had organized the radiological assassination, and that then FSB chief Nikolai Patrushev and even President Vladimir Putin himself had “probably” ordered it, the government has refrained from rocking the boat.
During the House of Commons debate that followed the publication of the Litvinenko Inquiry report, the home secretary, Theresa May, opposed calls from across the house for the introduction of a British equivalent to the U.S. Magnitsky Act—a broad sanctions bill aimed at corrupt and human rights-abusing Russian officials—and announced little more than the lukewarm punitive measure of freezing any U.K. assets belonging to the two assassins, who have been living under Kremlin protection (one as an MP) for almost a decade since the murder.

The reason for both Kerry and May’s soft approach to Russia derives from Western hopes that Putin will be of assistance in Syria. “We will continue to call on President Putin for Russia, as one of the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, to engage responsibly and make a positive contribution to global security and stability,” May said. “They can, for example, play an important role in defeating [ISIS] and, together with the wider international community, help Syria work towards a stable future.”
But this means turning a blind eye not only to the killing of Litvinenko, but Russia’s annexation of Crimea and invasion of the Donbass for the sake of a hope that Putin may be turned to work with the West on Syria. If Russia can, with impunity, use radioactive polonium to murder a British citizen in London or shoot down a passenger airliner over Ukraine, then how can we collaborate on “serious crime” or “aviation security”?
The hope here is profoundly misplaced.


While Russia “could” play an important role in fighting ISIS, they are not and have used the cover story of doing so to further aims that run directly contrary to the (publicly stated, at least) aims of the U.K., U.S., and France. The vast majority of Russian airstrikes in Syria are aimed not at ISIS-held territory, but areas controlled by opposition groups. This includes U.S.-supplied Free Syrian Army units. When they do carry out strikes in ISIS-held land, they bomb water treatment plants and grain silos, which the Russian Ministry of Defense attempts to pass off as oil refineries. Meanwhile, there are reports that Russia actually spent the years prior to the direct military intervention last September dispatching domestic jihadists to wage war in Syria with groups including ISIS itself.

The worst effect of this is that by devastating the opposition, which includes both nationalists and Islamists of shades varying from moderate to the fundamentalist, while leaving ISIS relatively unscathed, Putin and Bashar al-Assad are ensuring that the moderates are squeezed out and the jihadists’ appeal to bombed and abused Sunnis is strengthened.
Furthermore, if the Assad regime succeeds, with the help of Russian air and ground forces, in retaking rebel-held areas like Idlib and Aleppo, then the refugee crisis that is already causing a breakdown in the EU Schengen system of free movement will worsen dramatically.

It is by no means a stretch to say that the breakup of the European Union is a foreign policy goal for the Kremlin. Russia has fostered relationships with far-right Eurosceptic parties across the EU, with the virulent, neo-Vichyist Front National even receiving millions of euros from a Kremlin-linked Russian bank. Last month has even seen Russian state TV spreading a fabricated story of a German teenager being gang-raped by immigrants and the Russian embassy in London posting starkly racist tweets about Germany being trampled beneath the feet of migrants.
Western governments now appear set to ignore Russian malfeasance, not only in Ukraine and Syria, but at home in the EU, for the sake of fantasy and financial gain.


http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/02/03/the-war-in-ukraine-is-back-so-why-won-t-anyone-say-so.html
If you are going through hell, keep going.

Offline Feral Cat

  • Ветеран форума
  • ******
  • Повідомлень: 46625
  • Never give in!
Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #127 : Лютого 16, 2016, 09:31:28 21:31 »
Ось вчорашня редакційна стаття із WaPo:


THE BEST way to help Ukraine fend off Russia’s aggression is to build a strong and prosperous nation. That has been the core of Western thinking in the nearly two years since Russia seized Crimea and staged a separatist uprising in the Donbass. Now, a fresh warning to Ukraine’s leaders has appeared, this time from within, challenging them to heal the country’s chronic corruption and oligarchic rot. They must listen or risk losing all.

The warning came from the economic development and trade minister, Aivaras Abromavicius, 40, a technocrat and dedicated reformer brought in 14 months ago to help make a decisive break with the past and point Ukraine toward a long-overdue economic overhaul under President Petro Poroshenko. “We came here to do big things like deregulation, state-owned enterprise reform, and public procurement reform,” Mr. Abromavicius said this month, adding that the nation’s leaders had promised him “absolute political support and commitment to reforms.”

It was always going to be uphill. Ukraine has remained mired in a system in which billionaires gobble up state assets and siphon off the revenue streams. This corrupt form of oligarchic capitalism grew rapidly in the years after the Soviet Union imploded — it flourished in Russia, too — but Ukraine’s variant has been particularly deep-rooted. Finally, on Feb. 3, Mr. Abromavicius announced he was resigning because Ukrainian plutocrats were grinding down his efforts at reform.

He declared that businessmen close to Mr. Poroshenko were seeking to infiltrate the oil and defense industries and attempting to put their own people in government and corporate posts. “It has become clear that any kind of systemic reform is decisively blocked,” Mr. Abromavicius said. “I refuse to be part of this system. Neither me nor my team are prepared to serve as a cover-up for the schemes, old or new, that have been set up in the private interest of particular political or business players.” He added, “Evil forces still want to wind things back. Let us get rid of all those who shamelessly siphon billions off the Ukrainian economy.”

Specifically, he identified Ihor Kononenko, a businessman who is a deputy faction leader in Mr. Poroshenko’s bloc in parliament, as an obstacle to reform. As economist Anders Aslund of the Atlantic Council pointed out, Mr. Kononenko is Mr. Poroshenko’s right-hand man and often called the party’s “gray cardinal” by journalists; the crisis now goes all the way to the top.


The outburst was a needed shock to the status quo in Ukraine, and the question now is whether Mr. Poroshenko will do anything about it. Ambassadors from the United States, Canada, Britain, Germany, France, Italy, Lithuania, Sweden and Switzerland demanded in a statement that Ukraine put the vested interests that have dominated it for so long “squarely in the past.” The International Monetary Fund has indicated that Ukraine’s fiscal lifeline could be cut off in the absence of clear government action. Ukraine’s leadership must not ignore the warnings. Oligarchic capitalism was a messy first phase after the collapse of communism, but to survive, Ukraine must bid it farewell.

Це вже не натяк, пряма вказівка - олігархічний капіталізм must go.
Чекаю на голову Кононенка на тарілці. :smilie7:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/ukraine-should-heed-its-economy-ministers-warning-on-corruption/2016/02/15/eb7af9e6-cea3-11e5-88cd-753e80cd29ad_story.html?tid=ss_fb-bottom
If you are going through hell, keep going.

Offline Feral Cat

  • Ветеран форума
  • ******
  • Повідомлень: 46625
  • Never give in!
Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #128 : Лютого 17, 2016, 06:24:18 06:24 »
Ukraine: Into and out of the abyss

Western capitals pressure Kiev to bring reformers into government.

By   ADRIAN KARATNYCKY 2/16/16, 8:48 PM CET Updated 2/16/16, 11:50 PM CET

What had happened? By all appearances, just a week before Poroshenko was determined to rid himself of Yatsenyuk, whose tenure as prime minister has included halting progress toward reforms, laced with a heavy dose of favoritism and rents for key oligarchic business interests.

However, reliable sources in Western capitals and in Kiev confirmed that U.S. and European leaders looked unfavorably on the plan and sent two emphatic messages to Ukraine’s president: 1) add more independent professionals and reformers to the cabinet; and 2) avoid the collapse of the government and new elections.

Western leaders, who have put together a $27.5 billion bailout package for Ukraine, are more than mere bystanders, they are stakeholders in Ukraine’s success.


 If there are to be changes at the top of Ukraine’s government, they told Poroshenko, he must guarantee that such changes will ensure stability.

Simply put, there will be no new injections of financial support, which Ukraine’s economy desperately needs at the beginning of April. Western leaders did not issue their demand because they support or trust Yatsenyuk. They did so because they knew that a period of political uncertainty can erode support for the maintenance of sanctions against Russia: “Why should our economies make sacrifices for Ukraine, when its leaders are unwilling to make economic sacrifices themselves,” was how one EU-Ukraine hand put it to me in Brussels last week.

The multiple messages seem to have had the desired effect. By failing to prevail in a vote on Yatsenyuk’s resignation, Poroshenko bought the prime minister a half-year before a new vote can be held to strip him of his office — after two additional tranches of IMF aid are likely to come and the EU has made a June decision to extend sanctions against Russia.


For the second time in Ukraine’s recent history, a president had attempted to bring down a coalition government that emerged in the aftermath of a civic revolution. For the second time, as in 2005, the country faced a perilous choice. The last time, disunity between a president and prime minister opened the door to the routing of reformers and the strengthening of corrupt government as usual.

This time, there are six months to prove there is a chance for compromise and for averting a deep drop into a political abyss: That, after all, is an outcome an embattled Ukraine doesn’t need.

http://www.politico.eu/article/ukraine-heads-into-the-abyss-petro-poroshenko-arseniy-yatsenyuk/
If you are going through hell, keep going.

Offline polelis

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Повідомлень: 2944
Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #129 : Лютого 17, 2016, 07:40:14 07:40 »
Ukraine: Into and out of the abyss

Western capitals pressure Kiev to bring reformers into government.

By   ADRIAN KARATNYCKY 2/16/16, 8:48 PM CET Updated 2/16/16, 11:50 PM CET

What had happened? By all appearances, just a week before Poroshenko was determined to rid himself of Yatsenyuk, whose tenure as prime minister has included halting progress toward reforms, laced with a heavy dose of favoritism and rents for key oligarchic business interests.

However, reliable sources in Western capitals and in Kiev confirmed that U.S. and European leaders looked unfavorably on the plan and sent two emphatic messages to Ukraine’s president: 1) add more independent professionals and reformers to the cabinet; and 2) avoid the collapse of the government and new elections.

Western leaders, who have put together a $27.5 billion bailout package for Ukraine, are more than mere bystanders, they are stakeholders in Ukraine’s success.


 If there are to be changes at the top of Ukraine’s government, they told Poroshenko, he must guarantee that such changes will ensure stability.

Simply put, there will be no new injections of financial support, which Ukraine’s economy desperately needs at the beginning of April. Western leaders did not issue their demand because they support or trust Yatsenyuk. They did so because they knew that a period of political uncertainty can erode support for the maintenance of sanctions against Russia: “Why should our economies make sacrifices for Ukraine, when its leaders are unwilling to make economic sacrifices themselves,” was how one EU-Ukraine hand put it to me in Brussels last week.

The multiple messages seem to have had the desired effect. By failing to prevail in a vote on Yatsenyuk’s resignation, Poroshenko bought the prime minister a half-year before a new vote can be held to strip him of his office — after two additional tranches of IMF aid are likely to come and the EU has made a June decision to extend sanctions against Russia.


For the second time in Ukraine’s recent history, a president had attempted to bring down a coalition government that emerged in the aftermath of a civic revolution. For the second time, as in 2005, the country faced a perilous choice. The last time, disunity between a president and prime minister opened the door to the routing of reformers and the strengthening of corrupt government as usual.

This time, there are six months to prove there is a chance for compromise and for averting a deep drop into a political abyss: That, after all, is an outcome an embattled Ukraine doesn’t need.

http://www.politico.eu/article/ukraine-heads-into-the-abyss-petro-poroshenko-arseniy-yatsenyuk/
[/quote

Обіцянки-цяцянки, .... Щось навіть не пригадую коли вони це обіцяли і де
в якому "меморандумі" це зафіксовано.
 :eyes:

Offline Feral Cat

  • Ветеран форума
  • ******
  • Повідомлень: 46625
  • Never give in!
Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #130 : Лютого 17, 2016, 11:16:42 23:16 »
As world powers focus on freezing the conflict in Syria, the war in Ukraine continues unabated. According to international monitoring organizations and soldiers on the front, the fighting has reached levels not seen in months.

On Monday, three Ukrainian soldiers were killed and six were wounded, according to a tweet from Col. Oleksander Motuzyank, a military spokesman for the Ukrainian government. The deaths follow a sharp-uptick in violence between government troops and Russian-backed separatists. The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, or OSCE, has recorded numerous cease-fire violations in recent weeks, including the use of heavy weapons, such as 120mm mortars and BM-21 multiple rocket launch systems. Heavy weapons above 82mm were banned in previous cease-fire agreements known as Minsk I and Minsk II and are supposed to have been moved back from the front lines. In addition to the fighting, there has been “circumstantial evidence” that Russia is rearming the separatists, according to Lamberto Zannier, the secretary general of the OSCE.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/checkpoint/wp/2016/02/16/as-focus-remains-on-syria-ukraine-sees-heaviest-fighting-in-months/
If you are going through hell, keep going.

Offline Feral Cat

  • Ветеран форума
  • ******
  • Повідомлень: 46625
  • Never give in!
Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #131 : Лютого 20, 2016, 06:39:55 06:39 »
James Miller
Two Years After Ukraine’s Euromaidan Revolution, Is The West Betraying Its Values?
February 19, 2016

http://www.interpretermag.com/two-years-after-ukraines-euromaidan-revolution-is-the-west-betraying-its-values/

On the morning of February 18, 2014, all hell broke loose in Kiev. After 90 days of protesting, young activists who were tired of the corrupt government marched to the Presidential Administration to demand that President Viktor Yanukovych sign the association agreement with the European Union. Yanukovych answered — with brutality. His Berkut riot police attacked the protesters, driving them to their nearby encampments in Maidan Square.

It was the 90th day of protests, but it was the first day of the Euromaidan Revolution — and the day that changed Ukraine forever. It was the day the Ukrainian citizens said, in the loudest possible voice, that it was time for the country to become a fully-functioning 21st century democracy. It was a clear break with the past — its corruption, its repression, its brutal suppression of the will of the people.

Last year we remembered the Euromaidan Revolution and “a most violent year” that followed. We retraced the history of the events which led to the fall of the Yanukovych government. We called the revolution the birth of a nation. We reflected on the words on the Ukrainian national anthem and the spirit of Maidan.

We also reflected on what the revolution meant for the entire world. Estonian President Toomas Hendrik Ilves noted that the revolution, having succeeded, was quickly met by Russian aggression — an act which was a challenge to Ukrainian national sovereignty, but also to world peace. We argued that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was part of a worsening totalitarianism waged by the Russian president at home and abroad. We simultaneously published the words of a Ukrainian soldier while noting that “at every stage of this war truth has been strangled by its attendant bodyguard of lies.”

We also reflected on the lessons of covering a year of tumult, revolution, and war, in the hopes that we would do an even better job of cutting through the fog and finding the truth.

This year we are struck by how different things feel. Many of the promises of the revolution remain unfulfilled. Many of the dangers of Russian interference have only become more real.

Despite the overwhelming evidence that Russia invaded Ukraine, a breach of international law and a clear violation of Russia’s oaths to the international community, the world is still largely in denial about Russia’s role in creating and continuing this crisis, and its penchant for destabilizing everything it touches. Not only this, but those with a short memory appear to be ready to leave Russia’s victims to their own fate. Ukraine is increasingly alone in its struggles to complete the promises of its revolution, as Europe is closer than ever to dropping support for the fledgling government. The Netherlands is even holding a referendum on whether Ukraine should be part of the EU, a move which could trample a central goal of the revolution that sparked Russia’s aggression. Ukraine’s government has still not defeated corruption, and internal political divisions in parliament have dealt the coalition a series of self-inflicted gunshot wounds. But Ukraine, admittedly late to adopt post-Soviet progress, is trying to accomplish in just two years what countries like Poland accomplished over the course of decades. And they are trying to simultaneously fight their own demons while literally fighting Russia’s military, its propaganda, and its trade wars — major obstacles that the rest of Eastern Europe did not have to contend with while trying to fix their economies.

While Ukraine is striving to become more European, the West is also changing. Europe is simultaneously increasingly willing to forget the sins of dictators while being more sympathetic to the anti-Europeanism fostered by the Kremlin. The Russian strategy at play in Europe, Ukraine, and Syria threatens to break the European Union, NATO, and the resolve of the West. The killers in Ukraine — former Yanukovych officials who fled to Russia, and the Russian government that has spilled so much blood — walk free. Not only that but they have now openly joined the slaughter in Syria where they previously only supplied the weapons and the diplomatic environment where such death could thrive.


There are those who argue that we are not in the middle of a second Cold War with Russia. Years ago this was true. The West has flourished in the last century in part because it has worked with its former adversaries to ensure every nation prospers. But the reality is that Vladimir Putin does not believe what we believe, he does not value what we value, and while many in the West clamber to work with Putin to resolve the world’s problems, Putin has made it clear that he is only interested in making Russia stronger at the expense of the rest of the world. He will not compromise, he will not allow opposing ideas to prosper, or even to exist, if it is within his power to snuff them. He is playing a dangerous zero-sum game that is the creation of Moscow’s policies, and the West is losing, largely by simply not even attempting to play.

We wonder, out loud, what the next anniversary of the Maidan Revolution will be like. Will Ukraine still be on track to join the European Union? Will the IMF pull Ukraine’s funding? How much of the country will still be in the hands of foreign invaders? Will the Ukrainian people feel that the memory of the “Heavenly Hundred,” who gave their lives for freedom and democracy, has been honored, or squandered?

Our fear is that the West has forgotten the values and lessons of the Maidan and has abandoned the mission that Ukrainian activists — and their pro-democracy compatriots in Syria, Egypt, Bahrain, Tunisia, and beyond — paid for with their blood, sweat, and lives. One thing is clear, however — Russian president Vladimir Putin has not forgotten the power of devoted protesters who seek to break down the prison walls of dictatorship. The Kremlin will continue to hasten their campaign against pro-democracy movements, both at home and abroad. Will the world sit back and watch them do it, or worse, reward them for their efforts?

 
If you are going through hell, keep going.

Offline romuluss

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Повідомлень: 362
Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #132 : Лютого 20, 2016, 10:07:31 10:07 »
ДО ПИТАННЯ ЄВРОПИ
нєкто Christian Klar, звинувачений і засуджений за 9 вбивств член РАФ (роте-арме-фракціон) відсидів і працює на депутата німецього бундестагу від фракції "лінке" (тобто колишня Соціалістична єдина партія німеччини) у якості веб-дизайнера (депутат каже, що до змісту він відношень не має)

Wegen neunfachen Mordes saß Christian Klar 26 Jahre im Gefängnis. Heute arbeitet er als Web-Designer für einen Linken-Politiker. Darf so ein Mann Zugang zum Parlament bekommen?

Von Renate Meinhof, Berlin
Auf dem Anrufbeantworter im Büro des Bundestagsabgeordneten Diether Dehm von der Linkspartei sind am Freitag um 12.30 Uhr schon zwölf Interview-Anfragen. Dehm soll doch bitte sagen, warum er den ehemaligen Terroristen Christian Klar bei sich beschäftigt. Dehm aber gibt kein Interview, sondern veröffentlicht eine Erklärung auf seiner Website, jener Website, die Klar seit Jahren betreut. Der habe "26 Jahre im Zuchthaus gesessen und sich nach seiner Haftentlassung nicht das Geringste zu Schulden kommen lassen (. . .) Ein Berufsverbot wäre mit der Chance zur Resozialisierung völlig unvereinbar. Christian Klar macht als Selbständiger für einen sehr geringen monatlichen Geldbetrag seit einigen Jahren zu meiner vollen Zufriedenheit technisches Web-Design - ohne jeglichen Einfluss auf Inhalte."


Ein Hausausweis für den Deutschen Bundestag wurde Klar jedoch verweigert, es gebe "Sicherheitsbedenken". Der Ältestenrat beschäftigt sich nun mit dem Fall. Darf ein Mann, der wegen neunfachen Mordes und elffachen Mordversuchs zu lebenslanger Haft verurteilt wurde, der nie öffentlich Reue oder ein Unrechtsbewusstsein gezeigt hat, Zugang zum Parlament haben? Für Dehm keine Frage.

2008 kam Klar frei - als einer der Letzten der zweiten RAF-Generation
ANZEIGE

Christian Klar, 1952 in Freiburg geboren, gehört zur sogenannten zweiten Generation der RAF - genauso wie Peter Jürgen Boock, Susanne Albrecht, Adelheid Schulz oder Silke Maier-Witt. "Baader-Meinhofs Kinder", so nennt der Politikwissenschaftler Tobias Wunschik in seinem gleichnamigen Buch jene Linksterroristen, die die Bundesrepublik vor allem mit der Mordserie des Jahres 1977 in Angst versetzte.

Dutzende wurden Opfer, auch Generalbundesanwalt Siegfried Buback, der Chef der Dresdner-Bank Jürgen Ponto und Arbeitgeberpräsident Hanns Martin Schleyer. Während einige der Täter der zweiten RAF-Generation in der DDR untertauchten, blieb Klar als einer der Letzten bis 2008 in Haft. Dann kam er frei. Gutachter hatten dem Gericht bestätigt, dass weder physisch noch psychisch Gefahr von ihm ausgehe.

 Rote Armee Fraktion Raubüberfall in Niedersachsen Video

ОТАКОЄОТ (як казала люся енуковєдж)

Offline aag

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Повідомлень: 1073
Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #133 : Березня 01, 2016, 08:36:52 08:36 »
Obama's Ukraine policy in shambles

Distracted by ISIL, frustrated by infighting in Kyiv, the administration makes little progress against Putin in Europe.

By Michael Crowley


President Barack Obama’s effort to rescue Ukraine from Russia’s military grip has stalled, and turmoil inside Ukraine's government may hand Russian President Vladimir Putin a victory in a conflict that Obama has said involves "the most basic principles of our international system.”

Two years after the pro-western protests that toppled Kyiv’s government, enraged Putin, and caused an international crisis, Obama’s Ukraine policy is foundering — the victim of Putin’s steely determination, the distractions of Syria and ISIL, and wavering support from European allies eager to move past the conflict.

Despite personal pleas from Vice President Joe Biden, U.S. officials fear that Kyiv's leaders are near a political implosion that would derail efforts to stabilize the country and eject Russia from its eastern territories.

"Syria has really taken the focus off of Ukraine. It feels to me like its going to be difficult for Europe to stay together and continue to pressure Russia with sanctions," the Republican chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Bob Corker, told POLITICO. "At some point you're going to have a frozen conflict that's very much to Putin's advantage."

Critics like Corker say that Obama's actions have failed to live up to his rhetoric, which casts Russia's presence in Ukraine as a grave threat to European security. Obama has rejected calls from several top advisers to provide Ukraine with weapons to fight off Moscow-backed separatists.

"Putin has paid no price," Corker said, adding that European leaders have told him Putin says "there is just no push back" from the U.S.

http://www.politico.com/story/2016/02/obama-ukraine-russia-putin-219783

Offline Feral Cat

  • Ветеран форума
  • ******
  • Повідомлень: 46625
  • Never give in!
Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #134 : Березня 03, 2016, 06:33:21 06:33 »
CEASEFIRE IN SYRIA TURNS PUTIN'S EYE ON UKRAINE ONCE AGAIN
BY JOHN E. HERBST ON 2/29/16 AT 11:31 AM

Over the past month, the Kremlin has turned up the dial once again in its low intensity war in Ukraine’s east.

In September 2015, when the Kremlin decided to intervene in Syria, it reduced the violence in the Donbas and reined in local fighters who opposed this course. Before September, ceasefire violations had averaged 70 to 80 fire incidents per day, before dropping to 30 to 40.

At that time, it was clear to Moscow that its operation in Ukraine was not succeeding. Ukraine had stabilized defensive lines; it made sense to pause as the Kremlin focused its military attention on Syria. Moscow hoped that a reduction in violence—but not a total ceasefire—might persuade the EU to ease sanctions in December. This ploy failed and sanctions were renewed for six months.

Since January, the daily number of fire incidents in the Donbas again jumped to more than 70. In addition, over the past six weeks pro-Russian forces in the area have committed 73 weapons violations (the maintenance of heavy weapons in an area prohibited by the ceasefire) as opposed to 12 by Ukrainian forces. And observers have noted 88 tanks assembled on the Russian side of the ceasefire line near Debaltseve.

Moscow’s decision to increase hostilities in Ukraine’s east is related both to the war in Syria and the situation in Ukraine and Europe. Through the end of 2015, the Kremlin operation in Syria was not going well. It is true that Russia’s intervention quickly stopped the retreat of the Assad regime, which had been steadily losing territory to its opponents through the first eight months of 2015. Still, by late last year, the Kremlin intervention had only restored 0.004 percent of Syrian territory to Assad’s control.

In January, however, the tide of battle in Syria began to turn. Moscow resorted to carpet bombing the weak Western opposition and civilian centers in urban areas on the road to Aleppo—a tactic that it used successfully in the second Chechen war. The bombing campaign has routed those forces, produced massive civilian casualties, and driven the civilian population into flight. It has allowed Assad’s forces to capture significant territory in the approach to Aleppo and has exacerbated the refugee crisis in Europe. Seeing progress in Syria culminating now in a ceasefire and increasing pressure on Europe, Moscow decided that it could raise the stakes again in Ukraine.

There were other reasons too for this Kremlin decision. Moscow’s objectives in Ukraine have not changed since former President Viktor Yanukovych fled for Russia in February 2014. If Russia cannot restore a pro-Russian government in Kiev, it will destabilize the current Western-oriented leadership by maintaining control in parts of the Donbas and keeping military pressure on the country. Moscow saw no downside to upping military operations.

Sadly, the Western reaction to Putin’s growing aggression in Ukraine has vindicated Moscow’s calculations. Despite the clear increase of ceasefire violations from the Russian-controlled territories of Ukraine, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier and French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault lectured Ukraine on fulfilling its commitments under the Minsk process on February 23 in Kiev. Steinmeier said publicly that the “peace plan drawn up last year in Minsk between Germany, France, Russia, and Ukraine has stalled as both warring parties violate a ceasefire and Kiev fails to pass a key electoral law.”


The key to ending the war in Ukraine’s east is a clear understanding of its origins and nature. It is not a Ukrainian civil war; it is a not-so covert war, led, financed, and armed by Moscow. Estimates of Russian troops in the Donbas range from several hundred to ten thousand.

The most important, immediate commitment under Minsk II is to stop shooting. Since the Minsk II ceasefire, 375 Ukrainian soldiers have been killed and 1,500 wounded. In that same period, Ukraine has lost several hundred square kilometers of territory. Yes, Ukraine has made a commitment to pass a law for local elections in the Russian-occupied territory, but such elections cannot be held as long as there are daily violations of the ceasefire. Russian heavy weapons remain in the occupied territories and Moscow’s proxies do not permit Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) monitors free access to all sites under their control.

The best thing that German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande can do right now is to note the increase in violence and call on Putin to end it. If the violence in the Donbas does not end, they should announce their intention to table the summer renewal of sanctions at the March EU Foreign Ministers Meeting. The U.S. should do its part, too. President Barack Obama should provide anti-tank missiles to Ukraine before summer if the Kremlin continues to violate the ceasefire.

John E. Herbst is Director of the Dinu Patriciu Eurasia Center at the Atlantic Council. He served as U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine from 2003 to 2006.

http://www.newsweek.com/ceasefire-syria-turns-putins-eye-ukraine-once-again-431465
If you are going through hell, keep going.

Offline aag

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Повідомлень: 1073
Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #135 : Березня 03, 2016, 10:23:23 22:23 »
03 March 2016     
Ukraine will not join EU, NATO for another 20-25 years, Juncker says
Brussels (dpa) - It will take Ukraine at least another 20 years to join the European Union or NATO, a top EU official predicted Thursday, dashing hopes in the country for quick accessions to the bloc and the military alliance.

The push for closer ties between Ukraine and the EU lies at the heart of the current crisis in the former Soviet country, which was triggered by protests in 2013 over a failed attempt to finalize an EU-Ukraine free trade deal.

The agreement has since been signed and implemented, while the EU is paving the way for Ukrainian citizens to be able to visit the bloc without visas. Top officials in Ukraine have also repeatedly expressed the wish to join the EU.

But European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker said during a speech in The Hague on Thursday that "Ukraine will definitely not be able to become a member of the EU in the next 20-25 years, and not of NATO either."

Ukraine has shown increasing support for the Western military alliance in recent years, after Russia annexed its southern Crimea peninsula in 2014 and then supported a pro-Russian separatist rebellion in Ukraine's east.

Ukraine hosted NATO military exercises last year in an apparent show of force against its formidable eastern neighbour.

Russia has repeatedly denounced NATO's eastern expansion as a threat to its national security. Russia occupied Crimea, the site of a major Russian naval base, in response to Ukraine ousting its pro-Russian president.

Juncker made his comments in the context of a referendum that the Netherlands will hold in April on the EU-Ukraine free trade deal. The commission president said that some Dutch voters have misunderstood that agreement as the first step towards membership.

The commission, the EU's executive, plays a leading role in accession negotiations between the bloc and aspiring members.

http://www.dpa-international.com/news/top_stories/ukraine-will-not-join-eu-natofor-another-20-25-years-juncker-says-a-48506292.html


напускає туману  :smilie3:
« Останнє редагування: Березня 03, 2016, 10:26:57 22:26 від aag »

Offline Feral Cat

  • Ветеран форума
  • ******
  • Повідомлень: 46625
  • Never give in!
Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #136 : Березня 03, 2016, 10:27:20 22:27 »
By 20 years from now the EU and NATO will be DEAD:lol: :lol: :lol:
If you are going through hell, keep going.

Offline Feral Cat

  • Ветеран форума
  • ******
  • Повідомлень: 46625
  • Never give in!
Re: Західні політики і медія про Україну (in English)
« Reply #137 : Лютого 01, 2017, 04:56:50 16:56 »
If the world blinks, Putin will seize the rest of Ukraine

http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/foreign-policy/317182-if-the-world-blinks-putin-will-seize-the-rest-of-ukraine

The most recent example of the Kremlin’s disinformation campaign against Ukraine is the assertion by former Ukrainian politician Oleksandr Onyshchenko that the government of Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko accepted millions of dollars in bribes for political favors.

These allegations are not confirmed. What is confirmed is Onyshchenko was accused by Ukraine’s national anti-corruption body of embezzling $62 million in state funds. He was stripped of his seat in the Ukrainian parliament and charged with treason. Onyshchenko fled Ukraine to London, but not before making one stop – in Moscow.

Onyshchenko has produced no documents or other evidence to back up his wild stories. Unsurprisingly, Kremlin-backed media – broadcast by satellite across Ukraine – are using Onyshchenko’s allegations to disrupt the Kiev government and to undermine Poroshenko’s government.
If you are going through hell, keep going.