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Top 10 Kremlin myths & lies used to justify Russian invasion of Ukraine’s Crimea
Kyiv Post ^ | March 5, 2014, 4:04 p.m. | Brian Bonner, Ivan Verstyuk

Posted on 03/06/2014 5:11:38 AM PST by Texas Fossil

Edited on 03/06/2014 5:53:54 AM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]

The Soviet Kremlin was skilled at dishonesty – from Vladimir Lenin’s “a lie told often enough becomes the truth” to Josef Stalin’s denial of Ukraine’s forced famine that killed millions and Mikhail Gorbachev’s stonewalling about the Chornobyl nuclear power plant disaster in 1986.

While not the “evil empire” that it once was, Russia’s Kremlin under Vladimir Putin keeps in the tradition of deploying an arsenal of myths, deceptions, distortions and outright untruths. Since coming to power in 2000, despite his denials, the former KGB colonel is widely suspected of involvement in – or at least tolerance of – murders of journalists, dissidents and ordinary citizens in pursuit of his domestic and foreign policy agendas.

The Russian president’s propaganda machine has been working overtime to create pretexts justifying its military invasion of Ukraine and seizure of the Crimean peninsula in contravention of numerous international and bilateral treaties.

Ukrainian journalists have even launched a stand-alone website devoted to countering Russian myths and propaganda – stopfake.org. The New York Times also covered the issue in its blog section. 

Russian journalist Dmitry Kiselyov, working for Russia 24 television station, is even an icon of unfair and distorted coverage, not to mention the steady stream of inaccuracies that comes out of such outlets as the Kremlin-funded Russia Today and Voice of Russia. 

Ukraine and its friends abroad are having a hard time keeping up. Thus, here are some of the worst Kremlin lies being told about its invasion of Ukraine. 

MYTH 1: Russia does not interfere in the internal affairs of other nations.

REALITY: If those nations were once a part of the Soviet Union, as Ukraine is, Russia has a long history of interfering. Putin mourns the loss of empire and has set one of his goals to reconstruct a modern version of it through his proposed Eurasian Union. But to do that, he needs Ukraine and he doesn’t need democratic revolutions so close to Moscow that threaten his autocracy. So he reserves the right to resort to economic blackmail and – in Georgia in 2008 and now Ukraine – military intervention to keep his neighbors in line. 

MYTH 2: Viktor Yanukovych was democratically elected and not legitimately impeached as president on Feb. 22.

REALITY: Yanukovych abandoned the presidency overnight Feb. 21-22, fleeing Kyiv and ending up in Russia where he held a press conference on Feb. 28 in Rostov-on-Don. Moreover, he escaped ahead of an arrest warrant that accuses him in the mass murders of nearly 100 EuroMaidan protesters in Kyiv from Feb. 18-20. Many of his top aides are on the run also, including former presidential chief of staff Andriy Klyuyev, former Interior Minister Vitaliy Zakharcheko, former Prosecutor General Viktor Pshonka and former Justice Minister Olena Lukash. More than 300 members of parliament – out of 450 – filled the leadership void on an emergency basis by appointing an interim president, prime minister and Cabinet of Ministers and scheduling presidential elections on May 25. 

MYTH 3: The interim government in Ukraine came to power in place of Yanukovych is dominated by fascists, “Banderites” and anti-Semites.  

REALITY: The Kremlin denies the democratic character of the EuroMaidan Revolution. By and large, a broad segment of Ukrainian society, including Crimean residents, fed up with Soviet ways and Yanukovych’s corruption, took part. Also, fascists are not Banderites and Banderites are not fascists. If the iconic yet divisive Stepan Bandera, leader of Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists, was a fascist, he would probably not have spent three years in a Nazi German prison from 1941-1944, during most of the fighting.

The Svoboda Party led by Oleh Tiahnybok, criticized for allegiance to Bandera, has only three posts in the current government. He was expelled from Viktor Yushchenko’s Our Ukraine party many years ago for anti-Semitic statements.

But that doesn’t mean the government is anti-Semitic. In fact, leaders in Ukraine’s Jewish community have come out in support of Ukraine’s interim government and against the Russian invasion. Jewish leaders in Crimea note that anti-Semitic vandalism didn’t appear in Crimea until after Russian forces arrived, making such incidents suspicious. Also, many prominent Jewish leaders are being asked to take leading government positions, including billionaire Ihor Kolomoisky as Dnipropetrovsk Oblast governor. 

MYTH 4: Ukraine’s interim government is denying Russian-language speakers the right to use their language.

REALITY: While Ukraine’s parliament downgraded Russian from official status, along with other minority languages, Russian and other languages are widely used in all spheres of Ukrainian life. The law on regional languages, which allows greater use of Russian and other minority languages in other spheres, was voted down by the parliament last month, but the vote was vetoed by Acting President Oleksandr Turchynov.

The state of Russian-language media in Ukraine.

MYTH 5: Ukrainian soldiers in Crimea are capitulating en masse and are taking oaths of allegiance to the Crimean pro-Russian local government.

REALITY: So far the only member of Ukraine’s military to capitulate is the country’s former Navy commander Denis Berezovsky, who is now being investigated for treason. The rest are doing their jobs and have pledged to defend their country -- Ukraine.

MYTH 6: Russia’s intervention in Ukraine was essential to protecting the safety of ethnic Russians who are facing discrimination and violence; Ukrainian activists have already killed two Russians in Crimea.

REALITY: There has been no evidence of Russians experiencing violence or discrimination, to the best of the Kyiv Post’s information. However, Ukraine-born Valentina Matvienko, Russian Council of Federation head, has spread the rumor about the two killings, although the Russian general consul in Crimea, Vyacheslav Svetlichny, and speaker of the Crimean parliament, Vladimir Konstantinov, clearly denied this as false. However, the hysteria being whipped up and the Russian invasion with up to 16,000 heavily armed troops may actually lead to people getting killed. 

MYTH 7: The West, by supporting Ukraine’s interim government and the EuroMaidan Revolution, is supporting violent extremism.

REALITY: The West says it’s supporting the democratic aspirations of Ukrainians that were under assault from ousted President Viktor Yanukovych. Now, the West says it stands for Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity as a nation against the Russian invasion, which violates international law. Most of the violence in the EuroMaidan Revolution came from police and government-hired thugs, called "titushki," under ousted President Viktor Yanukovych. The threat of violence today comes from up to 16,000 armed Russian troops in Crimea.

MYTH 8: Ukrainians are fleeing en masse to Russia as refugees because they want to get away from the chaos of Ukraine and do not support the EuroMaidan Revolution

REALITY: No such exodus is taking place and, for the most part, Ukrainian life is proceeding normally under the circumstances, whereas the Russian stock market has been tumbling and its central bank has burned through $12 billion in reserves to prop up the ruble. 

MYTH 9: Crimeans demand to rejoin Russia and don’t want to be part of Ukraine any longer.

REALITY: Russia has been stoking separatist sentiment for years in Crimea and is now doing it at gunpoint. The new pro-Kremlin prime minister, Serhiy Aksyonov, a citizen of Russia whose party enjoyed only 4 percent in the last elections there, has declared a March 30 referendum to give the 2.2 million Crimeans three choices: status quo, independence or rejoining Russia. A Ukrainian court has cancelled his appointment because on his citizenship and the central government in Ukraine does not recognize him as the leader of the peninsula. But he’s backed by Putin and the Russian army. Under such heavy-handed circumstances, it is hard to see that any referendum would be legitimately valid. That said, a majority of Crimea's residents are ethnic Russians and many support Russia. 

MYTH 10: Russian media say the Right Sector, the militant faction of the EuroMaidan Revolution, is calling on Chechen separatist Doku Umarov for military support.

REALITY: Ramzan Kadyrov, the pro-Kremlin Chechen leader, has promised to eliminate Right Sector leader Dmytro Yarosh for allegedly making such a statement. However, the statement was never made by Right Sector. The group’s Vkontake website had been hacked, however, to post such a statement.

There are dozens of more myths, lies, distortions and half-truths floating around – not just exclusively on the Kremlin side, it should be noted. 

There’s doctored photos and bogus video clips airing on Russian TV channels. For instance, Russia 24 aired a short episode of clashes between protesters in Kyiv, but said it had taken place in Simferopol. Totally false. Hopefully, with the eyes of the world currently on Ukraine, truthful information will prevail as everybody fact checks each other. 

Kyiv Post chief editor Brian Bonner and associate editor Ivan Verstyuk can be reached at bonner@kyivpost.com andverstyuk@kyivpost.com, respectively.

 



TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Russia
KEYWORDS: brianbonner; crimea; evilempire; ivanverstyuk; kremlin; lies; neosoviets; putin; putinsbuttboys; russia; ukraine
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To: admin

Thanks for the addition of text. Considered including it all, but did not request permission before.


21 posted on 03/06/2014 6:46:03 AM PST by Texas Fossil (Texas is not where you were born, but a Free State of Heart, Mind & Attitude!)
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To: listenhillary

I don’t feel like I was “wringing my hands” to post the article.


22 posted on 03/06/2014 6:47:40 AM PST by Texas Fossil (Texas is not where you were born, but a Free State of Heart, Mind & Attitude!)
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To: listenhillary
I don’t see the point in wringing our hands over it when the USA wont do anything that matters to impact the situation...

Possibly because the consequences will bite further into the future than next weekend.

23 posted on 03/06/2014 6:48:03 AM PST by gogeo (If you are Tea Party, the Republican Party does not want you.)
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To: ilovesarah2012

We agree on that point. And we have done some really stupid things too that have come home to haunt us.


24 posted on 03/06/2014 6:48:33 AM PST by Texas Fossil (Texas is not where you were born, but a Free State of Heart, Mind & Attitude!)
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To: ilovesarah2012

“Which country interferes more in the internal affairs of foreign countries, Russia or the United States?”

We have troops in more than 150 countries and over 150,000 troops in those countries. Russia does not.


25 posted on 03/06/2014 6:58:21 AM PST by CodeToad (Keeping whites from talking about blacks is verbal segregation!)
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To: gogeo

Maybe we should have thought about that before electing a Marxist twice?


26 posted on 03/06/2014 7:39:14 AM PST by listenhillary (Courts, law enforcement, roads and national defense should be the extent of government)
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To: listenhillary
Maybe we should have thought about that...

Who is the "we" to which you refer?

27 posted on 03/06/2014 7:56:45 AM PST by gogeo (If you are Tea Party, the Republican Party does not want you.)
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To: gogeo

What is your plan to oust Putin out of Crimea?


28 posted on 03/06/2014 8:03:02 AM PST by listenhillary (Courts, law enforcement, roads and national defense should be the extent of government)
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To: gogeo

The west is largely Catholic, the east largely Russian Orthodox. The west speaks Ukrainian, the east speaks mostly Russian. Any attempt by one wing of Ukraine to dominate the other will lead to civil war or breakup.

Yeah! Lets jump in and show them that they had better join the EU and tell Putin to go home.


29 posted on 03/06/2014 8:21:52 AM PST by listenhillary (Courts, law enforcement, roads and national defense should be the extent of government)
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To: Colonel Kangaroo
You can't possibly be serious. You're not really suggesting that Britain and France should not have opposed Hitler when it became apparent that his intentions were to control all of Europe under an iron fist of fascist domination.

The mistakes were made in 1936, when those two nations could have stopped Hitler at absolutely no cost save the expense of fuel to move a few divisions eastward into the Rhineland.

Regardless of the best path to take relative to Russia and Ukraine today, your post was one of the most preposterous ever written on Free Republic.

30 posted on 03/06/2014 9:23:54 AM PST by SoCal Pubbie
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To: SoCal Pubbie

Had Neville not guaranteed the whole of Eastern Europe, it would have been Stalin versus Hitler, Bolshevism and Nazism destroying each other. Chamberlain in 1939, as today’s war party, forgot that a leader’s responsibility is to his own people.


31 posted on 03/06/2014 9:51:30 AM PST by Colonel Kangaroo
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To: Colonel Kangaroo
Hitler was bent on avenging WWI and war with France was inevitable. Please don't post falsehoods.
32 posted on 03/06/2014 9:56:40 AM PST by SoCal Pubbie
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To: SoCal Pubbie

I do agree that the time to act was in response to the Rhineland provocation. That’s on Stanley Baldwin and the French, not on the much-maligned Chamberlain who I think deserves a lot better than he gets today as the symbol of the one and only lesson the war party seems to want to take from history.


33 posted on 03/06/2014 9:56:49 AM PST by Colonel Kangaroo
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To: SoCal Pubbie

France was a distant second to Russia in Hitler’s mind. I wish our conservative politicians would take heed to the commonsense lesson of history that if there’s going to be a war, it’s best to be the last power to enter when the rest of the world is weakened and exhausted. Today’s “tough on defense” politicians seem to have their heart set on our nation to be in on every war all over the globe, ensuring that if a real threat ever did arise, we’d be broke and bled when the crisis arose.


34 posted on 03/06/2014 10:04:15 AM PST by Colonel Kangaroo
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To: CodeToad

I had no idea it was that many countries.


35 posted on 03/06/2014 10:23:25 AM PST by ilovesarah2012
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To: ilovesarah2012

This is about Ukraine, not the entire world. That said, I don’t fully agree with all our foreign commitments abroad either, but that’s not the point.

Which country interferes more in the internal affairs of Ukraine, Russia or the United States?


36 posted on 03/06/2014 12:14:14 PM PST by Corporate Democrat
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To: Colonel Kangaroo
This is just like how the Sudetenland, Austria and a good chuck of Western Poland deserved to be part of Germany too. Heck, the only reason appeasement didn't work was because they ended up declaring war, not realizing Hitler was just defending German majority areas in Poland from discrimination. Right? Right?

Being the primary homeland of a particular ethnic group does not give you carte blanche to invade and occupy territories where your ethnicity is the majority.

37 posted on 03/06/2014 12:18:14 PM PST by Corporate Democrat
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To: Corporate Democrat

23 January, 09:44
Russia outraged at foreign interference in Ukraine’s internal affairs – Putin’s aide

The Russian President’s press secretary Dmitry Peskov says Kiev is capable of finding on its own the best solutions for bringing the situation back to normal in and restoring peace to Ukraine. Peskov said that the obvious external interference in the processes under way in Kiev are clearly deplorable and arouse Moscow’s indignation.

“It’s hard to comprehend why foreign ambassadors in Kiev should tell the Ukrainian authorities where these should withdraw their Interior Ministry troops and police from, what they should do next etc. In other words, we see these kinds of outside instructions as something altogether incomprehensible. Of course, we can’t approve of it and feel intense indignation about it,” Peskov said in an interview with the Komsomolskaya Pravda daily. The interview has been posted on the daily’s website.
According to Peskov, Moscow is certain that Ukraine’s leaders are perfectly aware of what they should do. Ukraine is Russia’s partner; Russian-Ukrainian cooperation is multifaceted, the two countries have large-scale and long-term cooperation. There is absolutely no way Russia and Ukraine can avoid being partners, the official said.
Dmitry Peskov further said that Moscow doesn’t see it right to interfere in the internal affairs of fraternal Ukraine in any way. This is inadmissible, so Russia will never do that. Any decisions by Kiev are sovereign and made by Ukrainian leaders in the framework of democratic processes. So, we see any interference, any attempts to bring political pressure to bear through the use of political management instruments as inadmissible, the Russian President’s press secretary stressed.

http://voiceofrussia.com/news/2014_01_23/Russia-outraged-at-foreign-interference-in-Ukraine-s-internal-affairs-Peskov-6575/

What right do we have to interfere? Except for the little treaty.

The United States and Britain “reaffirmed” their commitment to protect Ukraine’s borders in exchange for the nation giving up its nuclear weapons in a little-known agreement known as the “Budapest Memorandum signed by former President Bill Clinton in 1994.

The Daily Mail notes reports “if Russia has invaded Ukraine then it would be difficult for the US and Britain to avoid going to war.”

Sir Tony Brenton, who served as a British ambassador from 2004 to 2008, said war is certainly on the table if it’s determined that the Budapest Memorandum is “legally binding.”

http://www.cafemom.com/group/99198/forums/read/19691256/Bill_Clinton_signed_a_treaty_Ukraine_War

March 1, 2014
Does the 1994 ‘Budapest Memorandum’ obligate the US to intervene in Ukraine?

There’s been a lot of loose talk about a 1994 “treaty” that obligates the US to guarantee the territorial integrity of Ukraine. As Financial Times reports, this is vastly overstating the reality of our agreement with Ukraine, which in no way says the US must come to Ukraine’s defense militarily.

Ukraine’s new prime minister invoked 20-year-old international agreement as he appealed for western powers to help him resist Russian attempts to assert itself in the south of the country.
Arseniy Yatseniuk called upon the members of the UN Security Council to help preserve Ukraine’s “territorial integrity” hours after armed pro-Russian separatists in Crimea took over the local parliament calling for unification with Moscow.

His words are a deliberate echo of the so-called Budapest Memorandum, signed as part of the deal that saw Ukraine give up its nuclear weapons in 1994.
According to the agreement, the US, UK and Russia all agreed to protect the sovereignty and “territorial agreement” of Ukraine, meaning any Russian support for an attempt to declare Crimean independence would be in violation of their international obligations.

The three powers committed to “respect the independence and sovereignty and the existing borders of Ukraine” and “refrain from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of Ukraine”.

Significantly, the wording suggests Russia’s insistence that Ukraine forgo an EU trade deal may have already breached the terms of the agreement.

The signatories agreed to “refrain from economic coercion designed to subordinate to their own interest the exercise by Ukraine of the rights inherent in its sovereignty and thus to secure advantages of any kind”.

Western diplomats are now scouring the text to check whether they are obliged to intervene in the country to prevent it from breaking up if Russia does so first.

John Lough, associate fellow of the Russia and Eurasia Programme at Chatham House, the foreign policy think-tank, said: “While this does not legally oblige the UK and other western powers to intervene, they might feel morally obliged to.”

He added: “Russia has already violated the spirit and letter of this agreement through the economic pressure applied to Ukraine in the run-up to the Vilnius Summit,” a reference to the November meeting when then president Viktor Yanukovich declined to sign the EU deal.

http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2014/03/does_the_1994_budapest_memorandum_obligate_the_us_to_intervene_in_ukraine.html


38 posted on 03/06/2014 3:22:27 PM PST by ilovesarah2012
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To: Texas Fossil
I have a built in bias toward those who seek their own liberty as opposed to being forced into subjection.

Crimea & the rest of eastern Ukraine appreciate your support as they move toward determining their own future!

39 posted on 03/06/2014 5:38:29 PM PST by mac_truck ( Aide toi et dieu t aidera)
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To: mac_truck

Let them. And leave the rest of them alone.

That is probably what is going to happen any way.


40 posted on 03/06/2014 6:57:39 PM PST by Texas Fossil (Texas is not where you were born, but a Free State of Heart, Mind & Attitude!)
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