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The 2022 Russo-Ukranian conflict is an on-going conflict between the Russian Federation and Ukraine.
In 2014, the US installed a pro-Western coup government[1] which resulted in the rise of neo-nazism.[2] (so much so that the Ukrainian army includes a neo-nazi battalion, the Azov Battalion) This right-wing pro-West government maintained hostilities towards ethnic Russians in the Donbass region of Ukraine.[3] These hostilities led to the separatist movements to establish the Luhansk People's Republic and the Donetsk People's Republic.
Tensions rose sharply in 2021 when the Brussels summit of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) reiterated that Ukraine would become aligned with NATO,[4] sparking outrage from Russian officials who considered the expansion of NATO a threat of their national security.[5] Russia began to build up troops closer to their borders, demanding that NATO stop its expansion towards Russia.[6]
In 1990, on a meeting between United States secretary of state James Baker and Mikhail Gorbachev, the US official guaranteed that "not an inch of NATO’s present military jurisdiction will spread in an eastern direction."[7]
The bourgeois media of the United States has been hypocritically feigning support for the citizens of Ukraine while completely disregarding the humanity of those who suffer under their own heinous wars.[8][9]
Former UN inspector Scott Ritter has said that NATO is too weak to face Russia.[10]
Background
While Russia was distracted with the Sochi Olympics, the US supported the Maidan coup which overthrew recently re-elected pro-Russian president Victor Yanukovych. Fearing for themselves, Crimeans held a vote on whether to remain a part of Ukraine or to secede and join Russia. An overwhelming amount of Crimeans voted for the latter, and Crimea joined Russia. Additionally, Donetsk and Luhansk seceded too. These breakaway republics had been locked in war with the Ukrainian army, which included outright nazi regiments like the Azov battalion.
2019 Minsk agreements
Reaction
References
- ↑ "How and Why the US Government Perpetrated the 2014 Coup in Ukraine".
- ↑ "Commentary: Ukraine’s neo-Nazi problem" (2018-03-19).
- ↑ "Ethnic Russians in eastern Ukraine say attacked by govt. forces" (2022-02-17).
- ↑ “We reiterate the decision made at the 2008 Bucharest Summit that Ukraine will become a member of the Alliance with the Membership Action Plan (MAP) as an integral part of the process; we reaffirm all elements of that decision, as well as subsequent decisions, including that each partner will be judged on its own merits.”
"Brussels Summit Communiqué" (2021-04-14). NATO. - ↑ “"After the collapse of the USSR, the security situation in Europe deteriorated sharply. Five ‘waves’ of NATO expansion have brought the Alliance States forces closer to our borders," [the Russian ambassador to the United States Anatoly Antonov] stated.
"NATO is constantly building up its offensive potential, demonstrating military force along the perimeter of the Russian territory. [...]”
"NATO expansion one of main threats to Russia’s national security - ambassador" (2022-01-16). Russian News Agency TASS. Retrieved 2022-01-24. - ↑ "West promised not to expand NATO" (2022-02-18). RT.
- ↑ Svetlana Savranskaya & Tom Blanton (2017-12-12). "NATO expansion: what Gorbachev heard" National Security Archive.
- ↑ Richard Medhurst. "Hypocrisy of the West Is Unbelievable" | Richard Medhurst on Ukraine"
- ↑ Daniel McAdams (2022-02-25). "Washington's Crocodile Tears Over Ukraine's Destruction" Ron Paul Institute.
- ↑ Richard Medhurst (2022-02-24). "NATO Too Weak to Face Russia: Scott Ritter on Russian Offensive"