{"id":22432,"date":"2022-04-13T15:02:42","date_gmt":"2022-04-13T13:02:42","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/donnexdiritti.com\/?p=22432"},"modified":"2022-04-13T15:02:42","modified_gmt":"2022-04-13T13:02:42","slug":"crisis-in-ukraine-putin-and-biden-russia-and-the-pact-broken-by-the-us-after-the-fall-of-the-berlin-wall","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/donnexdiritti.com\/2022\/04\/13\/crisis-in-ukraine-putin-and-biden-russia-and-the-pact-broken-by-the-us-after-the-fall-of-the-berlin-wall\/","title":{"rendered":"Crisis in Ukraine: Putin and Biden, Russia and the pact broken by the US after the fall of the Berlin wall"},"content":{"rendered":"
The fate of Ukraine is already written in its name: in Slavic the expression “u-craina” means “on the border” and, in geopolitical language, it is the buffer space between two powerful countries that must not belong to anyone to guarantee the strategic balances.<\/strong> When the USSR collapsed in 1991, Ukraine was the first of the Soviet republics to leave Moscow.<\/p>\n And it was prophetic Zbigniew Brzezinski<\/strong>, the security adviser of the White House at the time of Carter, who warned that the birth of Ukraine would prove to be “one of the three great turning points of the twentieth century, after the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the Cortina of iron”. The recent tension between Russia and the West comes from those distant events.<\/strong> But why is this country – the largest in Europe after Russia, as large as Germany and Great Britain combined, with 44 million inhabitants (the same as Spain) – so much disputed that it brings us back to Cold War scenarios?<\/p>\n “THE TRUE EAST-WEST LINE PASSES THROUGH UKRAINE AND THE CASPIAN ENERGY RESERVES \u2013 AS THE NEW YORK TIMES WROTE SOME YEARS AGO – PUTIN IS INTERESTED TO OWN IT, THE US TO CONTROL IT”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n <\/p>\n Let’s go back to 1989. The Russians argue that after the fall of the Berlin Wall there was an unwritten agreement between the Soviet leader, Mikhail Gorbachev<\/strong>, and the then American President George HW Bush<\/strong>: in exchange for the reunification of Germany and the withdrawal of forces armed with Moscow, NATO would never have expanded to the countries of the Warsaw Pact (at that time Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia and Romania were part of it), and even less to the former Soviet republics. It is an agreement that the Americans have always officially denied.<\/strong> And that did not last long anyway. The independence of Ukraine was sanctioned by a referendum on 1 December 1991: exactly five months after the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n In 1993, with the birth of the European Union and the first requests for membership from Eastern countries, the United States invented the “Partnership for Peace”, a program that bypasses Russian vetoes and brings NATO closer to more than just the countries of the former Warsaw Pact, but also pieces of the old USSR such as Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.<\/p>\n But there\u2019s more: President Bill Clinton asks all Europeans to make “a choice of side” and that all negotiations for EU membership, from that moment on, are also preceded by substantial adherence to NATO principles.<\/strong> The rule is not codified, but becomes a practice, also because it is the countries themselves that ask to be part of the Alliance. It went like this for Poland, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, the three Baltic republics, and it is going the same way in the Balkans: from Albania to Montenegro to Macedonia.<\/p>\n Boris Yeltsin\u2019s post-Soviet<\/strong> and weakened Russia suffered this western enlargement in the 1990s. They negotiate on everything.<\/strong> The two lines of the Nord Stream gas pipeline are being designed, which will have to transport Russian gas directly to Europe, “bypassing” the former allies of Poland, the Baltic countries and Ukraine, but also the most faithful Belarusians. That\u2019s because in Moscow, at that moment, it is more urgent to collect dollars than political credit.<\/strong> With the entry of Vladimir Putin, everything changes. And the first, decided “niet” is precisely on Ukraine.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n The impassable red line. Kiev was the capital of the third largest republic of the Soviet Union. The granary and arsenal of the empire: it gave Moscow a quarter of cereals, milk, a third of iron, coal and manganese, 60% of bitumen and anthracite, it housed nuclear power plants and warheads.<\/strong> The population of eastern Ukraine and Crimea has always remained largely Russian in terms of language, mentality and culture. Last July Putin made it clear how he thinks it: Ukrainians, Russians and Belarusians are born from the same root and must remain together.<\/strong> Ukraine, therefore, no: its entry into NATO, like that of Georgia, would diminish Russia’s strategic and political credibility.<\/p>\n In 2004, the Orange Revolution broke out in Kiev, an anti-Russian revolt supported by the West, and it was there that the Kremlin managed to elect one of its men, Viktor Janukovy\u010d<\/strong>, with a vote that was declared rigged: his opponent, Viktor Ju\u0161\u010denko<\/strong>, is mysteriously poisoned with a dose of dioxin. And at the end of a dispute over gas, with Moscow accusing Kiev of skimming on supplies to Europe that pass through Ukrainian gas pipelines, it is always Janukovy\u010d who gets re-elected and moves the country to the positions of Moscow.<\/strong><\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n On April 4, 2008, during the NATO summit, convened in Bucharest, the US pressured for the entry of Ukraine and Georgia into the Alliance, but nothing was done due to the opposition of Italy, France and Germany. Romano Prodi<\/strong>, who was present at that summit, recalls “the summit was convened only for that, but we said no,” for now “, because it would have created tensions”.<\/p>\n IN FACT, GEORGIA, FOR TRYING TO GET OUT FROM THE INFLUENCE OF MOSCOW, IN AUGUST 2008 TASTES THE FIRST EUROPEAN WAR OF THE 21st CENTURY<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Moldova finds its exports to Russia blocked as soon as it signs an agreement to bring it closer to Europe. In 2014 in Ukraine it will be a new bloody uprising of the capital to expel Yanukovy\u010d definitively, unveil American plans and push Putin to a double response: the invasion of Crimea and the annexation of the peninsula through a referendum presided over by the occupation forces<\/strong>; the secession of the pro-Russian Donbass region, on the eastern border, which will lead to the self-proclamation of the republics of Donetsk and Lugansk and will start eight years of a long ongoing civil war, with 14,000 dead.<\/p>\n To block Ukraine’s aspirations to place itself under NATO protection, Russia has intensified the massing of troops and armored vehicles: 130,000 men on the borders of the Donbass, plus 40,000 stationed in Belarus, as well as in Moldova and Transnistria. Ukraine asks for help and the answer comes with a massive supply of weapons.<\/strong> A NATO law prohibits exports to third countries without the producer\u2019s green light: before selling German weapons to the Ukrainians, for example, Estonia must have the permission of Germany (which has decided not to give it).<\/p>\n <\/p>\n In this case, the rule no longer applies and the US has authorized NATO countries to export weapons of all kinds. From the US arrived Javelin portable anti-tank missiles with autonomous infrared guidance and powerful anti-aircraft missiles (Manpads).<\/strong> From Great Britain small arms, anti-armor, anti-tank and military training personnel. The Baltic states send anti-tank and anti-aircraft missiles. The Czech Republic sent small arms. Canada is a contingent of special forces. Denmark will send one frigate in the Baltic, plus 4 F-16 fighters in Lithuania. <\/strong><\/p>\nThe unwritten Bush-Gorbachev deal<\/strong><\/h4>\n
Putin: Ukraine no!<\/strong><\/h4>\n
2008: the refusal of Italy, France, Germany<\/strong><\/h4>\n
Who is sending weapons?<\/strong><\/h4>\n