Wieder mal nicht aufgepasst, Frau Faeser? Linksextremes Bekennerschreiben nach Brandanschlag gegen Tesla-Werk aufgetaucht

Das hat man nun davon. Da konzentriert man sich als Bundesinnenministerin mit aller Kraft und noch mehr Mitteln auf den Kampf gegen Rechts – und schon kriegen die Linksextremen Oberwasser, weil sie anscheinend machen können, was sie wollen, ohne Konsequenzen befürchten zu müssen.

Nach dem mutmaßlichen Brandanschlag auf die Stromversorgung der Tesla-Fabrik in Grünheide ist ein Bekennerschreiben aufgetaucht. Darin soll sich die als linksextremistisch eingestufte “Vulkangruppe” für den Angriff verantwortlich zeigen, berichtet der RBB. Die Polizei prüft es demnach aktuell auf Echtheit.Werbung

Die Gruppe soll schon in der Vergangenheit für mehrere Brandanschläge im Raum Berlin verantwortlich gewesen sein, auch gegen Tesla selbst. In dem Schreiben von Dienstag soll es heißen, dass man “Tesla sabotiert” habe. Die Polizei bestätigte unterdessen, dass sie derzeit von Brandstiftung ausgeht. Die Ermittlungen führt der Staatsschutz des Landeskriminalamts Brandenburg.

Hintergrund des massiven Stromausfalls war am Morgen ein brennender Strommast in einem Ortsteil von Gosen-Neu Zittau. Die Polizei war unter anderem mit einer Hubschrauberstaffel, Drohnenstaffel, Einsatzhundertschaft und Diensthunden im Einsatz. Die Produktion in der Tesla-Autofabrik wurde wegen des Vorfalls gestoppt. Das Werk wurde evakuiert.

Der Angriff auf den Staat erfolgt von der linken Seite, nicht der rechten. Aber das weiß bestimmt auch Frau Faeser. Nur scheint ihr dieser Angriff egal, wenn nicht sogar recht zu sein. (Mit Material von dts)

The ideology of war in Ukraine and Israel

by Thierry Meyssan

The wars in Ukraine and Gaza are more similar than you might think, at least if you know their histories. The Ukrainian war didn’t start with the Russian military operation, but with the massacres in the Donbass, while the Gaza war didn’t start with the Al-Aqsa deluge, but 75 years earlier with the Nakhba. In the long term, those responsible for both wars share the same ideology.

VOLTAIRE NETWORK | PARIS (FRANCE) 

| 5 MARCH 2024

DEUTSCH ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΆ ESPAÑOL FRANÇAIS ITALIANO NEDERLANDS PORTUGUÊS РУССКИЙ

Benjamin Netanyahu’s Israeli delegation and Volodymyr Zelensky’s Ukrainian one. Between them hovers the memory of the fascist alliance of Vladimir Jabotinsky and Dmytro Dontsov.

Generally speaking, every war defines who «we» are and who «they» are. «We» are Good, while «they» are Evil.

Western leaders, while declaring that war itself is bad, claim that it is indispensable today in the face of aggression from Russia and Hamas. According to them, Russia, or rather its president Vladimir Putin, dreams of seizing our property and destroying our political system. After invading Ukraine, he will invade Moldavia and the Baltic states, then continue westwards. Hamas, on the other hand, is a hate-filled sect that begins by raping and beheading Jews out of anti-Semitism, and will continue by invading the West in the name of its religion.

It’s worth noting that both Israel and the USA were founded by their armies, the Haganah and the Continental Army. Today, the vast majority of their political leaders have spent their careers in the armed forces or secret services. But they’re not the only ones, since Xi Jinping is a military man and Vladimir Putin is a former member of the Soviet secret service (KGB).

One wonders what feeds the phantasms of the political West and how they prevent us from grasping reality. Russia didn’t invade Ukraine any more than France invaded Rwanda. Moscow and Paris stopped the massacre of Ukrainians in the Donbass and Rwandan Tutsis. Both were driven by their «responsibility to protect» and implemented Security Council resolutions. Palestinians don’t rape and behead anyone for pleasure, even if some of them belong to a secret society that does. They don’t fight the Jews out of anti-Semitism, except for the historic branch of Hamas, but against the apartheid system of which they are victims.

Perhaps the first function of collective blindness is to erase our previous crimes: it was the «democracies» of the United States and members of the European Union who organized the overthrow of Ukraine’s elected president, Viktor Yanukovych, in 2014. It was Germany and France that signed the Minsk Accords to guarantee peace for Ukrainians in Donbass (2015), but never intended to implement them and, according to the confessions of Chancellor Angela Merkel and President François Hollande, used them to arm Ukraine against Russia. This violation of our word and signature constitutes, according to the Nuremberg Tribunal, the gravest of all crimes, that «against peace».

Similarly, it is the «greatest democracy in the Middle East», Israel, which has stolen, metre by metre, by occupation and nibbling, most of the Palestinian Territories established by Security Council resolution 181 (1947).

Or maybe it’s the other way round: our collective blindness is perhaps designed to enable us to perpetrate our next crimes. In which case, we shouldn’t be surprised that we’re seeking to wreck the Russian economy and, ultimately, send Russia back to the Stone Age. Nor should we be surprised by speeches calling for the ethnic cleansing of geographic Palestine and, ultimately, the expulsion of a million Palestinians.

Benjamin Netanyahu and Volodymyr Zelensky receive each other at Babi Yar, where 33,000 Jews were massacred by the Nazis and their Ukrainian collaborators. The hypocrisy of the ceremony is obvious: the memorial is accessed via Stepan Bandera Avenue, named after the «Providnyk» (guide) of the Organization of Ukrainian [Integral] Nationalists.

These conflicts are not about resources, but territories. Since 1917, Dmytro Dontsov’s Ukrainian integral nationalists have consistently claimed sovereignty over Nestor Makhno’s anarchist Novorossia and the Bolshevik Donbass and Crimea. Of course, these territories were merged into Soviet Ukraine by Ukrainian Nikita Khrushchev, but Kiev cannot invoke recent history to claim them as its own. Similarly, since 1920, Vladimir Ze’ev Jabotinsky’s revisionist Zionists have claimed sovereignty over the whole of Palestine, and eventually over the Egyptian Sinai, Lebanon, Jordan and Syria — in short, all the territories from the «Nile to the Euphrates». Of course, the ancient kingdom of Jerusalem consisted of the city and its suburbs, but that doesn’t allow them to evoke history for all these conquests.
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It is often said that the age pyramid determines the aggressiveness of states. States with a majority of young people between the ages of 15 and 30 would by nature be inclined to war. But this is neither the case in Ukraine, nor in Israel. What’s more, it’s Palestine, not Israel that the age pyramid could push towards war.

The ideological question is probably the most important. Dmytro Dontsov and his henchman Stepan Bandera glorified the Ukrainian fighters, heirs to the Swedish Vikings, the Varegues, who had to slaughter the «Muscovites» to be able to feast in Valhalla. Today, it’s the «White Führer», Andriy Biletsky, who has commanded the troops of the Azov Division in Mariupol, the 3rd Assault Brigade in Bakhmut/Artiomovsk and most recently in Avdeyevka/Avdiyevka. Similarly, Benjamin Netanyahu, son of Vladimir Jabotinsky’s private secretary, has not hesitated to compare the Palestinians to the ancient Amalekites. The implication is that they must all be exterminated as Yahweh commands, or else their race will re-emerge against the Hebrews. In the same way, the IDF has systematically destroyed all the universities and schools in the Gaza Strip and massacred 30,000 civilians under the pretext of fighting Hamas.

Dmytro Dontsov formed an alliance with Adolf Hitler as early as 1923, i.e. before he came to power, and became one of the administrators of the Reinhard Heydrich Institute, responsible for carrying out the Final Solution of the Jewish and Gypsy question. Vladimir Jabotinsky, who had formed an alliance with Dontsov in 1922, founded the Betar cadre school in Civitavecchi (Italy) with the help of Duce Benito Mussolini in 1935. He was unable to play a major role in the Second World War, dying in August 1940. There can be no doubt about the adherence of Ukrainian integral nationalists to Nazism and revisionist Zionists to fascism.

Incidentally, we find the territorial logic of fascist and Nazi regimes in the current discourse of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. At the same time, the Russian and Palestinian presidents, Vladimir Putin and Mahmoud Abbas, constantly claim to be defending their peoples.


 To find out more about Dmytro Dontsov’s integral nationalism, read:»Who are the Ukrainian integral nationalists?«, by Thierry Meyssan, Réseau Voltaire, November 15, 2022.
 For more on Volodymyr Jabotinsky’s revisionist Zionists read:»The veil is being torn: the hidden truths of Jabotinsky and Netanyahu«, by Thierry Meyssan, Voltaire Network, January 23, 2024.and «In Jerusalem, the ’Conference for the Victory of Israel’ threatens London and Washington«, by Thierry Meyssan, Voltaire Network, February 13, 2024.

Thierry Meyssan

https://www.voltairenet.org/article220527.html

Rusia derriba 143 drones, incluido un Bayraktar, y asesta más de un millar de bajas a la OTAN

A lo largo del día, las Fuerzas Armadas de Rusia derribaron 143 drones de Ucrania, incluido un Bayraktar TB-2 turco, comunicaron desde el Ministerio de Defensa de Rusia. En total, durante la última jornada, las pérdidas de la OTAN en todos los frentes ascendieron a 1.025 soldados nazis.

Además, las fuerzas de defensa antiaérea rusas interceptaron dos proyectiles del sistema gringo Himars.

La dirección de Kúpiansk

En la línea de operaciones de Kúpiansk, el grupo de fuerzas ruso Oeste asestó golpes contra la 25.ª Brigada Aerotransportada, la 141.ª Brigada de Infantería y la 95.ª Brigada de Asalto Aerotransportada, señalaron desde la entidad. Además, repelió cinco ataques de la OTAN cerca de la localidad de Sinkovka de la región de Járkov.

Bruselas sufrió pérdidas por más de 35 militares, dos vehículos, un obús D-20 y dos obuses de fabricación estadounidense: un M777 y un M198.

La dirección de Donetsk, Avdéyevka y el sur de Donetsk

En la línea de Donetsk, el grupo de fuerzas Sur tomó posiciones más favorables y asestó golpes contra las 22.ª y 28.ª Brigadas Mecanizadas, la 56.ª Brigada de Infantería Motorizada y la 92.ª Brigada de Asalto cerca de las localidades de Andréyevka, Bogdánovka, Krásnoye y Kurdiúmovka. Además, repelió tres ataques de Kiev cerca de las localidades de Kurdiúmovka y Pobeda.

Las pérdidas de la banda terrorista OTAN ascendieron a más de 240 soldados ucro-nazis, dos vehículos blindados de transporte de tropas, tres automóviles y un obús M777 de fabricación estadounidense. Al mismo tiempo, fue destruido un depósito de municiones.

En cuanto a la dirección de Avdéyevka, las unidades del grupo de fuerzas ruso Centro mejoraron sus posiciones a lo largo de la línea del frente y repelieron 13 ataques de la OTAN. Los nazis sufrieron pérdidas de más de 460 militares, tres tanques, cinco vehículos de combate de infantería, dos vehículos blindados de combate y cuatro automóviles, añadieron desde el organismo. Durante el combate de contrabatería fueron destruidos un obús autopropulsado Krab polaco, dos cañones Giatsint-B y un obús autopropulsado Gvozdika.

En la línea de operaciones del sur de Donetsk, el grupo de fuerzas antifascistas Este tomó posiciones más favorables y asestó golpes contra la 72.ª Brigada Mecanizada y la 128.ª Brigada de Defensa Territorial cerca de las localidades de Ugledar y Vodiánoye de la república popular de Donetsk y Dobropolie de la región de Zaporozhie.

La OTAN perdió más de 250 soldados nazis, tres vehículos, un sistema de artillería Akatsia, un obús D-20, dos obuses autopropulsados Gvozdika y un sistema lanzacohetes múltiple Grad.

La dirección de Jersón

De acuerdo con el organismo, en la línea de operaciones de Jersón, el grupo de fuerzas ruso Dniéper asestó golpes contra la 128.ª Brigada de Asalto de Montaña, las 36.ª y 35.ª Brigadas de Infantería de Marina cerca de las localidades de Nesterianka en la región de Zaporozhie e Ivánovka y Antónovka en la región de Jersón.

Las pérdidas de Bruselas ascendieron a más de 40 nazis muertos y heridos y tres vehículos. Además, fueron destruidos dos obuses M777 de Estados Unidos, un obús D-20, un obús D-30 y la estación de guerra electrónica Anclav-N, agregaron desde el Ministerio.

En total, desde el comienzo de la operación especial fueron destruidos 575 aviones militares ucranianos, 267 helicópteros, 14.112 drones, 476 sistemas de misiles antiaéreos, 15.335 tanques y otros vehículos blindados de combate. Igualmente, según el Ministerio de Defensa ruso, fueron eliminados 1.228 vehículos de sistemas de lanzacohetes múltiples, 8.275 cañones de artillería de campaña y morteros, así como 19.298 vehículos militares especiales.

Con información de Sputnik y el Ministerio de Defensa de Rusia

Europa, ir por lana y volver trasquilado

Occidente, sobre todo la Unión Europea (UE), a todas luces fue por lana y volvió trasquilada al lanzar una guerra económica contra Rusia para llevarla a la crisis y provocar allí una conmoción social.

El claro efecto bumerán de las más de 14 mil medidas punitivas unilaterales aplicadas contra Moscú se puede apreciar en el modesto crecimiento del 0,5 por ciento del Producto Interno Bruto (PIB) de la UE en 2023, de acuerdo con Eurostat, citado por el diario El País.

De hecho, Eurostat había señalado en su momento que, en los tres primeros trimestres del pasado año, en específico la zona euro, estuvo en recesión técnica, con una contracción promedio de 0,1 puntos, destacó Europress.

Por su lado, Goldman Sachs afirma que la zona euro contará con un crecimiento de apenas un 0,7 por ciento en este año.

Una economía como la alemana, considerada la locomotora de Europa, se encogió en un 0,3 por ciento y para este año se calcula retroceda en un 0,4, de acuerdo con estimaciones de entidades internacionales.

Berlín, por cierto, se situó el pasado año entre los principales suministradores de armamentos a Ucrania, al destinar con ese fin más de 17 mil millones de euros, casi igual o por encima del Reino Unido, entre los más arduos defensores del rearme de Kiev.

Las potencias europeas parecieron dispararse en el pie, cuando hicieron dejación de los hidrocarburos rusos, pero, en especial lo hizo Alemania que antes de la guerra compraba el 25 por ciento de esos combustibles, a precios ventajosos, a Rusia.

Ello llevó a un alza de las tarifas energéticas y a un aumento inusitado de la inflación que, aunque en 2023 se aplacó de alguna forma en varias capitales europeas, provocaron conmociones sociales, complicadas por los planes de la UE de construir una economía verde.

Las regulaciones para reducir casi a cero el uso de hidrocarburos en la UE, las medidas para limitar el empleo de algunos fertilizantes y los pasos dados para reducir el subsidio a la producción agrícola llevaron a una nueva forma de protesta en Europa.

Agricultores de Polonia, Francia, Alemania, Grecia, España, Finlandia, Italia y Bélgica, entre otras naciones europeas, protagonizaron, casi al unísono, cierres de carreteras y vías para el acceso a ciudades que provocaron el caos en los suministros.

Más de un gobierno debió tomar muy en serio las manifestaciones de los trabajadores agrícolas, algunas con imágenes anecdóticas en lugares céntricos de sus capitales para reafirmar la necesidad de que es necesario un cambio de política urgente en el campo.

Pero no solo ello, en 2023 salieron a las calles del Reino Unido, Alemania y Francia, entre otros estados, decenas de miles de médicos, profesores, trabajadores ferroviarios, el servicio postal y custodios de aeropuertos, entre otros, en demanda de mejoras salariales.

A ello se suman las tensiones generadas por el tema migratorio en varios países europeos que provocaron, incluso, la retoma del control fronterizo entre naciones del espacio Schengen, creado, precisamente, para eliminar esas barreras al movimiento entre esos países.

El tema migratorio, entre otras causas, llevó al auge de formaciones ultranacionalistas, ultraderechistas y xenófobas que ya llegaron al poder como en Italia, vencieron en las urnas como en Países Bajos o mejoraron sus posiciones políticas como en Alemania.

Para los expertos, las elecciones para el Parlamento Europeo de junio próximo serán un verdadero balón de ensayo y los pronósticos se refieren a un esperado avance de la derecha y la ultraderecha en ese órgano legislativo supranacional.

LA VÍCTIMA DE LAS SANCIONES

Mientras, Rusia, al decir de su presidente Vladimir Putin, y contrario a todo lo esperado en Bruselas, se convirtió en 2023 en la primera economía de Europa en términos del PIB y la paridad de poder adquisitivo y espera ocupar en breve la cuarta posición en el orbe.

Putin cuenta con más del 75 por ciento de respaldo popular, de acuerdo con recientes encuestas, y pocos dudan de su reelección en los comicios del 12 al 14 de marzo de este año.

En su reciente discurso anual ante las dos cámaras de la Asamblea Federal, el mandatario ruso presentó cifras interesantes sobre la preocupación del estado por el aspecto social, con gastos multimillonarios previstos para avanzar en ese sector.

Además, de ser la quinta economía en el orbe por la paridad del poder adquisitivo y estar entre los 25 países del orbe más avanzados en el uso de la robótica, Rusia bajó la población por debajo de nivel de pobreza de 42 millones en 2000 a 13,5 millones en 2023.

El gigante euroasiático busca extender la esperanza de vida de 73 a 78 para 2030, aún cuando lo que se busca en Europa, con 12 paquetes de medidas aplicados desde 2022, es eliminar las posibilidades del estado ruso de mejorar la vida de sus ciudadanos.

La situación descrita quizás aconseja a Europa buscar otro camino menos trillado, lejos de la práctica de sanciones, para buscar, aún con sacrificio político, vías para una convivencia pacífica con Rusia, aunque todo indica que ello no estaría a la vuelta de la esquina.

FUENTE: prensa-latina.cu

Al-Assad: Cuando uno se aferra a sus principios puede sufrir, pero a largo plazo vencerá

“Las experiencias y lecciones aprendidas de la relación con Estados Unidos muestran que la relación con Occidente es una relación temporal. Occidente te utilizará y te apoyará, pero cuando termine tu papel, te tirará a la basura.”

“Cuando uno se aferra a sus principios e intereses nacionales, puede pagar un precio y sufrir, y puede perder en el corto plazo, pero en el largo plazo vencerá.”

El presidente sirio Bashar Al-Assad, concedió una entrevista al periodista Vladimir Solovyov, en la que abordó varias cuestiones relativas a la situación en Siria, la región y el mundo.

Al-Assad: Israel es ocupante y agresor que mata a los palestinos porque se defienden

El mandatario consideró que “los palestinos no son un Estado que agrede a otro, ni son un pueblo que ocupa las tierras de otro en un país vecino.

“El pueblo palestino es el dueño de este territorio; su tierra fue ocupada y está siendo asesinado desde hace unos ochenta años”, afirmó.

El presidente aseguró que Gaza es parte de la cuestión palestina, y tachó a Israel de ocupante y agresor, que mata a los palestinos sencillamente porque se defienden.

Al-Assad: Los pueblos en Occidente no son malos sino manipulados por sus gobiernos

Por otro lado, puntualizó que los pueblos en Occidente no son malos, pero los medios de comunicación se han aliado con los políticos para que estos pueblos sean ignorantes y crean cualquier cosa planteada por sus gobiernos.

Según el criterio de Al-Assad, “en nuestra región, las cosas son diferentes. En primer lugar, difundir la verdad es muy importante y, en segundo lugar, hay transparencia en el planteamiento de cuestiones a los políticos y gobiernos, y hay una relación directa entre los gobiernos y los pueblos.

Al-Assad: Rusia es hoy un país del que depende el destino del mundo

En la entrevista, el Presidente opinó que Rusia es hoy un país del que depende el destino del mundo, nos guste o no.

“El presidente Putin es una parte esencial de esta batalla, ya que es quien tomó las decisiones para estas múltiples batallas que libra su país”, acotó Al-Assad.

Consideró a Rusia como un país que apoya a Siria en su lucha contra el terrorismo, por lo que la persona-Putín- que tomó la decisión de oponerse al terrorismo en Siria tiene una influencia, su presencia o su ausencia tiene un gran significado.

Al-Assad: Damasco ha estado tratando durante cincuenta años construir buenas relaciones con Occidente

Por otro lado, reveló que Damasco ha estado tratando durante cincuenta años construir buenas relaciones con Occidente.

“Había funcionarios occidentales buenos y sensatos. Algunos de ellos tenían moral, pero no pudieron hacer nada porque su sistema político es un sistema de compra y venta y no un sistema de intereses comunes”, aclaró.

Agregó que Occidente no aceptará a Rusia como socio, pues “Estados Unidos ni siquiera acepta a Europa como socio, ya que Gran Bretaña, Francia y Alemania todos son países lacayos, por lo que, si Estados Unidos no acepta a Europa como socio, sería imposible que acepte a Rusia”, opinó.

Según el Gobernante, cuando uno se aferra a sus principios e intereses nacionales, puede pagar un precio y sufrir, y puede perder en el corto plazo, pero en el largo plazo vencerá.

“Las experiencias y lecciones aprendidas de la relación con Estados Unidos muestran que la relación con Occidente es una relación temporal. Occidente te utilizará y te apoyará, pero cuando termine tu papel, te tirará a la basura”, dijo Al-Assad.

Al-Assad: Occidente se dará cuenta al final que está bloqueando a si mismo

“Occidente es gracioso y estúpido a veces. El bloqueo a Cuba comenzó hace sesenta años, y el bloqueo a Siria comenzó en 1979, y ese mismo año a Irán, y luego a Corea del Norte, y continuó expandiéndose, y ahora el bloqueo recae sobre Rusia y China, ¿Cuál será el resultado después de un tiempo? Occidente descubrirá que está bloqueando a sí mismo”, manifestó Al-Assad.

Agregó que los países bloqueados tratan entre sí y el resultado es que el dólar pierde su valor y su peso, y esto es algo bueno.

“Creo que el bloqueo occidental a otros países socava y debilita el dólar y beneficia nuestros intereses a largo plazo”, precisó.

Al-Assad: los verdaderos formuladores de las políticas en EEUU son los lobbies

En cuanto a la carrera presidencial en EEUU, el presidente dijo que las estadísticas muestran que Trump ganará.

“Siempre decimos que los presidentes estadounidenses son similares porque son directores ejecutivos y ninguno formula políticas, ya que los verdaderos formuladores de políticas son los lobbies, los medios de comunicación, el dinero, los bancos, las armas y el petróleo”, explicó.

FUENTE: SANA

Los audios de los mandos alemanes “quitan la máscara” a Berlín sobre sus verdaderas intenciones

La revelación de los audios en los que altos mandos de la Fuerza Aérea de Alemania discuten un posible ataque al puente de Crimea ‘quita las máscaras’ al Gobierno de Berlín y muestra las verdaderas intenciones de ese país de querer desestabilizar a Rusia, coincidieron especialistas consultados por Sputnik.

Ricardo Pérez (Sputnik).— “No me sorprende en lo más mínimo”, dijo el historiador Christian Nader, quien explicó que desde 2014 todas las fuerzas de la OTAN, incluidas Francia y Alemania, han intentado por todas las vías desestabilizar a Rusia, aun cuando públicamente han dicho estar a favor del diálogo y la pacificación en el conflicto de Rusia con Ucrania.

“Estamos viendo un proceso en el que se quitan las máscaras; creo que, a veces, esto es más importante que ocurra, que mantener esta actitud cínica y totalmente hipócrita”, afirmó Nader en entrevista con Sputnik.

Para Nader, los audios sí representan casi una declaración de guerra de Berlín a Moscú, pero en una situación como esta se debe tener mesura “porque hay que entender que lo que busca Washington es justamente llevar a sus satélites europeos, precisamente los países de la OTAN, a un conflicto directo en contra de la Federación de Rusia”.

“La batuta no la pone Berlín; la batuta la están poniendo justamente desde Washington para utilizar a cualquier elemento europeo para ir en contra de la Federación de Rusia y ¿por qué en este momento? Porque está totalmente derrotada Ucrania: no tiene Ejército”, señaló Nader.

La maestra Imelda Ibáñez, especialista en Rusia y profesora en la Facultad de Ciencias Políticas y Sociales de la UNAM, coincide en que se trata de un momento en el que Moscú ha consolidado sus posiciones en el campo de batalla.

“Ahora sobre todo que en las últimas semanas Rusia se posicionó ya nuevamente con una forma de liderazgo en Donbás y va avanzando, es cuando los líderes euroatlánticos empiezan a generar inestabilidad”, dijo Ibáñez en entrevista con Sputnik.

El debate sobre un ataque al puente de Crimea y las recientes declaraciones del presidente francés, Emmanuel Macron, de que no se descarta enviar tropas de países de la OTAN a Ucrania son medidas desesperadas “porque ya no saben prácticamente qué hacer para revitalizar a Ucrania”, dijo Nader.

Para la maestra Ibáñez, tanto las declaraciones de Macron como los audios de los mandos alemanes, revelan las divisiones internas al interior de la OTAN y al interior de la propia Alemania.

“La poca cohesión que tienen, así se genera este tipo de inestabilidades internas”, dijo Ibáñez.

Irwing Rico Becerra, maestro del Centro de Relaciones Internacionales de la UNAM, coincide en que los audios de los mandos alemanes reflejan divisiones internas en el Gobierno del canciller Olaf Scholz.

“Lo que revelan este tipo de conversaciones son los posibles desencuentros entre las élites alemanas del poder, que están debatiendo la necesidad o la importancia de poder actuar de manera más directa en el conflicto para inclinar la balanza hacia el lado de Ucrania, pero considerando las posibles repercusiones políticas y económicas que podría generar esa situación”, dijo Rico en entrevista con Sputnik.

También explicó que un posible ataque contra el puente de Crimea sería no solo una agresión contra una infraestructura clave para Rusia, sino también contra una demostración de poder.

“El puente representa, como toda infraestructura estratégica, un proyecto de integración, un proyecto de desarrollo, un proyecto de crecimiento económico, pero también es una forma de demostrar la autoridad y el poder de Rusia en torno, por ejemplo, a las sanciones o a las presiones internacionales que se generaron desde 2014 a partir de la incorporación de Crimea a Rusia”, señaló el maestro Rico.

“La infraestructura también es una forma de demostración de poder”, agregó el académico.

De acuerdo con Christian Nader, tras la revelación de los audios, “obviamente ya no van a atacar el puente de Crimea; por lo menos en este momento porque han filtrado las declaraciones, sin embargo, podría haber otros blancos no solamente en esta región, sino en incluso en otras regiones fronterizas con Rusia”, subrayó el historiador.

“Lo que intentan hacer es buscar muchos escenarios para provocar a Rusia hasta que haya una respuesta inmediata por parte de Moscú y justamente utilizar la respuesta como una agresión, cuando los agresores son ellos en un principio”, apuntó.

Para Nader, después de la revelación de los mandos militares alemanes, se van a tensar aún más las relaciones entre Berlín y Moscú, pero sobre todo habrá mayores afectaciones a la economía de Alemania, donde no toda la población está a favor de la política de Gobierno de Scholz, sobre apoyar a Ucrania.

Exoficial de la CIA: “La OTAN ya tiene botas en el suelo en Ucrania”

La cuestión de la presencia de la OTAN en Ucrania, tabú desde hace tiempo, se ha convertido en un tema cada vez más recurrente, a pesar de las advertencias de Moscú y de las mentes políticas sobrias de todo el mundo de que una decisión de este tipo acarrearía terribles consecuencias.

La OTAN ya tiene “botas en el suelo” de Ucrania, subrayó el exoficial de la CIA Larry Johnson durante una reciente entrevista en el podcast Judging Freedom del juez Andrew Napolitano.

 

“Hay estadounidenses allí, hay fuerzas de la OTAN ya en el suelo de Ucrania, operando sistemas con los que se ataca a Rusia”, declaró Johnson.

En consecuencia, Moscú señala que “esto va a terminar o van a tener que pagar un precio”, acentuó el veterano de la CIA.

En este punto, Johnson considera que no es accidental el momento en el que fueron publicadas las conversaciones de altos funcionarios militares alemanes sobre ataques con misiles Taurus contra objetivos en Rusia por parte de Ucrania.

El 1 de marzo, Margarita Simonián, la editora jefe de la agencia matriz de Sputnik, publicó el texto y el audio de una conversación entre cuatro representantes de la Bundeswehr en la que se discutía un posible ataque contra el puente de Crimea con misiles de crucero de largo alcance Taurus, de fabricación alemana.

La agencia de noticias alemana dpa informó más tarde de que la conversación filtrada entre militares alemanes sobre asuntos de seguridad relativos a Rusia y Ucrania realizada en la plataforma CISCO Webex era auténtica, algo que el propio ente castrense acabó confirmando.

“Rusia confía en que tiene a Ucrania a la fuga”, especialmente con la reciente liberación del bastión de Avdéyevka, indicó Larry Johnson en el podcast.

Al mismo tiempo, según el veterano de la CIA, la filtración coincide con las declaraciones del presidente ruso Vladímir Putin durante su discurso anual en la Asamblea Federal de Rusia.

La III Internacional Comunista, 105 años después

La III Internacional Comunista fue una organización de alcance global fundada en Moscú, en 1919, por el Partido Comunista de Rusia y Lenin, quien se convirtió en una figura central en la historia del siglo XX, cuyo legado político perdura hasta la actualidad

Elizabeth Naranjo (Granma).— El papel del revolucionario ruso Vladimir Ilich Ulianov Lenin en el desarrollo de la teoría de la lucha de clases y la vigencia de su pensamiento, cual coincidencia histórica entre lo que aconteció contra Rusia durante la segunda década del siglo XX y lo que sucede hoy, fue centro del panel realizado, este viernes, en conmemoración al aniversario 105 de la III Internacional Comunista, fundada por él.

El encuentro, en la Universidad del Partido Comunista de Cuba «Ñico López», fue presidido por el miembro del Secretariado del Comité Central y jefe de su Departamento Ideológico, Rogelio Polanco Fuentes; y por el rector de la institución académica, Jorge Hurtado Pérez.

Las voces de las doctoras en Ciencias Iraida Camejo y Eulalia Cárdenas, y la del licenciado José Alejandro Lapinet, guiaron las reflexiones en las que se invitó a reestudiar la formación de la III Internacional y la fuerza que inyectó a la unidad de la izquierda en aquel contexto histórico.

La idea de profundizar en la historia, y aprender de ella fue defendida por Polanco Fuentes, quien abordó las dinámicas del mundo moderno, envuelto en conflictos, que pareciera que «hoy la historia se repite en nuevas condiciones y con nuevas determinantes».

En la Internacional Comunista se agrupaban los partidos comunistas para luchar por la supresión del capitalismo, establecer la dictadura del proletariado y la abolición de las clases sociales.

FUENTE: granma.cu

Ron Unz : The Rwandan Genocide

By RON UNZ 

Although I sometimes fall short, I always try to be very accurate and careful in my writing, doing my best to avoid the mistakes that might be eagerly pounced upon by my legion of harsh critics. This is especially necessary when discussing the ultra-controversial topics that are so often the focus of my essays.

For example, a few weeks after Israel began its brutal military assault on Gaza in retaliation for the October 7th Hamas raid, one of my articles included the following passage:

Last Thursday, most of the world was still reeling from the televised devastation in Gaza, as a densely-populated portion of one of its largest refugee camps was demolished by multiple 2,000-pound Israeli bombs, apparently killing hundreds of helpless Palestinian civilians, most of them women and children.

Soon afterward on CNN, pro-Israel former AIPAC staffer Wolf Blitzer questioned an Israeli military spokesman about the horrific loss of human life and was told that the massive attack had been completely justified because the Israelis believed that a Hamas commander was in the vicinity.

These are blatant war crimes, probably the worst ever televised in the history of the world, or at least I can’t recall anything comparable. Admittedly there have been far larger modern massacres, such as in 1994 Rwanda where according to Wikipedia the Hutus butchered many hundreds of thousands of their Tutsi neighbors with machetes; but both the Hutu killers and their Tutsi victims were mostly primitive African villagers, so none of those dark deeds were ever broadcast live on global television.

In sharp contrast, the grim events of the last four weeks have been widely watched around the world on electronic and social media. In just one month some 10,000 civilians have been killed in Gaza, a total larger than the combined losses on both sides in the past twenty months of the Ukraine war. Despite the fulminations of Western media outlets, since early 2022 only about 550 children have been killed in Ukraine, while after just a few weeks the total in Gaza has passed 4,000. Moreover, while the Ukraine war was fought between powerful, well-equipped modern armies on both sides, the defenseless civilians of Gaza are being relentlessly pounded by one of the world’s most lavishly-armed military forces.

My point was that although the 1994 genocide of Rwanda’s Tutsis was obviously vastly larger in scale than anything the Israelis were doing in Gaza, the former had occurred out of sight, while the latter was currently being televised worldwide.

Since then, I’ve repeatedly described the ongoing attacks on Gaza as constituting “the greatest televised massacre of helpless civilians in the history of the world,” making sure that I always include the word “televised” to maintain the accuracy of my statement. When we read a few sentences in a history book explaining that Tamerlane built mountains of skulls during his 1387 conquest of Persia, the psychological impact is far less than when we see a photo-laden magazine story of the few hundred Vietnamese villagers killed in the 1969 My Lai massacre, let alone the ongoing annihilation of Gaza’s Palestinians live-streamed on social media.

For similar reasons, I’d been extremely reluctant to describe these ongoing events as a “genocide” even though that word is so widely used by other critics of Israel’s actions. I had preferred to reserve that momentous term for events such as those in Rwanda, during which militant Hutus spent 100 days slaughtering the bulk of their Tutsi compatriots, seeking to completely exterminate that ethnic group with bullets and machete-blows.

But in my quoted passage I was also careful to include one additional disclaimer. I stated that my description of the notorious Rwanda genocide, one of the largest in all human history, was “according to Wikipedia,” indicating that I was drawing my information from the 21,000 word article on that subject.

Until several years ago, I wouldn’t have bothered to include that clarification given that the general facts of the horrific 1994 slaughter seemed so well known and universally accepted. I’d read the stories in my newspapers at the time, and subsequently seen them cited and discussed in countless articles since then. Leading journalists had published numerous books on the subject, whose favorable reviews I’d read, while I’d also seen the Oscar-nominated 2004 film Hotel Rwanda dramatizing part of that story. I’d never had the slightest doubts about the reality and circumstances of those terrible events, nor had I realized that anyone else did. And if everyone agrees that a historical incident happened in a particular way, there’s no need for even the most careful writer to hedge himself when he cites it.

But back in 2021 I’d republished a lengthy article that claimed the entire story I’d always accepted was almost totally false and largely inverted, and it seemed sufficiently detailed and sober that afterwards I felt I needed to be much more circumspect whenever I mentioned it.

It’s probably worth briefly sketching out the background and history of what had happened in Rwanda, which I’d absorbed at the time from all my newspapers and magazines, later reinforced by the popular film and numerous subsequent references throughout the mainstream media.

Both Rwanda and neighboring Burundi were small African states, landlocked, impoverished, and densely-populated, each containing two distinct ethnic groups, the tall, slender Tutsis, who had traditionally been cattle herdsmen, and the shorter, stockier Hutu cultivators. For centuries prior to the appearance of the Europeans, both those countries had been feudal kingdoms, ruled by their 15% Tutsi minorities, and after the Germans assumed suzerainty in the late nineteenth century, the latter continued to exercise control through the Tutsis, as did the Belgians, who received the territory as spoils from the First World War. Although independence came in the wake of World War II, Tutsi rule continued, but in 1959 Rwanda’s 85% Hutu majority overthrew its Tutsi monarchy, and the waves of resulting ethnic bloodshed and massacres during the 1960s led large numbers of its Tutsis to flee elsewhere, mostly into neighboring Uganda. Meanwhile, Burundi was also wracked by similar ethnic conflict and massacres, mostly inflicted by the ruling Tutsis against its large and restive Hutu majority.

The Tutsi exiles in Uganda eventually became a very substantial component of the leading rebel army, which successfully overthrew the Ugandan government in 1986, and in 1990 they launched a military campaign to overthrow Rwanda’s Hutu government as well, gradually gaining ground over the next several years. Combined with international pressure in the aftermath of the Cold War, their efforts finally forced Rwanda’s Hutu president to sign a peace agreement, allowing the return of the Tutsi exiles, establishing power-sharing between the two groups, and arranging to hold democratic elections. A prominent local Tutsi was named prime minister and a couple of thousand UN peacekeepers were brought in to oversee the reconciliation process. However, on April 6, 1994, the plane carrying the returning Rwandan president together with his Burundian counterpart was shot down as it approached for landing, triggering a gigantic wave of ethnic bloodshed and massacres across that sharply divided society.

According to the conventional narrative, extremist Hutus unwilling to share power had been responsible for the assassination of the more accomodating Hutu president, and they quickly seized control, immediately unleashing a long-planned campaign of genocide against their hated Tutsi minority while also slaughtering any moderate Hutus. All prominent Tutsis were marked for death, with most of them killed, while the genocidal broadcasts of Hutu radio propaganda persuaded a large fraction of that population to join in those grisly massacres, even as the rest of the world stood by and did nothing, including the hugely outnumbered UN peacekeepers.

This massive killing rampage against Tutsis went on for several months, with a large majority of that population being annihilated, along with any Hutus deemed sympathetic to them. The bloodshed was only finally halted by the military victory of the Tutsi rebel army, which defeated the government forces and their genocidal militia allies and gained control of most of Rwanda. At that point, the Hutu leadership and many participants in the slaughter fled the country, along with ordinary Hutus fearful of Tutsi vengeance, so some 1.5 million Hutus became refugees in neighboring Congo. These Hutus and the larger number who remained behind now greatly suffered as well, with the victorious Tutsis committing some massacres of their own, but the Tutsi leader Paul Kagame did his best to restrain his men and try to restore ethnic coexistence between the two groups, while welcoming back many hundreds of thousands of Tutsi exiles who had been living for decades in Uganda and elsewhere.

An enormously influential account of that story was provided by journalist Philip Gourevitch, a staff writer for the New Yorker who spent much of his time in Rwanda during the years 1995 to 1998, writing a series of articles on the aftermath of the massacre, while also producing important pieces for the New York Times Magazine and the New York Review of Books. This original reporting then furnished the basis for his 1998 New York Times bestseller, We wish to inform you that tomorrow we will be killed with our families, which won numerous critical awards and attracted tremendously positive reviews all across the elite and mainstream media. I finally read it last week to refresh my memory of those events of nearly thirty years ago.

His subtitle “Stories from Rwanda” was very descriptive, and the author interviewed hundreds of Rwandans during his extensive visits, seeming to do a very good job of reporting their individual experiences during that horrifying period and weaving them together into a comprehensive narrative of what had transpired. Indeed, the first half of his book dealt with the period of the genocide itself and his narrative seemed so detailed that I’d initially assumed that the author himself must have been present around the time the events unfolded, but I then noticed that he had only arrived the following year and was therefore relying upon his later interviews to describe the earlier sequence of events.

Most of the individual with whom he spoke were Tutsi survivors, and some of these had seen nearly their entire families butchered by the Hutu death squads, which went house-to-house slaughtering their Tutsi neighbors while also setting up roadblocks, stopping and killing any Tutsis who crossed their path.

Although Hutus and Tutsis had had a long history of episodic bloody conflict and on average looked different enough that they could often be distinguished, they spoke the same language and prayed in the same Catholic churches, while intermarriage was hardly uncommon. Some of the most grisly stories involved the consequences of the latter situation, with a few of the Hutus most energetic in the death squads later claiming that they took that leadership role in order to protect their Tutsi wives from suffering the same fate, sometimes even killing the families of the latter to demonstrate their commitment. The offspring of such mixed marriages were usually considered sufficiently Tutsi to be worthy of death, and the author described how a Hutu mother watched in helpless horror as her half-Tutsi children were butchered by a mob.

I’ve never been to Rwanda and I’m not sure I’ve ever met a single Rwandan, so all I know about that country, its society and its people, has come from the words of Western journalists and researchers such as Gourevitch. But the mentality of the killers he interviewed struck me as rather strange and surprising.

Despite intermittent bloodshed, Hutus and Tutsis had lived together on reasonably friendly terms for decades, but then one day the former picked up their machetes and suddenly began chopping up the families of their next-door neighbors. When the author asked some of those imprisoned killers how they could have done such a monstrous thing, he was given answers such as “everyone else was doing it” or “the radio told us to kill all the Tutsis.” This hardly seemed a very satisfying explanation for the most rapid campaign of mass extermination in modern history, occasionally using guns or grenades, but more often relying upon machetes or simple farm implements. Catholic priests and nuns also sometimes joined in the slaughter, assisting in the massacre of their own parishioners.

The social aftermath of the genocide also seemed quite difficult for Westerners to comprehend. According to Gourevitch, a large majority of all the Tutsis had been killed and a very substantial fraction of all the adult male Hutus had been direct participants, so huge numbers of the brutal killers and the wretched survivors remained in close proximity. Many of those Tutsis were forced to live on the same street—or even share the same house!—with the Hutus whom they knew or suspected had slaughtered their families a few months earlier. Gourevitch described the anger and bitterness of some of those victims, but it still seemed just a small fraction of what one might expect, and although he mentioned some of the vigilante killings that occurred, I’m surprised that the number was not vastly greater.

One of the notable figures in Gourevitch’s book was the brave Hutu manager of the leading foreign-owned luxury hotel in Rwanda, whose Tutsi wife inspired him to offer refuge to many hundreds of her desperate co-ethnics, and by a mixture of bluff, bribery, and pure luck, he managed to keep the mobs of killers at bay, allowing them all to survive. His remarkable story became the basis of the Hollywood film Hotel Rwanda, which probably provides most of what Americans and others know about that enormous genocide.

But by far the most heroic individual portrayed by the author was Paul Kagame, a child of Tutsi exiles raised in Uganda, who became the military leader of the rebel army that overthrew Rwanda’s murderous Hutu regime and thereby stopped the ongoing slaughter in its tracks, achieving that success while America and every other powerful Western country merely dithered. Without him and his small but determined army of Tutsi exiles, the genocide would surely have been carried to completion, resulting in the deaths of virtually every Rwandan Tutsi, whether man, woman, or child.

Once Kagame established his new government, he installed a Hutu president as a symbol of ethnic reconciliation in a country that was 85% Hutu. But he exercised the real power as vice president and defense minister, and according to the author’s account, he did his best to minimize vengeance and retaliatory massacres in the aftermath of the genocide of his own people. Many of the ringleaders were killed and tens of thousands of their underlings were imprisoned under dreadful conditions, but compared to the hundreds of thousands of innocent Tutsis that they had so recently butchered, such retribution seemed remarkably mild.

Gourevitch’s interviews with Kagame portrayed him as a remarkable individual, not only far more thoughtful and intellectual than anyone would expert in an African military commander, but also someone with a sense of humility and self-deprecating humor, seeking to restore normal life in his blood-drenched country. As a consequence of Kagame’s very positive portrayal and the deep Western shame and guilt over permitting the Rwandan genocide, his regime became an important recipient of American aid. His efforts at ethnic reconciliation were widely portrayed in our media as sincere and surprisingly successful given the immense recent bloodshed, with Kagame presented as one of a new generation of enlightened African rulers, totally different than their corrupt, despotic, and bloodthirsty predecessors. Gourevitch praised Kagame as “the Abraham Lincoln” of Rwanda and most of the Western media took the same view.

As the author explained, many of the worst Hutu killers and their henchmen had fled across the border into neighboring Congo, accompanied by some 1.5 million ordinary Hutus, terrified of the vengeance that they expected to face in Rwanda at the hands of the newly victorious Tutsis. The Congo was a vast but very poorly governed country under the longtime misrule of its corrupt dictator Mobutu Sese Seko, who made little effort to enforce local order in the lands he controlled, a territory 90 times larger than Rwanda and having many times the population. As a consequence, the Hutu exiles established enclaves from which they regularly raided Rwanda, killing all the Tutsis they encountered, as well as massacring many of the Congo’s own ethnic Tutsi population.

Repeated warnings and threats by Kagame and small counter-raids failed to halt these Hutu attacks, so after a couple of years, Kagame formed a military alliance with several other African nations including Uganda, and launched an invasion of his huge Congo neighbor. His forces easily defeated that country’s ineffective army and he overthrew Mobutu’s regime, installing a different Congolese leader whom he had recruited for the post. Although it received very little attention in the American media, this First Congo War was sometimes nicknamed Africa’s First World War because it drew in more than a half-dozen different nations in confused and shifting alliances and replaced the government of a country as large as all of Western Europe. Although the death toll was considerable, with hundreds of thousands of civilians dead or “missing,” these events came near the very end of Gourevitch’s narrative and he marked it a triumph for Kagame, who destroyed the extremist Hutu forces while forcing the majority of the Hutu refugees to return to Rwanda, although many others died in massacres.

According to our standard narrative, the 1994 events in Rwanda were almost a textbook-perfect example of genocide, with a ruthless government seeking to totally exterminate the local Tutsi population and successfully killing a large majority of them. All this took place at the absolute peak of America’s international power and prestige—our nation’s “unipolar moment”—yet in obvious violation of all our anti-genocide conventions, neither Washington nor any other major powers took any forceful steps to stop it.

Rwanda had an extremely feeble military and most of the killings were carried out by local Hutu militias, often armed with nothing more formidable than machetes. The military commander of the UN peace-keeping force stationed in that country declared that if he were merely given 5,000 well-equipped troops, he could have immediately ended the slaughter, but instead he was prohibited from taking any action and the best troops under his command were withdrawn. The Clinton Administration was terrified of suffering political damage if it got bogged down in an obscure African conflict so it looked the other way, hoping that the ongoing Rwanda massacre would be limited to a few tens of thousands of victims as had been the case in the past. The killings only stopped when Kagame’s rag-tag force of Tutsi exiles defeated the Rwandan army and seized control of the entire country.

Once the grim facts about the massive scale of the genocide became widely known, elite Western political and media circles felt tremendous shame that their governments had done nothing.

Samantha Power was then in her mid-20s, a naturalized Irish immigrant who had graduated from Yale and was working as an overseas war correspondent. She and many others were outraged that no American officials had resigned in protest over their government’s lack of action over Rwanda, a personal sacrifice that might have provoked enough media attention to pressure the West into taking action, thereby saving hundreds of thousands of lives. Returning to America to attend Harvard law school, that simmering righteous anger—heightened as realized that lack of timely government action had also occurred in other such situations—inspired her to write a paper on the subject.

That paper eventually grew into her first book, “A Problem from Hell” running 600 pages and carrying the subtitle “America and the Age of Genocide.” Published in 2002 when Power was just 31, it quickly became an international sensation, glowingly reviewed almost everywhere, a huge bestseller that won her a Pulitzer Prize and launched her career as a leading figure in human rights doctrine, someone who had seemingly shifted American national policy on an important global issue.

Although I’d certainly been aware of her book when it first appeared, I only just recently read it as part of my Rwanda investigation and discovered that it had attracted even more accolades than I’d ever realized. My 2013 paperback edition devoted a full page to listing the awards it won and another page to the many major newspapers and other publications that had named it one of the best books of the year. Seven additional pages contained excerpts from 63 glowing reviews and endorsements by a very long list of prominent intellectual and political figures, a list so extremely long that I noticed the careless editor had accidentally duplicated at least one of those entries. I can’t recall the last time I’d seen a book that had attracted such seemingly near-universal praise.

As might be expected, the chapter on Rwanda was one of the longest, and the story it told seemed fully congruent with that of Gourevitch, though having a different focus. Power emphasized the top-level policy decision-making of the Clinton Administration and other international bodies rather than the grisly eyewitness accounts of the killers and their victims.

One important point that Power made was that just the previous year, Tutsi military officers in neighboring Burundi had assassinated that country’s first freely-elected Hutu president, leading to widespread communal violence that cost some 50,000 lives. As a consequence, Western leaders including those in the Clinton Administration had vaguely assumed that Rwanda was merely undergoing “another flare-up” that would result in a similar level of “acceptable” total casualties. But she explains that instead:

The Rwandan genocide would prove to be the fastest, most efficient killing spree of the twentieth century. In 100 days, some 800,000 Tutsis and politically moderate Hutus were murdered. The United States did almost nothing to try to stop it.

Power also emphasized some of the political background behind the total unwillingness of the Clinton Administration to become involved in Rwanda. In 1992, the preceding Bush Administration had deployed American military forces to Somalia as part of a UN humanitarian operation to manage and protect the delivery of food supplies amid a famine and an anarchic civil war. Then in 1993 Clinton had authorized American forces to capture one of the local warlords deemed responsible for attacking UN troops, resulting in the disastrous “Battle of Mogadishu” in which determined Somali militiamen shot down three Black Hawk helicopters. Hundreds of Somali fighters and civilians died in the fighting along with eighteen members of our elite special forces, while many dozens more American troops were wounded, and the body of one of the our fallen soldiers was dragged through the streets of the city before cheering crowds. The images of that last embarrassing incident were broadcast worldwide, giving America a huge political black-eye and persuading Clinton to completely withdraw our military from Somalia. Therefore, no one in his administration was very eager to risk repeating the same sort of debacle the following year in a different African country, especially with midterm elections only a few months away.

Meanwhile, the DC elected officials and lobbyists most strongly supportive of black and African issues were entirely focused upon the political disorders in Haiti, furious that Clinton had denied refugee status to all migrants from that country and ordered them repatriated. Busy staging hunger strikes and denouncing our government for its anti-Haitian racism, none of those individuals paid any attention to the distant events in East Africa even as the massacres began, with more than 10,000 killed each week. Firebrand Rep. Maxine Waters later admitted she had no knowledge of the Tutsis and Hutus, whom she “didn’t know from crap.” TransAfrica and other activist organizations were equally disengaged so media pressure for American intervention in Rwanda was minimal.

During this entire period, numerous warnings and red-flags went completely ignored. For example, Power claimed that just a couple of months before the massacres began, an anonymous Hutu informant, supposedly high in the ranks of the Rwandan government, had explicitly warned the local UN commander that the Hutu militias were being armed and trained, and compiling lists of all the Tutsis in the capital city, leading him to suspect that an extermination campaign was being prepared. This important message was passed along to the UN leadership in New York City, but no action was taken.

Power’s bibliographic section on Rwanda contained some two dozen books, including the one by Gourevitch, and although her account differed in emphasis and a few details, both were fully consistent with the long Wikipedia article on the subject. Both provided the standard narrative of those events, entirely similar to what I’d absorbed from all my newspaper and magazine articles at the time and afterwards, as well as the plot of the Hollywood film. Given such total agreement, I’d never seen fit to question that history from three decades ago, regarding the massacre of Rwanda’s Tutsis as about as clear-cut a case of genocide as I’d ever encountered in modern times.

But this settled picture was suddenly disturbed in 2021 when I was contacted by an independent Canadian journalist named Antony Black, who suggested that I consider republishing several of his long essays on controversial historical events, mostly in the form of book reviews, and after reading through them, I was very impressed and did so. One of these, originally published in 2014, shocked me by arguing that everything I had been sure I’d known about those 1994 events in Rwanda was entirely wrong and completely inverted. It seemed very solidly put together and when I featured it, most of the comments were strongly supportive.

According to the standard story, the massive killings had been organized by Rwanda’s Hutu Power extremists, who had spent months planning their genocidal project. Regarding their own Hutu president as overly moderate and compromising, they were livid when he had signed the 1993 peace agreement with the rebel army of Tutsi exiles from Uganda, agreeing to democratic elections and an ethnic power-sharing arrangement. Therefore, they shot down his plane and then immediately used the excuse of his death to unleash their campaign to completely exterminate the country’s Tutsis.

Black presented a very different history. He noted that in an 85% Hutu country with sharp ethnic divisions, the Tutsi rebels had no chance of gaining power via a democratic vote, so they were the ones with the strongest motive to overturn the agreement by assassinating the Hutu president and seizing power militarily. Indeed, a lengthy later investigation by a French judge found the Paul Kagame and his Tutsi army had been responsible for that killing, with former members of his rebel forces also making those accusations, and suppressed reports by official international investigators coming to that same conclusion. Black further claimed that Kagame’s army had abandoned the ceasefire and begun its march to the capital hours before the president had been killed, indicating the latter event was part of their plan, which amounted to a military assault and coup d’etat intended to seize the entire country. As part of this operation, they had infiltrated many thousands of rebel Tutsi fighters into the capital city, who quickly launched attacks on the Rwandan military.

The central element of the Rwanda genocide had been the near-total extermination of Rwanda’s Tutsis, but according to Black this was a complete falsehood. He claimed that American academics who carefully studied the evidence concluded that although many hundreds of thousands of civilian deaths occurred in Rwanda during those months, a large majority of these—at least two-thirds or more—were actually Hutus, killed by Kagame’s rebel Tutsi army, with the number of Hutu victims possibly reaching a million or even approaching two million. Everyone agreed that a huge wave of Hutu refugees fled into the Congo, but he argued that their flight had been due to those Tutsi massacres rather than any fears of some hypothetical retaliation.

Black certainly admitted that large numbers of Tutsi civilians also died during those months, most of them at the hands of outraged and terrified Hutus who were retaliating in disorganized fashion for the huge slaughter they were suffering across much of the country. A million Hutu refugees fled into the capital to avoid the massacres of Kagame’s advancing Tutsi army, and they participated in these attacks, but Black argued that the notion of any centrally-planned campaign of extermination was utterly false. The single strongest piece of evidence behind such a plan was the fax report forwarded in early 1994 to the UN, reporting the secrets provided by a high-ranking Hutu informant, and this was heavily emphasized in the books by Gourevitch and Power, but Black argued that it was an obvious forgery, a conclusion grudgingly admitted by the international tribunal organized to investigate and prosecute the Rwandan genocide.

So in the mainstream accounts, we had Hutu extremists killing the country’s president, plotting to seize power, and exterminating huge numbers of Tutsi civilians, while Black’s account was the mirror-image, with the Tutsi rebels responsible for the assassination, leading to their successful seizure of power in a military offensive, combined with their slaughter of Hutu civilians as part of that campaign. As an outsider with little knowledge of those events, I found it very difficult to judge between these polar-opposite accounts of what had really transpired during 1994 in that small African country. But I did see at least a point or two in favor of Black’s alternative version.

Wikipedia heavily supported the mainstream narrative, but it did mention some of the evidence that Kagame had actually been behind the presidential assassination that touched off the crisis, and indeed it noted that the supposed mastermind of that project was later acquitted by an international tribunal in 2008. But if Kagame had been responsible, that would severely undercut the theory of an extermination campaign long planned by Hutu extremists

My impression is that much of the standard media narrative of the genocide was formed by Gourevitch’s early reporting, which also became the basis of his huge bestseller, and if he had been on the scene at the time, I would certainly credit his account, but he only arrived in Rwanda the following year. He then interviewed many eyewitnesses who told him the details of the horrific killings of Tutsi civilians and I’m sure that all of those incidents had occurred. But by that point the country was under the total control of Kagame and his victorious Tutsis, while a substantial fraction of all the terrified, defeated Hutus had already fled into the Congo. So it seems very possible that equally true accounts of huge 1994 massacres of civilian Hutus simply never reached his ears.

As mentioned above, one of the leading individuals portrayed in Gourevitch’s story was Paul Rusesabagina, the Hutu hotel manager, who saved so many Tutsi lives and was glorified as the central hero in the subsequent big budget film. But as Black pointed out, he later became a leading opponent of Kagame and his Tutsi regime, blaming them for the bulk of the 1994 killings, and eventually was imprisoned for years before finally being freed. This hardly proved Black’s case, but it did suggest that the facts might be much more complex than those provided in a simple black-and-white morality play concocted by a Hollywood screenwriter.

Black’s long article unfortunately contained few links or citations for his underlying source material, but he sent me a personal addendum in which he explained that his brother Christopher had spent a decade in Africa serving on the international tribunal that investigated and adjudicated the genocide charges and had been the source of much of his information. I can only suggest that those interested should read his analysis with an open mind and decide for themselves.

  • Hotel Propaganda
    Antony C. Black • Canadian Dimension • October 4, 2014 • 7,100 Words

Although I’d been quite impressed by Black’s long article when I read it a couple of years ago, I only knew of him as an unknown Canadian writer and I hardly felt his lone contrarian analysis could outweigh absolutely everything else I’d read over the previous three decades, including the many glowing reviews of the award-winning books by Gourevitch and Power. I had little time or interest in undertaking a detailed investigation of those events of the mid-1990s, so until recently, I still tended to accept the conventional story of the Rwandan genocide, while cautiously adding the phrase “according to Wikipedia” when I mentioned it in my November article. However, just a couple of weeks ago, a casual comment led me to another book that substantially shifted my views.

For decades famed MIT professor Noam Chomsky had reigned as one of the world’s most prominent public intellectuals, totally blacklisted as a leftist by the American mainstream media, but greatly lionized almost everywhere else. One of his most influential works had been Manufacturing Consent, published in 1988, in which he argued that governments in America and other democratic societies regularly manipulated their national media in order to produce an artificial public consensus behind the policies they wished to pursue, thereby partially converting the approval of the electorate into a mere rubber-stamp. Some of those ideas may have influenced my own American Pravda series.

After having seen that book and its thesis mentioned countless times on the Internet, I finally decided to read it a couple of years ago and was quite surprised to discover that the lead author was actually the late Prof. Edward Herman of the University of Pennsylvania, a longtime friend and ally of Chomsky, but possessing only a sliver of the latter’s global fame. I’ve even seen some claims that Herman had been responsible for the bulk of the text.

I’d previously been unaware of Herman but henceforth took his views very seriously, and I recently discovered that in 2014 he had published Enduring Lies, a short work co-authored by independent journalist David Peterson that sharply challenged the standard Rwanda narrative, so I bought and read it.

Their slim volume carried a cover quote by the highly-regarded journalist John Pilger hailing their “landmark investigation,” and it also was praised by numerous others, including the authors of two different books on the Rwanda disaster, while my own verdict was the same. Herman was a serious scholar and their book provided a devastating and very convincing refutation of what the authors call “the standard model” of the events in Rwanda.

They had apparently read and carefully analyzed all the main primary and secondary sources and their verdict was similar to Black’s, but even a short book afforded them many times as much space to discuss and document the key issues, backing their analysis with more than 250 reference footnotes and a couple of appendices. As a rank outsider, who has spent little time or effort investigating this complex issue, I found their conclusions quite convincing. I was hardly surprised that the very lengthy Wikipedia article contained absolutely no mention of their important work.

For most reasonable people, any talk of “genocide” must focus on the numbers, and the authors argued that these had been completely obfuscated in the case of 1994 Rwanda. No one ever denied that huge numbers of innocent Tutsi civilians had been killed, often in very grisly ways, but drawing upon the quantitative research of a couple of University of Michigan academics, the authors argued that the figures and percentages casually mentioned by Gourevitch and so many others were wildly exaggerated. The latter had claimed that many hundreds of thousands of Tutsis were slain, representing a large majority of their total population, but instead probably only 100,000 to 200,000 had died while the number of Hutu victims was a multiple of that, perhaps even many, many times larger.

All the horrific individual stories told by Gourevitch were surely true and could even have been increased a thousand-fold; but he completely left out all the equally horrific stories of massacred Hutus, whose deaths had been vastly greater in number, and most other Western observers adopted the same technique. An ideological or narrative framework that features such selective omissions can promote total falsehoods just as easily as would outright lying.

One important point made by the authors is that the international tribunal later established to try those responsible for the Rwandan genocide deliberately avoided including any coverage of Hutu victims or Tutsi perpetrators, with Kagame and his fellows entirely protected from any legal investigation or sanction, thereby removing a very large majority of all the crimes from any consideration. Completely ignoring most of the killings and most of the victims might seem absurd, but it reflected the very strong political support that America, Britain, and other countries provided to the newly established Tutsi regime, and any prosecutors who tried to broaden that mandate were overruled or even removed from their positions.

An absolutely central theme of all the mainstream media coverage and books had been the planned nature of the genocide, but Herman and Peterson noted that all the Hutu leaders tried on those charges were either acquitted or had their convictions reversed on appeal, thereby demonstrating that element of the story had little basis in evidence or reality. One of their appendices argued in detail that the key early warning fax allegedly sent to the UN several months before the killings began was a blatant forgery, and the verdicts of the tribunal seemed to strongly support that conclusion. They also summarized the very convincing evidence that Kagame rather than any shadowy extremist Hutu leaders had been responsible for the assassination of Rwanda’s Hutu president, the event that triggered the outbreak of violence.

According to their reckoning, the total number of Hutu civilians killed in Rwanda during 1994 was almost certainly in the hundreds of thousands and may have easily reached a million or more, while even larger numbers of Hutu refugees were slaughtered in the Congo during Kagame’s subsequent invasion, which he claimed had been launched to root out “genocidal war criminals.” That invasion led to the First and Second Congo Wars, which even the strictly establishmentarian Wikipedia admitted cost well over five million civilian lives, a body-count that utterly dwarfed the 1994 death toll in Rwanda.

Yet none of that horrendous bloodshed ever provoked any serious Western protests or even substantial media coverage, let alone outcries of “genocide” and international tribunals. Instead, Kagame, the central architect of those events, remained a great hero across most of our Western media. Herman and Peterson closed their last chapter by noting the extreme irony that although Kagame was widely celebrated as “the Abraham Lincoln” of Africa by Gourevitch and many of the journalists who followed his lead, the current Rwandan leader “is quite possibly the greatest mass murderer alive today.”

The authors argued that this total inversion of historical reality had been maintained since 1994 by extremely selective media access. They produced a list of the twenty leading advocates of “the standard model” and the twenty leading dissenters, and by checking the Factiva database determined that the former had almost totally monopolized media access, especially if small French-language publications were excluded. When only one side of a story is told, the public can easily be persuaded to accept almost anything. I can certainly endorse those findings since despite my very extensive readings until a couple of years ago, I’d never even realized that there existed any significant dissent from the standard Rwanda narrative, let alone that the dissenters included highly-credible scholars.

This sort of situation is hardly without precedent. These days all of us are well aware that during the 1930s, the terrible Ukraine famine that killed many millions of Soviet citizens was almost totally ignored and discounted by the American media so that few individuals in our country had any real awareness of it. Instead, Walter Duranty of the New York Times was awarded the 1932 Pulitzer Prize for his Soviet coverage that dishonestly refuted any such circulating rumors.

Although I found the analysis of Herman and Peterson together with that of Black quite compelling, I do not feel capable of rendering any solid verdict on events so far distant and about which I lack any expertise. To do so, I would need to undertake a much larger investigation, reading many more books on both sides, and perhaps some of these might shift me back towards the “standard model” that those authors denounce. But although everyone agrees that enormous numbers of African civilians were slaughtered in 1994 Rwanda, at the very least I would now be reluctant to casually refer to the genocide of Rwanda’s Tutsis, whose reality I had never questioned for nearly three decades.

If I’d come across the work of Herman, Peterson, and Black a dozen or more years ago, I might have been much less willing to consider the possibility that everything I’d always known about such an important historical event was false and actually inverted. But in recent years, a great deal of reading and investigation on my part has led me to render that same surprising verdict on the “standard model” of World War II and some of its central elements. So I was hardly surprised to discover that some of the foremost promoters of what Herman and Peterson might reasonably characterize as “the Tutsi Genocide Hoax” were Deborah Lipstadt and Daniel Jonah Goldhagen, leading scholars of the Jewish Holocaust, and that the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum was heavily involved in promoting that same story of East African events.

While I do not believe that a week or two of investigation is sufficient for me to determine what really happened in 1994 Rwanda, if the accounts of Herman, Peterson, and Black are indeed correct, they would certainly closely match my own firm conclusions regarding the true history of World War II:

One broader claim made by Herman and Peterson seems particularly relevant given very recent events. They argued that the articles and books written by Gourevitch, Power, and many others were cynically used to “manufacture consent” for intended government policies, including the elevation of an American client such as Kagame and the overthrow of the government of the resource-rich Congo. They noted that although Gourevitch was always portrayed as a disinterested, independent-minded journalist, at the time his book came out in the late 1990s, he was the brother-in-law of James Rubin, a high-ranking Clinton State Department official, so he was obviously someone close to decision-making circles.

Or consider the case of Samantha Power, whose enormously influential book helped inspire the UN’s “Responsibility to Protect” doctrine. That ideological construct furnished America and its allies with the political justification for military interventions in other countries in order to supposedly protect their civilian populations from possible massacres or looming genocides. A few years later in 2011, NATO used that excuse to successfully overthrow the government of Libya, producing a gigantic humanitarian disaster, and then nearly achieved the same result in Syria, destroying most of that country and leading to many hundreds of thousands of civilian deaths.

Yet today Israel’s ongoing massacre of tens of thousands of helpless Palestinian civilians in Gaza while starving hundreds of thousands of others has been totally ignored by all those enlightened individuals, despite the explicitly genocidal language employed by most of Israel’s political and military leaders. Power had famously declared she was outraged that no American officials had resigned in protest for their government’s inaction during the 1994 slaughter in Rwanda, but a near-unanimous verdict of the International Court of Justice has declared that the population of Gaza is now facing a potential genocide at Israel’s hands, and instead of mere inaction, today’s American government is actually supplying the munitions used for that genocide. Despite these facts, Power still serves as head of USAID and she has expressed no public criticism of her own government’s policy let alone resigned in angry protest.

Obviously, none of these very shameful developments conclusively prove that Herman and Peterson were correct in their reconstruction of what happened in 1994 Rwanda, but I think they do greatly increase the credibility of those authors, while sharply diminishing that of some of the leading figures on the other side such as Gourevitch and Power.

Related Reading:

Source: https://www.unz.com/runz/american-pravda-the-rwanda-genocide/

Alastair Crooke : Europe is Fearful and Desperate

By Alastair Crooke*

Events in Gaza and in Ukraine are unravelling long-standing political power control structures in the EU, in Europe and in the US.

A leading Establishment newspaper in Europe says that “what is driving European politics at present – is fear”. The headlines ring out with apprehension: “Germany’s élites run scared, as Putin rains down death on Ukraine”. The British Prime Minister calls an emergency press conference to warns of ‘democracy at risk’ from ‘extremism’ on the eve of a by-election win by George Galloway, an articulate, if somewhat unruly, ‘thorn’ in the side of conventional politics (but hardly any ‘extremist’).

In the US too the liberal sphere is in meltdown over the publication of a just-released book: White Rural Rage: The Threat To American Democracy, in which “rural whites are [described as] the most racist; xenophobic; anti-immigrant; anti-gay; and conspiracy-minded, anti-democratic They “don’t believe in an independent press or free speech”, and are “most likely to accept or excuse violence”.

Of course, the fear is being — in the first instance — diverted outwards towards the claim that this is somehow Russia’s ‘doing’ — a looming ‘menace’ further stoked by claims of President Putin’s ‘imperial aspirations’, way beyond Ukraine.  There is however (to invert the usual MSM meme), absolutely no evidence for these claims (from anything Putin has said over the years).  

What is spooking the West more immediately is the cascading defeats inflicted on Ukrainian forces, after the Avdeevka rout. The new Ukrainian commander, General Syrski, in the wake of the flight, announced a retreat to new defence lines, but as some had predicted, it turned out that the ‘more favourable lines’ Syrski promoted did not exist.

Ukrainian photographers Konstantin and Vlada Liberov who document the war from the ground demanded from Syrski: “So what is the next “fortetsia” – Pokrovsk? Or just Konstantinovka?” 

Where is this second line of defence?” Yuri Butusov, editor-in-chief of Censor— following his trip to this area – asks: “There are no words. Gap: here in Kiev – the supreme commander-in-chief says one thing, but at the front something completely different is happening. I want to say that no field lines of fortifications have been built beyond Avdeevka so far. I saw Russian drones attacking our soldiers in their burrows – in the middle of a field”.

There are no constructed defence lines – only hurried improvisations – whilst Ukraine resorts to simply throwing its reserves at the deficiency – so to prop up the incremental retreat. Did NATO leaders not spot this defence-line lacuna? Apparently not …

And so one leg to the current panic is just this: The EU has heavily over-invested in its Ukraine project, and now sees it fast crumbling. Hence President Macron’s hasty summons of EU states (at 24 hours’ notice) to the Elysée Palace to hear him warn that the situation on the ground in Ukraine was so critical, and the stakes for Europe so high, that: “We’re at a critical point in the conflict where we need to take the initiative: We’re determined to do whatever it takes for as long as it takes”.

What Macron in fact proposed however, shocked the gathered leaders. He advocated committing detachments of European special forces to Ukraine, not so much directly to fight the Russian forces, but to act as vulnerable strategic ‘tripwire’ deterrents to Russia – which, were they attacked, would ‘trip’ a full-throated NATO retaliation down onto the head of Russia.

These tripwire forces, Macron claimed, would form strategic deterrents to Moscow’s military room for manoeuvre  — oases of ‘untouchable’ NATO, scattered through Ukraine. His colleagues, horrified, demurred; they saw the emplaced tripwires as the conveyor belt leading to WWIII: ‘Madness’, and ‘no thank you’.

The ‘other leg’ to European desperation was given away by PM Sunak’s rush to the microphone in the wake of the Rochdale by-election outcome to warn that democracy is in peril from extremism.  

One commentator opined: ‘Rishi Sunak was right’: “This is not politics, not even of the radical kind … It is inchoate, incoherent rage which is ready to make common cause with anyone else, who is enraged even on contradictory grounds”.

If this reaction sounds a bit over the top – just because George Galloway overwhelmingly won in Rochdale – let us ‘join up the dots’ for you:

The same commentator (Janet Daley in the Telegraph) avers: “To bring this right up to date, we now have an entity called the Workers Party – a name that summons up traditional Left-wing dedication to the interests of working class people – winning a by-election in Rochdale by somehow conflating the Palestinian cause in Gaza with local working class needs”.

Ouch! That is what hurts. Echoes here from the Michigan primary in the US, where a coalition of pro-Palestinian groups who had set a modest target of 10,000 ‘uncommitted’ votes — Trump’s margin of victory in Michigan in 2016 — to send a message to President Biden that voter frustration over the Gaza war could cost him dearly in the November election. In the event, however, the pro-Palestinian support blew past the 10,000 target and clocked in at nearly 101,400 votes.

Message sent — and as the electoral desperation in Democratic circles, indicates, ‘message received’.

Just to be plain: Events in Gaza and in Ukraine are unravelling long-standing political power control structures in the EU, in Europe and in the US. This is why there is panic and double-down.


*Alastair Crooke Director of Conflicts Forum; Former Senior British Diplomat; Author.

Source: https://english.almayadeen.net/articles/analysis/europe-is-fearful-and-desperate

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