Last week two prominent Ukrainian opposition figures were gunned down in broad
daylight. They join as many as ten others who have been killed or committed
suicide under suspicious circumstances just this year. These individuals have
one important thing in common: they were either part of or friendly with the
Yanukovych government, which a US-backed coup overthrew last year. They include
members of the Ukrainian parliament and former chief editors of major opposition
newspapers.
While some journalists here in the US have started to notice the strange series
of opposition killings in Ukraine, the US government has yet to say a word.
Compare this to the US reaction when a single opposition figure was killed
in Russia earlier this year. Boris Nemtsov was a member of a minor political
party that was not even represented in the Russian parliament. Nevertheless
the US government immediately demanded that Russia conduct a thorough investigation
of his murder, suggesting the killers had a political motive.
As news of the Russian killing broke, Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs
Committee Ed Royce (R-CA) did not wait for evidence to blame the killing on
Russian president Vladimir Putin. On the very day of Nemtsov's murder, Royce
told the US media that, "this shocking murder is the latest assault on those
who dare to oppose the Putin regime."
Neither Royce, nor Secretary of State John Kerry, nor President Obama, nor
any US government figure has said a word about the series of apparently political
murders in Ukraine.
On the contrary, instead of questioning the state of democracy in what looks
like a lawless Ukraine, the Administration is sending in the US military to
help train Ukrainian troops!
Last week, just as the two political murders were taking place, the US 173rd
Airborne Brigade landed in Ukraine to begin training Ukrainian national guard
forces - and to leave behind some useful military equipment. Though the civil
unrest continues in Ukraine, the US military is assisting one side in the conflict
- even as the US slaps sanctions on Russia over accusations it is helping out
the other side!
As the ceasefire continues to hold, though shakily, what kind of message does
it send to the US-backed government in Kiev to have US troops arrive with training
and equipment and an authorization to gift Kiev with some $350 million in weapons?
Might they not take this as a green light to begin new hostilities against
the breakaway regions in the east?
The Obama administration is so inconsistent in its foreign policy. In some
places, particularly Cuba and Iran, the administration is pursuing a policy
that looks to diplomacy and compromise to help improve decades of bad relations.
In these two cases the administration realizes that the path of confrontation
has led nowhere. When the president announced his desire to see the end of
Cuba sanctions, he stated very correctly that, "...we are ending a policy that
was long past its expiration date. When what you're doing doesn't work for
fifty years, it's time to try something new."
So while Obama is correctly talking about sanctions relief for Iran and Cuba,
he is adding more sanctions on Russia, backing Saudi Arabia's brutal attack
on Yemen, and pushing ever harder for regime change in Syria. Does he really
believe the rest of the world does not see these double standards? A wise consistency
of non-interventionism in all foreign affairs would be the correct course for
this and future US administrations. Let us hope they will eventually follow
Obama's observation that, "it's time to try something new."