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Ex-CIA Official speaks about Russia/Crimea reunification Printer friendly page Print This
By Staff Writers, Sputnik
Sputnik
Saturday, Mar 19, 2016

The City of Yalta

It has now been two years since Crimea declared independence from Ukraine, with a referendum on joining Russia approved by 96% of voters. Ex-CIA official Ray McGovern told Radio Sputnik’s Brian Becker that the reunification was predetermined, taking into account Russia’s history, events in Ukraine prior the referendum, and NATO policy.

Only six countries currently recognize Crimea as a part of Russia, while many Western powers continue to assert that the peninsula was "annexed." But somehow, when Western news outlets portray the "annexation" as an act of aggression by Russia, they tend to forget the events which preceded the referendum, McGovern noted during the broadcast.

Various international powers, including Russia, had an agreement with the Ukrainian opposition that the continuous violence would end, that there would be diminution of presidential powers, earlier elections would be held and there would be increased regional autonomy. However, on February 22, 2014, the country's parliament was driven out by a coup, and neo-Nazis seized power forcing Ukrainian President Victor Yanukovych to flee.

"It started on the 22nd of February with the coup, not on the 23d with Putin's reaction," McGovern said.

According to the political activist, geopolitical interests were clearly involved, and NATO's eastward expansion partially prompted Crimea's reunion with Russia. McGovern added that the crisis in Ukraine has been used by the Pentagon to escalate troops, and increase war exercises into the region, with the excuse that countries on the western border of Russia must be protected from "Russian aggression."

"If anyone in the White House, the State Department, the CIA was surprised that Russia would react very strongly to the prospect of Ukraine joining NATO on the one hand or having a ballistic missile system set up in Black Sea…those people don't have any sense of Russian history."

What's more important, McGovern said, is that the peninsula has been part of Russia for centuries, since the time of Catherine the Great. The peninsula is ethnically Russian, not merely Russian-speaking, he asserts. In 1954 Nikita Khrushchev, who came to power after Stalin's death, gave Crimea to Ukraine as a token gift by, "signing a piece of paper," given that, at the time, Russia and Ukraine were merely parts of the 15 republics that made up the USSR.

The referendum in Crimea indicated that a very large part of the peninsula's population sought to reunite with Russia. 

"If this came as a surprise to anybody, that person doesn't know much about Russian history, or Soviet history, or the balance of power in central Europe" McGovern said.


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