[Salon] The cancellation of western mainstream debate on what’s happening in Ukraine
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- Subject: [Salon] The cancellation of western mainstream debate on what’s happening in Ukraine
- From: Chas Freeman <cwfresidence@gmail.com>
- Date: Wed, 8 Jan 2025 09:35:12 -0500
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https://strategic-culture.su/news/2025/01/08/the-cancellation-of-western-mainstream-debate-on-whats-happening-in-ukraine/
The cancellation of western mainstream debate on what’s happening in Ukraine
There
has been an enormous cancellation of debate on Ukraine in the
mainstream western media. Google does its part too, making it very
difficult in the west to search for and find genuinely independent
reporting on what is happening. When you search for key issues, such as
Ukrainian casualty rates, ultra-nationalism in Ukraine, presidential
elections or the state of Ukraine’s economy, the computer will normally
say no.
Let’s look at those areas where independent information and analysis is actively withheld from western citizens.
The number of Ukrainian casualties
In
a war that has killed or injured, by most accounts, over a million
people, the issue of which side has suffered most may appear academic.
Why can’t we stop the killing, would be my first question?
But
the western media often claims that Russia has suffered far greater
casualties than Ukraine. They do this to maintain the argument that,
even though Ukraine is losing on the battlefield, it could still win the
war. This is completely false.
The go-to figure used by western
journalists is that 1,500 Russian troops are being lost on the front
line every day. This number has no basis in analysis but is rather
plucked from a Ukrainian military intelligence report of early November.
Recognising that it is in the interests of both sides in a conflict to
embellish the other side’s casualty figures, western officials and
journalists nevertheless take numbers from the Ukrainian Defence
Ministry as truer than the Gospel.
What the Ukrainian side almost
never does is to admit the shocking number of Ukrainian casualties so
far. In a rare announcement on the subject, Zelensky suggested in
December 2004 that 43,000 Ukrainian troops had died. No serious analysts
believes that figure. I have seen estimates of upwards of 700,000
Ukrainian dead or injured. Looking at the six separate exchanges of dead
bodies between the Russian and Ukrainian side during 2024 which have
been reported in the press, six times more bodies were returned to
Ukraine (1611) compared to Russia (273). That doesn’t mean that Ukraine
has suffered six times as many deaths, as Russia has been advancing and
Ukraine retreating. But few serious analysts really believe that Russia
is suffering a higher rate of casualties than Ukraine, quite the
opposite.
Yet talking about Ukrainian casualties in the western
media would reaffirm the assessment many realists have made, that
Ukraine is losing on the battlefield, suffering greater casualties than
Russia, and urgently needs to sue for peace.
The ‘Russia is
suffering more’ narrative is merely a PR tool to bolster Zelensky’s
never-ending quest to keep fighting and to receive additional billions
in support from the west in a battle he can’t win.
Ultra-nationalism in Ukraine
I
have never believed that most Ukrainians are Nazis, but there is a huge
body of evidence to suggest that Nazi-sympathising groups have a
disproportionate influence on state policy in Ukraine. Western media
seldom discusses this.
A recent ultra-nationalist torch parade in
Lviv to commemorate the birthdate of the Nazi collaborator Stepan
Bandera received no western coverage, for example. Nor the extinguishing
of a Jewish menora statue. Any suggestion that there is a deeply
unpleasant ultra-nationalist core at the heart of decision making in
Kiev is written off as pro-Russian propaganda.
It didn’t used to
be like this. In the run up to the Polish and Ukrainian hosting of the
Euro 2012 Football championship, there was widespread reporting in UK
media about the risk of anti-Semitism among Polish and Ukrainian
football fans. The Kyiv Post reported on Svoboda’s anti-Semitic and
racist tendencies when, in 2012, the marginal ultra-nationalist party
form western Ukraine gained seats in the Verkhovna Rada. In the
aftermath of the 2014 coup to remove Viktor Yanukovych, the western
press cautiously reported on the prevalence of ultranationalists like
Right Sector in the Maidan protests; they instead minimise their role,
particularly in the killing of 100 protestors by snipers, despite
evidence suggesting their possible involvement or complicity. In 2015,
politico was still describing Svoboda, Patriot of Ukraine and the
Social-Nationalist Assembly as neo-Nazi organisations. A 2019 photo
essay in the Guardian newspaper suggested the Azov battalion was also
neo-Nazi and had propagated white supremacist views. Yet this same group
was welcomed with open arms into the Reform Club in London by Boris
Johnson in the spring of 2024, who greeted them as ‘heroes’.
It
is now entirely commonplace to see black and red flags of the neo-Nazi
Ukraine Insurgent Army displayed at Ukrainian military ceremonies, even
at the passing out parade of the Anna of Kyiv Battalion that was trained
in France. A cross-chest fascist salute is commonplace in photographs
of Ukrainian army formations. The term ‘Slava Ukraini’ slips off the
tongues of western political leaders more easily that ‘Heil Hitler’, as
they don’t obviously seem to appreciate it’s neo-Nazi associations.
The
most corrosive aspect of Ukrainian ultra-nationalism has been the
relentless quest since 2014 for Ukrainian to be the sole and only
language spoken in Ukraine. This first manifested itself in the
declaration of the Verkhovna Rada on 24 February 2014, two days after
Yanukovych’s ouster, to cancel the Kolesnichenko language law which
allowed for Russian to be considered on of Ukraine’s state languages,
among others. Perhaps more than other reckless moves by the Ukrainian
side, attempting to deny the Russian language to a significant
proportion of Ukraine’s population that speaks Russian as a first
language, was the act that provoked Russian intervention.
By
refusing to talk about the challenge of ultra-nationalism in Ukraine,
western commentators are potentially contributing to its growth and for
the maintenance of a war posture in Kiev. It is also holding back
prospects for Ukraine to emerge from war and continue on its road to
potential future EU membership.
The absence of democratic elections
The
issue of ultra-nationalism is perhaps not seen as a pressing challenge
right now, as Ukraine itself is going through a markedly undemocratic
phase, given the constraints of war. Because western commentators also
seldom talk about the pause in presidential elections in Ukraine.
These
elections in Ukraine should have taken place in Ukraine in March 2024,
but were postponed sine die because the country is under martial law.
This is not necessarily an illegitimate move. Elections didn’t take
place in the United Kingdom for ten years between 1935 and 1945 because
of the intervention of World War II. However, in the United Kingdom, the
government was comprised of a coalition representing the two main
political parties, the Conservatives and Labour. This was despite the
Conservative party having a very large majority in Parliament. During
the war, political power in Britain was shared in the interests of the
nation.
However, in Ukraine, no such division of power exists.
Zelensky has centralised all power into the office of President. By
edict, he can rule on any topic, for example, making it illegal for any
official to hold talks with Russia about peace. For now, any decision to
negotiate with Russia an end of the war appears entirely to be in his
power.
Ukraine, though, has found itself in the perfect storm of
losing the war slowly yet continuing to receive billions of dollars’
worth of aid and loans each year. If Ukraine was losing in a more
dramatic way on the battlefield, there would be more internal pressure
for Zelensky to sue for peace. But, for now, western sponsors appear
happy to keep paying for slow defeat. Western leaders treat Zelensky
like a superhero when he visits, yet Ukrainian opinion polls suggest
that he would lose a Presidential election to Zaluzhny, and that many
Ukrainians believe Zelensky shouldn’t even stand for office again.
Zelensky has now started using excuses such as that it would be
impossible to hold elections with so many Ukrainians living outside the
country; although that didn’t seem to be a problem in the recent
elections in Moldova, where diaspora voters tipped the vote in favour of
Maia Sandu. The real issue here, I suggest, is that with over one
million Ukrainians having moving to Russia, that Zelensky would not wish
for them to vote.
Zelensky has fallen into the same trap that
many dictators fall into, in believing that he is the state, and
therefore indispensable. So, it is not in Zelensky’s interests to
negotiate an end to the war, as that would almost certainly mean an end
to his political career.
Even Trump’s pick for Director of
National Intelligence – Tulsi Gabbard – has described Zelensky as an
unelected dictator. But you will never hear the western media talk about
that. They have spent three years lionising Zelensky and it would be
damaging to their credibility to suggest that, rather then being part of
the solution, he may be part of the problem.
The state of Ukraine’s economy
As
war grinds on, there is considerable western reporting of the state of
Russia’s economy. Despite Russia forecast to grow by over 3% in 2024,
when final figures are released, western journalists portray an imminent
meltdown on the back of admittedly high inflation and interest rates
caused by the massive fiscal stimulus of war spending. However, Russia’s
foundations remain strong with state debt at only 14% and international
reserves topping $620bn (including that part which is currently frozen
by sanctions). There’s no evidence to suggest Russia will be unable to
continue to prosecute a war for the foreseeable future.
On the
other hand, Ukraine’s economy is entirely dependent on foreign handouts.
Of the $93bn budget that was set for 2024, almost fifty percent of that
cost was to be met by lending, either from western donors or domestic
bonds to Ukrainian citizens. Another $12.5bn would be provided in the
form of free handouts from the west, the biggest donor being the U.S.
So, Ukraine racked up over $44bn in new debt in 2024 – or almost one
quarter of GDP – and will do the same in 2025. The economic cost of the
war is completely unsustainable for Ukraine with debt soaring above 100%
of GDP and no plan to repay it. Indeed, it is far from clear that any
donor government will receive back the money they have lent to Ukraine.
And the worst part is, there is no plan to keep paying the bills in
Ukraine after 2026. So, in the entirely plausible – though hopefully
unlikely – eventually that western leaders are persuaded by Zelensky to
keep fighting into 2026, they may be shocked to discover that they will
need to pay for it.
If this was covered in the western media,
there would be far more pressure among western voters to bring the war
to its resolution, because Ukraine isn’t winning but Zelensky is still
writing cheques at our expense.
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