Wayne Madsen
Editor’s note: Now that security forces in Ukraine are allegedly shooting protestors,
corporate media coverage in the United States will focus on the
violence and calls for President Viktor Yanukovich to step aside. The
situation in Ukraine, however, is not entirely as the corporate media
would have us believe. Wayne Madsen provides a look at the effort by the
United States to destabilize not only Ukraine, but Russia. The crisis
in the Ukraine provides an additional headache for Russia as it deals
with terrorist threats on the eve of its hosting the Winter Olympics in
Sochi.
Police crackdown on the streets of Kiev.
One “themed revolution”, for which the U.S. Agency for International
Development (USAID) and its allied operatives of the National Endowment
for Democracy (NED) and the George Soros Open Society Institute have
become so infamous, went virtually unnoticed in the English language
Western media.
In 2010, anti-Russian government provocateurs, financed by Western
non-governmental organizations (NGOs), staged a number of protests
featuring plastic blue buckets. The buckets were meant to symbolize the
portable flashing blue lights, known in Russian as migalki, used atop
many vehicles for Russian VIPs, including government officials and
private businessmen.
The themed blue bucket protests were directly linked to the
“pro-democracy” activities of USAID in Russia. American-backed
provocateurs began placing blue buckets on top of their cars to mock the
use of blue lights by officials. In response, three parties represented
in the State Duma, United Russia, A Just Russia, and the Liberal
Democratic Party, proposed a bill to crack down on the use of the blue
buckets by protesters who were intent on causing traffic problems,
sometimes resulting in vehicle accidents.
U.S. NGO support for the “blue bucket” revolution preceded by a year
the nomination by President Barack Obama of anti-Russian activist
Michael McFaul as the U.S. ambassador to Russia. McFaul began his tenure
in Moscow by opening up the U.S. embassy to all sorts of anti-Russian
political activists, provocateurs, and troublemakers.
These political provocateurs, which include People’s Freedom Party
leader political blogger Aleksey Navalny, “Left Front” Sergey Udaltsov,
chess celebrity Garry Kasparov, Russian “cover girl” Ksenia Sobchak,
“Solidarity” co-leader Ilya Yashin, Boris Nemtsov, neo-fascist National
Bolshevik Party leader Eduard Limonov, Yabloko Party leader Sergey
Mitrokhin, and Lev Ponomarev were all well-schooled in the use of
various devices and contrivances to gain media attention for their
political causes and protests.
Themed street protests were used by Gene-Sharp-trained activists in a
number of CIA- and Soros-advanced political operations. The first such
group to successfully oust a government was OTPOR, which led protests
that ejected Slobodan Milosevic as president of Serbia. Other groups
backed by U.S.-trained activists included Kmara in Georgia, Pora in
Ukraine, KelKel in Kyrgyzstan, and Zubr in Belarus.
Sharp’s call for cultural, religious, and historical icons to be
ridiculed in small and large mass protests have often led to violent
responses, thus driving a stake through Sharp’s contention that his
blueprint for political change is “non-violent.”
McFaul was recruited from the right-wing, neo-conservative Hoover
Institution at Stanford University to serve as Obama’s envoy to Russia.
McFaul served on the boards of a number of Cold War-oriented NGOs,
including Freedom House, the Soros-linked Eurasia Foundation, and the
USAID-funded NED.
The coordinator of the “Society of Blue Buckets” was Peter Shkumatov.
The activities of the Shkumatov and his traffic disruptors included
some of McFaul’s frequent embassy guests, notably Nemtsov and Udaltsov.
One Blue Bucket protester was shown wearing an Obama t-shirt in a
video uploaded to YouTube on May 5, 2010. The video was produced by
Nikita Tatarsky for the CIA- and Soros-controlled Russian service of
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Other Blue Bucket protesters confused
police by placing blue buckets on top of their vehicles, resulting a
traffic snarls in downtown Moscow. If it were discovered that the
Russian embassy in Washington organized protesters to place
official-looking devices on their vehicles there would be two immediate
reactions: criminal charges for impersonating law enforcement officers
and a strong diplomatic protest with the Russian government.
It was not until September 2012, over two years after USAID was
linked to the Blue Buckets, that President Vladimir Putin ordered USAID
out of Russia. Some 57 NGOs in Russia were said to receive official
financial support from USAID. That number did not count the unofficial
support rendered by USAID to other groups, some with close links to
terrorist groups in the Russian Caucasus region, particularly Chechnya
and Dagestan.
In keeping with Sharp’s protest group template, the Society of Blue
Buckets was divided into wings of “doves” and “hawks” all under an
official organization with an official website called ru-verderko.ru,
which translates to English as “ru-pail.ru.” By not calling the website
“blue bucket”, the provocateurs left open the possibility of changing
their target to other migalki colors, including the red used for
emergency and police vehicles in the event the protesters decided to
raise the stakes in their anti-government activities.
The Blue Bucket organization was careful to disseminate the
information that it would be supported by dues and donations so that it
would not be connected to McFaul and the U.S. embassy. However, a number
of Russian disruptive organizations received “donations” from entities
linked directly to Soros, USAID, and NED. The “Blue Buckets” registered
with the Russian government as a public organization by paying the
standard fee of 35,000 rubles, a little over $US 1000.
Russia accuses West of meddling in Ukraine.
Blue Bucket protesters were witnessed walking across official
vehicles with “migalki” lights even on Red Square. Comparatively, if
protesters jumped on US Secret Service vehicles at the White House,
there would be a very good chance they would be shot dead by law
enforcement. Russian authorities displayed relative restraint in dealing
with the Blue Buckets.
The anti-Christian and anti-Muslim FEMEN group, which was established
by American Zionist financiers in Ukraine, also took up the Blue Bucket
cause. Topless FEMEN protesters were seen at various Blue Bucket
protests around Moscow making obscene gestures with blue buckets.
The use of cheap trinkets like blue buckets in Russia and white
clothing and eye coverings in China are examples of the subterfuge
engaged in by the Sharp / Soros / NED public opinion manipulators. In
Indonesia, it was the cheap rubber and plastic sandal that became the
symbol of an aborted popular movement against the government. In 2012, a
15-year old bot was sentenced to a five-year prison sentence for
allegedly stealing the old worn-out sandals of a police officer that
were lying outside a police station in Palu in central Sulawesi. The
sentence resulted in a massive protest in which people left sandals and
flip-flops outside of police stations across Indonesia. The movement,
which was linked to USAID, Soros, and NED manipulators, never got off
the ground and President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was not driven from
office.
While the democracy manipulators brag about their successes, they
never want to write or talk about their failures, of which there are
many. The Blue Bucket, White, Sandal, Lotus, Jasmine, Cedar, Green, and
Orange Revolution II capers in Russia, China, Indonesia, Egypt, Tunisia,
Lebanon, Iran, and Ukraine, respectively, were all miserable failures…
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