Aimed at Total Destabilization
By Ernst Wolff
On February 12, Christine Lagarde, 
Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, announced that the
 IMF had reached an agreement with the Ukrainian government on a new 
economic reform program. Ms Lagarde’s statement, made in Brussels, came 
only minutes after peace negotiations between the heads of the German, 
French, Russian und Ukrainian governments in Minsk, Belarus, had ended. 
The timing was no coincidence. Washington had been left out of the 
negotiations and now reacted by sending its most powerful financial 
organization to the forefront in order to deliver a clear message to the
 world: that the US will not loosen its grip on the Ukraine, if not by 
sending weapons, then at least economically and financially.
Mme Lagarde’s assertions that the 
program „would support immediate economic stabilization“ and spell „a 
turning point for the Ukraine“ are as far removed from reality as the 
main stream media’s depiction of the IMF as an aid organization helping a
 drowning country to survive in times of trouble. Not a single cent of 
the loans will go to the Ukrainian working people. Instead, the money 
will be used to prop up the Yatseniuk government which is totally 
subservient to US interests, and enable it to service the debts incurred
 by its predecessors in the aftermath of the financial crisis of 2008, 
to pay off most of its military expenses of around $ 250 million per 
month for the continuation of a war against its own population and to 
fill at least some holes in the state budget which are due to the 
country’s ongoing economic deterioration.
The loans will be based on the terms of 
an economic program for Ukraine for 2015 – 2020, passed by the Kiev 
parliament in December 2014, and are tied to harsh conditions laid down 
in a letter of intent, signed by prime minister Yatseniuk and president 
Poroshenko in August 2014. Some of the measures have already been 
implemented, others will follow. Among those already in force is the 
flexible exchange rate regime which has not only led to a 67% 
devaluation of the hrivna, lowering the average monthly wage of 
Ukrainian workers to less than $ 60, but has also opened the doors for 
international currency speculators who have already made millions by 
indebting themselves in hrivnia and repaying their debts in euros and 
dollars.
The rate of inflation, running at 25 % 
in 2014 and expected to rise even higher in 2015, and a hike in gas 
prices by 50 % in May 2014 made survival almost impossible for the 
weakest 20 % of the population who already lived below the poverty line 
in 2013. Among the measures still to come are the layoff of 10 % of the 
country’s public employees and the partial privatization of health care 
and education. The retirement age for women is to be raised by 10 years,
 that for men by 5 years, most benefits for old age pensioners are to be
 abolished, the pharmaceuticals market is to be deregulated. Retirement 
pensions will be frozen, and there will be no more free lunches for 
school children and patients in hospitals. Benefits for victims of the 
1986 nuclear disaster in Chernobyl are to be cut, and the boundaries of 
the officially designated radioactive hazard zone will be revised. The 
country’s monthly minimum wage is to remain at 1,218.00 hrivna ($ 46 at 
the current rate of exchange) until at least November 2015.
None of these measures will serve to 
„improve the living standards for the Ukrainian people“, as cynically 
predicted by Ms Lagarde. Nor will they „restore robust growth“ in an 
economy which is teetering on the verge of collapse, with a central bank
 left with only $ 6 billion in currency reserves and incapable of 
raising new fundi
ng in foreign exchange auctions. 
However, they will contribute to an intensification of the suffering of 
the Ukrainian people, deepen the social divide of a country already torn
 apart by a bloody civil war and lead to its complete disintegration, 
nurturing separatist movements and thus creating perfect conditions for a
 future of violence and despair.
In pursuing this strategy, the IMF is 
totally in line with the geopolitical policies pursued by Wall Street 
and the government in Washington. Both are in deep trouble, with the US 
torn apart by ever-increasing social inequality threatening to explode 
in massive social unrest, while its rulers are drowning in debt and 
losing control over the world financial system. Having dominated global 
markets for seven decades, the United States’ economic decline and a 
shift in global power are ringing in the end of the US dollar as the 
world’s reserve currency and thereby heralding the end of the US’s 
status as the world’s super power.
In a reckless attempt to stop this 
unstoppable process, Wall Street and the White House are waging an 
extremely aggressive campaign against Russia and China who have dared to
 complete an energy deal outside the petro-dollar and whom the US fear 
to be preparing a new, possibly gold-backed, currency that might replace
 the US dollar as the world’s reserve currency. To prevent this from 
happening and to gain control of the vast natural riches of Russia which
 promise enormous profits, Wall Street and the White House are pursuing a
 strategy of regime change in Moscow, undertaking everything possible to
 replace the Russian government by one that is as subservient to US 
interests as that of Ukrainian premier Yatseniuk and his investment 
banker cronies in Kiev.One of the means to this end is the integration 
of Ukraine into NATO in order to step up the military threat against 
Russia. However, as the EU – and Germany in particular – do not seem to 
be willing to join forces in an all-out war against Russia (not out of 
humanitarian considerations, but because of their dependency on Russian 
gas and oil and their anticipation of a new monetary world order no 
longer dominated by the US) and as the majority of Americans, despite a 
massive media campaign demonizing Vladimir Putin, are unwilling to 
support a war that would cost more money and more lives than any war in 
the past and could end up in a nuclear catastrophe, the US government’s 
and the IMF’s main purpose in Ukraine is to deepen and widen the already
 existing economic, social and ethnic conflicts. By doing so, they hope 
to force Vladimir Putin into a long-lasting and costly war that will 
weaken his position at home and eventually pave the way for the 
installation of new rulers in Moscow.
Looking at Ukraine as a part of the 
present geopolitical struggle, one can see that the IMF’s  new loans to 
Ukraine, announced by Christine Lagarde, are anything but a „turning 
point“ signalling the country’s stabilization. They will lead to 
unspeakable human suffering and contribute to the trail of blood which 
Ms Lagarde and the IMF are so used to leaving behind after intervening 
under the pretext of „helping“ countries in times of trouble. 
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