‘Gods of War’: How the US weaponized Ukraine against Russia
TJ
COLES·APRIL 1, 2022
https://thegrayzone.com/2022/04/01/war-us-weaponized-ukraine-russia/
Since the US-engineered 2013-14 coup in Ukraine,
American forces have taught Ukrainians, including neo-Nazi units, how to fight
in urban and other civilian areas. Weaponizing Ukraine is part of Washington’s
quest for what the Pentagon calls “full-spectrum dominance.”
“[I]f you can learn all modalities of war, then you
can be the god of war,” so said a
Ukrainian artillery commander in 2016 while receiving training from the US
Army.
The unnamed commander was quoted by Lt. Claire
Vanderberg, a mortar platoon leader training soldiers as part of the Pentagon’s
Joint Multinational Training Group-Ukraine. The training has taken place at the
absurdly named International Peacekeeping and Security Center, which sits close
to the border with Poland near the Ukrainian town of Yavoriv. Western media
reported Russia’s recent cruise missile attack on the base but chose not to mention what
has taken place inside.
The relationship described above is a snapshot of a
decades-long US-NATO effort to not only pull Ukraine from Russia’s orbit but
to actively weaponize the country against Moscow.
US national security state acknowledges “Russia
is pushing back,” not pushing first
In their internal documents, the Pentagon and other
arms of the US national security state reiterate the same arguments the
anti-war left does when it explains how Ukraine has been used to provoke Russia
into a military escalation. The principal difference is that the Pentagon
speaks from an unabashedly imperialist perspective in which such provocations
are seen as an important component of US power projection.
Recently, the US Director of National Intelligence’s
Annual Threat Assessment reported: “Russia
is pushing back against Washington where it can—locally and globally—employing
techniques up to and including the use of force.” Note: Russia is “pushing
back,” not pushing first.
A report from 2021 by the National Intelligence
Council concedes of
Russia and China: “Neither has felt secure in an international order designed
for and dominated by democratic powers,” with “democratic” meaning the US and
friends. Both Russia and China “have promoted a sovereignty-based international
order that protects their absolute authority within their borders and
geographic areas of influence.”
In October 2017, US Army Field Artillery School
Assistant Commandant, Col. Heyward Hutson, who is responsible for training
Ukrainians, explained: “Ukraine
wants to become a NATO nation, but Russia doesn’t want them to be a NATO
nation. Russia wants to have a buffer zone.” He added that another “problem is
a lot of Eastern Ukraine is pro-Russia so the civilian population there is
divided.” A 2016 US Army War College report reiterated: “Russia’s
basic national security strategy is to keep its ‘neighboring belt stable’, NATO
weak, China close, and the United States focused elsewhere.”
Another, from 2007, explains that
the “pro-reform forces in power since the Orange Revolution” (read: pro-US
forces) “would like to move Ukraine squarely into the Euro-Atlantic community
with only limited deference to Russia.”
The document goes on to note that, at the time, the
“Ukrainian political and military leadership has remained divided over the
question of whether Ukraine should pursue a collective security approach or
retain its neutral status.” It concluded that, while “[m]ost senior [Ukrainian]
commanders have pro-reform credentials… there are still large numbers of senior
leaders within the Main Defense Forces who have no or only limited exposure to
Western training and operations.”
The US-sponsored coup of 2013-14 enabled Washington to
smooth over that contradiction by launching an extensive program to train units
of the Ukrainian Armed Forces.
NATO is “not an exercise in diplomacy and
deterrence as before”
When the Soviet Union collapsed, so too did its
military alliance, the Warsaw Pact. But the West not only refused to disband
its alliance—the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)—it expanded up to
Russia’s borders.
NATO’s own records state
that in 1992, “Just four months after Ukraine’s declaration of independence”
from the USSR, “NATO invited its representative to an extraordinary meeting of
the North Atlantic Cooperation Council, the body set up to shape cooperation
between NATO and the states of the former Warsaw Pact.”
Russia did not propose a similar pact with America’s
neighbors.
In 1994, Ukraine joined the so-called Partnership for
Peace (PFP). Citing the UN Charter, the PFP states that
signatories agree “to refrain from the threat or use of force against the
territorial integrity or political independence of any State, to respect
existing borders and to settle disputes by peaceful means.” A US State
Department primer reveals that
the PFP had an ulterior motive. Its real aim was not neutrality but to move
Ukraine and other signatories closer to NATO. “Participation in PFP does not
guarantee entry into NATO, but it is the best preparation for states interested
in becoming NATO members.”
The primer also lists the 52 actual and planned
military exercises in which PFP members initially engaged on or near Russia’s
borders.
Bill Clinton-era policymakers explained that
“NATO is not merely an exercise in preventive diplomacy and deterrence as
before.” NATO expansion had a political agenda. They considered “NATO
enlargement [a]s a democratization policy.” As above, “democratization” means
pro-US. Citing President Clinton’s 1996 campaign speeches, the report notes
that in their minds NATO “will provide the stability needed for greater
economic development in Central and Eastern Europe.” In other words, post-USSR
NATO was designed, in part, to guarantee US led-“free markets” (which are often
neither free nor markets, but monopolies,) in ex-Soviet nations where
state-ownership of businesses was the norm.
In 1997, NATO and Ukraine signed the Charter on a
Distinctive Partnership. The Charter was a prima facie violation
of the PFP in that it compromised Ukraine’s political independence. It proposed
several areas of NATO-Ukraine cooperation, “including civil emergency planning,
military training and environmental security.” NATO brags: “cooperation
between NATO and Ukraine quickly developed” in the form of “retraining for
former military officers … and invit[ing] Ukraine to participate in NATO-led
exercises.”
Making Ukraine a “military partner of the US”
The US Army says: “Ukraine
has been a military partner of the U.S. dating back to the mid 1990s.” In 1998,
America’s Special Operations Command Europe hosted a Special Operations Forces
(SOF) conference in Stuttgart, Germany. The US Army reports: “This benchmark even brought
military personnel from Moldova, Georgia, and the Ukraine together to view U.S.
SOF demonstrations and discuss opportunities for future Joint Combined Exchange
Training (JCET) and Joint Contact Team Program (JCTP) events.”
In June 2000, the US Marines reported that
the Navy’s amphibious warship, the USS Trenton, had sailed from the
Aegean to the Black Sea and had docked in Odessa (Ukraine). The 24th Marine
Expeditionary Unit (MEU) “got to experience some of Odessa’s history first hand
when they climbed the Prymorsky, or ‘Maritime’, Stairs.” In addition to the
pleasantries, “the focus for MEU personnel and USS Trenton crew [was] NATO’s
next exercise – Cooperative Partner 2000 (CP00) – of which Ukraine is the host
nation.”
In addition to Ukraine’s participation in the US-led
NATO training and exercises, Ukrainian soldiers fought in American-led wars.
After 9/11, they participated in the occupation of Afghanistan via NATO’s
so-called International Security Assistance Force. Ukrainian troops also aided
the US-British-occupation of Iraq. In 2008, the Army lauded their
comrades: “More than 5,000 Ukrainian troops have served in Iraq during
Ukraine’s five years of service in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.”
After backing 2014 coup, US provides “lethal
security assistance”
Established in 2014 during the US-backed coup, the
Ukraine component of the US State Department and Pentagon’s Global Security
Contingency Fund (GSCF) provides tens of millions of dollars-worth of training
and equipment to “develop the tactical, operational, and institutional training
capacities of its Ministry of Defense and National Guard.” The State
Department says: “The
GSCF has also supported Ukrainian Special Operations Forces in developing
tactical and institutional capabilities that are compatible with Western
models.”
According to
one Pentagon-linked journal: “Arsen Avakov, the Minister of Internal Affairs
from 2014 to 2021[, …] enabled the expansion and later integration of
paramilitary forces into the National Guard,” including the nazi Azov
Battalion.
From 2015, the Pentagon’s European Command oversaw the
Joint Multinational Task Force-Ukraine (JMTF-U), in which the US Army and
National Guard trains the Ukrainian Armed Forces. In addition, officers
were trained in the
US through the International Military Education and Training program. The
Congressional Research Service reports that,
“[s]eparately, U.S. Special Operations Forces have trained and advised
Ukrainian special forces.” In addition, the US participates in the annual NATO
Partnership for Peace exercise, Rapid Trident.
In November 2015, supposedly at
the request of the new pro-US regime, the Obama administration sent two AN/TPQ
radar systems to Ukraine. “President Petro Poroshenko had the opportunity to
review the equipment, and was briefed by U.S. military personnel on its
capabilities.”
The US Army later revealed that
the radar system was not purely defensive. A team from US Army Europe, Fort
Sill’s Fires Center of Excellence (FCoE), and the Army Security Assistance
Training Management Organization (SATMO) “conducted four weeks of operator
training.”
Since the initial delivery, “Ukraine received four
additional Q-36 radars … and training by U.S. Army Communications-Electronics
Command with support from the FCoE and USSATMO.” The publication quoted one
trainer as saying that “the U.S. team showed their brigade, battalion and
platoon commanders how to tactically employ the radar system to support fire
and maneuver efforts.”
Since 2016, SATMO’s Doctrine Education Advisory Group (DEAG)
“has advised Ukrainian Security Forces at the operational level to revise
doctrine, improve professional military education, enhance NATO
interoperability and increase combat readiness.” In January this year, DEAG
brought the first load of $200m-worth of
“lethal security assistance, including ammunition for the frontline defenders
of Ukraine.”
US trains Ukrainians to “blend into the local
populace” waging warfare in civilian-heavy areas
One of the more immoral US actions in Ukraine has been
the training of armed forces to fight in civilian areas, goading Russia to
fight in densely-populated locations with the effect of scoring anti-Russia
propaganda points when Russians kill Ukrainian civilians.
In 2015, the US Marines implied that
American service personnel would travel to Ukraine to fight. “Unofficial travel
(leave or liberty) to any country in Africa or the following European countries
[including Ukraine and its neighbors] requires command O-6 level approval … The
countries are subject to change based on the Foreign Clearance Guide (FCG),
Department of State (DOS), Combatant Command, and/or Intelligence threat
notifications.” This suggests preparation for “irregular” warfare.
An undated document published by the US Special
Operations Center of Excellence (SOCE), apparently from around 2017, states that
“the United States should learn from the Chechnya rebels’ reaction” to Russia’s
invasion of Chechnya in the ‘90s. It explains that the “rebels” engaged in
“decentralized operations,” using social media to “blend into the local
populace.” Russia’s enemies used “misinformation” to manipulate Russians into
killing the rebels’ enemies.
The SOCE paper goes on to note that the Army Special
Operation Forces “are trained to thrive in these environments.” The document
explicitly advocates for the US to train irregular forces to provoke Russia:
“The United States should form an interagency working group with the Department
of State, members of the intelligence community and SOCOM,” the Special
Operations Command, which would “serv[e] as the DoD lead/representative.” It
suggests that such a working group “understand that SOCOM actions will need to
be unconventional and irregular in order to compete with Russian modern warfare
tactics.”
By bolstering Ukraine’s armed forces and goading
Russia, US elites have openly used Ukrainian civilians as pawns. For many
years, Ukrainian forces were trained in urban combat by US personnel: i.e., to
fight Russians in densely-populated civilian areas. “Task Force Illini” is
comprised of 150 soldiers from the 33rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team of the
Illinois Army National Guard.
In September 2020, the US Army reported that
Armed Forces Ukraine soldiers “honed their urban operations skills as Task
Force Illini advisors lent their expertise at Combat Training Center in
Yavoriv” – the Western Ukrainian de facto NATO base near Poland’s border.
“Thunderbirds” train Ukrainian in full-scale
vehicular combat
The Oklahoma-based “Thunderbirds” have gone through
several incarnations over the last century. The army unit was originally known
as the 45th Infantry Division and is now the 45th Infantry Brigade Combat Team.
By early-2017, the JMTG-U mission fell under the 7th Army Training Command and
US Army Europe, which paired Thunderbirds from the 1st Battalion, 179th
Infantry Regiment with soldiers from the Ukrainian 28th Mechanized Brigade and
79th Airborne Brigade. Their goal was to prepare Ukrainians for full-on
vehicular combat.
Putin claims that Ukraine is a pawn of NATO. US
propaganda rejects the notion, attempting to prove it by publicly ruling out
Ukraine’s membership in the Alliance. But in April 2017, the US Army admitted that
under the JMTG-U, the Thunderbirds’ mission was “to train the Ukrainian army to
NATO standards, develop their noncommissioned officer corps, and help them to
establish a combat training center, so that in the future, they can continue to
train themselves.” So, if the Ukrainian military is trained to NATO standards
and is overseen by a US puppet president, it might as well be part of NATO,
minus the US obligation to come to its defense.
The proposed center became the Yavoriv Combat Training
Center. The US Army reported that
in October 2017, “a new grenade range was opened. Maj. Montana Dugger said:
“We’ve helped them build long-range maintenance plans so they’ll be able to use
these facilities for the next 20, 30-plus years.”
Seemingly ignorant of the comical doublespeak, the US
Army also explained that
Ukrainian’s Combat Training Center “is being established at the International
Peacekeeping and Security Center near Yavoriv.” Also ironic is that while the
Thunderbirds train a military incorporating neo-Nazi units to fight Russians in
Ukraine, its pre-1930s insignia was a swastika, which
its Oklahoma-based museum describes as
“an Ancient American Indian symbol of good luck.”
CIA covert operations’ goal: “kill Russians”
In addition to the overt but under- or non-reported
events outlined above, the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) has run a
covert, eight-year training program. Why the need for covert ops in the face of
extensive overt projects? The CIA specializes in
assassination, proxy warfare, psychological operations, and false flags. This
suggests that their efforts include tactics prohibited by the Geneva
Conventions.
Yahoo! News reported that
in 2014, under a doctrine called “covert action funding,” “a small, select
group of veteran CIA paramilitaries made their first secret trips to the
frontlines to meet with Ukrainian counterparts.” The training was conducted by
the CIA’s Special Activities Center, which suggests that even if the officers
were “ex-CIA” and Special Forces, they were given access to Langley at
high-levels, making it a de facto official mission.
One operative is quoted as
saying that the officers attempted to Talibanize the Ukrainian paramilitaries
in the sense that the Afghan Taliban had no sophisticated hardware that was
vulnerable to enemy blinding. Ergo, basic, non-tech warfare training was
required. The report says that the trainers:
“taught their Ukrainian counterparts sniper
techniques; how to operate U.S.-supplied Javelin anti-tank missiles and other
equipment; how to evade digital tracking the Russians used to pinpoint the
location of Ukrainian troops, which had left them vulnerable to attacks by
artillery; how to use covert communications tools; and how to remain undetected
in the war zone while also drawing out Russian and insurgent forces from their
positions, among other skills, according to former officials.”
In addition, one former senior source said (paraphrased
by the reporter): “The agency needed to determine the ‘backbone’ of the
Ukrainians … The question was, ‘Are they going to get rolled, or are going to
stand up and fight?”
So who tends to have “backbone,” i.e., a ruthless and
psychopathic fighting spirit? Fascists and ultra-nationalists. Indeed, it has
been widely reported by even US corporate media that the Ukrainian Armed Forces
and paramilitary units were infested with Nazis. Today, the same media refer to
the Nazis as mere nationalists.
Beginning 2015, the CIA’s Ground Department arranged
for Ukrainians to be trained in the US south. The operations continue to the
present and have been expanded under the Biden administration. “The multiweek,
U.S.-based CIA program has included training in firearms, camouflage
techniques, land navigation, tactics like ‘cover and move,’ intelligence and
other areas.” One senior officer is quoted as
saying: “The United States is training an insurgency … to kill Russians.”
In February this year, shortly before the Russian
invasion, it was reported that
the CIA had been “preparing Ukrainians to mount an insurgency against a Russian
occupation.” Against an occupation? Or an insurgency to provoke an occupation?
In addition to the CIA, the US military has its own
covert operations. Under the Resistance Operating Concept started
in 2018, the Pentagon appears to have been training territorial defense units
comprised of Ukrainian civilians. This seems to have led to the creation by
Ukraine’s Special Operations Forces creating a National Resistance Center that
teaches civilians guerrilla tactics.
Ukraine military build-up brings the world to the
brink
After Russia annexed Crimea in 2014, pro-Russian
eastern protests erupted in Donetsk and Luhansk. The Congressional Research
Service (CRS) noted: “The
government in Kyiv responded with military force and employed local militias to
help push back the separatists.” The CRS added that the US leads Britain,
Canada, and Lithuania in the Multinational Joint Commission on Defense Reform
and Security Cooperation. The Pentagon’s European Command had a European
Reassurance Initiative at the time, which is now called the European Deterrence
Initiative. Under this program, dozens of Ukrainians were trained in
Huntsville, Alabama, in RQ-11B, hand-launched Raven drone operations.
Seventy-two drones were sent to Ukraine in 2016.
A January 2016 UK House of Commons Library research
briefing states: “Fighting
between Ukrainian government forces and Russian-backed separatists has killed
more than 9,000 people since April 2014 and injured more than 20,000.” The
briefing goes on to note that after the UN Security Council-backed Minsk II
agreement, which called for a ceasefire and the withdrawal of frontline forces
on both sides, the Ukrainian parliament granted special status and enhanced
autonomy to parts of the Luhansk and Donetsk regions.
The Royal United Services Institute is a UK Ministry
of Defense-linked think-tank. One of its reports concedes that Russia had a
largely “defensive policy” when it came to Ukraine. It says: “Russian
officials have become alarmed by expanding and overlapping Western alliances
from an enlarged NATO and EU, to AUKUS and the Coalition of Democracies
promoted by both the US and the UK.”
Part of Russia’s strategy has its roots in the US-led
destruction of Libya in 2011, the report explains. The NATO bombing of Libya
and overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi “underscored how strong Western alliances were
able to bypass or manipulate the [UN Security Council] UNSC, essentially
circumventing a forum where Russian interests could be protected.”
Indeed, on February 27th, 2022, the UNSC adopted
Resolution 2623, which states: “the
lack of unanimity of its permanent members at the 8979th meeting has prevented
it from exercising its primary responsibility for the maintenance of
international peace and security.”
The absence of international diplomacy, the weakness
of a domestic anti-war movement in the US, and the cheerleading for war by many
leftists and liberals under the doctrine that Putin is an evil villain has
pushed the world as close to terminal nuclear disaster as it has been since the
1962 Cuban missile crisis; perhaps even closer. Many Russians have taken to the
streets to clamor for a ceasefire. After looking the other way as their leaders
spent the past 8 years weaponizing Ukraine against Russia, the Western public has
yet to demand the same.
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