Of course you can dismiss the following as being information warfare by the Russians or you can demand the answers from your government & media.
31 Mar, 2022 13:37
HomeRussia & FSU
The Ukraine ‘aid’ bill that’s actually a license to kill and defraud. Papers show how Ukraine is used in a Western proxy in a war against Russia
By RT investigative unit
The Ukraine ‘aid’ bill that’s actually a license to kill and defraud
Russian servicemen are pictured by military equipment captured by Russian troops during Russia's military operation in Ukraine, near the village of Huta-Mezhyhirska, in Ukraine. © Sputnik / Russian Defence Ministry
On March 15, US President Joe Biden signed a bill approving a staggering $13.6 billion in aid to Ukraine. Heavily promoted in advance as a vital lifeline to Kiev that would safeguard citizens, defend refugees, and protect "democracy,"references to the supposedly landmark move immediately vanished from the mainstream media following its White House approval, and have remained absent ever since.
One explanation for this informational deficit could well be that in reality, the legislation serves no tangible benevolent ends of any kind, in fact providing an effective blank cheque for proxy war, and untrammelled embezzlement by US government agencies and contractors.
This much is certain from a precursory analysis of the bill’s lengthy underlying text. The term “military” crops up over 350 times, “humanitarian” just 58. What’s more, almost half the headline $13.6 billion wellspring ($6.5 billion) has already been allocated - to cover the cost of weapons shipments to Ukraine and the buildup of NATO forces in January and February this year. In other words, before the war had even formally begun.
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) reports published in the weeks prior to the war commencing highlight some of the gruesome purposes to which this “lethal aid” may have been put. In one representative filing on February 18, its investigators documented how a kindergarten in breakaway Lugansk had been struck by shrapnel, while 20 children were being taught inside. Luckily, they all escaped uninjured.
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The same report noted that, “in violation of withdrawal lines,” OSCE observers identified placement of surface-to-air-missile systems, howitzers, anti-tank guns and multiple-launch rocket systems in government-controlled areas of Donetsk. Neither this blatantly belligerent activity, nor the Organization recording how the overwhelming majority of missile and rocket attacks carried out in the days leading up to Russia's military attack were targeted at breakaway areas by government forces, has ever been mentioned by a Western news outlet.
This may be partially explained by the US, UK and Canada pulling out of the OSCE mission in Ukraine in mid-February, allegedly due to fears of an impending Russian assault – another rationale for the English-speaking trio’s withdrawal could be that revealing the reality of egregious government abuses in Eastern Ukraine was problematic, and politically unpopular at home.
The mainstream code of silence on such crimes against humanity is no longer rigorously maintained. In fact, many current and former Western officials have been unabashed in confirming Washington’s overriding priority is arming Kiev to the teeth, to foment a protracted insurrection and trap Russia in a bloodspattered quagmire, in the manner of the Soviet-Afghan War.
This comparison was drawn favorably by US lawmaker Adam Smith, House Armed Services Committee chair, after legislation to establish a “Ukraine Resistance Fund” was recently drafted. Speaking to MSNBC on February 28, failed presidential candidate Hillary Clinton echoed his endorsement, stating “the model that people are now looking toward” in respect of the Ukraine crisis is the “armed insurgency [that] basically drove the Russians [sic] out of Afghanistan.”
Ironically, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan was ordered by a Ukrainian, Leonid Brezhnev, back in 1979.
Washington’s shameful experience of funding, arming and training the Afghan resistance is much-venerated in modern US foreign policy circles today, despite the strategy creating the conditions that led to the tragedy of 9/11, on the alleged basis it was fundamental to the fall of Communism. However, many mainstream historians - and indeed the CIA’s then-Soviet Affairs chief - largely or completely discount the Afghan war as a factor in the Soviet Union’s collapse.
In its defense, the “aid” bill contains some protocols related to food and medical aid, although details on what will be sent to whom and where are troublingly unforthcoming.
The State Department is afforded lone responsibility for deciding every aspect of distribution, with no apparent obligation on the part of officials to publicly account for any allocations - raising the obvious prospect that the intended beneficiaries of this ostensibly humanitarian disbursement could well be soldiers, mercenaries or guerilla fighters.
Conversely, it could be that these projects are concerned with selling inflammatory, indirect US intervention in the Ukraine crisis to its own population, on a false prospectus.
This was very much the case with ‘aid’ projects during the two-decade-long Western occupation of Afghanistan, as a withering August 2021 official review of US reconstruction efforts in the country during that deplorable period made abundantly clear. The appraisal found the amount of money being spent on reconstruction projects, such as the creation of new hospitals, was “the most important measure of success” for US officials - rather than the projects being worthwhile or even remotely viable.
In turn, false claims of those projects’ ‘success’ were then fed to US lawmakers and citizens in order to convince them that Washington’s ongoing, costly presence in Afghanistan wasn’t the total, counterproductive failure it actually was. This “institutional drive to produce good news stories” produced a situation in which Washington spent money “faster than it could be accounted for,” so as to generate positive press coverage “as quickly as possible.”
As part of this cynical push, representatives of the US Agency for International Development (USAID) were frequently “bulldozed” by their military counterparts into pursuing projects in areas of Afghanistan “far too dangerous for them to have a stabilizing effect.” In essence, the bigger the associated risks, the greater the ‘success’ that could be claimed.
The Agency was therefore forced to depend on contractors, and “sometimes unable to establish with confidence even the most basic information” about a project’s progress as a result. Despite this, USAID’s reliance on these external actors endured unabated, creating a cottage industry of companies willing to defraud the Agency, and suppliers eager to help them do it.
On the subject of USAID, the organization is frequently referenced in the new aid bill, for example sharing a $145-million slush fund of “aid to independent media, journalists and civil activists” and counteract “disinformation and provide factual data about the situation in Ukraine” with the US Agency for Global Media (USAGM), parent of the CIA-created state-run outlets Radio Free Asia and Voice of America, among others.
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USAID’s status as a “humanitarian” organization has long-been questioned, with many charging that it acts as an effective CIA front. A proposal published by the Agency’s internal “global development lab” in February 2019 should surely put to bed any doubts that it doesn’t.
The paper advocated for USAID staffers to be trained as special operations forces in order for them to effectively and intimately collaborate with military and intelligence agencies, so they act as “super enablers” and optimally serve US “national security” interests through “a mix of offensive, defensive, and stability operations in extremis conditions.”
With the US spending more on defense than the next 11 countries combined, and the White House having just requested a $31-billion war chest for the 2022/23 financial year, bringing the total budget to $813 billion, it’s no wonder Washington only views matters through a military lens. It has no other choice.
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White House urges Congress to pass both, but weapons for Ukraine are deemed more urgent
Democrats will make a separate $10 billion coronavirus funding proposal so the nearly $40 billion in weapons and other aid to Ukraine could get approved more quickly ahead of a “critical” deadline, US President Joe Biden said on Monday.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-California) originally had funding for Covid-19 treatments, tests and vaccines tacked onto the $33 billion proposal for supplemental aid to Ukraine. Republicans, who fully backed funding Ukraine but had a problem with how the Covid funding proposal would affect border policy, threatened to block it in the Senate.
In a statement on Monday, Biden said he would accept splitting the bill if that would get the Ukraine funds – which have since grown by another $6.8 billion – approved faster.
“We cannot afford delay in this vital war effort. Hence, I am prepared to accept that these two measures move separately, so that the Ukrainian aid bill can get to my desk right away,” Biden said.
“This aid has been critical to Ukraine’s success on the battlefield. We cannot allow our shipments of assistance to stop while we await further Congressional action. We are approximately ten days from hitting this critical deadline,” he added.
Biden did say helping Americans combat the virus was “equally vital” as helping Ukraine, as “more Americans will die needlessly” without timely funding. The US will also miss out on new treatments and “next-generation vaccines under development,” as well as fall behind on “our effort to help lower-income countries get [covid] vaccines into arms,” the president added.
Democrats wanted to use the Covid funding to get rid of Title 42, a policy that allowed the US to turn away or deport migrants caught crossing the border illegally, on account of the pandemic. Republicans objected.
They did not object to spending more money on Ukraine, however, reportedly agreeing to tack on $3.4 billion in food aid and another $3.4 billion for the US military to replace the equipment Biden sent to Ukraine from the Pentagon stockpiles, according to Roll Call. The Ukraine bill is still being finalized, and could appear in the House as early as Tuesday.
Earlier on Monday, Biden signed the “Ukraine Democracy Defense Lend-Lease Act Of 2022,” a WWII-era scheme to funnel weapons and other equipment to the government in Kiev, approved by Congress at the end of April. The signing was scheduled for the day Russia celebrates as the anniversary of its WWII victory over Nazi Germany – which Biden completely ignored, choosing instead to bring up the 1950 founding of the precursor to the EU, and praise the “Allied nations’ defeat of the scourge of fascism in Europe” on May 8 – the date on which the Nazis surrendered to the US and UK troops on the continent, but not the Soviets.
This stinks to the high and nonexistent Heaven... I don't think it's just Biden and his family, but many FUKUS, EU leaders and their corporate overseers that have A LOT TO LOSE, if Russia (when) Russia prevails. Ukraine isn't the US private laundromat and corruption club. I think nearly the whole of NATO has been availing itself of Ukraine's whoring 'services' since the coup and perhaps before.
They just don't throw this kind of money around, even at the weapons manufacturers unless key people are in sheer panic over what could be uncovered and shown to the rest of the world. Russia has already begun with the bio-labs. This article already provides the loading of the now 'smoking gun', as always happens. What also happens is what Clarence Darrow called 'mobilizing of the Liars Brigade' to warrant use of that loaded gun.
Heaven might be nonexistent, but if these vermin, who are in a corner, feel like their end is inevitable or Putin for good reason feels his to be, either side won't hesitate to take the rest of us with them. Putin has stated how Russia will emerge victorious no matter the outcome.
"We will go to Heaven. They won't have time to repent."
Well said. As usual.
If true, it appears we are not giving Ukraine enough military aid.
Did you ever win a case in court?
@FrayedBear According to you I too dumb to have ever been a lawyer, or for that matter a member of the human species.
I'll give you a hint. I am retired and living very comfortably. Losers don't get to retire comfortably.
@Alienbeing do you have a conscience? I doubt it.
And one person's "very comfortably" is usually evidence of a sociopathic wasteful selfish life at the expense of all humanity. Pablo Escobar, Al Capone, John Dillinger & Lucky Luciano all thought themselves very comfortable.
Losers don't live, retire or refute stupid* people's claptrap. I'm doing it every day with you.
As for what you think I think of you I can only have thoughts based upon the information supplied by you.
You must be extremely narcissistic if you think I would waste my time gaining independent evidence as to why you choose your site name or have previously chosen to tell me that you are a retired lawyer. Are you projecting?
That your professional association condones the unprofessional standard of writing & argument displayed by you time & again on these pages suggests that its professional standards are at a kindergarten level if at all existant.
@FrayedBear Your reply is the usual garbage. I never expect an intelligent response from you, because you have proven you aren't intelligent. In your current response you prove something new; you have no psychoanalysis expertise. What a surprise!
Continue with your posts, I enjoy seeing you hang yourself over and over
@Alienbeing I've just been notified that you have addressed me in a group that is not available to me. How childish.
@FrayedBear How am I supposed to know what groups are available to you? How stupid can you be?
@Alienbeing how cowardly are you?
@FrayedBear Your reply immediatly above makes absolutly no sense. What are you replying to?
It looks as if you really need help.