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That night Russian paratroopers landed on the borders north of Kharkov and east of Donetsk. Russian tanks rolled into position. Russian planes began avoiding Ukrainian airspace. Twitter filled up with phone shots of armour trundling through railway stations out of Karelia and Siberia. Knife-wielding mobs clashed in the east and the Russian foreign ministry announced Ukraine has lost control of the security situation.

The morning was sunny and dark as I entered the Ukrainian parliament, the Rada. Before the colonnades and the marble coated walls a table was laid out with pictures of the dead, the frames balanced by crowns of thorns. Piggy ancien régime officials from the ousted government eulogised the EU to the cameras. The eyes of teenage guards in camouflage uniforms stalked secretaries in painful stilettos.

From the gods, I felt I was watching the fall of Ruritania. In London, their fate was being debated by John Kerry and Sergey Lavrov. In the Rada, clownish new leaders vowed to prevent the Kremlin annexing Crimea. Boxer-turned-party-leader Vitaly Klitschko raised the Crimean flag at the podium. Hysterical motions were passed in minutes. The provisional government fluttered with nerves.

This was living through brinkmanship.This was Ukraine's Cuban missile crisis. Deputies reeking of cologne wandered in and out of the chamber wondering if there would really be war.

Collaborators could be found here in the hallway. Yanukovych had gone but his once-loyal deputies from the Party of Regions, representing the east and south, had gone nowhere. Anatoliy Bilznyuk, a deputy and former governor of Donetsk, had the hair, and air, of the Gorbachev generation. He stuck closely to the Kremlin script: there are no Russian troops in Crimea.

He accused the authorities: "When it happens in the West it will happen in the East. This government killed people in Donetsk. The people may call for Russian protection."

Politicians rushed out and began speaking about partisans. Bells rang. And I found myself with the soft-voiced Oleh Tyahnybok, leader of the nationalist Svoboda party, now in government.

Tyahnybok has a pub landlord's face. Russians call him a Nazi. But he was already speaking like the leader of the underground resistance. "The EU needs to support us harder. We need much harder support. The EU and the US gave us a guarantee. Now that's been thrown into doubt."

The Rada whistled with rumours. Russia was ready to strike: "If Russia occupies Eastern Ukraine, it is possible that my men will go and join the partisans to fight the occupation. I don't exclude partisan war in Crimea if Russia annexes it. We have power and army to defend ourselves but if Russia occupies our land . . ."

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hegel`s advocate
April 3rd, 2014
5:04 PM
antifa may be right in his references to "another Nazi who pretends not to be anti-Semitic" but this is still a great and moving piece of journalism by Ben Judah. The muslims of Bradford who voted for George Galloway can now watch him on Iran tv (Youtube) accusing Israel of sending gunmen and snipers to Maidan ! As a gobshite and shit-stirrer Galloway plies his trade. Leonard Cohen in his song `The Future` says the future is murder. Syria being the obvious example. Zizek too sees the rise of anti-Enlightenment Dark Ages `passions`. Julie Burchill called it the new endarkenment. London has gone from being "Londonistan" to now include "Moscow-on-Thames" and "Dubai-on Thames". How far away from the advanced voting of the people of Uruguay are most countries? And what does the opening of the radical Mayday Rooms,88 Fleet St,London signal? In a few weeks a music cd single `Is That You,Darling?` that I have made with some artist friends will be available from Gothic Moon Records website. Send your email info if you want the free International Gothic Honey Newsletter. Viva Israel and Uruguay and more culture with a sense of justice,truth,beauty and humour.

antifa
March 30th, 2014
6:03 PM
From the Svoboda Wiki page. 'Svoboda advisor Yuriy Mykhalchyshyn established a "‘Joseph Goebbels Political Research Centre" in 2005, later changing "Joseph Goebbels" to "Ernst Jünger."[2] Mykhalchyshyn wrote a book in 2010 citing works by Nazi theorists Ernst Röhm, Gregor Strasser and Goebbels.[51][129][149] Elsewhere Mykhalchyshyn referred to the Holocaust as a "period of Light in history".[150]' Perhaps Ben Judah should do his homework before he interviews another Nazi who pretends not to be anti-semitic.

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