How to Hide a Nazi Army

West backs Nazis in Ukraine, compares Putin to Hitler for trying to stop them.

March 12, 2014 (Tony Cartalucci - New Eastern Outlook) - Blanket denials have been made across the Western media regarding the presence of Neo-Nazis among the ranks of "Euromaidan" mobs that had rioted in Kiev for months before finally executing a coup, ousting the democratically elected government of Ukranian President Viktor Yanukovych. A prime example of this was the Daily Beast’s article, “Putin’s Crimea Propaganda Machine,” which disingenuously twists reality by stating: 
...Putin needed a story to spin, no matter how full of holes, and thus the neo-Nazi claims. But as it turns out, Crimea’s streets are not exactly paved with extremists—a fact that has proven troublesome for Russian state TV channels looking to find token far-right bogeymen.
And of course, Crimea's streets are not full of Neo-Nazis, because the population of eastern Ukraine wholly rejects the abhorrent ideology of the "Euromaidan's" Nazi vanguard, and backs Russian forces who have been permanently stationed there for years under treaty and as a consequence, have deterred any abusive incursions by the far-right into the region. 

Still, the impression the Daily Beast would like to get across to readers is that the concept of Neo-Nazis leading the so-called "revolution" in Kiev, is absurd. In fact, the truth that Kiev's Independence Square was full of Nazis, was right under the nose of the entire world - with a handful of Western journalists even admitting as much. 

Nazis Hiding in Plain Sight 

The impressive pictures broadcast by the Western media of mobs filling Independence Square featured scores of large flags waving in the crisp cold air of Kiev. Prominent among them were the blue and yellow banners of Svoboda, with a peculiar 3-fingered salute stamped on each one. The odd iconography, had the Western media investigated, is in fact a revised Nazi salute, a play on the Ukrainian coat of arms and German Neo-Nazi Michael Kühnen's three-fingered salute. Before that, Svoboda used the more obvious "Wolfsangel," popular among Neo-Nazis and a symbol used by the Waffen SS during World War II. 


Image: Neo-Nazi flags unfurled side-by-side with the European Union's - with the revised 3-fingered salute on Svoboda's party flag, the familiar Nazi black and red of "Right Sector," and flags of the Hitleresque "Fatherland Party," all hidden in plain sight in front of the world. The Western media's selective omissions and its intentional failure to investigate and expose the true nature of an opposition they portrayed as "pro-democracy" and "pro-West" helped build international support for a movement the global public would otherwise have recoiled in disgust from. 

Svoboda was officially linked to paramilitary organizations until as late as 2007, and is still loosely affiliated with them. The organization has attempted to "soften" its image, or in other words, bury its extremist ideology under a moderate facade to covertly move it forward. 

Spiegel Online would report in its article, "'Prepared to Die': The Right Wing's Role in Ukrainian Protests," that:
"The Svoboda party also has excellent ties to Europe, but they are different from the ones that Klischko might prefer. It is allied with France's right-wing Front National and with the Italian neo-fascist group Fiamma Tricolore. But when it comes to the oppression of homosexuality, representative Myroshnychenko is very close to Russian President Vladimir Putin, even if he does all he can to counter Moscow's influence in his country. 
"The EU is the only possibility for us to defend ourselves against Russian pressure," he says. He and his party see the alliance with Klitschko as being purely tactical. Klitschko, after all, would like to limit the powers of the president while Svoboda dreams of a country with a strong leader. 
Myroshnychenko was press spokesman for the Ukrainian national football team in the lead up to the 2008 European Championships, but he isn't exactly cosmopolitan. He would even like to see foreign professional football players deported because they "change Ukraine's ethnic map."

There have been other, similar incidents. In a 2012 debate over the Ukrainian-born American actress Mila Kunis, he said that she wasn't Ukrainian, rather she was a "Jewess." Indeed, anti-Semitism is part of the extremist party's platform; until 2004, they called themselves the Social-National Party of Ukraine in an intentional reference to Adolf Hitler's National Socialist party. Just last summer, a prominent leader of party youth was distributing texts from Nazi propaganda head Joseph Goebbels translated into Ukrainian. 
Without the nationalists' tight organization, the revolt on Maidan Square would long since have collapsed. But Svoboda also embodies the greatest danger to the protest movement. The party's foot soldiers, with their muddled, right wing doctrine, aren't likely to hold back for much longer."
Image: Signed by Svoboda party leader Oleh Tyahnybok,
a 2005 open letter titled, "Stop the Criminal Activities of
Organised Jewry" exemplifies the ideologies of groups
leading the so-called "Euromaidan" uprising - groups
the West has openly and eagerly supported.  
Speigel Online notes what other independent geopolitical analysts have been saying since the mobs took to Kiev's streets months ago, that the "pro-democracy," "pro-European" facade was propped up by literal Nazis who were armed and fully backed by the US - and without which, the entire movement would have collapsed. 

The BBC admitted of current Svoboda leader Oleh Tyahnybok, in a 2012 article titled, "Svoboda: The rise of Ukraine's ultra-nationalists," that: 
But while the party's radical past can be papered over, it cannot be erased. Its name until 2004 was the "Social-National Party" and it maintains informal links to another group, the Patriots of Ukraine, regarded by some as proto-fascist. 
In 2004, Tyahnybok was kicked out of former President Viktor Yushchenko's parliamentary faction for a speech calling for Ukrainians to fight against a "Muscovite-Jewish mafia" - using two highly insulting words to describe Russians and Jews - and emphasising that Ukrainians had in the past fought this threat with arms.

In 2005, he signed an open letter to Ukrainian leaders, including President Yushchenko, calling for the government to halt the "criminal activities" of "organised Jewry", which, the letter said, was spreading its influence in the country through conspiratorial organisations as the Anti-Defamation League - and which ultimately wanted to commit "genocide" against the Ukrainian people.
Astonishingly, it would be overt Jew-hater Oleh Tyahnybok that US Senator John McCain would share the stage with in Kiev during the climax of "Euromaidan" in support of the "pro-European" mobs.  


Image: US Senator John McCain in Kiev flanked on his left side by overt Jew-hater and Svoboda party leader, Oleh Tyahnybok. The West's willingness to ally itself with violent bigots, racists and literal Nazis exposes its "values" as nothing more than a selectively upheld facade easily disposed of when inconvenient - and entirely designed to couch its true, corporate-financier driven hegemonic designs behind. 

While the opposition that has now seized Kiev claims to share "European values," one must wonder just what those values are. While the West uses alleged anti-homosexual policies in Moscow as a pressure point against Russia, it gladly allies itself with anti-homosexual bigots and racists in Kiev. Apparently, "European values" are whatever can be selectively leveraged when beneficial, and blatantly ignored when inconvenient.

While other groups among the Ukrainian opposition exhibit their extremist views more overtly than Svoboda, like Right Sector, there are also opposition parties that conceal their bigotry, racism, and right-wing ideology with more skill.  This includes protest leaders in Kiev such as Arseniy Yatsenyuk and Oleksandr Turchynov, both of deposed, disgraced, convicted criminal, former Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko's All Ukrainian Union or "Fatherland" party. Both have taken controversial stances regarding homosexuals. 

Arseniy Yatsenyuk would go as far as stating - when his views regarding homosexual marriage were labelled "conservative" - that:  

 "I do not agree. If a man has normal views, then you label him a conservative, but those who use drugs or promote sodomy – you label them a progressive person. All of these are perversions." 
And despite all of this, news organizations like the BBC have attempted to endear global audiences to Ukraine's pro-EU Nazis in articles like, "Ukraine protests: Singing in the cold." 

Russia's Standing Up to Nazis - And Paying the Price (Again)  

Read the rest at New Eastern Outlook...