Ep. 108 Whose War Is It Anyway? Pt. 3

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Back again for part 3 in a series on the history of Ukraine, Russia, and U.S. relations. In this episode we look more in detail at the West's funding of militant Nationalists in Ukraine, and the various modern groups. Igor Kolomoisky, and his influence, NATO expansion since the end of the Cold War, the Brzezenski family role in the fight against Russia, F. William Engdahl's history on the 2004 Orange Revolution in Ukraine, and those behind it, & The Bucharest Declaration of 2008, and how it promised Ukraine, and Georgia membership in print. Thank You for listening to the show! Please share, and give a good rating on your preferred podcasting platform.   Cheers, and Blessings   Show Notes   Doug Valentine On U.S. Involvement In Ukraine 
https://youtu.be/jRicZc-cZ0I


 ...it was reported as recently as April 2021 that the ostensibly ‘liberal’ Zelensky wanted to appoint one Serhiy Sternenko (a former leader of the Neo-Nazi ‘Right Sector‘) as the head of the SBU (the Secret Service in Ukraine).
This being despite Sternenko being under investigation for murder and for involvement in a massacre during the events of 2014.
If even Zelensky – the current and apparently ‘liberal’ president – is willing to be in alliance with Nazis and murderers (let alone to seek to place a Nazi *and* murderer in charge of, of all things, the Secret Service), then how much of a ‘minor problem’ or ‘minority’ presence can the Neo-Nazis and ultra-nationalists really be? Svoboda, for the record, is widely acknowledged as a Neo-Nazi party, and was founded by Oleh Tahnybok and Andriy Parubiy, the latter of whom was the chairman of Ukraine’s parliament until 2019 (and was invited to address the US Congress three years ago), and the former having been famously photographed with Senator John McCain during the events of 2014. A key figure in Azov’s political wing, the National Corps Party, is Olena Semenyaka: who has been photographed with the swastika flag and doing a Hitler salute. She was invited to be a visiting fellow at the Vienna-based Institute for Human Sciences.    Great Source For Info On Ukraine! https://burningblogger.com/2022/03/05/the-truth-about-nazism-in-ukraine-and-why-the-media-is-covering-it-up/   
Ukrainian Nationalist Groups• 
White Hammer
Svoboda Party
Azov Battalion
C14
Banderists, See: Stephan Bandera
Centuria
Trident Group
Right Sector
Aidar Battalion
Dnipro Battalion   Andriy Biletsky, leader of Azov’s National Corps political party and defacto head of the Azov movement. Wotanjugend’s “Thule Signal”
Aleksey Levkin Right Sector
Dmytro Yarosh National Resistance
Alexey Svynarenko 
Atlantic Council 2018 
Ukraine's Got A Real Problem w/ Far Right Violence https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/ukrainealert/ukraine-s-got-a-real-problem-with-far-right-violence-and-no-rt-didn-t-write-this-headline/   Kolomoisky, Hunter Biden, & Zelensky Connection 
https://thewallwillfall.org/2022/03/14/how-one-ukrainian-billionaire-funded-hunter-biden-president-volodymyr-zelensky-and-the-neo-nazi-azov-battalion/     The Cold War was a political standoff between the Western allies of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, or NATO, and the countries of the Warsaw Pact, often referred to as the "Eastern Bloc." The latter was dominated by the Soviet Union and included Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria and East Germany. All of these countries underwent significant changes after the Cold War came to an end in 1991. 
https://classroom.synonym.com/happened-eastern-bloc-countries-after-end-cold-war-19984.html   
On 9 November 1990, US Secretary of State James Baker told Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev in the Kremlin’s St. Catherine Hall that NATO would not expand beyond reunified Germany “one inch in the eastern direction.
Strategic Culture


In 1999, Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic joined NATO, amid much debate within the organization and Russian opposition. Another expansion came with the accession of seven Central and Eastern

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