Friday, 3 May , 2024

Ukraine

Kiev names street after Nazi collaborator

Kiev’s city council has renamed one of the city’s major streets after Roman Shukhevich, a Ukrainian nationalist and Nazi officer who was commander of...

New Advances of Democracy in Europe: Deputies Reversing the Referendum Verdict...

SP votes with the people as Senate overturns referendum result on Ukraine treaty After the voters had given a clear NO to the Association Agreement...

Let’s Call Western Media Coverage of Syria By Its Real Name:...

By Michael Howard In his essential study of the ongoing crisis in Ukraine, University of Kent Professor Richard Sakwa writes that, somewhere down the road,...

Tillerson: Never Peace with Russia

Tillerson Vows Forever Sanctions on Russia By Stephen Lendman According to acting State Department spokesman Mark Toner, Tillerson spoke to (illegitimate US-installed putschist) Ukraine (puppet)...

Prof. Cohen on the Increasing Danger of a US-Russia War

‘Words Are Also Deeds’: Unverified Stories and the Growing Risk of War With Russia The US narratives for which there are as of yet no...

Is Trump testing Putin?

The following article was published under the headline "Is Russia Testing Trump?". One way to read it is at is written. Another is to use a...

“New Yorker” on the New Cold War

By I.Soft Targets On April 12, 1982, Yuri Andropov, the chairman of the K.G.B., ordered foreign-intelligence operatives to carry out “active measures”—aktivniye meropriyatiya—against the reëlection...

Obama, Kissinger and Nuland: Cyprus 1974 – Cyprus 2017

In 1974 Kissinger was able to prepare his Cyprus coup first by deceiving everybody about his real intentions, including the Greek dictator Ioannides, Archbishop Makarios and Soviet FM Gromyko (when he met both of them in Nicosia weeks before the coup), the British government and even his own President Richard Nixon, probably exploiting his serious troubles with Watergate.

Blacklist Promoted by the Washington Post Has Apparent Ties to Ukrainian...

Last month, the Washington Post gave a glowing front-page boost to an anonymous online blacklist of hundreds of American websites, from marginal conspiracy sites to flagship libertarian and progressive publications. As Max Blumenthal reported for AlterNet, the anonymous website argued that all of them should be investigated by the federal government and potentially prosecuted under the Espionage Act as Russian spies, for wittingly or unwittingly spreading Russian propaganda.

Détente Now: A New Call for Peace, Security, and Cooperation

A transatlantic appeal for a new policy of détente with Russia has been launched. The declaration’s authors invite the general public to join leading political figures and social activists who have publicly rallied to support the call.