By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, April
14 --
Oleksandr
Turchynov of
Ukraine, in a
telephone call
with UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon,
suggested a
joint
"counter-terrorism"
operation in
Eastern
Ukraine with
UN
peacekeepers.
This and much
reporting on
it ignores
that all UN
peacekeeping
operations
require
authorization
from the
Security
Council, in
which Russia
(and China)
have veto
rights.
But it also
ignores how
the UN
Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations has
lost any
semblance of
impartiality
under Herve
Ladsous, the
fourth
Frenchman in a
row to head
DPKO.
Counter-terrorism
has an echo of
Mali, where
first the
French Serval
forces, then
later a
"re-hatted" UN
Mission under
Ladsous,
MINUSMA, are
un-transparently
in northern
Mali.
Last week,
Ladsous refused
to answer
Press
questions
about UN
Peacekeepers
charged with
gang rape in
Mali, and
before that
about his Congo mission belatedly going after
the Hutu FDLR
militia in
Eastern Congo.
In this
context, the
idea of a UN
Peacekeeping
mission in
Eastern
Ukraine is,
well,
laughable.
When the UN
Security
Council met to
exchange
speeches late
on April 13,
it was two
hours before a
deadline by
Ukraine's
president to
use force in
Eastern
cities.
Russian
Ambassador
Vitaly
Churkin, who
had requested
the meeting, tweeted
photo here,
said he hoped
his "Western
colleagues"
would get on
the phone and
try to get
this "criminal
degree"
rescinded.
Several
speakers cited
the meeting
slated for
Geneva on
April 17. But
Churkin said
if force is
used, why
would Russia
sign off on
that meeting?
US Ambassador
Samantha Power
among other
things cited
to funding,
saying the $1
billion US
loan guarantee
goes into
place on April
14 and the US
wants the
International
Monetary Fund
to move
forward. She
said, "On
Monday, we
will conclude
the $1 billion
loan guarantee
for Ukraine...
We strongly
support
concluding the
agreement
between
Ukraine and
the IMF so the
international
community can
bolster
Ukraine’s
economy."
After the
meeting Inner
City Press asked
Churkin if
Russia was
aware of any
"Western
colleagues"
behind the
scenes asking
for an
extension of
the deadline.
Churkin's
answer
mentioned,
skeptically,
US Secretary
of State John
Kerry.
When Ukraine's
long-time
Ambassador
Yuriy Sergeyev
came to the
stakeout
microphone as
the second and
last speaker
there, Inner
City Press
first asked
him about
any extension
- no, he said,
this was the
last deadline
-- and about
Crimea. Video
here.
On the latter
Sergeyev
pulled out a
sheet of paper
from the UN
Refugee Agency
UNHCR and
cited 4000
displaced
people, using
the word
genocide.
As the last
question,
Inner City
Press asked
about the CIA's
John Brennan.
"That only
happened in
some comments
from Moscow,"
Sergeyev said.
And then he
was gone, less
than two hours
before the
deadline.
Video
here.
Watch this
site.
Inner City
Press had arrived
at the
Security
Council at 7
pm and was
reliably
informed that
there will be
an open
meeting, and a
briefing by UN
Assistant
Secretary
General
Taranco (and
not Under
Secretary
General
Feltman, who
traveled to
Ukraine with
Ban Ki-moon
when he met
the leader of
the Svoboda
Party, and
stayed behind
for days.
Still, just
before 7 pm
there were
only three
cars parked in
front of the
UN, tweeted
photo here,
and no UNTV at
the stakeout.
It was only
Friday April
11 when
Sergeyev was
slated to give
a talk
promoted by UN
scribes
at Rutgers
University in
Newark
entitled
"Seeing
Through the
Spin: Sorting
Fact from
Fiction in
Public
Information."
UN deputy
human rights
official Ivan
Simonovich's
report on
Ukraine is
slated to be
heard, also
behind closed
doors. UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon spoke
on another
topic, Western
Sahara, with
Morocco's King
on Saturday
but the UN
refused to
give a
read-out,
click here for
that.
Watch this
site.
Back on March
30 it was
midnight in
Paris when US
Secretary of
State John
Kerry came to
take two
questions from
two media
about his
meeting with
Russia's
Sergey Lavrov.
One of the two
asked about
Palestine,
Israel and
prisoners.
That, Kerry
declined to
answer, saying
only that he
spoke with
Benyamin
Netanyahu
fifteen
minutes
before.
Kerry was
asked what was
said about the
"Russian
troops." He
replied those
troops are on
Russian soil,
so it's not
about
legality. To
some, this
implies that
Crimea, or at
least Russian
presence
there, is off
the table.
On Crimea, as
if in a
parallel
universe the
UN Security
Council will
hold an "Arria
formula"
meeting on
March 31
featuring a
Crimean Tatar
and a
journalist
from Crimea,
organized by
Council member
Lithuania, it
was confirmed
to Inner City
Press.
Tatar leader
Mustafa
Jemilev has
been calling
for another
referendum in
Crimea.
This meeting
comes a day
after US
Secretary of
Stat John
Kerry and
Russia's
Sergey Lavrov
meeting at the
Russian
Ambassador's
residence in
Paris. While
the US talked
Crimea, Russia
moved on to
Moldova.
Russia's
read-out of
Putin's call
to Obama
raised the
latter issue
and was silent
on the former.
Much was made
of this by
talking heads
on US Sunday
morning shows.
Perennial
David Gergen
mocked Kerry
for turning
his plane
around to meet
with Lavrov,
asking
rhetorically
if this is the
promised
diplomatic
isolation. A
pair of
Michaels,
Hayden and
Morell, mused
about a
commitment for
Ukraine not to
join NATO, or
even the
European
Union. But
what about the
IMF deal?
Soon to be
former elected
official Mike
Rogers, headed
to talk radio,
went beyond
dark talk of a
land bridge to
Moldova to
speculate
about Russia
moving from
South Ossetia
to Armenia.
He's running
for the
Republican
Presidential
nomination, it
seems.
On March 28
while at the
UN Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon took
selective
questions from
the press
about Ukraine
(and Venezuela),
the US White
House issued a
read-out of a
call
between
President
Barack Obama
and Russia's
Vladimir
Putin, here.
Russia issued
a different
read-out, here.
So how
relevant is
the UN?
Later a Senior
Administration
Official
explained,