‘F**k the EU’: Nuland’s decade-old Maidan quip has never been more true
By: Rachel Marsden
At the height of the 2014 coup in Ukraine, Washington’s ‘Maidan midwife’ uttered a phrase that has held true ever since
This week, Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky – and his Western backers –
celebrated the tenth anniversary of the start of the Maidan protests in Kiev. Of
course, they led to a US-backed coup and, ultimately, the current conflict with
Russia.
“Ten years ago, we began a new chapter in our struggle. Ten years ago,
Ukrainians launched their first counteroffensive. Against lawlessness and an
attempt to rob us of our European future. Against unfreedom. Year after year,
step by step, we make every effort to ensure that, among the other stars on the
EU flag, which represents the unity of European nations, our star shines as
well. The Ukrainian star,” Zelensky tweeted.
Except that, in reality, it’s been a full ten years now of “f**k(ing) the EU,”
as US State Department fixture Victoria Nuland was caught saying back then in a
leaked conversation with then ambassador to Ukraine, Geoffrey Pyatt.
“F**k the EU,” she demanded. And, well, they sure did exactly that.
And it was no one-night stand, either. Instead, it has turned into a
marathon, sadistic orgy on the EU people who are endlessly getting the shaft in
this whole mess while the bloc’s chief whip-cracker, unelected Commission
President Ursula von der Leyen, tells Western Europeans to bend over and take
the pain for Ukraine as she and her pals blow up their own economies with
endless sanctions against Russia. Not to mention that her fellow Germans just
sat there like a bunch of masochists while their own cheap energy supply got
blown up.
“F**king the EU” for ten years straight has been good for her though,
apparently. “Ten years of dignity. Of pride. Of striving for freedom. The cold
winter nights of Euromaidan have changed Europe forever. Today, it is clearer
than ever. The future of Ukraine is in the European Union. The future that the
Maidan fought for has finally begun,” von der Leyen said.
Meanwhile, speaking of masochists, Germany is currently panicking over money
problems, largely as a result of selling out its own industry to the US-led
agenda for Ukraine. “The house is in flames,” one member of the ruling coalition
told Bloomberg. Well, it could be a fire. Or it could be German Chancellor Olaf
Scholz lighting some romantic candles while tweeting, “10 years ago, the Maidan
became a symbol of freedom, democracy and sovereignty. The courage of the
Ukrainians will not be forgotten. Ukraine is part of Europe – and we stand by
its side.” Scholz still hasn’t bothered to tell us who blew up the Nord Stream
pipeline network carrying Russian gas into Germany – his country’s economic and
industrial lifeline – an attack which happened to come just a few months after
Scholz himself stood right beside Joe Biden while the US president openly
threatened the pipeline’s existence. With the International Monetary Fund
forecasting a recession for the German economy, Scholz has since resorted to
congratulating himself for securing deals like the one to replace a whopping 2%
of the pricey American liquified natural gas on which Berlin is now dependent,
with Nigerian gas – maybe by 2026.
It’s also quite the revisionist history from Zelensky, saying that Euromaidan
was about Ukraine fighting against being robbed of its “European future” and
freedom. In reality Ukraine already had freedom to deal with both Russia and the
West, was courted by everyone like the hottest girl in town, and the country’s
president at the time, Viktor Yanukovich, had, in fact, just refused to sign an
agreement with the EU, which would have reduced Ukraine’s diversity of options
and its freedom, and would have put all its eggs in the Western basket. All that
is the exact opposite of what Zelensky is now spinning.
Zelensky is also getting poetic about something he calls the Ukrainian star –
whatever that is – shining among the stars on the EU flag that represent the
bloc’s unity. In any case, some EU leaders have already thrown cold water on the
wet dream of Ukraine’s integration into the bloc, which would require unanimity
among all member states.
Not only is Zelensky fantasizing about Ukrainian stars, but also about
Western European unity. But even the bloc’s chief diplomat, Josep Borrell, whose
actual job is to present the EU’s best face to the world, isn’t quite that
delusional. Borrell has repeatedly referred to major dissent within the bloc on
everything from Ukraine and US-China competition to migration, which Borrell has
called nothing less than a potential “dissolving force.” None of this sounds
like the quaint little constellation of 27 countries among which Zelensky
already sees Ukraine. More like a Big Bang.
The thing about romanticizing relationships is that it can turn out to be a
bummer when you have to deal with real life. And here in the real world, Ukraine
is already getting into fights with other European countries, most recently
Poland and Slovakia, whose truckers, by the thousands, have been blockading
roads to three border crossings for days, and effectively blocking humanitarian
aid. They apparently feel that they’re losing business amid the Ukraine conflict
and that their government isn’t doing anything about it. So there isn’t even an
engagement date in sight between Kiev and the EU, let alone a wedding day, and
already there’s trouble in paradise.
Too bad all these elites can’t just get a room already and leave the rest of us
out of it.
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN