By John Wayne on Thursday, 29 February 2024
Category: Race, Culture, Nation

Not an American Proxy War? By Richard Miller (London)

The official narrative that the Ukraine War is about preserving the freedom of the Ukraine to do trans things etc, and that the war is about "democracy," and is not an American proxy war to destroy Russia, just got a beating by a New York Times article. It seems that the US has been poking the Russian bear for at least a decade. For a start, according to the New York Times, the Ukraine underground bases are almost all fully financed and equipped by the CIA. This was not done because of the Russian invasion, but was put together about a decade ago, and continued through three different presidents. The CIA also trained an elite commando unit called Unit 22445, and this began in 2016. The CIA sent out Ukrainian spies to Russia, and spies behind enemy lines are important to the Ukraine now it has moved to sabotage and long-range missile strikes upon Russia.

It is interesting that this information, which blows the official Ukraine narrative out of the water comes out now. Is the US getting ready to abandon the Ukraine? Or is something more sinister, that at present is unclear to us, about to unfold? Either way, hundreds of thousands of lives have been lost for nothing, beyond profit and power for the masters of war of the military industrial complex.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/25/world/europe/cia-ukraine-intelligence-russia-war.html

"Nestled in a dense forest, the Ukrainian military base appears abandoned and destroyed, its command center a burned-out husk, a casualty of a Russian missile barrage early in the war.

But that is above ground.

Not far away, a discreet passageway descends to a subterranean bunker where teams of Ukrainian soldiers track Russian spy satellites and eavesdrop on conversations between Russian commanders. On one screen, a red line followed the route of an explosive drone threading through Russian air defenses from a point in central Ukraine to a target in the Russian city of Rostov.

The underground bunker, built to replace the destroyed command center in the months after Russia's invasion, is a secret nerve center of Ukraine's military.

There is also one more secret: The base is almost fully financed, and partly equipped, by the C.I.A.

"One hundred and ten percent," Gen. Serhii Dvoretskiy, a top intelligence commander, said in an interview at the base.

Now entering the third year of a war that has claimed hundreds of thousands of lives, the intelligence partnership between Washington and Kyiv is a linchpin of Ukraine's ability to defend itself. The C.I.A. and other American intelligence agencies provide intelligence for targeted missile strikes, track Russian troop movements and help support spy networks.

But the partnership is no wartime creation, nor is Ukraine the only beneficiary.

It took root a decade ago, coming together in fits and starts under three very different U.S. presidents, pushed forward by key individuals who often took daring risks. It has transformed Ukraine, whose intelligence agencies were long seen as thoroughly compromised by Russia, into one of Washington's most important intelligence partners against the Kremlin today.

The listening post in the Ukrainian forest is part of a C.I.A.-supported network of spy bases constructed in the past eight years that includes 12 secret locations along the Russian border. Before the war, the Ukrainians proved themselves to the Americans by collecting intercepts that helped prove Russia's involvement in the 2014 downing of a commercial jetliner, Malaysia Airlines Flight 17. The Ukrainians also helped the Americans go after the Russian operatives who meddled in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.

Around 2016, the C.I.A. began training an elite Ukrainian commando force — known as Unit 2245 — which captured Russian drones and communications gear so that C.I.A. technicians could reverse-engineer them and crack Moscow's encryption systems. (One officer in the unit was Kyrylo Budanov, now the general leading Ukraine's military intelligence.)

And the C.I.A. also helped train a new generation of Ukrainian spies who operated inside Russia, across Europe, and in Cuba and other places where the Russians have a large presence.

The relationship is so ingrained that C.I.A. officers remained at a remote location in western Ukraine when the Biden administration evacuated U.S. personnel in the weeks before Russia invaded in February 2022. During the invasion, the officers relayed critical intelligence, including where Russia was planning strikes and which weapons systems they would use.

"Without them, there would have been no way for us to resist the Russians, or to beat them," said Ivan Bakanov, who was then head of Ukraine's domestic intelligence agency, the S.B.U."" 

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