Global Research News Hour - Regime Change in the Ukraine: Euromaidan Uprising and the Grand Chessboard - 02/10/14

Published: Feb. 10, 2014, 11:02 p.m.

b'As the world focuses its attention on the Olympic Games in Sochi and controversies around the Russian government\\u2019s apparent hostility toward gay and lesbian rights, a far-reaching drama is playing out in the former Soviet Republic of Ukraine.The Eastern European country, independent since the dissolution of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics in 1991, has been gripped by a series of protests that may very well determine its long-term political fate.The Euromaidan was apparently named after the Independence Square in Kiev, Maidan Nezalezhnosti, where a major protest was held on the evening of November 21 of last year. The gathering of 1,000 to 2,000 people was staged in opposition to the abandonment by the Yanukovych government of an Association Agreement with the European Union.[2]Further protests ensued until a particularly violent crackdown by Ukrainian police on November 30. [3] From that point forward, demonstrations intensified and grew larger in number.The protests seemed to take a much more violent turn by mid-January after the Ukrainian Parliament pushed through a sweeping 100 page anti-protest law. [4] The law essentially banned the installation of tents, stages or amplifiers in public places, all critical components of the Euromaidan up to that point.Two and a half months later, the law has been repealed, Yanukovych\\u2019s Cabinet has been dissolved, and detained protesters granted amnesty on condition of an end to the occupations of government buildings. [5] Nevertheless, the protests continue and demands to end \\u201cgovernment corruption\\u201d and the resignation of the Russian President remain unrelenting.Complicating the situation is the role of\\xa0militant fascist groups\\xa0which appear to be influencing the protest movement, and are reminiscent of Hitler\\u2019s Brown Shirts and Mussolini\\u2019s Black Shirts from an earlier era.Foreign governments appear to be influencing the situation as well. Russian President Vladmir Putin\\u2019s offer of substantial reductions in the cost of Russian natural gas and their willingness to purchase $15 billion in Ukrainian Government Eurobonds could be read as a bribe to keep Ukraine under Russian influence. [6]Meanwhile, Western governments, including those of the US and Canada, are clearly expressing support for government opposition demonstrators. Following harsh crackdowns before and during the G20 protests in 2010, it is hard to imagine the Canadian government behaving much differently if faced by similar demonstrations which have included the occupation of government buildings and the use of\\xa0molotov cocktails being hurled at police.This week\\u2019s Global Research News Hour probes some of the less talked about aspects of the Euromaidan with three analysts.University of Winnipeg Associate Professor of History Andriy Zayarnyuk\\xa0is a Ukrainian national and is a specialist in the field of the Social and Cultural History of 19th and 20th Century Eastern Europe, including the Ukraine and the Soviet Union. He is also the author of the recently released book,\\xa0Framing the Ukrainian Peasantry in Habsburg Galicia, 1846-1914.\\xa0He helps provide an overview of the political and cultural background of the current struggle.Eric Draitser\\xa0is a New York-based geo-political analyst with\\xa0StopImperialism.org. He discusses the right-wing fascist groups involved with the Euromaidan protests and threats they may pose over and above the opposition movement itself.Finally,\\xa0Rick Rozoff\\xa0of\\xa0Stop NATO\\xa0returns to provide a thorough examination of the geo-political and geo-strategic context in which the popular uprising is taking place.'