U.S. AMBASSADOR GEOFFREY R PYATT ENGINEERED UKRAINE CRISIS
The
ongoing Crisis in Ukraine was engineered by the United States and the key person
behind this project was Geoffrey R. Pyatt, the US Ambassador to the Ukraine. He
is one of the most important instigators of the Ukrainian “revolution.” Here’s a curious fact: Geoffrey R. Pyatt's appointment came in
the wake of so called trade wars between the Russian Federation and Ukraine in
the summer of 2013. This was at a time when the West had decided it must force
Ukraine to take sides: to choose between its beloved self or the Russian
Federation. Anyone familiar with the Ukraine's economy could have foreseen that
Yanukovich would reject an unmodified trade pact with the EU. The US was also
well aware of what was going on because it has good field analysts, to say
nothing of a network of spies and informants, including a number of high ranking
Ukrainian politicians.
One should also remember that US-Russian
relations were going through a difficult phase because of the Syrian crisis.
Russian diplomatic successes irked the Obama administration.
Russia had in effect blocked America's interventionist war in Syria.
Relations, which were lukewarm to begin with, chilled significantly because
efforts to expand war by Obama the Peacemaker were thwarted in Syria.
To punish Russia's lack of enthusiasm for
destruction of the Syrian people, the US decided to strike a blow at the
Ukraine. Stratfor's George Friedman confirmed this in a lecture he gave in
Moscow on December 9, 2014. The United States had created a number of
destructive scenarios for the Ukraine a long time ago. The American hyper empire
is motivated by its lust for global control and it operates according to an
interventionist strategy based on the premise that the US must be able to
manipulate political processes in any part of the world. In the summer of 2014
the US decided to get rid of Viktor Yanukovich and to crown some pro-American
puppet as ruler of the land. At this time, Geoffrey R. Pyatt, a known
manipulator and a dirty tricks expert with a nasty track record going back to
his time in Latin America, appeared on the scene. This was a sure sign of what
was about to happen.
Ukraine is the crown jewel in Pyatt's
résumé, which includes such iconic service posts as Honduras,
Pakistan, Hong Kong and India. Pyatt's diplomatic career began in Honduras, in
1990, where he worked as a commercial relations officer as well as vice consul.
He debuted in Honduras when that impoverished Central American state was
engulfed in a sea of change:
Rafael Leonardo Callejas Romero became the country's president.
Soon after his first term, Callejas was
accused of abuse, electoral fraud, corruption, and other sins enumerated in
America's holy manual of democracy. Fortunately for Callejas, a judge cleared
him of most charges later on. But while he ran the show, the Honduran economy
was liberalized, hordes of multinationals descended on the hapless country and,
as an expression of inexplicable and sudden affection for Honduras, the US wrote
off 430 million dollars of the nation's debt. In 1990, the year Geoffrey R. Pyatt
began working in Honduras and Callejas became president, the latter opened a
special account that was used as a depository of what was then classified as
dirty money, payments which included funds from Texaco, a US-based oil
corporation. Unforunately for
Callejas, his US employers fired him after the end of his term. Jeff Pyatt, the
commercial liaison officer and the vice consul must have known everything,
because Callejas' entry visa was revoked under clause 212F, which is reserved
for persons deemed detrimental to US interests but conventionally used for
chastising Third World officials with charges of corruption. In a way this story
resembles the fate of another disgraced American appointee, Georgian President
Mikhail Saakashvili.
From 1992 to 1994, Pyatt was appointed as
a policy officer to Delhi, India where he looked around and prepared for a
future assignment. This came in 1994 when Jeff Pyatt was appointed Assistant
Secretary of State for Latin America. Just a year later he became Special
Assistant under the US Deputy Secretary of State. He was at that job from 1995
to 1996. Pyatt's immediate boss
was Strobe Talbott, then the Deputy Secretary of State and a close friend of
Bill Clinton. Talbott's specialization was post-Soviet states, or rather
destabilization of these states. In 2010 he met with then Russian President
Dmitri Medvedev.
After his stint in the post-Soviet
directorate he was moved back to the familiar environment of Latin America. From
1996 to 1997 he headed the Latin America section of the US National Security
Council. That's a breathtaking career pace for a diplomat who had been a lowly
vice consul assigned to Honduras, so one can assume he was doing a good job back
in Honduras and he was promoted for more than just his cheerful smile at rare
diplomatic receptions. Of course
the U.S. National Security Council is not a diplomatic outfit by any means: the
entity was created along with the CIA in 1947 and from its inception, engaged in
clandestine warfare against the USSR and other less than diplomatic activities.
When this assignment was over, Geoffrey
Pyatt was transferred to Pakistan where he became the head of the US consulate
at Lahore, the capital of the province of Punjab. Punjab happens to be
Pakistan's most populous territory and accounts for 56% of the nation's
population and 59% of Pakistan's GDP. The region is infested with militant
groups preaching extremist ideologies.
The US Consulate at Lahore had to work with those people as well. The
year 2001 was especially eventful. A US diplomat killed 2 people because he
believed they were going to do him in. As Pakistani authorities investigated
they found out that the US Consulate, the employer of the murderous diplomat,
was connected with terrorist cells operating in Pashtun tribal territories and
the diplomat in question was not really a diplomat but a CIA agent. Pyatt's
contacts with Pakistani terrorists would help him in India later on. Wikileaks
published a report by Pyatt in which he talks about the popularity of Taliban
with Indian and Pakistani deobandi.
After his successes against or with
terrorism, Pyatt was transferred to Hong Kong. His official job was at
commercial interests sections at the US Consulate General. This all happened two
years after Britain transferred sovereignty over the island back to its Chinese
owners and the territory was in a state of flux: a perfect time for intelligence
gathering and detecting weak spots in the Chinese administration.
Geoffrey R. Pyatt spent three years there.
In 2002 Pyatt became Minister-Counselor for Political
Affairs at the U.S. Consulate in New Delhi. He was the second man at the
consulate from 2006 to 2007. At
that time this diplomatic outpost in India became one of largest US consulates.
Besides the usual work with Indian and Pakistani Islamic extremists, Pyatt was
handling Indian intelligence services. It all ended with a huge scandal in India
that followed the leak of a report penned by Pyatt himself.
In his confidential cable on “how to counter this new and worrying effort (by Iran) to
reach out to Indian opinion makers,” Paytt
names his informer: former Secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of India
and Head of the Advisory Committee of National Security Council of India K.V.
Radjan. Rajan provided the U.S. with the data about Iranian ties to Indian
politicians. In fact Rajan prepared a list of people whom he suspects were
working with Iran. K.V. Rajan has denied all of this, but to his chagrin Indian
journalists found the actual list.
After his stint in India Pyatt was appointed Deputy Head
of the U.S. mission in India and South East Asia.
While in this position Pyatt rose to a new level. Now he wasn't merely
recruiting foreign officials, but could lobby for advancement of their
careers. With Pyatt's helpful
assistance Yukiya Amano become the Director of the IAEA. Grateful Amano
supported all important actions of the U.S., as Pyatt himself wrote in a leaked
classified cable: “he (Amano) was solidly in the US court on every key
strategic decision, from high-level personnel appointments to the handling of
Iran's alleged nuclear weapons program.” By all counts Pyatt was doing an outstanding job.
Let's take a look at Pyatt's report on
Syria. The U.S. blamed Syria for collaborating with Iran. At the US controlled
UN, the Iranian nuclear program and Syrian weapons of mass destruction were
intimately related topics.
In 2011 Amano, always ready to oblige, demanded to call Syria to account
for its so-called "hidden nuclear reactor". And 3 years later, right after the U.S.
made sure that Syria had destroyed its chemical weapons, the US revived the
hidden nuclear reactor canard. Loyal Amano came in handy again. Pyatt knew what
he was doing.
In 2010 Geoffrey Pyatt left Vienna to
become the First Deputy Assistant Secretary of State and Principal Deputy
Assistant Secretary of the South and Central Asia Affairs Bureau. The Bureau
deals with Pakistan, states of the Hindustan peninsula, Afghanistan and Central
Asian republics of the former USSR. During this period the region became very
unstable and, yes you guessed it, Pyatt was there. And then came the most
significant promotion: Geoffrey becomes the U.S. Ambassador
to Ukraine.
When Geoffrey Pyatt was appointed U.S.
Ambassador in Ukraine, "Ostrov", a pro-Kiev media outfit gave him a title:
"anticrisis manager". The name isn't entirely correct because Pyatt is a "crisis
manager" all right, he is the man whose job is to create crisis. After his
appointment Pyatt said honestly that this a critical moment for Ukraine, that it
too can be an independent, strong state which can choose its own future. He said it in the context of implied
future modernization and westernization of the country. The United States
Ambassador let everyone understand in no unclertainterms that until to his
appointment Ukraine wasn't quite independent. But to use the phraseology of
India he will do what is necessary to make Ukraine independent.
To translate that into laymen-s terms, Pyatt was saying you, guys, have
been way too independent from the US and that's is going to change.
is the outcome is well known.
That
wasn't all of course.
There were many indicators of what the US was up to a month or so before the
Kiev coup d'état.
Under ordinary circumstances American diplomats are quite circumspect when it
comes to hate speech. But here the U.S. Embassy has used word "titushki" in
their official Russian language New Year Greetings. So the New Year greetings
message from the US Embassy expressed an opinion that anyone who opposes
Euromaidan is a titushka, that is a non-human. Those who oppose Euromaidan are
hirelings of Yanukovich and Putin, mercenary militants. Though it was by no
means the first instance in US undiplomatic diplomatic practice at least for
Ukraine, it was most definitely the first time that represenatives of a foreign
government, not just any foreign government but the US Embassy, has justified
mass murder of Russian-speaking population in Ukraine in veiled but
definitely not vague terms. As far as the U.S. embassy was
concerned those who opposed Euromaidan were non-humansmere titushki, who will be
subsequently killed, burned, shelled, bombed, tortured, in Odessa, Lugansk,
Donetsk and other cities, everywhere that people tried to openly oppose the
US-installed regime in Kiev.
Pyatt's service track record on its own is
a logical overture to what he was doing to the Ukraine . First there was
Honduras, a long suffering victim of American imperialism. There as a young
diplomat he learned the art of corrupting public officials and of advancing U.S.
interests against the interests of the host nation. After that assignment, he
studied former Soviet republics and worked at the service headquarters. Then he
practiced what he had learned in the National Security Council and worked with
intelligence agencies. Then
another call of duty: this time he was dispatched to Pakistan. At that
destination his clients were, well, terrorists. By all accounts Pyatt did a good
job there. Hong Kong was the next
location for our character to try his prowess. Not bad: preparation for the
upcoming Umbrella Revolution followed by a new appointment. This time to India.
At his new post Pyatt was working with agents of Indian National Security and by
all counts he did more than okay there. After India he was promoted to a higher
level: International Organizations.
Thanks to Pyatt the U.S. has aquired its own puppet Director of the IAEA,
whose only occupation seems to consist of agitating against Syria. Then Pyatt
was appointed to the South and Central Asia Affairs Bureau. He wasn't studying
Asian cooking there. In fact Geoffrey was given a very special task, the
ultimate task of them all: remaking the former USSR.
If this vocational trend is to continue
both Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan must brace for major trouble
ahead.
The danger level for Russia is also glowing red. The new
U.S. Ambassador to that country has been named "anticrisis ambassador". We
already saw another one with the same title – in Kiev. Like ordinary mortals most journalists are not
good at making forecasts for the future. But what happened in Kiev can serve as
a good guide and it's easy to predict what John Tefft will try to pull off in
Moscow: some local version of an Euromaidan and a Civil War that will inevitably
follow it, consequently a major international crisis with grave consequences for
the rest of Europe. The world will
face a disaster if the US is allowed to succeed the way it “succeeded” in Ukraine.
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