Letters from an American - February 17, 2024
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Letters from an American
Written by Heather Cox Richardson
Read by the author
February 17, 2024
Although few Americans paid much attention at the time,
the events of February 18, 2014 in Ukraine would turn out to be a linchpin
in how the United States ended up where it is a decade later.
On that day 10 years ago, after months of
what started as peaceful protests, Ukrainians occupied government buildings and marched on
parliament to remove Russian-backed President Viktor Yanukovych from office. After the escalating
violence resulted in many civilian casualties, Yanukovych fled to Russia and the Maidan Revolution,
also known as the Revolution of Dignity, returned power to Ukraine's constitution.
The ouster of Yanukovych meant that American political consultant Paul Manafort was out of a
job. Manafort had worked with Yanukovych since 2004. In that year, the Russian-backed
politician appeared to have won the presidency of Ukraine. But Yanukovych was rumored to have
ties to organized crime, and the election was full of fraud, including the poisoning of a key rival
who wanted to break ties with Russia and align Ukraine with Europe.
The U.S. government and other international observers did not recognize the election results,
while Russia's President Vladimir Putin congratulated Yanukovych even before the results were officially announced. The Ukrainian government voided the election
and called for a do-over. To rehabilitate his reputation,
Yanukovych turned to Manafort, who was already working for a young Russian billionaire,
Oleg Deripaska. Deripaska worried that Ukraine would break free of Russian influence and was
eager to prove useful to Vladimir Putin. At the time, Putin was trying to consolidate power in Russia, where oligarchs
were monopolizing formerly publicly held industries and replacing the region's communist leaders.
In 2004, American journalist Paul Klebnikov, the chief editor of Forbes in Russia,
was murdered as he tried to call attention to what the oligarchs were doing.
Russia, was murdered as he tried to call attention to what the oligarchs were doing.
With Manafort's help, Yanukovych finally won the presidency in 2010 and began to turn Ukraine toward Russia. In November 2013, Yanukovych suddenly reversed Ukraine's course toward
cooperation with the European Union, refusing to sign a trade agreement, and instead taking a $3 billion loan
from Russia. Ukrainian students protested the decision and the anger spread quickly.
In 2014, after months of popular protests, Ukrainians ousted Yanukovych from power,
and he fled to Russia. Manafort, who had borrowed money from Deripaska and still owed him about
$17 million, had lost his main source of income. Shortly after Yanukovych's ouster,
Russia invaded Ukraine's Crimea and annexed it, prompting the United States and the European
Union to impose economic sanctions on Russia itself and also on specific Russian
businesses and oligarchs, prohibiting them from doing business in U.S. territories.
These sanctions were intended to weaken Russia and froze the assets of key Russian oligarchs.
By 2016, Manafort's longtime friend and business partner Roger Stone, they had both worked on Richard
Nixon's 1972 campaign, was advising Trump's floundering presidential campaign, and Manafort
was happy to step in to help remake it. He did not take a salary, but reached out to Deripaska
through one of his Ukrainian business partners, Konstantin Kalimnik, immediately after landing the job,
asking him, how do we use to get whole? Has OVD, which meant Oleg Vladimirovich Deripaska,
operation seen? Manafort began as an advisor to the Trump campaign in March 2016 and became the chairman in late June.
Thanks to journalist Jim Rutenberg, who pulled together testimony given both to the Mueller investigation
and the Republican-dominated Senate Intelligence Committee,
transcripts from the impeachment hearings, and recent memoirs, we now know that in 2016, Russian operatives presented Manafort a plan
for the creation of an autonomous republic in Ukraine's east, giving Putin effective control
of the country's industrial heartland, where Kremlin-armed, funded, and directed separatists
were waging a two-year-old shadow war that had left nearly 10,000 dead.
In exchange for weakening NATO, undermining the U.S. stance in favor of Ukraine in its attempt
to throw off the Russians who had invaded in 2014, and removing U.S. sanctions from Russian entities,
Russian operatives were willing to help Trump
win the White House. The Republican-dominated Senate Intelligence Committee in 2020
established that Manafort's Ukrainian business partner, Kalimnik, whom it described as a Russian
intelligence officer, acted as a liaison between Manafort and Deripaska while Manafort ran Trump's campaign.
Now, 10 years later, Putin has invaded Ukraine in an effort that when it began looked much like
the one his operatives suggested to Manafort in 2016. Trump has said he would encourage Russia
to do whatever the hell they want to NATO allies that don't commit 2% of their gross domestic product to their militaries, and Trump MAGA Republicans are refusing to pass a measure to support Ukraine in its effort to throw off Russia's invasion.
after the violence of February 18, 2014 in Ukraine, then Vice President Joe Biden called Yanukovych to express grave concern regarding the crisis on the streets and to urge him to pull back
government forces and to exercise maximum restraint. Ten years later, Russia has been at open war with Ukraine for nearly two years
and has just regained control of the key town of Avdiivka because Ukrainian troops lack ammunition.
President Joe Biden is warning MAGA Republicans that the failure to support Ukraine at this critical moment will never be forgotten.
History is watching, he said. Dedham, Massachusetts. Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.