[Shadow_Group] Fw: THE CIA AND U.S. MONEY IS

shadowgroup-l at lists.resist.ca shadowgroup-l at lists.resist.ca
Sun Dec 5 20:10:52 PST 2004





THE CIA AND U.S. MONEY IS GOING ALL OUT TO WIN EVEN IF IT DESTROYS THE UKRAINE.
The CIA with U.S. funding is financing this coup because the vote turned out on the side of Pro-Russia Yanukovich instead of the Pro-Western Yushchenko. I guess the U.S. only considers a vote valid and democratic when it favors the side the U.S. tried to rigged it. (What about the STOLEN U.S. election?) But they just won't accept defeat so will tear the country apart and figure half is better than nothing. I hope the coup, demonstrations and new election works out the same as it did in Argentina. The U.S. was politically embarrassed there when the vote of the people overwhelmingly went against the U.S. 

http://wireservice.wired.com/wired/story.asp?section=Breaking&storyId=957358&tw=wn_wire_story<http://wireservice.wired.com/wired/story.asp?section=Breaking&storyId=957358&tw=wn_wire_story>
International Mediators Try to End Ukraine Crisis 
By Ron Popeski, Wired News, 11/30/04

KIEV (Reuters) - International mediators will step up efforts on Wednesday to resolve Ukraine's 10-day-old crisis over a disputed presidential election after the collapse of talks between pro-Western and pro-Russian factions.

President Bush called on Tuesday for a peaceful resolution to the crisis, which has triggered mass street protests and threatened to tear the former Soviet republic apart.

"It's very important that violence not break out there, and it's important that the will of the people be heard," Bush told a joint news conference with Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin in Ottawa.

Bush said he had spoken by phone to Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski, one of the international mediators trying to broker a way out of a standoff that has paralyzed government and is beginning to bite into Ukraine's economy.

Ukraine's opposition, whose insistence its candidate Viktor Yushchenko was cheated out of victory in the Nov. 21 ballot has brought tens of thousands onto the streets, pulled out of talks with authorities on Tuesday in favor of "People Power." 

YUSHCHENKO DEMANDS NEW VOTE

Yushchenko, a liberal who seeks gradual moves toward Western Europe, is demanding a rapid new vote and has challenged the Nov. 21 result in the Supreme Court, which will sit for a third day to examine allegations of systematic electoral fraud.

The crisis was triggered when electoral authorities declared the ballot had been won by Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovich, who sees closer links with neighboring Russia as vital for Ukraine's future prosperity.

Parliament will meet for a second successive day to consider an opposition motion to dismiss Yanukovich and his government on grounds of mismanagement and fomenting separatism in the Russian-speaking and more economically powerful east of Ukraine.

On Tuesday, opposition protesters surged toward the parliament building after the assembly failed to proceed with the motion. The parliament speaker appealed to the protesters not to storm the building, promising a decision on Wednesday.

European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana, who arrived in Kiev on Tuesday and met outgoing President Leonid Kuchma, said any solution "had to lie in Ukraine's legal framework, ruling out any use of force."

Kwasniewski, Lithuanian President Valdas Adamkus and Boris Gryzlov, a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, were due to arrive on Wednesday.

All the mediators took part in talks in Kiev last week that produced a "working group" involving both sides in Ukraine, independent for only 13 years and lying between an expanded EU and its master for many centuries, Russia.

It was not immediately clear whether the mediators had any new proposals to end the standoff, particularly after the opposition's withdrawal from talks with Yanukovich's camp.

Kuchma was due to chair talks on the economy with top officials on Wednesday, 24 hours after the central bank introduced emergency measures to stop people pulling money out of banks.

Kuchma, his 10-year rule tarnished by scandal and poor economic management, had suggested on Monday he might bow to pressure at home and abroad to allow a fresh presidential poll.

Russia, which had backed Yanukovich, seemed to come round to the idea of a fresh vote.

Putin and German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder said they would respect the outcome of any new poll, according to a German government statement. A Kremlin statement made no mention of a new poll. 





------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"The practice of discernment is part of higher consciousness. Discernment is not just a step up from judgement. In life's curriculum, it is the opposite of judgement. Through judgement a man reveals what he needs to confront and learn. Through discernment, one reveals what he has mastered."   Quote from: Love Without End, by Glenda Green
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.resist.ca/pipermail/shadowgroup-l/attachments/20041205/6e9685aa/attachment.html>


More information about the ShadowGroup-l mailing list