tv Cross Talk RT June 13, 2014 9:29am-10:00am EDT
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never want to live near the people they claim to want to help you know henry ford was one of those guys who said that you should never give anybody any handouts so what he did was give the disabled and the poor are decent paying jobs at his factory so listen up you liberal loony bin if you want to get those. people off the streets just put them to work it will reduce your city of its homeless problem a lot faster than spikes will but that's just my opinion.
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they say. hello and welcome to cross talk we're all things considered i'm peter lavelle divisions within ukraine are becoming greater with each passing day the western backed regime in camp shows no interest in compromise or negotiations at the same time civilians in the east continue to die of going for broke.
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to cross-talk the crisis in ukraine i'm joined by my guest michael shank in washington he's an associate director at the friends committee on national legislation in berlin we have many well oxen writer he's a journalist editor and reporter and in moscow we cross to ben heiress he's the editor in chief of business new europe all right gentlemen crosstalk rules in effect that means you can jump in anytime you want and i very much encourage it but if i go to you first here in moscow the ukrainian president can't seem to take the answer yes over the last few weeks and months there been overtures coming from russia to do deescalate the situation in eastern ukraine to stop the violence and at the same time russia's gas promise offered ukraine the same price for gas that it did for unocal which and they're still saying no to what's going on. well it does seem that the russians now come to the table and started to negotiate and itself is a massive step forward i mean they named a concrete prize with concrete conditions that is less than the four hundred fifty
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four hundred eighty dollars per thousand cubic meters that they've been talking about one hundred dollars less and if the ukrainians now turn around and said yes then a deal would be struck and the whole gas thing would be over power from the fact that ukrainians were still struggling to pay their gas bills because the country is on its knees economically and the fact that the two sides in actually sasa the table and haggling for the first time over concrete practical questions of price is a huge positive however you know the ukrainians are playing hardball and to be honest they have an extremely weak negotiating position because they're still pounds in theory by the price of signing the contract in two thousand and nine which would leave them with this four hundred dollars plus cost of us. but the fact that the russians are trying to compromise looks like they're looking for a way out of this which which i'm very pleased to hear ok michael a way out of this is actually should make the europeans
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a lot happier too because ukraine is in the middle of all of this here i mean why isn't the regime in care of more open to negotiations because on a number of occasions putin said that he thought the referendum in the east wasn't a good idea when. the foreign minister said that if you know ukraine signs an association agreement with the european union russia won't sanction ukraine i mean we keep hearing this over and over again but the ukrainians keep saying no. well my guess for and i think ben's right ukraine's on its knees economically as i've said before publicly and c.n.n. with former congressman russ carnahan the way to go forward on gas is actually to diminish or decrease our reliance on gas or oil i know the u.s. government and u.s. industry is very keen to come in and supplant russia's gas imports into the e.u. which make up a third of their gas imports much of which crosses ukraine with replace it with renewable energy unfortunately republicans in the u.s. and industry in the u.s.
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is quite keen to send in crude oil shale gas that's not the way to go now in terms of other negotiations i think ukraine president has shown that he's keen to negotiate when it comes to the east i think forays by the german foreign minister steinmeier in the polish foreign ministers of course key any effort to deescalate sikorsky saying that nato is not on the table for ukraine was a gesture of good gesture to russia and so any effort there to deescalate the rhetoric is key certainly ukraine president's speech on saturday is good in terms of amnesty for rebels wanting to disarm safe passage back to russia problem there. are also the ukrainian citizens ukrainian citizens defending themselves i'm afraid you know there's a green men looking for these little green men just isn't really the case i mean it's ukrainians defending themselves people that speak russian and ethnic russians who mean well if i can if i can go to you to berlin i mean it seems to me that the west isn't trying to deescalate this here i mean they would tell their friend that
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you better still pull back you militias stop killing people stop shelling apartment buildings were civilians live i mean it's i'm not i don't see the escalation on the western side i see i see a lot of the escalation in the rhetoric coming from the russian side. i think you will completely get the point because we have to see that today's ukraine is more or less a sort of failed state failed entity which is disintegrated already so we have in the western ukraine the rest ukraine we have publishing who is the president and president poroshenko all gifts very contradicting messages since he was elected he said on the one side yes he wants to the escalate especially when he speaks towards the west but he says on the other side as well he wants to crush the uprising in the east he wants to take back crimea at the same time we hear for
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example. the speaker or the chairman of the right sector saying he can even imagine to put in our terrorists. on crimea so we see pushing course right now playing on both violence when it comes to moscow and i heard something very interesting when i was interviewing last week a russian diplomat who said well to who should moscow speak if it comes to ukraine is it really that poroshenko is the one who has such a big influence on what is done in ukraine or not or is it the west which is spec'ing portion of the west could easily influence publishing co and the rest ukraine by saying if you are not negotiating if you are not coming down if you don't stop your attacks against civilians we will stop immediately all our support but the west doesn't do that by the way this is the same principle for example we see in syria the syrian war is going as long as the west is spec'ing the so-called rebellion at the moment the west doesn't back anymore any rebellion it will stop so
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it's the same in ukraine pushing for hence the support of the west and as long the west is not stopping that support with pushing him to serious negotiations it won't stop it will go on then where do you think the ukrainian president i mean hoot. where is his power base is it washington in brussels or is it people like the right sector he has a genuine supports amongst the ukrainian people both in the east in the west and when he did poll far ahead of anybody else in the presidential elections and partly because he doesn't belong belong to any of the traditional camps neither the party of regions of going to court fish which was strong in the east nor the orange group strong in the west and the ukrainian people said in the election they basically want to break from the past they want to get rid of these oligarchic camps and make a fresh start with a pragmatist and publishing who works in both the head of corporate administration and in the orange ministration before that and so he is
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a pragmatist i mean if you listen to his rhetoric clearly at the moment put up a good point you know there's a question over his just missy when it comes to the east of the country i mean he's whether sconce to in the west of the country where the ukrainian nationalist ukrainian speakers live moreover he has the backing of the west for unclear but when it comes to the east is authority there is questionable in so much as lots of people in the east of ukraine were rejecting the european deal rejecting the european vision which is not to say they want to join russia tomorrow but they want it more of a choice and so left with this impossible task of trying to please everybody when people on the two sides are shooting at each other because their disagreements are so so enraged at this point and he's going to have a very hard time of it but if you listen to his comments and when he says things like the nationalist things like he wants crimea back for ukraine is not workable that russia is going to have to be involved in it and now we have this very
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difficult and long process of going through that and getting those two different messages to reconcile each other and it has to happen at some point but the problem is in the meantime the fighting is going on the tensions remain high and so we had looking for a way to back out of it and this comes. the pragmatism so i mean the russians of have learned with an orange an olive branch in the form of trying to cut some sort of gas deal but you're right to say on the west and they've never been arguing this pragmatism they have no interest in either economic nor strategic in ukraine particularly not the usa at the same time they've been arguing purely on principle and when you've got one side arguing on principle and the other side in pragmatism there's no mean the middle ground for them and so i think we're going to be stuck into particularly the west backs off its moral high ground and if she starts to deal with the nuts and bolts issues of like we've got to make this country work again you know someone's going to have to finance it someone is going to have to help you know with all the investment that it needs before you can actually get it
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functioning again and before any of that starts you need peace exactly michael we need peace here why doesn't the ukrainian government call pull back its troops and its militias and start a dialogue. yeah well ben hit on a couple points that i'd like to reiterate the west has definitely escalated the situation as several of you have already mentioned obama calling for a billion more in military aid right when we were going to bring down our eighty thousand troops from europe a couple years ago the pentagon was ready to do that now the white house is ramping up military aid bolstering nato the wrong move it's escalating the situation i think poroshenko feels bolstered by the i.m.f. seventeen billion i think he feels bolstered by obama's rhetoric military ramp up of a nato so that's not helpful when i was in berlin in warsaw a couple months ago saner voices there were talking about deescalation they weren't putting nato on the table i think that's what we need to follow if there are any western voices there are more likely in berlin in warsaw than in washington so
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that's key for the u.s. government to back down its rhetoric i think vice president a little good cop bad cop vice president biden over the weekend supporting porcher and co and saying yes the peace deals the way to go but then a bomb a talking about military ramp up so you're getting to voices from washington which isn't helpful when it comes to deescalate in the east lynne well you know it's amazing to me six months ago we the possibility of having the current situation seemed unthinkable you have an illegal coup break up the country and now you have more military hardware going into europe i mean what a screw up. well when we when we look back i think in november or even october november december nobody really wants what's what's really seeing that what will come that we will have for now is such a a geo political tsunami what is now going on in ukraine and we have to say the very clear it's not to reach thing it's not about what if maybe there will be
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a federalist say federal sation off that you some parts of the country or even if they will split off it it's now and there's a lot on the state it's a big game right now going on we see that we very debating in europe about women well let me let me jump in here well let me jump in here we're going to go to a short break and after that you'll break we'll continue our discussion on ukraine change with our. immediately the only thing we want. is a. i
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sometimes for nothing which lead to sleet and simple. it's not just heat of the still we can still be jobst if you see a stage eight looked to be. but speech was. plenty. to. put it on your whole arm and a lot of the banking news all the face time you know in both. legs. a pleasure to have you with us here on t.v. today i roll researcher.
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welcome back to cross talk where all things considered i'm peter lavelle to mind you we're discussing the continuing crisis in ukraine. ok many men when i look back will go back to you in berlin and you know i always wish when i look at the situation today on the ground i always reflect upon the agreement that was agreed to on february twenty first where we had the e.u. brokering and we had a russian official in the room witnessing the signatures and there was a deal it was a deal to to have political reform in the country new elections there was
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a push towards that and then we all know what happened in the elected government and elected president was overthrown you know in looking back now that deal with such a sweet deal and i don't know if we'll ever get it again. no i think i think this was maybe a very very unique chance to end the conflict before it really escalates but now we have to see it escalate and we have a major geo political conflict right in front of the gates of the european union on the one side and right in front of the gates of moscow on the other side and we have to see that we speak now since a couple of months in terms of a really hot cold war already i mean people are dying now every day especially in the east of ukraine and we have to see the that our politicians now we have now again debates about reinforcement of nato forces in europe and all of the sudden the nato is very much in fashion again in europe we see that nato air force us is
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going to do the politics dates and when we just one sentence when we think back why or what where the purpose of the nato when it was found that the spare the three things which were set by the first general secretary of the nato lord use me said the three keeps to keep the americans in europe to keep the russians down off europe and to keep the german stollen in europe so at least purpose one and three we see now it's very actual right now ben one of the biggest problems i think when when policymakers particularly in washington when they look at ukraine is that no partly east cannot dominate the west the west can dominate the east and in this is just a historical reality of cultural reality because we have very different narratives of different populations within a country that is so diverse here and i think the diversity of ukraine is so misunderstood when it comes to policymakers particularly people like big torii a new one in this really goes back to what's been said from the very very beginning
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ukraine needs to deal with federalization or some kind of decentralization. i think the policy made to make is in the west of had a bit of a shock there was a very interesting paper this week from. these two academics in the states who have been following russia from the beginning and they were speculating that you know the from the u.s. perspective there were basically two options for russia or either we was going to reform and be pro western strong and you know successful it was posed to be under yeltsin or it was going to go down an authoritarian route or and then it would never reform and it would be economically weak and what we've actually seen is that it's gone not progress to the root and it's become economically strong at the same time and there is simply not prepared for a per prepared for this in our area and so everyone's been left scrambling to catch up again you'd look at the policymakers from the states who are watching the whole eastern europe and they're just cold war warriors who've come back to the fore and
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they've just put it back in those terms because that's their defaults understanding of a russia that's not pro western and is economically powerful and militarily powerful but we have a totally different situation the cold war the two sides were antithetic the opposed to each other communism and capitalism but russia signed up to capitalism game and they're just asserting that saying that we're doing in a different way we have our own interests we you have me particularly friendly to us and so we're going to assert our interest in ukraine we have a thousand years of shared cultural historical and economic values from the beginning and that you just can't walk off with ukraine without talking to us you know our two economies are intimately tied together and you have to take that into account and that wasn't taken into account because it became this cold war play and hence we've got into this mess and they only way out is when the west wake up to
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the fact that you know things have changed but russia is an enemy these actually signed up to the capitalist. and therefore there should be some cooperation that can be done even if they're not going to be best friends but at the moment it's not being played like that it's all it's just you know get the nato war planes because nato was set up to defend against the soviet union and as far as they're concerned that's back again well that sums it up right there i mean michael it it's very interesting is that if you look at public opinion polls of the people that lived in east ukraine before this conflict there wasn't much longing to be part of russia at all they just wanted to keep care of it bay they wanted more regional autonomy but as every day passes in the violence continues the more and more people there would like to join russia now i mean again the law of unintended consequences breaking up the country partitioning the country which is in the cards. yeah i think his play paid lip service to local elections decentralization russian language in the east
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a lot of people are critical of it his lip service isn't genuine so we'll see how that plays out i want to go to the cold warriors cold war warriors point that ben made in washington and he's absolutely right there's a whole kind of bastion of older white men who were cold war experts and now have been brought out again and they're very excited because they have kind of renewed career here to weigh in on all things russia it is cold war mentality that's problematic that's not helpful and i think russia has signed up to the capitals club when i was in berlin i was talking with german business men and women there six thousand business people in russia who could negotiate with russia in a way that the governments perhaps can't i do think the private sector has a role to play here in deescalating but i'd be curious for benjamin well and peter your thoughts on the a c. and further negotiations going forward organization for security cooperation in europe are they the rights brokers for any negotiated agreement any ceasefire or
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how is that perceived in russia is a problematic so i'd be keen to question all three of you on the a c. and where should they take place st petersburg vienna elsewhere but to your point peter yeah any any gesture from par shango for the east currently perceived as disingenuous when they only see i don't see it as being very fair broker it's a lot of former intelligence and military people that are involved in it and i find them to be quite biased but what i think and i think the question back to everyone else here is that i think that the that washington in brussels and moscow should talk to the people they know on the ground there and you know go to helsinki or something and sit around a table and talk why don't we start talking first i mean this is a twenty first century we all have email and stuff ok do it on twitter if you have to ok then this is where it has to go. it really has to get the players on the ground to start talking to each other because the forces didn't care that it's that
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we're behind this forced regime change they're the ones that are maximalist they want everything and that's not going to work i think it doesn't matter which forum you choose i mean what does matter is some of the talks between kerry and lavrov america and russia which i found rather than so much is we're talking about europe and european country so what they have you know why when the europeans are invited i mean the point with the table is that it has to have everyone at it i mean the second point is this this this point about capitalism because i think that's going to be the long term solution to this how are we going to you know mend these wounds and his business is business german business is heavily invested into russia they're very interested in ukraine jaeger cultural potential there is enormous some i.p.o.'s that ukrainian companies have done in london have been hugely successful and have been long you know government has become more and more beholden to business and as those business ties develop and the money that's being made and the
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significant money russia and ukraine together you know form a massive consumer market and one of the few that still growing and as those business ties deeper then you're going to see the business lobby pressuring the government from beneath in order to find some sort of restitution between the fights and the whole thing with principle will go away because it will come back to the pragmatism of life but we have hundreds of millions of dollars invested into this country we are making huge profits as they catch up to our standard of living and that's going to go on for decades and then we'll get to a point where you know it will smooth all over i think i come back to my original point that one of the reasons why america has been so problematic in this is because it has no interest neither economic nourse here in the region it will mean well that's right i mean the americans have an ideological interest they like to bring through force democracy that's what they call it anyway what it does is often just export chaos and the ukrainians are a victim of victims of it this time round. i think we have two contradicting
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ideologies now not not any more us like in the old cold war when we had communism on the one side and capitalism on the other side we have now a sort of let me call it a post modernist or democratic. ideology coming from certain neo con circles from us will say we have to bring democracy everywhere and if the people don't want to take it with a color of illusion they will take it with some bombs this is on the one side and we have a concept of the polarity from russia a concept of civil rayna ts concept off of independence so these concepts are of course contradicting because of concept will not accept any other concept which says we will talk on the same level so this for the first the second thing what your question was about why they are there no negotiations with the round table where the people sit we have one certain problem there should be one very important
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condition because if we do such a round table where russia is sitting where people from ukraine are sitting from the european states as well from the us and again i ask myself why should the us sit and such a table it's not their business so that if they are sitting on the table there is one important point is that the states are negotiating on their own behalf and not on behalf of others this means germany the german minister steinmeier should sit there of the german chancellor and should negotiate on behalf of germany on behalf of the german business of the very important business relations with russia as well as to ukraine and not on behalf of nato and not on behalf of the friendship to washington and on the behalf of the long tradition of liberal well us or whatever i think this is the major point that the european states should be months he paid them so first from the so-called west before we can negotiate in an equal way on the same level all right gentlemen we've run out of time fascinating discussion.
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thanks to my guests in washington berlin and here in moscow thanks to our viewers for watching us here at r.b.c. you next time remember top of. the basic. reason. why there's a new i'm a grown river and i've got a polygamist family i'm looking for a woman who understands me anyway and i want her to share my goal of saving our people from extinction up through most of. the i've had two failed marriages and she's had one you wish changed to to you to what's been a chemist marriage and have decided to find
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a man to marry as. the machine we want to know women who could say your kids together with us. your mind dream is to have let's say thirty to forty kids are going to do that with only one wife so it's impossible. dramas good trying to be ignored. stories others refuse to notice. faces changing the world lights now. on the old picture of today's leaves. from around the globe. dropped.
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only. russia sounds the alarm over claims the crane army used to banned weapons in its crackdown on dissent as a military expert tells r.t. the attacks bear the hallmarks of phosphorous bomb use. months behind on payments ukraine will have to prepay for russian gas if it fails to settle at least part of its debt by monday that's after negotiations collapse over insistence and any deal had to be fully honest terms. an extremist militants in iraq have advanced to within fifty kilometers of the capital baghdad after securing much of the north of the country which they hope to turn.
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