Anonymous ID: e50067 Aug. 30, 2025, 12:10 p.m. No.23528550   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8558 >>8608

>>23528517

 

 

Elon Musk

@elonmusk

Mar 4

Did Adam Schiff commit treason? Sounds like he did.

Mario Nawfal

@MarioNawfal

Mar 4

🚨🇺🇸 SEN. SCHIFF "IN DEEP TROUBLE" OVER UKRAINE CONNECTIONS

 

Eric Ciaramella, the whistleblower tied to Trump’s 2019 impeachment, is back in the spotlight over Adam Schiff’s Ukraine connections.

 

Former diplomat Andrei Telashchenko says he was in the room when Ciaramella met with Obama and Biden to discuss Ukraine.

 

Now, FBI Director Kash Patel—who exposed the Russia hoax—allegedly has "strong feelings" about Schiff’s role in all of this.

 

Source: Fine Point, OAN, @ChanelRion

D. Bruce Crawford

@BruceD48698

Mar 6

Replying to @elonmusk

And not just w/Ciaramella, but also after he got punked by Vovan & Lexus, who wereposing as Ukr. M.P. Andriy Parubiy. “Parubiy” told Schiff he’d left a pkg. w/ “Sergiy” at Ukr.’s embassyin D.C. The next day he had his aide, Rhianne Wirkkala, actually call the Ukr. embassy.

 

Mar 6, 2025 · 1:58 AM UTC

Anonymous ID: e50067 Aug. 30, 2025, 12:14 p.m. No.23528558   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8569 >>8608 >>8669

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>>23528550

 

Ukrainian Fascist Leader Speaks in US Congress, While Nazis Launch Racist Attacks

by Max Blumenthal July 6, 2018

 

Get fearless, uncompromising truth in your inbox. Subscribe to The Real News.

 

YouTube video

 

Journalist Max Blumenthal asked why a fascist leader waswelcomed in the US Senate building. He discusses Andriy Parubiy, the founder of two neo-Nazi organizations and the chair of Ukraine’s parliament, and the violent white supremacist movement against Russia

 

https://youtu.be/mlh6gJmmlN8

Anonymous ID: e50067 Aug. 30, 2025, 12:17 p.m. No.23528569   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8588 >>8608 >>8669

>>23528558

>Ukrainian Fascist Leader Speaks in US Congress, While Nazis Launch Racist Attacks

 

https://therealnews.com/ukrainian-fascist-leader-speaks-in-us-congress-while-nazis-launch-racist-attacks

 

https://www.citizensforethics.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/F-2019-07153.pdf

Anonymous ID: e50067 Aug. 30, 2025, 12:33 p.m. No.23528608   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8626 >>8669

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Kyiv hands over list of required US arms to McCain

By Interfax-Ukraine.

Published Feb. 26, 2015 at 1:42 pm

Senator John McCain speaks at the Reagan National Defense Forum "Building Peace Through Strength for American Security" event at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library & Museum in Simi Valley, California on Nov. 15, 2014.

Photo by AFP PHOTO/Mark RALSTON

 

First Deputy Chairman of the Verkhovna RadaAndriy Parubiy has passed on a list of American weapons that Ukraine requires during his meeting with Republican Senator John McCain in Washingtonon Feb. 26, the press service of the People's Front faction has reported.

 

In an interview with Voice of America, Parubiy said that U.S. President Barack Obama has already seen the list.

 

“Some of the weapons are non-lethal. For example, radar and UAV’s (drones), radio communications, and interference suppression devices,” said Parubiy. “The lethal weapons include, primarily, anti-missile systems, including Javelin (anti-tank missiles),” he said.

 

Parubiy believes that a U.S. commitment to send weapons would encourage other countries to follow suit.

 

As reported, Parubiy is on state visit to Washington.

Anonymous ID: e50067 Aug. 30, 2025, 12:41 p.m. No.23528626   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8629 >>8660 >>8669 >>8678

>>23528608

>Kyiv hands over list of required US arms to McCain

Analysis: U.S. Cozies Up to Kiev Government Including Far Right

The new Ukrainian government contains several ministers from a party some describe as extreme right-wing.

 

March 30, 2014, 4:57 AM EDT

 

The U.S. and Europe have been emphatic in their support of the new Ukrainian government – but a significant number of Washington's new bedfellows are members of what some experts class as extreme right-wing parties.

 

When Sen. John McCain traveled to Kiev in December, he told the crowd of 200,000 on Independence Square: "The free world is with you, America is with you, I am with you."

 

But among those stood next to the veteran Republican was Oleh Tyahnybok, leader of the Svoboda Party. Some policy analysts have calledSvoboda ultra-nationalist and even neo-Nazi.

Image: Sen. John McCain waves to pro-European protesters during a rally at Independence Square in Kiev in December

Sen. John McCain waves to pro-European protesters during a mass rally at Independence Square in Kiev in December. Oleh Tyahnybok is seen to his right.GLEB GARANICH / Reuters

 

Svoboda, which means "Freedom," was given almost a quarter of the Cabinet positions in the interim government formed after the ouster of President Viktor Yanukovych in February.

 

The party's policies center around protecting the rights of what it calls “ethnic Ukrainians,” the preservation of the Ukrainian language and culture, and strict controls on immigration.

 

Although much of the more extreme content has now been removed from Svoboda’s leaflets, the European Parliament passed a resolution on Ukraine in 2012 that asked Kiev not to associate with the party on account of its “racist, anti-Semitic and xenophobic views.”

 

One of the party's lawmakers was appointed to run the powerful defense ministry before being forced out. However, Svoboda still holds one of the vice prime minister posts as well as the ministries of agriculture and the environment. According to Foreign Policy magazine, this represents the largest far-right representation in any government in Europe.

 

The appointment of Svoboda co-founder Andriy Parubiy to position of secretary of the Security and National Defense Committee has raised eyebrows. Although now a member of the liberal-conservative Fatherland party, Parubiy led anti-Yanukovych street militias in Kiev in the wake of protests that erupted in December.

 

McCain: US Should Send Ukraine Weapons Now

00:53

 

His deputy is Dmytro Yarosh, leader of the even further right-wing group Pravyi Sektor, meaning "Right Sector."Its members formed the most militarized elements of the anti-government protest movement. Some of these demonstrators wore anti-Semitic insignia.

 

"The Parubiy appointment to such an important post should, alone, be cause for international outrage," Montreal-based research organization Centre for Research on Globalization said after the new government was appointed. It also described Svoboda as a "Neo-Nazi, ultra-right, [and] anti-Semitic."

 

But others say the influence of these groups is already waning.

 

Orysia Lutsevych is a research fellow at the Russia and Eurasia program at the London-based Chatham House think tank. She said the right-wing groups were given a disproportionate share of power in relation to public opinion because of their central role in Yanukovych's demise.

 

"The justification for having this ministries in the interim government, and let's not forget it is an interim government, was in response to their role in the protests," she said. "The Freedom Party and Right Sector got traction because they were very active in the protests and were able to get a response – people were tired of just singing songs. They played a role but that's it."

 

Lutsevych said the dwindling enthusiasm toward these groups can be seen in a recent poll that suggested Right Sector would get 1.2 percent of the vote. And Tyahnybok, who is running in the presidential elections on May 25, saw his support drop from 3.7 percent to just 2.5 percent in a recent poll.

 

Right-wing representation is further inflated because champion boxer turned politician Vitali Klitschko, at the time entertaining his own presidential aspirations, decided his UDAR party would not take any of the Cabinet positions.

Anonymous ID: e50067 Aug. 30, 2025, 12:42 p.m. No.23528629   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8660 >>8678

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>Analysis: U.S. Cozies Up to Kiev Government Including Far Right

 

Yanukovych's Party of Regions is also not involved in the coalition despite having the largest number of seats in Ukraine's parliament.

 

Even so, the influence of Svoboda and the Right Sector is minimal compared to that of the Fatherland party, which holds seven Cabinet positions, including leader Arseniy Yatsenyuk as prime minister.

 

Keen to strengthen this power base, the party's recently freed leader, Yulia Tymoshenko, announced her own presidential bid Thursday.

 

Svoboda's website outlines policies that are centered around persevering Ukraine's national identity, protecting the country's "living space," and imposing criminal penalties for any displays of "Ukrainophobia."

 

The German government described the party in August as "a right-wing populist and nationalist party with some extreme right-wing positions," according to broadcaster Deutsche Welle.

 

"What is politically correct and politically incorrect is very different in Ukraine than in the West"

 

The party is a member of the pan-European right-wing group the Alliance of European National Movements, which includes the anti-immigration British National Party and Italy's neo-fascist Tricolour Flame.

 

But Lutsevych said that while Svoboda does hold nationalist views, in the context of Eastern European or Russian politics they are not out of the ordinary. She said that past soundbites, such as Tyahnybok suggesting Kiev was run by a Jewish-Moscow mafia, are a result of a rough-and-ready political culture in Ukraine that will need time to iron itself out.

 

"What is politically correct and politically incorrect is very different in Ukraine than in the West," she said. "Ukraine has to change its political culture if it is going to align itself with the West."

 

The U.S. has thrown its weight behind the new Kiev administration, from McCain's overtures to a video of support from George Clooney. Earlier this month, Secretary of State John Kerry solidified the alliance with a visit to Kiev and the pledge of a $1 billion loan deal.

 

The development of the crisis as a proxy geopolitical conflict between Russia and the West has gathered pace significantly since then. But John Lough, another associate fellow at Chatham House, said that the U.S. and Europe had little choice strategically but to endorse the fragile coalition on offer, no matter what was on its fringes.

 

"Ukraine politics is in a state of flux," he said. "To be fair to the Ukrainians they had to form a government in extremely difficult circumstances, with strong rivalries between some of the opposition forces.

 

He said the position of the West has been simple: "We've got what we've got."

 

Lough added that any influence from the right has been exaggerated by Moscow, which denounced the uprising in Kiev as a fascist coup.

 

"If you actually look at the Russian propaganda in detail it bears very little relation to reality," he said. "There have been no pogroms, no Nazis roaming Crimea – this is the stuff of fantasy."

 

He did concede that there had been some "unfortunate incidents" - citing a video that emerged earlier this month showing Svoboda lawmaker Igor Miroshnichenko assaulting the boss of Ukraine's state TV station merely for broadcasting a speech by Vladimir Putin.

 

"But let’s face it," Lough added. "This is a country that's been in revolutionary turmoil. And on the other side, snipers were used to try to stop the events of the Maidan [revolutionary movement]. Are we going to criticize those brave Ukrainians who fought to free Ukraine from Yanukovych?"

 

Even if the influence of the right is overblown, any elements that do exist undoubtedly play into the hands of the Kremlin's attempts to unsettle Kiev.

 

The killing of prominent Right Sector figure Sashko Muzychko in a police shootout on Monday night exposed divisions in the coalition. Masked activists blocked the entrance to the parliament Thursday night to demand justice.

 

"Now is not the time for liberals"

 

Interim President Olexander Turchynov told parliament the next day that this blockade was "an attempt to destabilize the situation in Ukraine, in the very heart of Ukraine - Kiev."

 

"That is precisely the task that the Russian Federation's political leadership is giving to its special services," he said.

 

Keir Giles, director of the U.K.-based Conflict Studies Research Centre, said that in this climate of annexation and intimidation from Russia the appointment of people like Yarosh andParubiy could actually be seen by Ukrainians as a positive.

 

"If you were a Ukrainian and you saw what you were up against, you would want someone like Parubiy," he said. "Now is not the time for liberals."

Anonymous ID: e50067 Aug. 30, 2025, 12:48 p.m. No.23528660   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8664 >>8666 >>8669 >>8678 >>8690

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John McCain and Paul Ryan hold ‘good meeting’ with veteran Ukrainian Nazi demagogue Andriy Parubiy

Ben Norton and Max Blumenthal·June 23, 2017

 

Two of the Republican Party’s most powerful figures gave a PR boost to violent neo-Nazi forces rampaging across Ukraine, hosting meetings with fascist leader Andriy Parubiy.

By Ben Norton and Max Blumenthal / AlterNet

 

Andriy Parubiy is one of the most notorious right-wing extremists in Ukrainian politics. A founder of the far-right Social-National Party of Ukraine, whose name and symbols were inspired by Germany’s Nazi Party, Parubiy directed the street muscle in Kiev’s Maidan Square that drove the 2014 U.S.-backed coup against Ukraine’s democratically elected, Russian-oriented government.

 

In 2016, just two decades after founding a neo-fascist party that declared at its opening ceremony that it was the “last hope of the white race, of humankind as such,” Parubiy leveraged his street cred to rise to the chairman of Ukraine’s parliament, the Verkhovna Rada.

 

This June 15, two of the most influential Republicans in Congress, House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senator John McCain, held court with Parubiy in Washington. The meeting was just the latest event exposing American support for Ukraine’s post-Maidan government as a cynical exercise in saber-rattling against Russia with little demonstrable concern for liberal democracy.

 

During his meeting with Ryan, Parubiy signed a memorandum of understanding emphasizing commitment to the U.S. Congress-Rada Parliamentary Exchange.

 

“I was proud to join Speaker Parubiy to renew our interparliamentary ties with the Rada,” Ryan declared in a statement published by his office. “This mutually beneficial program fosters closer political, economic, and security relations between our legislatures.”

 

“Amid ongoing aggression from Russia, close coordination with the people and government of Ukraine is more important than ever,” Ryan added. “I appreciate Speaker Parubiy’s commitment to strengthening this critical partnership.”

Sen. John McCain, the chair of the Senate Armed Services Committee, likewise met with Parubiy, and said the two had a “good meeting.”

 

“I’ll always stand for free & prosperous Ukraine,” McCain wrote.

Unrepentant fascism

Anonymous ID: e50067 Aug. 30, 2025, 12:49 p.m. No.23528664   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8666 >>8669 >>8678

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>John McCain and Paul Ryan hold ‘good meeting’ with veteran Ukrainian Nazi demagogue Andriy Parubiy

 

As a far-right leader, Andriy Parubiy played a critical role in pushing for the breakup of the Soviet Union in the late 1980s and early ‘90s. After the dissolution of the USSR in 1991, Parubiy founded the Social-National Party of Ukraine, a neo-fascist party that borrowed Nazi ideology and Third Reich imagery like the Wolfsangel, which was its official symbol. The SNPU banned non-Ukrainians and established a violently racist paramilitary group called the Patriot of Ukraine.

 

Scholar Anton Shekhovtsov noted in a 2011 research paper on the “creeping resurgence of the Ukrainian radical right” that, at its founding presentation ceremony in 1995, the SNPU proclaimed, “In view of the prospects of mass degradation of people and entire nations, we are the last hope of the white race, of humankind as such.” The neo-fascist party added, “We must resolutely separate ourselves from the North-Eastern neighbour” — that is to say, Russia.

 

Parubiy led the Patriot of Ukraine for several years. As a standard bearer of his country’s ultra-nationalist forces, he forged friendly relations with neo-fascists like France’s Jean-Marie Le Pen, who once inscribed a polemic he wrote with a tribute to Parubiy.

 

In 2004, Parubiy left the SNPU and its paramilitary wing in an attempt to rebrand himself as a more respectable far-right politician. The record Parubiy left behind, however, left little doubt about his fascist worldview.

 

Among Andriy Parubiy’s most memorable published writings is a book called “View from the Right,” which depicts Parubiy on the cover in a Nazi-style uniform.

 

When asked in 2015 if he had reformed his extremist politics, Parubiy insisted his values remained unchanged.

 

“I don’t think he changed his views,” explained historian Grzegorz Rossolinski-Liebe in an email to AlterNet. Rather, he said, Parubiy has just “adjusted them to his current positions.”

 

“Yes, he is a far-right nationalist politician,” stressed Rossolinski-Liebe, who is a leading expert on far-right movements in Europe. The scholar noted that he interviewed Parubiy in 2006 for his landmark book on Stepan Bandera, a Nazi-collaborating Ukrainian fascist whose historical legacy has been rewritten by the new Western-aligned government, which lionizes Bandera as a hero.

 

In the book, Rossolinski-Liebe noted that Parubiy (also transliterated as Parubii) was the leader of the Society to Erect the Stepan Bandera Monument. Parubiy considers Bandera “the most important person in Ukrainian history,” the historian wrote.

 

McCain’s visit with Parubiy this year was not the first time he has junketed to Kiev to pay homage to the country’s far-right forces. During the Euromaidan demonstrations that rocked Ukraine in 2013 and 2014, McCain met with Oleh Tyanhbok, the leader of the Svoboda party who had been expelled from his former party for calling on his countrymen to do battle with the “Muscovite-Jewish mafia.”

 

Soon after the meeting, McCain and Democratic Sen. Chris Murphy appeared on Maidan Square next to Tyanhbok. “Ukraine will make Europe better and Europe will make Ukraine better!” McCain proclaimed before the crowd of thousands.

 

When Parubiy left the Social-National Party of Ukraine in 2004, the Nazi-style political group did some rebranding of its own. It was renamed Svoboda and changed its symbol in an effort to seem less directly tied to Nazism.

 

Historian Anton Shekhovtsov warned in his 2011 research paper that the victory of Svoboda in 2009 regional elections “seems to attest to the gradual revival of the radical right in Ukraine.” He was correct; Svoboda went on to play a key role in Euromaidan and the 2014 coup, and today is an influential force in mainstream Ukrainian politics.

 

Legitimizing Ukraine’s rising extremists, damning democracy

 

Since the U.S.-backed coup that ousted Ukraine’s democratically elected president, Viktor Yanukovych, Ukraine has lurched far to the right — and closer to the West. Extreme right-wing nationalists occupy some of the most powerful roles in the new government, which also adopted a new constitution.

 

These far-right figures include Vadym Troyan, a leader of the neo-Nazi Patriot of Ukraine organization, who became police chief of the province of Kiev under Prime Minister Ansenei Yatsenyuk, a billionaire oligarch. Ukraine’s interior minister, Arsen Akakov, had personally commissioned neo-Nazi militias like the Azov Battalion, where Troyan served as deputy commander and whose members decorated their helmets with Nazi SS insignia and bore swastika tattoos and flags.

Anonymous ID: e50067 Aug. 30, 2025, 12:50 p.m. No.23528666   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8669 >>8695

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>>John McCain and Paul Ryan hold ‘good meeting’ with veteran Ukrainian Nazi demagogue Andriy Parubiy

 

Through the Interior Ministry, Akakov has overseen an online blacklist designed to intimidate journalists accused of collaborating with pro-Russian “terrorists” in the Donbass region of eastern Ukraine. Called Myrotvorets, or “Peacemaker,” the online blacklist targeted some 4,500 journalists, including Western reporters like Ian Bateson, whom it dubbed a traitor for receiving accreditation from Russian separatists so he could enter the Donetsk region. In April 2015, Ukrainian writer Oles Buzina and former lawmaker Oleg Kalashnikov were killed after Myrotvorets leaked their personal information.

 

In the pro-Western Ukraine, Nazi collaborators like Stepan Bandera are revered as national heroes. Bandera was the commander of the wartime militia the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN-B), which fought alongside Nazi Germany against the Soviet Union. Despite his OUN-B militia’s role in the massacre of Jews and ethnic Poles during the war — including one of the most brutal pogroms in history in the city of Lvov, where some 7,000 Jews were slaughtered — a major boulevard in Kiev has been named for Bandera.

 

Each year since the Maidan revolution, Bandera has been commemorated in Kiev with a torchlit rally. So have the Ukrainian Cossacks, the authors of countless anti-Jewish pogroms.

 

Neo-Nazi militias and fascist “self-defense” units are running rampant in the new Ukraine, menacing local police, smashing communist-era memorials and even overturning elections results. As journalist Lev Golinkin wrote last year in the Nation, “It is difficult to imagine any stable administration tolerating three years of such brazen challenges to its monopoly over the use of force, yet nearly all of the far right’s actions have gone unpunished.”

 

The second anniversary of the Maidan uprising saw central Kiev overtaken not by the youthful technocrats and hipster reformists lionized in the Western press, but by a cast of characters that journalist Anna Nemtsova described as “uniformed militia from nationalist movements, war veterans, and some dubious characters with criminal records.” Organized under the banner of the Revolutionary Right Force, the masked men got together and burned down a building they mistook for a local branch of the Russian-owned Alfa Bank.

 

The U.S. has made some weak attempts to pressure Ukraine’s government to respect the rule of law in eastern Ukraine and tamp down on corruption. However, McCain’s and Ryan’s “good meeting” with Parubiy revealed the extent to which Washington has cast aside any concern for democratic institutions and is willing to overlook open displays of violent Nazism in order to ratchet up the tension on Russia’s doorstep.

 

https://thegrayzone.com/2017/06/23/john-mccain-paul-ryan-meeting-ukrainian-nazi-andriy-parubiy/

Anonymous ID: e50067 Aug. 30, 2025, 1 p.m. No.23528695   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8698

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Speaker Parubiy to visit the United States on June 12-16

12.06.2017 17:52

Chairman of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine Andriy Parubiy will pay a visit to the United States of America on June 12-16.

 

This has been reported by the press service of the Verkhovna Rada.

 

"During the stay in Washington (USA), Speaker Parubiy will have a series of high level meetings. In particular, the visit program includes meetings with Paul Ryan, Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, Mac Thornberry, Chairperson of the Committee on Armed Services of the United States House of Representatives, Adam Smith, Ranking Member of the Committee on Armed Services of the United States House of Representatives, Eliot Engel, Ranking Member of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, and Kevin McCarthy, Majority Leader of the United States House of Representatives," the report said.

 

According to the program, a solemn event in the framework of the Ukrainian Days in the United States Congress devoted to20th anniversary of the Congressional Ukrainian Caucusand a meeting with members of the Senate Ukraine Caucus are scheduled to take place.

 

The Chairperson of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine will speak at "US-UA Working Group Yearly Summit V: Providing Ukraine with an Annual Report Card" and also meet with John McCain, Chairman of the United States Senate Committee on Armed Services, and Jack Reed, Ranking Member of the United States Senate Committee on Armed Services.

 

The ceremony of honoring the Holodomor victims with the participation of representatives of the Ukrainian community in the United States is also planned during the visit to the Memorial to Victims of the Ukrainian Famine-Genocide of 1932-33.

 

https://www.ukrinform.net/rubric-polytics/2246033-speaker-parubiy-to-visit-the-united-states-on-june-1216.html