The United States claims to be a defender of democracy and human rights. Often, that's far from the case. When it's useful for economic or geostrategic reasons, the U.S. overthrows democractically-elected governments, sends in the CIA, supports oppressive regimes, or bombs countries. This happened all over Latin America, in particular, and is happening now in Venezuela. It happened, in fact, worldwide, with devastating destruction and costs. U.S. aid for the Indoesian military's fight against leftists caused about a million deaths in the 1960s. Decades of wars and sanctions in the Middle East (especially Iraq and Syria) unleashed mass death and destruction and led to huge refugee crises that destabliized European politics. Likewise, regime change operations and sanctions in Latin America resulted in migration to the U.S., upending U.S. politics as well. The war in Ukraine was a CIA operation as well.
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U.S. hypocrisy about the war in Ukraine is absolutely stunning, given that it invaded and bombed countries all over the world (e.g., Iraq) for flimsy reasons, often allying with Muslim extremists (e.g., Afghanistan in 80s, Serbia, Libya, and Syria). The U.S. occupies 1/3 of Syria (the parts with oil), with help from its proxy army, the Syrian Defense Forces. Russia's invasion was along its borders, in response to CIA and NATO meddling in a country with deep historical, linguistic, and cultural ties to Russia. U.S. meddling included "engineering" the 2014 coup, according to Chas. W. Freeman, former U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia and Lifetime Director of the Atlantic Council. The U.S. also armed far-right militias that were attacking Russian speakers in the east. Before the 2022 invasion, the militias increased their bombings. Crimea had voted multiple times for closer ties to Russia. The U.S. exploited divisions in Ukraine between pro-Western and pro-Russian provinces and groups to provoke the war. RAND Corporation recommended arming Ukraine as the best way to "weaken and overextend" Russia and predicted it would result in a war. The New Yorker reported that the CIA and NSA engaged in a broad "effort, around the time of the invasion, to close off many 'sources related to Russia/Ukraine matters.'"
Jack Matlock (former U.S. Ambassador to the USSR under Ronald Reagan) said in a 2024 interview: "Why don’t we understand that trying to remove Ukraine from Russian influence and put military bases there would be, in their case, absolutely unacceptable and worthy of defense?" Matlock said the U.S. backed the 2014 coup, and "Obviously, to any Russian leader, not just Vladimir Putin, that would have been an absolutely impossible, hostile act, which they had to react to. And in particular, they were not going to lose their naval base in Crimea." Finally, Matlock said the Ukrainians are "dominated in their thinking by neo-Nazis — we tend to ignore that, or when Putin points it out, we say he’s lying. He’s not lying."
The U.S. government lies about every war. They're lying, too, about the one in Ukraine.