The dream of united Europe "from Dublin to Vladivostok," voiced by Jean-Francois Thiriart in 1960s, has been finally crushed by Ukraine's crisis, Bryan MacDonald noted.
The Ukrainian crisis has dealt a mortal blow to Jean-Francois Thiriart's idea of united Europe from Dublin to Vladivostok, adopted in the 2000s by policy makers in Moscow and Berlin, Bryan MacDonald, an Irish writer and commentator noted in his Op-Ed, published by RT.
"A detente between Moscow and Berlin to counterbalance the USA and the emerging Chinese superpower. This dream has been on life support for years and it's fair to say that the Ukraine crisis finally killed it."
Motivation for US influence in the Ukrainian Maidan, along with the Brzezinski doctrine of ending Russia's aspiration to be a great power by denying Russia of the Ukraine. This has the double benefit to the US of foreclosing a German-Russian alliance in the future and preventing a Eurasia capable of challenging US hegemony, two of the chief geopolitical and geostrategic objectives of US strategists since WWII.
Motivation is not proof of commission, but it is a prerequisite. There is ample evidence to suggest that the Maidan was indeed engineered by the US State Department (Pyatt and Nuland), US clandestine services (CIA), and associated NGOs (the five billion mentioned by Nuland).
Bryan MacDonald believes that a "sizable and influential wing in Berlin" will finally pressure the leadership of the country into adopting an independent political course, free from Washington's dictate.
The writer referred to the doctrine, promoted by British General Hastings Lionel "Pug" Ismay, the first Secretary General of NATO from 1952 to 1957 – "to keep the Americans in, the Russians out, and the Germans down," stressing that Russian and German political elite strongly oppose this approach.Sputnik
Ukraine Crisis Kills Dream of Russian-German Alliance - MacDonald
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