Euromaiden
© WIkipediaEuromaidan in Kiev, 19 February 2014. Labor Unions' House on fire.
When Euromaidan kicked off almost exactly 4 years ago in Ukraine's capital of Kiev, you could hardly move for western correspondents there covering it, telling us all about the heroic protesters wishing to overthrow the awful regime of Yanukovych and his government (both, democratically elected, btw) -

What happened next? Maidan and the West got their way, Yanukovych and his government were booted out, the West's people were installed. What happened after that? Well, going on 4 years of chaos, inflation, unemployment, in Ukraine, and war in Donbass, of course. All of which the west have been a bit shy in telling you about, given it's their guys at the wheel....

All of this has contributed to 80% of Ukrainians now being against president Poroshenko, again, something the western press are strangely reticent to report on. Actually, there's a long list of things the West would rather you didn't know about their new Ukraine. Such as this, on October 14th, that open neo-Nazis now brazenly march through Kiev in their thousands -

Saakashvili
© uropean Press AssociationFormer Georgian president and ex-Odesa Governor Mikhail Saakashvili (centre) speaks with journalists after he crossed Polish-Ukrainian border on Sunday.
And that shortly after that, the new Maidan kicked off in Kiev, spearheaded by former Georgian president (now wanted on high-level charges there), recently of a disastrous reign as governor of Odessa, even more recently, September, simply barging over the Ukrainian border. Since that September border-barge, Saakashvili has been on a trouble-making tour of Ukraine, as he attempts to topple incumbent president Poroshenko.

All of which has left the western press in a bit of dilemna. Who to support - the western installed uber pro-west Poroshenko, or the darling of the West, wanting-to-be-western-installed Saakashvili, who has even gone to far as to be sleeping in the tents on the new Maidan. All of which would surely be screaming for sympathetic western media coverage. Yet, Saakashvili is going up against their man. So he's out of luck. No fawning western coverage this time, no glorious new Maidan for him. Almost no western press coverage at all.

This has left Saakashvili rather pathetically pleading with the Ukrainian people to protect him against Poroshenko's apparent wish to deport him back to Georgia. Meanwhile, Ukrainian ultra-nationalists storming and attempting to occupy a court in Kiev similarly find themselves out of luck - the West only supported that in Ukraine in 2013, guys. Now, the west supports Poroshenko, who seemingly entirely without irony, or memory, is attempting to deport the tent-dwelling Saakashvili for his attempt in an 'illegal overthrow of government'.

Post-Euromaidan Ukraine is certainly never boring. Not so much a car crash, as a neverending demolition derby.