Puppet Masters
So perhaps we should start with a short history lesson. A thousand years ago Kiev was the capital of an Orthodox Christian state called Rus with links reaching as far west as England. But Rus was swept away by the Tatars in the 13th century, leaving only a few principalities in the north, including an obscure town deep in the forests, called Moscow.
What became known as Ukraine - a Slav phrase meaning "borderlands" - was regularly fought over by Tatars, Poles, Lithuanians, Russians, Turks, Swedes and Cossacks. One large chunk, including Kiev itself, joined Russia in the 17th century. Galicia in the west fell to the Austrians in the following century, but was taken by Poland after the First World War, when the rest of Ukraine joined the Soviet Federation. Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin handed Galicia and its capital Lviv to Ukraine in 1945. All these changes were accompanied by much bloody fighting.
Ukraine's Crimean peninsula followed a different but equally tumultuous path. The seat of a powerful and predatory Tatar state, it was conquered and settled by the Russians in the 18th century. Stalin deported its Tatar minority in 1944 because, he said, they had collaborated with the Germans. They were later allowed to return. Crimea only became part of Ukraine in 1954, when Khrushchev gave it to Kiev as a present.
An American anchor for the Kremlin-funded news channel RT has quit on air and accused the network of "whitewashing" Moscow's military intervention in Crimea.
Liz Wahl, a Washington-based correspondent for RT-America, part of the network formerly known as Russia Today, told viewers on Wednesday she was resigning because of its coverage of President Vladimir Putin's actions in the Ukrainian region.
Veerng off script, Wahl said: "I cannot be part of a network funded by the Russian government that whitewashes the actions of Putin. I'm proud to be an American and believe in disseminating the truth, and that is why, after this newscast, I'm resigning."
As the daughter of a military veteran and the wife of a military base physician the network's coverage of a potentially explosive crisis presented ethical and moral dilemmas, she said.
Comment: She's "Proud to be an American" but whitewashes the actions of the USA involved in instigating the conflict in Ukraine. She appears to be a perfect example of Glenn Greenwald's recent expose about social control via the media. Her announcement was totally unprofessional and damaging to one of the few news outlets that DOES publish truth on a wide scale.

Troops under Russian command fire weapons into the air in Lubimovka, Ukraine.
Diplomatic pronouncements are renowned for hypocrisy and double standards. But western denunciations of Russian intervention in Crimea have reached new depths of self parody. The so far bloodless incursion is an "incredible act of aggression", US secretary of state John Kerry declared. In the 21st century you just don't invade countries on a "completely trumped-up pretext", he insisted, as US allies agreed that it had been an unacceptable breach of international law, for which there will be "costs".
That the states which launched the greatest act of unprovoked aggression in modern history on a trumped-up pretext - against Iraq, in an illegal war now estimated to have killed 500,000, along with the invasion of Afghanistan, bloody regime change in Libya, and the killing of thousands in drone attacks on Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia, all without UN authorisation - should make such claims is beyond absurdity.
It's not just that western aggression and lawless killing is on another scale entirely from anything Russia appears to have contemplated, let alone carried out - removing any credible basis for the US and its allies to rail against Russian transgressions. But the western powers have also played a central role in creating the Ukraine crisis in the first place.
And here is Russian President Vladimir Putin, already last year, talking about how Russia and China decided to trade in roubles and yuan, and stressing how Russia needs to quit the "excessive monopoly" of the US dollar. He had to be aware the Empire would strike back.
Now there's more; Russian presidential adviser Sergey Glazyev told RIA Novosti, "Russia will abandon the US dollar as a reserve currency if the United States initiates sanctions against the Russian Federation."
So the Empire struck back by giving "a little help" to regime change in the Ukraine. And Moscow counter-punched by taking control of Crimea in less than a day without firing a shot - with or without crack Spetsnaz brigades (UK-based think tanks say they are; Putin says they are not).
Putin's assessment of what happened in Ukraine is factually correct; "an anti-constitutional takeover and armed seizure of power". It's open to endless, mostly nasty debate whether the Kremlin overreacted or not. Considering the record of outright demonization of both Russia and Putin going on for years - and now reaching fever pitch - the Kremlin's swift reaction was quite measured.
Niger has extradited Muammar Gaddafi's son Saadi to Libya where he has been placed in a Tripoli prison, the Libyan government said on Thursday.
Libya had been seeking the extradition of Saadi, who had fled to the southern neighbour nation after the toppling of Gaddafi in a Nato-backed uprising in 2011.
"The Libyan government received today Saadi Gaddafi and he arrived in Tripoli," the cabinet of the Libyan prime minister, Ali Zeidan, said in a statement.
Saadi, one of Gaddafi's seven sons, was being held by judiciary police forces, the government said. It thanked Niger for its co-operation and said Saadi would be treated according to international justice standards for prisoners.
In strongly worded comments during a commemoration event on the anniversary of the death of the country's late president, Hugo Chavez, Maduro derided Panama's leadership.
"We're not going to let anyone get away with interfering with our fatherland, you despicable lackey, president of Panama," said Maduro.
The Venezuelan leader affirmed that actions to break relations with Panama were in keeping with the day's homage to Chavez.
"This is the best way to honor commander Chavez, by defending our sovereignty."
North Korea defended on Wednesday its recent missile firings as "ordinary military practice," as South Korea said Tuesday's volley passed above a Chinese passenger jet's route just minutes ahead of the airliner.
In its first public comment on the launches, North Korea's state media said the missiles' accuracy ensured they wouldn't affect neighboring countries. The firings began on Feb. 21 and ended on Tuesday, state media said.
South Korean and U.S. officials confirmed that North Korea fired four Scud missiles into the sea on Feb. 27 and two on Monday, as well as other short-range rockets on Tuesday. The firings of ballistic missiles breaches a United Nations test ban, but North Korea said Wednesday that the launches were a sovereign right.
Seoul's Defense Ministry said the North gave no warning for any of the tests.

Patrick Rock had earlier been accused of inappropriate behaviour by a colleague.
David Cameron is under pressure to explain whether his senior aide Patrick Rock was tipped off by Downing Street that he was accused of an offence related to child abuse images hours before his arrest by police.
Labour accused Number 10 late Tuesday of a "lack of transparency" about the senior adviser's resignation and subsequent arrest, which took place nearly three weeks ago but only became public after a leak to a newspaper.
It also emerged that the aide was previously accused of "inappropriate behaviour" by a colleague and this incident was investigated by his line manager, Ed Llewellyn, Cameron's chief of staff, who is also an old friend of Rock's.
The prime minister on Tuesday said he was "profoundly shocked" by allegations against Rock, who had worked on government policy about placing filters on internet pornography to protect children.
The report RT's Abby Martin SHOULD have done - RT America exposes blatant hypocrisy of Western media
But bluster and self-interest aside, Russia's invasion helps hold up a mirror to the West's foreign policy, however much that makes us flinch. "The first casualty when war comes is truth," US Senator Hiram Warren Johnson was reported to have said in 1918; in the Ukrainian crisis, the first casualty has been irony. "You just don't invade another country on a phoney pretext in order to assert your interests," declares John Kerry, Secretary of State for a country which infamously did just that almost exactly 11 years ago. "The world cannot say it's OK to violate the sovereignty of another nation in this way," solemnly proclaims William Hague, who merrily waltzed through the division lobby in support of the Iraq war in 2003.













Comment: It looks as though Crimea is not going to allow its government or citizens to be manipulated and bullied by the Ukraine and the West. Good for them!
Agreement on cooperation between Republics of Tatarstan and Crimea signed in Simferopol
Crimea's Supreme Council makes decision to join Russia as federal subject
BREAKING! Crimean parliament votes to join Russia, hold referendum in 10 days on ratifying