The American Dilemma
http://watchingamerica.com/News/233758/the-american-dilemma-3/
Does the U.S. view its interests and credibility in Eastern Europe and Ukraine as preferable to those in the Middle East and Egypt, even though its support for Ukraine may ignite a new Cold War?
The American Dilemma
Al Masry Al Youm, Egypt
By Mohammed Qashqush
Translated By Kristine Anderson
28 February 2014
Edited by Gillian Palmer
The Arab Spring has extended its legacy from Tahrir Square in Cairo to Independence Square in Kiev, where a Ukrainian Spring has been ignited. There the ruling regime is falling: The elected president, Viktor Yanukovich, has been deposed and is now summoned by the courts an act ratified by parliament on charges of murder, terrorism and corruption. This occurred after he refused to engage in an early election, disregarding the lawful and democratic demands of the people.
Ukrainian aviation authorities barred the presidents jet from leaving Ukrainian airspace, and so he fled Kiev via sea to the eastern borders in the Crimea region. He then dismissed his guards so they would not follow him, and disappeared! It is likely he will cross the nearby border into Russia ... but his actions will become apparent at a later date.
Here we might discuss the resemblance between Egypt and Ukraine, as well as the contradictory aspects of the U.S. stance toward both these nations! Egypt is a central and pivotal nation in the Arab homeland and the Middle East; it possesses the most powerful military in the area the 14th largest in the world and the largest in the Arab region as of 2013. It also holds a strategic position between the Red and Mediterranean Seas, connecting them through the Suez Canal, and is one of the primary nations facing Israel.
Similarly, Ukraine has the second most powerful military in Europe, after Russia. It is Europes gateway to Russia and the Black Sea, and the primary passageway for Russian natural gas into Western Europe. The most important Soviet nuclear facilities were concentrated in Ukraine prior to the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, and it leases one of its Black Sea ports in Sevastopol to Russias Black Sea fleet. It is also a breadbasket and steel producer for Europe and the Middle East.