https://thegrayzone.com/2021/05/26/b...nazis-ukraine/
US-funded Belarusian regime-change activist arrested on plane joined neo-Nazis in Ukraine

Ben Norton·May 26, 2021
Belarusian  regime-change activist Roman Protasevich, whose arrest on a grounded  plane caused a global scandal, fought in Ukraine’s neo-Nazi Azov  Battalion and was cultivated by the US government’s media apparatus.
A high-profile Belarusian regime-change activist whose detention on a  forcibly grounded airplane caused an international scandal has  extensive links to neo-fascist groups, which his political sponsors in  Western capitals have conveniently overlooked.
 Far-right activist Roman Protasevich was traveling on the Irish  airliner Ryanair on May 23 when the plane crossed into Belarusian  airspace and was ordered to land by state authorities. Protasevich was  subsequently taken off the aircraft and arrested.
 The incident triggered a wave of denunciations by Western  governments, and a new round of aggressive sanctions on Belarus. Many  anti-interventionist critics pointed out the hypocrisy of the US  government’s condemnations, recalling how, in 2013, it forcibly grounded the plane of Bolivian President Evo Morales in an egregious violation of international law because it wrongly suspected he was harboring NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden.
 Effortlessly ignoring Washington’s own precedent, Western governments  and major corporate media outlets blasted the government of Belarusian  President Alexander Lukashenko as a brutal dictatorship while lavishing  praise on Protasevich, portraying the prominent opposition figure as a  heroic human rights defender.
 What they refused to acknowledge is Protasevich’s recent history serving with a neo-Nazi militia in Ukraine, and his extensive ties to other right-wing extremist organizations.
Belarusian regime-change activist Roman Protasevich with the neo-Nazi Azov Battalion in Ukraine
 A leader of Ukraine’s notorious Azov Battalion, an explicitly neo-Nazi militia that uses white supremacist imagery, publicly acknowledged that Protasevich joined the fight inside Azov. A Ukrainian newspaper reported that Protasevich worked with the neo-Nazi militia’s press service.
Numerous photos discovered by another Ukrainian media outlet show Protasevich in the ranks of the Azov Battalion, clad in a military uniform and holding an assault rifle.
Protasevich was also photographed wearing a neo-Nazi t-shirt with swastikas on it.
Belarusian regime-change activist Roman Protasevich armed with an assault rifle in a neo-Nazi Azov Battalion uniform in Ukraine 
Protasevich personally admitted in an interview to traveling to Ukraine and spending a year battling  pro-Russian forces in the eastern war zone of Donbas. He is even  suspected of possibly posing with an assault rifle and a military  uniform on the front of Azov’s propaganda magazine, which is emblazoned  with a large neo-Nazi symbol.
The influence of Azov and similar ultra-nationalist groups in Ukraine  has extended well outside of its borders, spilling over into  neighboring countries in Eastern Europe, while also influencing politics in Canada and even Hong Kong, where Azov extremists joined a Western-backed “color revolution” operation targeting China.
A cover of the propaganda magazine run by Ukraine’s neo-Nazi Azov
Battalion features a man suspected by to Belarusian regime-change  activist Roman Protasevich Like Azov, Protasevich has benefited from direct support from Western governments. Just as the neo-Nazi Ukrainian militia received weapons and military training from the United States  in order to fight in its proxy war against Russia, Protasevich’s media  career was launched by a US government-backed outlet, Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty (RFE/RL), which was created by the CIA as part of an  information war against Moscow.
Washington’s RFE/RL even interviewed Protasevich  back in 2015 for a puff piece promoting foreign far-right extremists  who joined the neo-Nazi Avoz Battalion in Ukraine. Using a pseudonym,  Protasevich spoke of his experience fighting and being wounded in the  Pahonia Detachment, a group of Belarusian fascists who joined Azov.
The RFE/RL article clearly describes Protasevich as a “soldier,” not a  journalist. And in his testimony the Belarusian extremist stated openly  that he was fighting on the front line when he was hit by shrapnel.  Protasevich also explained that the Pahonia Detachment was not separate,  and that he and other Belarusian fighters were embedded in Azov units.
Far-right  regime-change activist Roman Protasevich interviewed by US-funded  RFE/RL as a member of a detachment of Belarusians fighting in the  neo-Nazi Avoz Battalion in Ukraine, auto-translated by Google Translate
Western government-backed color revolution seeks regime change in Belarus
Roman Protasevich is among the most high-profile Belarusian  opposition figures to be cultivated by Western governments in a  regime-change operation targeting their home country.
In 2020, a protest movement in Belarus quickly morphed into a  Western-backed attempt at a so-called color revolution. It aimed at  overthrowing the government of President Alexander Lukashenko, a former  Soviet collective farm director who has ruled Belarus since 1994 and  maintained some Soviet-style policies, while pursuing friendly relations  with Russia and China.
To the chagrin of the US and its EU allies, Lukashenko has overseen a  relatively state-led economy with greater public ownership and more  robust social programs when compared to his post-Soviet neighbors, which  imposed neoliberal shock therapy and integrated their political and  economic systems into NATO and Western financial markets.
While imposing suffocating economic sanctions on Belarus, the US  government and European Union member states have poured millions of  dollars into anti-Lukashenko groups, particularly media outlets, while  helping to establish a parallel government in exile, called the  Coordination Council, led by NATO-backed opposition figure Sviatlana  Tsikhanouskaya.
A pair of Russian pranksters posing as Tsikhanouskaya tricked top officials from the US government’s National Endowment for Democracy (NED),  a CIA front that funds opposition groups in countries targeted by  Washington for regime change, into admitting that they had trained and  funded the leaders of the attempted Belarusian color revolution.
“A lot of the the people who have been trained by these [NED] hubs,  who have been in touch with them, and being educated, being involved in  their work, have now taken the the flag and started to lead in community  organizing,” stated NED Senior Europe Program Officer Nina Ognianova,  who previously served as the Eurasia program coordinator at regime-change lobby group the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ).
“We don’t think that this movement that is so impressive and so  inspiring now came out of nowhere, that it just happened overnight. But  it has been developing, and we have our modest but significant  contribution in that by empowering the local actors to do the important  work,” Ognianova openly told the Russian pranksters, known as Vovan and  Lexus.
Also on the prank call was Carl Gershman, the decades-long president  of the NED, and a former activist on the American anti-communist,  social-democratic left who later became a Reagan-era neoconservative and  has led the CIA front since 1984.
Thinking he was speaking with Tsikhanouskaya – the Belarusian version of Venezuelan coup leader Juan Guaidó  – Gershman outlined the extensive support the US government’s  regime-change arm has provided to the Belarusian opposition, and  particularly its media apparatus:
We have four institutes, and I think all of them are  active in Belarus. Two of them I think you know well, because they work  very, very closely with you and your team and the Coordination Council,  and that’s NDI [National Democratic Institute] and IRI [International  Republican Institute], our two party institutes.
And they’re under the NED umbrella, and we fund their work, you know,  that works on strengthening parties and their messaging, their public  outreach, their communications. And I know that they’re working with you  [Tsikhanouskaya] and your team very, very closely.
And we also have a business institute that’s associated with our  Chamber of Commerce in the United States, the Center for International  Private Enterprise, that we have funded to work with the private sector  in Belarus, to set a vision and a framework for a post-Lukashenko  private economic recovery of the country.
And we have a labor institute, a trade union institute association …  and in addition to these four institutes, and our labor institute, which  supports the independent unions in Belarus, we also make grants  directly to organizations in Belarus, and have done so for a very, very  long time.
And the critical area here, first of all, is free media. We support  the journalists … We support people if they have to flee the country, we  support their temporary stay in other countries, and all the needs that  they have.
We have been working around the country, in the eastern part of the  country … on civic participation, and we’ve made grants to groups. We  also have worked in the western part of the country on free media …  where we’ve supported citizen journalism.
In a call with Russian pranksters posing as  Western-backed Belarusian opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya,  the head of US gov't regime-change arm the NED admits to meddling in  Belarus to try to topple President Alexander Lukashenko.
Read more here: https://t.co/CTPVMr1Khb pic.twitter.com/l6eWFUgVCi
 — The Grayzone (@TheGrayzoneNews) May 28, 2021
US government-funded Belarusian infowarrior fights alongside Ukrainian neo-Nazis
Roman Protasevich is one of the main Belarusian infowarriors whose career has been cultivated by the US government.
Following his arrest, Franak Viačorka, a top Tsikhanouskaya advisor  who has also long been funded by Washington and its soft-power arms,  tweeted that he and Protasevich had worked as “Havel fellows” at the US  government’s propaganda arm Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL).
RFE/RL, which was originally called Radio Liberation from Bolshevism,  was founded by the CIA to function as an information warfare weapon  against the former Soviet Union, and continues playing the same role  against the Russian Federation today.
Besides his stint at Washington’s RFE/RL, Protasevich also worked at European Radio for Belarus, a right-wing outlet funded by the governments of the United States, Poland, Netherlands, and Lithuania.
I know Raman Pratasevich for 8 years as  principled, brave journalist. He is always on the frontline. Raman, Ihar  Losik & I — we were Havel fellows at @rferl. When Ihar Losik was imprisoned last summer, Raman kindly took over Ihar’s project @belamova. He may be tortured by KGB now 
pic.twitter.com/6jlldKnaoB
 — Franak Viačorka (@franakviacorka) May 23, 2021
Viacorka noted that his friend had run a popular opposition  propaganda channel on the messaging app Telegram, called Belamova, which  was created by another US government-funded Havel fellow, Ihar Losik.
Operating from Poland, Protasevich also operated a Belarusian  opposition Telegram channel called Nexta. Protasevich used these large  platforms from abroad to organize protests and destabilization  operations against the Belarusian government.
Protasevich fits the precise profile of the foreign-based Belarusian  infowarriors funded by the US government, as NED President Carl Gershman  had admitted: “We support the journalists … We support people if they  have to flee the country, we support their temporary stay in other  countries, and all the needs that they have.”
Through the attempted color revolution, Protasevich has collaborated  closely with Tsikhanouskaya, coordinating messaging for her  regime-in-exile.
Immediately before his detention, Protasevich was in fact with  Tsikhanouskaya in Greece for an opposition conference. He served as her  photographer, taking photos of the Belarusian opposition leader as she  met with top Greek officials, including President Katerina  Sakellaropoulou.
Посчастливилось поснимать @Tsihanouskaya в ходе её визита в Афины.
Было безумно круто получить такой опыт! Больше фото — в официальных аккаунтах Светланы Георгиевны. pic.twitter.com/ugHVHXLzrQ
— Roman Protasevich (@pr0tez) May 16, 2021
Protasevich subsequently flew from Athens to Vilnius, Lithuana, the  base of Tsikhanouskaya’s parallel government, when his plane, Ryanair  flight 4978, crossed into Belarusian airspace and was ordered to land, and he was arrested.
The European Union forcefully condemned the arrest. Ursula von der  Leyen, the president of the EU Commission, called on Belarus to release  Protasevich, while publicly offering the opposition a €3 billion ($3.67  billion USD) “investment package” if they overthrew Lukashenko –  essentially bribe money to grease the gears of regime change.
We have a 3 billion euro economic and investment package ready to go for Belarus, when it becomes democratic. pic.twitter.com/704CAyX8tZ
— Ursula von der Leyen (@vonderleyen) May 24, 2021
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken  called the grounding of the airliner a “brazen and shocking act.” The  State Department released a statement lionizing Roman Protasevich as a  brave “journalist” representative of “independent media,” and former CIA  agent-turned-State Department spokesman Ned Price demanded the “Lukashenka regime” release him.
While Western governments and corporate media outlets have vigorously  marketed a Hollywood-esque portrait of Protasevich as a plucky  grassroots reporter challenging a thuggish dictator, there is more to  the story than the simplistic Western narrative has allowed.
The Ukrainian newspaper Mirror Weekly  published a report on May 24 acknowledging that Protasevich had served  in the press service of Ukraine’s neo-Nazi Azov Battalion.
Ivan Katchanovski, a political scientist at the University of Ottawa  and expert on Ukraine, noted that Western media outlets have totally  ignored Protasevich’s work with the notorious neo-Nazi militia.
#Ukrainian media reports that #Protasevich served in the press-service of the neo-Nazi-led Azov battalion in #Ukraine during the war in #Donbas: "… украинскую страницу в биографии Протасевича: белорус одно время работал в пресс-службе «Азова»." https://t.co/azFjYFkCtk
— Ivan Katchanovski (@I_Katchanovski) May 24, 2021
Following the reports, Andriy Biletsky, a Ukrainian neo-fascist politician and former commander of Azov, confirmed in a Telegram post that Protasevich had indeed fought alongside the neo-Nazi militia.
Biletsky said Protasevich was wounded in the fighting with  pro-Russian forces, although the former Azov commander insisted that  Protasevich was engaged primarily in information warfare and not combat.
Biletsky lavished Protasevich with praise and, warning of the  possibility of Belarus unifying with Russia, called on fellow far-right  Ukrainians to join Belarusians in overthrowing the Lukashenko  government.
While the former Azov leader claimed Protasevich was not involved in combat, photos that were subsequently published by the Ukrainian news website Strada  directly contradicted his denial. The outlet found numerous images  showing Protasevich holding an assault rifle while wearing Azov’s  uniform, standing next to fellow neo-Nazi soldiers.
Belarusian regime-change activist Roman Protasevich armed with an assault rifle with the neo-Nazi Azov Battalion in Ukraine 
These photos were posted on the Russian social media website VKontakte, or VK, by the girlfriend of an Azov fighter, Irina Khalanskaya.
A screenshot of a VK post showing Belarusian regime-change operative Roman Protasevich with the neo-Nazi Azov Battalion in Ukraine 
The stills clearly show Protasevich, who claimed to be a “journalist,” armed and in formation with the neo-Nazi militia.
A  screenshot of a VK post showing Belarusian regime-change operative  
Roman Protasevich with the neo-Nazi Azov Battalion in Ukraine Another photo uploaded in the same PK publication shows an Azov officer doing a fascist-style salute.
A screenshot of a VK post showing an Azov Battalion officer doing a fascist-style salute
Researchers on Twitter also found photos of Protasevich wearing Swastika t-shirts from an explicitly neo-Nazi clothing line.
Protasevich's selfie in an explicitly neo-Nazi  brand Sva Stone. It's extremely unlikely that one can wear these  T-shirts without being "in". pic.twitter.com/brpsUgEpPw
 — Volodymyr Ishchenko (@Volod_Ishchenko) May 26, 2021
Researchers likewise uncovered a 2015 edition of Azov’s newsletter, Black Sun, which depicts a man on its cover that some suspect may be Protasevich.
Azov published the issue on its official page on VK. It is not confirmed if the soldier in the photo was Protasevich, although facial recognition software suggests he may be.
But the name of the publication, Black Sun, says a lot about Azov’s  political agenda. Known as the Sonnenrad, the symbol is a notorious  white supremacist emblem first appropriated by Nazi Germany that has  since been adopted by neo-Nazi groups around the globe. The image is  especially popular as a tattoo, and many fighters in Azov and other  neo-fascist gangs in Eastern Europe can be seen with it on their elbows.
Ukraine’s neo-Nazi Azov Battalion sharing the 2015 magazine on its official VK page 
The independent website FOIA Research investigated Protasevich’s social media accounts and found photos linking him to an array of far-right groups.
Protasevich got his start as a militant in the right-wing Young  Front, a conservative Belarusian nationalist group that trained youths  in how to shoot guns, co-sponsored rallies honoring World War II-era Eastern European Nazi collaborators, and organized violent protests against the Lukashenko government.
FOIA Research came across a Facebook post showing Protasevich  participating in the Western-backed “Euromaidan” coup in Ukrainian  capital Kiev in 2013 or 2014, where he helped destroy a statue of  Vladimir Lenin. The website also uncovered numerous photos of  Protasevich supporting neo-Nazi black bloc forces in Belarus.
On his Facebook page, Protasevich liked the Pahonia Detachment, a  neo-fascist Belarusian militia that battled pro-Russian forces alongside  Ukraine’s Azov Battalion. (Some researchers say that Protasevich served  in Pahonia when he was in Ukraine.)
Tracking his Facebook posts, FOIA Research documented how Protasevich  flew from Brussels to Washington DC in April 2018 for a series of  meeting with US government officials.
Protasevich described his junket to Washington writing, “The most  important week in my life begins.” He then posted a photo in the US  State Department, commenting, “Never had so many important and  interesting encounters in my life.”
Belarusian regime-change activist Roman Protasevich in the US State Department in April 2018
When Protasevich later became an editor of the popular Belarusian  opposition Telegram channel Nexta, he was working alongside another  regime-change activist named Stepan Putilo, known more commonly as  Stepan Svetlov.
The New York Times heroized Svetlov in a puff piece titled “The 22-Year-Old Coordinating Protests in Belarus, From a Small Office in Poland.”  What the US newspaper of record did not mention is that Svetlov also  worked for Belsat, a Polish media channel funded by the governments of  Poland, the United States, Britain, and numerous Western European  nations.
Belsat has broadcasted constant propaganda against Belarus, seeking  to destabilize the country and ultimately overthrow its government. To  do so, FOIA Research noted that Belsat “regularly give[s] a platform to  Belarusian nationalists and neo-Nazis,” and even published an open call  for volunteers to go to Ukraine to fight against pro-Russian forces,  accompanied by an email address and phone number for recruits.
Grayzone editor Max Blumenthal reported on leaked documents  from the UK Foreign Office that named Belsat as a key weapon in a  Western government information war operation targeting Moscow, its  allies, and Russian speakers in Belarus and Ukraine.
The more complete portrait of Belarusian activist Roman Protasevich  shows he is a prototypical example of a Western government-cultivated  regime-change operative, with origins in neo-fascist groups and a  comfortable career as an infowarrior cultivated by Washington and the  European Union.
Protasevich constitutes another example of how NATO member states  hypocritically pose as enlightened defenders of freedom and democracy,  when in reality they support the most reactionary, far-right groups  imaginable, in a cynical bid to advance their economic and political  interests.
Since Protasevich’s arrest, the corporate media outlets that have  celebrated him as a courageous dissident conveniently overlooked his  entire political record, nervously shielding their eyes from the  right-wing extremist recruited and trained by Western governments.
Editor’s note: This article was updated on May  28 to include the newly discovered photos of Roman Protasevich with  weapons with the Azov Battalion and the 2015 RFE/RL interview with him.
Ben Norton
Ben Norton is a journalist, writer, and filmmaker. He is the assistant editor of The Grayzone, and the producer of the Moderate Rebels podcast, which he co-hosts with editor Max Blumenthal. His website is BenNorton.com and he tweets at @BenjaminNorton.