Archive for June, 2017

Socialism’s Past and Future – The Nation.

Illustration by Tim Robinson.

First, take a deep breath. Close your eyes to the appalling spectacle of American democracy collapsing all around us. Stop your ears to the cacophony of voices cheering on or lamenting its imminent demise. Instead, try to achieve enough inner calm to recall something that was once a source of solace: the idea of an alternative political and economic systemindeed, a whole new way of lifeknown as socialism. It may not be easy, because the din outside is deafening and the memory of socialism has faded for many. But only if you can summon the concentration and strength will you be in the proper frame of mind to consider Axel Honneths The Idea of Socialism.1

Honneth is best known as the leading representative of the Frankfurt Schools third generation. He is an advocate of many of the lessons and ideas of its first two generations, but over the years, he has also broken with his forebears in a variety of ways. Moving beyond Jrgen Habermass theory of communicative reasoning, Honneth has stressed the important role that our struggle for recognitionas manifested in the pursuit of love, esteem, and respectcan and should play in egalitarian politics. He has also tried to renew the Frankfurt Schools mode of social criticism and analysis by mining a wide variety of sourcesMichel Foucault, the American pragmatists George Herbert Mead and John Dewey, the British psychoanalyst D.W. Winnicottthat he believes helps us better understand the pathologies of modern life, and he isnt afraid to get into debates with fellow social theorists, including with Nancy Fraser over whether recognition or redistribution should be a key to radical politics.2

Hegel hovers over much of Honneths work, and never more explicitly than in his last major effort, Freedoms Right. But Honneths writings are also haunted by the question of what the radical tradition might mean in todays world. Can one rescue the socialist ideal from its history of disappointments and failures? Can democracy become more than an empty ideal in our age? Must a radical politics mean an end to all aspects of bourgeois society? Or is there a way to synthesize whats best in the socialist and liberal traditions and perhaps remake our economic system along the lines of what some now call market socialism?3

These are not new questions. Much of the lefts history in the 20th century has been marked by effortssome more creative than othersto give renewed meaning and purpose to the socialist tradition. But as Honneth acknowledges in The Idea of Socialism, part of the motive behind his book is personal: He seeks to rebut recent criticisms that he has abandoned the utopian impulse in critical theory and settled for modest reforms of the present order. Although he avoids imperatives for concrete action and isnt writing a socialist manifesto for our time, he wants to combat the resignation of those on the left who, he believes, have abandoned all hope for radical change. To that end, he defends a particular idea of socialismone that doesnt need to conform to the contours of the Marxist political tradition. For Honneth, this vision of socialism can be defended less from the vantage point of utopian thought experiments and more from what he sees as the practical lessons of history itself: all those traces of social progress, as he puts it, in whose realization socialism has played such a decisive role for 200 years.4

To parse out these traces, Honneth offers his readers an idiosyncratic history of socialisms rise and fall. After the French Revolution, whose promise of freedom was undermined, he argues, by the excessive individualism unleashed in its wake, socialists came to believe that the revolutionary goals of fraternity and equality could only be realized by reimagining freedom in terms of social cooperation and mutual recognition. This vision of socialism took shape in the context of the unbridled capitalist expansion of the mid-19th century, and it emerged as both a body of ideas and a set of social movements and political parties that sought to check the competitive excesses of the market through solidarity and cooperative interaction. Individual self-realization, these mid-19th-century socialists argued, could come about only through communal efforts that ex-tended beyond liberalisms faith in individual rights and the republican defense of the nondomination of others. It is this notion of social freedom-unapologetically intersubjective, but unwilling to sacrifice the individual on the altar of an idealized collectivitythat inspires the socialism Honneth hopes to redeem.5

But even at its birth, Honneth argues, the socialist project was doomed by several fatal flawshe calls them congenital defectsthat have haunted its subsequent history. These largely resulted from refracting the emancipatory goals of the French Revolution through the new socioeconomic realities of the Industrial Revolution. Early utopian socialists like Saint-Simon and Fourier, recoiling from the revolutionary violence of the late 18th century, emphasized social and economic change instead of political emancipation; and in the years to come, Marx, Engels, and the socialist movements they inspired also came to focus on what some called the material substructure of society, rather than on its cultural or institutional superstructure. The result was an excessive focus on economic change at the cost of its political counterpart. Lamentably, this imbalance often led to a dubious reduction of individual liberty to little more than an ideological reflection of bourgeois class interest. It also resulted in a blindness to the complexities of an increasingly differentiated modern world and an exaggerated faith in the role that the proletariat might play in inaugurating a new socialist society.6

These questionable assumptions, in Honneths view, allowed Marxists to believe that the inevitable crisis of capitalism would blaze a clear developmental path to its redemptive successor. Because of this inevitability, many socialistseven those involved in parliamentary and revolutionary actiondemonstrated a near-fatal indifference to those efforts that sought to discipline the market without eschewing the protections afforded by liberal rights and constitutions. Blinkered by an a priori reading of historical trends, Honneth concludes, socialist theory would henceforth be bound to the virtually transcendent precondition of an already present social movement, even though it was necessarily unclear whether it actually existed in social reality.7

Although praising Eduard Bernsteins revisionist appreciation of the value of pluralist democracy, Honneth credits the founders of the Frankfurt School with casting the first empirical doubts on the existence of a revolutionary proletariat and thereby helping to renovate the socialist tradition. But with their faith in the working class now lost, many in the Frankfurt School began to develop a socialist theory that no longer had clear links to activism on the ground. As a result, their mode of social critique threatened to descend into moral outrage rather than concrete politics, a weakness of utopian socialism that Marx had damnedand, one might argue, that continued to define competing socialist traditions like British Fabianism.8

Given that these major pillars of 19th-century socialism crumbled in the early 20th century, one might ask: Can the idea of socialism still motivate our actions, or should we work through our left melancholy and acknowledge it as a beloved object whose loss we must mourn and ultimately leave behind? Honneth is committed to the former position, but he insists that socialists need (among other things) to move beyond Marxs totalistic depiction of capitalism and abandon his belief that it will inevitably be overthrown by a revolutionary class of workers. They must also recognize, Honneth asserts, that whatever socialist society emerges in capitalisms wake will still need the market mechanisms and political practices that were developed in the liberal bourgeois era.9

Drawing on Dewey, among others, Honneth makes a case for this alternative vision of socialism by insisting that we begin to understand the idea as calling for an ongoing process of social and political experiments, one in which new groups constantly seek to draw public attention to their own demands by attempting to tear down barriers to communication and thereby expand the space of social freedom. There is a rich tradition of egalitarian politics beyond the Marxist and Leninist parties from which leftists can draw inspiration, but one of the keys to these experiments, for Honneth, is their inherently democratic nature. Although different oppressed groups may air their grievances and push their demands, these socialist experiments must be addressed to the citizenry in general.10

Because of the irrevocable differences in culture, language, and values found in modern life, Honneth contends, such a citizenry will never have one clear idea of what a socialist society should look like; instead, it will be the product of democratic deliberation and compromise, and will therefore require fostering what he calls social freedom not only in the economic sphere, but also in those of personal relations and political action. Unlike Marx and many of his followers, Honneth refuses to efface the differences between various sphereseconomic, political, civilthat make up contemporary social life, and it is here where Hegel becomes relevant. While Marx and Marxists advocated the reconciliation of politics and economics, Hegel argued that by keeping the different spheres of social interaction separate, one could create a more harmonious and organic society.11

The division of labor necessitated by the complexity of advanced societies could not be overcome by restoring these societies to some kind of putative preindustrial wholeness. Socialism, as Honneth reimagines it, would have to accept the different spheres that make up modern society. Instead of trying to erode them, it would need to place them into a rationally integrated, harmoniously arranged order where the steering mechanism is the public sphere, in which all citizens will play an equal role. Taking global interdependence into account, this socialism of the future would also need to operate on both a global and a local scale, and it would have to jettison not only the notion of a revolutionary subject, but also that of revolution itself as a total break with the current order. It would, in other words, have to abandon the older notions of utopia as a perfected form of life and understand socialism as an endless task involving constant experiments in newsocial arrangements.12

Honneth opens The Idea of Socialism with a question: why do visions of socialism no longer have the power to convince the outraged that collective efforts can in fact improve what appears inevitable? And though he forthrightly tells us why such visions, flawed in the ways he cogently describes, have faded in the past, we are still left with the question as to why these visions have not taken off today. There are, to be sure, sporadic resurgences of socialist enthusiasmexemplified by the Sanders campaign in the United States and the rise of Jeremy Corbyn in the British Labour Partybut they rarely translate into programmatic change by sympathetic politicians able to gain real power. Too often the ideal of democratic socialism turns oxymoronic when put to the test, since building a viable popular coalition dilutes the socialist goals, while focusing strictly on socialist programs often means sacrificing the support of a broad cross section of the population (see the unfolding debacle in Venezuela).13

There is, alas, not much in Honneths new book to inspire confidence that the idea of socialism can easily be transformed into a practical political and economic program. One obvious reason is that the hangover from the cataclysmic failure of actually existing socialism in the former Soviet bloc hasnt fully lifted. It is, after all, now a full century since the first great historical attempt to repeal and replace capitalism was launched, and we still have very few examples of socialism in practice that have succeeded. Subsequent experiments in the postCold War years, such as Hugo Chvezs, raised hopes for some, but the aftermath has not been encouraging, to put it mildly. The surviving soi-disant socialist countries, such as China, Vietnam, Laos, Cuba, and North Korea, are moving more toward state capitalismironically steered by a Leninist vanguard partythan anything that could plausibly be said to serve the cause of the kind of social freedom that Honneth extols.14

Nor is it clear that there is much enthusiasm for the more realistic microexperiments that Honneth hopes will foreshadow these viable alternatives. No experiments! served as the successful electoral slogan of Germanys Christian Democratic Union in the 1957 Bundestag elections, and there are many on all sides of the political spectrum who have come to share the sentiment. In fact, if we honestly acknowledge the experimental audacity of Trumps agenda, it may well be that American progressives and leftists will be the ones forced to embrace, at least for the moment, the wisdom of moving slowly and preserving what has already been gained in our decidedly non-utopian system.15

The Nation is reader-supported. Donate today to fund more reporting like this.

There is, of course, considerable and justified discontent with that system, and capitalism in all its motley variety remains an inviting and deserving target. But such discontent now manifests itself more in the volatile idiom of populism than in anything that resembles Honneths inclusive idea of democratic socialism. Populism is notoriously hard to define, but one of its abiding characteristics is the division of the world into friends and enemies, victims and perpetrators, the people and the elites. While often protesting real injuries and identifying real villains, it can too quickly degenerate into projection, resentment, and scapegoating, opening its adherents to those demagogic appeals to the baser instincts that so often spur political and social action. Although it offers plenty of recognition (or, perhaps more correctly, misrecognition), it is not of the mutually respectful and affectionate kind that Honneth hopes will underpin the solidarity that could enable his vision of socialism. Despite the efforts of left populists to be inclusive on non-ethnocentric lines, it is sobering to recall that the chilling epithet enemy of the people began its long and dubious career with the French Revolution, during the Reign of Terror.16

It is clearly wrenching for the many people who so long dreamed of a socialist alternative to modern capitalism to acknowledge the diminishing likelihood of realizing their hopes. But arguing that it may finally be time to do so doesnt mean emulating previous moments of leftist disillusionment, for the idea of socialism, Honneth reminds us, has led to many accomplishments of which its devotees can rightly be proud. It does mean, however, that at least for the moment, it may be more prudent to defend what is increasingly under threat.17

Moving beyond old leftist pieties may not be enough, but saving the adjective in democratic socialism seems more exigent at the moment than striving to realize the noun. What is left of the American welfare state, which for so long was denigrated by socialists as a strategy for maintaining rather than subverting capitalism, is now under mounting threat. The energy spent trying to disentangle an idealized, unrealized version of socialism that can still inspire confidence from all of the distorted, ineffective, and often counterproductive alternatives that litter its history may thus be better expended on other urgent tasks. Dreaming the utopian dreams that prolong our dogmatic slumber may not provide the most effective ammunition against the menace of dystopia that is looming before us.18

Read the rest here:
Socialism's Past and Future - The Nation.

‘Cochran political machine’ caused Mississippi attorney’s suicide, lawsuit says – The Sun Herald


The Sun Herald
'Cochran political machine' caused Mississippi attorney's suicide, lawsuit says
The Sun Herald
... subsequent suicide on a political machine lined up behind U.S. Senator Thad Cochran during an infamous re-election campaign that involved his wife being photographed in her nursing home bed by supporters of Tea Party candidate Chris McDaniel.
Lawsuit: Mississippi political scandal pushed man to suicideMinneapolis Star Tribune

all 4 news articles »

Read the original:
'Cochran political machine' caused Mississippi attorney's suicide, lawsuit says - The Sun Herald

Cyberattack hits Ukraine, Europe, U.S.; hackers use suspected …

PARIS -- A new and highly virulent outbreak of malicious data-scrambling software appears to be causing mass disruption across Europe, hitting Ukraine especially hard.

Company and government officials reported serious intrusions at the Ukrainian power grid, banks and government offices, where one senior official posted a photo of a darkened computer screen and the words, "the whole network is down."

The attack was reportedly affecting websites in Great Britain, Norway and India, as well, and at least one major U.S. company said it was affected. The New Jersey-based pharmaceutical company Merck confirmed that its computer network was compromised as part of what it called a "global hack," and said it was investigating.

Ukraine's government said the cyberattack was the biggest ever to hit the country, and an adviser to the Minister of Internal Affairs was quick to suggest the attacks appeared to have originated from Russia.

However, Russia's Rosneft energy company also reported falling victim to the hacking, saying it had narrowly avoided major damage.

Play Video

CNET's Dan Ackerman joins CBSN to explain the steps computer owners need to take to help keep their data secure from hackers and ransomware.

"The hacking attack could have led to serious consequences but neither the oil production nor the processing has been affected thanks to the fact that the company has switched to a reserve control system," the company said.

U.S. cybersecurity expert Chris Hadnagy, CEO of Social-Engineer Inc., told CBS News, "We've been following it very closely and it is ... massive. It's attacking a lot of industrial areas, airports, banks, power grids in the Ukraine and in Russia."

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security issued a statement saying it is monitoring reports of attacks "affecting multiple global entities" and is "coordinating with our international and domestic cyber partners," offering confidential analysis and technical support.

The number of companies and agencies reportedly affected by the ransomware campaign piled up fast, as the electronic rampage appeared to be rapidly snowballing into a real-world world crisis.

Shipping company A.P. Moller-Maersk said every branch of its business was affected. "We are responding to limit impact on customers and to uphold operations," the company said in a statement posted on Twitter.

"We are talking about a cyberattack," said Anders Rosendahl, a spokesman for the Copenhagen-based shipping group. "It has affected all branches of our business, at home and abroad."

Dutch daily Algemeen Dagblaad said container ship terminals in Rotterdam run by a unit of Maersk were also affected.

The Ukrainian Interior Ministry adviser said the cyberattacks were using a modified version of the "WannaCry" malware that was found to be at the heart of a massive, global attack by hackers earlier this year -- one that cost companies billions of dollars.

Technology experts said in May that there was evidence North Korean hackers could have been behind that malware assault.

Play Video

Cybersecurity experts say North Korea may be to blame for the unprecedented global "ransomware" attack. The hacking has crippled computer systems...

Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Pavlo Rozenko on Tuesday posted a picture of a darkened computer screen to Twitter, saying that the computer system at the government's headquarters had been shut down.

There was very little information on Tuesday about who might be behind the latest disruption, but technology experts who examined screenshots circulating on social media said it bears the hallmarks of ransomware, the name given to programs that hold data hostage by scrambling it until a payment is made.

"A massive ransomware campaign is currently unfolding worldwide," said Romanian cybersecurity company Bitdefender. It said the malicious program appeared to be nearly identical to GoldenEye, one of a family of rogue programs that has been circulating for months. It's not clear whether or why the ransomware had suddenly become so much more potent.

In Switzerland, a government cybersecurity agency said the attacks appeared to employ ransomware known as "Petya."

"There have been indications of late that Petya is in circulation again, exploiting the SMB (Server Message Block) vulnerability," the Swiss Reporting and Analysis Center for Information Assurance (MELANI) told the Reuters news agency in an e-mail.

Reuters said the Petya virus was behind a widespread attack in 2016.

CNET reports the malware encrypts crucial computer files and holds them hostage, demanding $300 in bitcoin to regain access.

Screenshot of a computer affected by the Petya ransomware cyberattack.

Ukraine Prime Minister's Office via CNET

What can computer users do to protect themselves? ZDNet security editor Zack Whittaker said it's important to keep software up to date by installing the latest security patches, but even that may not be enough.

"There's some conflicting reports that even backed-up computers may be affected," he said. "We'll see what happens in the next few hours as we have more information."

In addition to software updates, he advised, "You should carry out regular backups of your data to make sure it's safe and secure, and make sure that backed-up data is never connected to the internet."

Many systems are still recovering from the WannaCry outbreak this spring, which spread rapidly using digital break-in tools originally created by the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) that wereleaked to the web by a group calling itself the Shadow Brokers.

Max Everett, a cybersecurity expert and managing director at Fortalice Solutions, told CBSN on Monday that the world was simply not prepared for the more widespread attacks expected in the future.

See the article here:
Cyberattack hits Ukraine, Europe, U.S.; hackers use suspected ...

Cyberattack Hits Ukraine Then Spreads Internationally – The …

Like the WannaCry attacks in May, the latest global hacking took control of computers and demanded digital ransom from their owners to regain access. The new attack used the same National Security Agency hacking tool, Eternal Blue, that was used in the WannaCry episode, as well as two other methods to promote its spread, according to researchers at the computer security company Symantec.

The National Security Agency has not acknowledged its tools were used in WannaCry or other attacks. But computer security specialists are demanding that the agency help the rest of the world defend against the weapons it created.

The N.S.A. needs to take a leadership role in working closely with security and operating system platform vendors such as Apple and Microsoft to address the plague that theyve unleashed, said Golan Ben-Oni, the global chief information officer at IDT, a Newark-based conglomerate hit by a separate attack in April that used the agencys hacking tools. Mr. Ben-Oni warned federal officials that more serious attacks were probably on the horizon.

The vulnerability in Windows software used by Eternal Blue was patched by Microsoft in March, but as the WannaCry attacks demonstrated, hundreds of thousands of groups around the world failed to properly install the fix.

Just because you roll out a patch doesnt mean itll be put in place quickly, said Carl Herberger, vice president for security at Radware. The more bureaucratic an organization is, the higher chance it wont have updated its software.

Because the ransomware used at least two other ways to spread on Tuesday including stealing victims credentials even those who used the Microsoft patch could be vulnerable and potential targets for later attacks, according to researchers at F-Secure, a Finnish cybersecurity firm, and others.

A Microsoft spokesman said the companys latest antivirus software should protect against the attack.

Governments and companies in Europe and the United States have been impacted. Here are several:

The Ukrainian government said several of its ministries, local banks and metro systems had been affected. A number of other European companies, including Rosneft, the Russian energy giant; Saint-Gobain, the French construction materials company; and WPP, the British advertising agency, also said they had been targeted.

Ukrainian officials pointed a finger at Russia on Tuesday, although Russian companies were also affected. Home Credit bank, one of Russias top 50 lenders, was paralyzed, with all of its offices closed, according to the RBC news website. The attack also affected Evraz, a steel manufacturing and mining company that employs about 80,000 people, the RBC website reported.

In the United States, the multinational law firm DLA Piper also reported being hit. Hospitals in Pennsylvania were being forced to cancel operations after the attack hit computers at Heritage Valley Health Systems, a Pennsylvania health care provider, and its hospitals in Beaver and Sewickley, Penn., and satellite locations across the state.

The ransomware also hurt Australian branches of international companies. DLA Pipers Australian offices warned clients that they were dealing with a serious global cyber incident and had disabled email as a precautionary measure. Local news reports said that in Hobart, Tasmania, on Tuesday evening, computers in a Cadbury chocolate factory, owned by Mondelez International, had displayed ransomware messages that demanded $300 in bitcoins.

Qantas Airways booking system failed for a time on Tuesday, but the company said the breakdown was due to an unrelated hardware issue.

The Australian government has urged companies to install security updates and isolate any infected computers from their networks.

This ransomware attack is a wake-up call to all Australian businesses to regularly back up their data and install the latest security patches, said Dan Tehan, the cybersecurity minister. We are aware of the situation and monitoring it closely.

A National Security Agency spokesman referred questions about the attack to the Department of Homeland Security. The Department of Homeland Security is monitoring reports of cyberattacks affecting multiple global entities and is coordinating with our international and domestic cyber partners, Scott McConnell, a department spokesman, said in a statement.

Computer specialists said the ransomware was very similar to a virus that emerged last year called Petya. Petya means Little Peter, in Russian, leading some to speculate the name referred to Sergei Prokofievs 1936 symphony Peter and the Wolf, about a boy who captures a wolf.

Reports that the computer virus was a variant of Petya suggest the attackers will be hard to trace. Petya was for sale on the so-called dark web, where its creators made the ransomware available as ransomware as a service a play on Silicon Valley terminology for delivering software over the internet, according to the security firm Avast Threat Labs.

That means anyone could launch the ransomware with the click of a button, encrypt someones systems and demand a ransom to unlock it. If the victim pays, the authors of the Petya ransomware, who call themselves Janus Cybercrime Solutions, get a cut of the payment.

That distribution method means that pinning down the people responsible for Tuesdays attack could be difficult.

The attack is an improved and more lethal version of WannaCry, said Matthieu Suiche, a security researcher who helped contain the spread of the WannaCry ransomware when he created a kill switch that stopped the attacks.

In just the last seven days, Mr. Suiche noted, WannaCry had tried to hit an additional 80,000 organizations but was prevented from executing attack code because of the kill switch. Petya does not have a kill switch.

Petya also encrypts and locks entire hard drives, whereas the earlier ransomware attacks locked only individual files, said Chris Hinkley, a researcher at the security firm Armor.

The hackers behind Petya demanded $300 worth of the cybercurrency Bitcoin to unlock victims machines. By Tuesday afternoon, online records showed that 30 victims had paid the ransom, although it was not clear whether they had regained access to their files. Other victims may be out of luck, after Posteo, the German email service provider, shut down the hackers email account.

In Ukraine, people turned up at post offices, A.T.M.s and airports to find blank computer screens, or signs about closures. At Kievs central post office, a few bewildered customers milled about, holding parcels and letters, looking at a sign that said, Closed for technical reasons.

The hackers compromised Ukrainian accounting software mandated to be used in various industries in the country, including government agencies and banks, according to researchers at Cisco Talos, the security division of the computer networking company. That allowed them to unleash their ransomware when the software, which is also used in other countries, was updated.

The ransomware spread for five days across Ukraine, and around the world, before activating Tuesday evening.

If I had to guess, I would think this was done to send a political message, said Craig Williams, the senior technical researcher at Talos.

One Kiev resident, Tetiana Vasylieva, was forced to borrow money from a relative after failing to withdraw money at four automated teller machines. At one A.T.M. in Kiev belonging to the Ukrainian branch of the Austrian bank Raiffeisen, a message on the screen said the machine was not functioning.

Ukraines Infrastructure Ministry, the postal service, the national railway company, and one of the countrys largest communications companies, Ukrtelecom, had been affected, Volodymyr Omelyan, the countrys infrastructure minister, said in a Facebook post.

Officials for the metro system in Kiev said card payments could not be accepted. The national power grid company Kievenergo had to switch off all of its computers, but the situation was under control, according to the Interfax-Ukraine news agency. Metro Group, a German company that runs wholesale food stores, said its operations in Ukraine had been affected.

At the Chernobyl plant, the computers affected by the attack collected data on radiation levels and were not connected to industrial systems at the site, where, although all reactors have been decommissioned, huge volumes of radioactive waste remain. Operators said radiation monitoring was being done manually.

Cybersecurity researchers questioned whether collecting ransom was the true objective of the attack.

Its entirely possible that this attack could have been a smoke screen, said Justin Harvey, the managing director of global incident response at Accenture Security. If you are an evildoer and you wanted to cause mayhem, why wouldnt you try to first mask it as something else?

An earlier version of this article referred incorrectly to the occupation of Justin Harvey. He is the managing director of global incident response at Accenture Security, not the chief security officer for the Fidelis cybersecurity company.

Reporting was contributed by Liz Alderman, Andrew E. Kramer, Iuliia Mendel, Ivan Nechepurenko and Isabella Kwai.

A version of this article appears in print on June 28, 2017, on Page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: A Cyberattack Hits Ukraine, Then Spreads.

Go here to see the original:
Cyberattack Hits Ukraine Then Spreads Internationally - The ...

Ukraine’s Stalled Revolution – Foreign Affairs

More than three years have passed since Ukraines Euromaidan Revolution, in which protestors took to the streets and ousted their corrupt leader Viktor Yanukovych. But reform has been slow in coming. To be fair, President Petro Poroshenko faces a Herculean task: protecting Ukraine from Russias ongoing aggression in the east while reforming the country in a way that is in keeping with the idealsdemocracy, transparency, and rule of lawthat united Ukrainians during Euromaidan. So far, however, Poroshenko has not handled this dilemma very well. He has used a heavy hand in cracking down on anything Russian and seems, ironically, increasingly determined to adopt Moscows authoritarian methods even as he speaks the language of Brussels in advocating for democratic change.

Of course, Russias aggression toward Ukraine is not limited to the fighting at their borders. Russian propaganda plays an even greater role in influencing Ukrainian politics than it does in Western countries. One false report that has been recently circulating, for example, claims that the Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) is using drug addicts as spies in the countrys east. Another alleges that Ukraines newest public holiday, known as Volunteers Day, glorifies the killing of separatists in the breakaway republics of Donetsk and Luhansk. Poroshenkos approach to countering Russian propaganda, however, has been blunt and ineffective. Rather than demonstrate to disillusioned Ukrainians, especially in the east, that the postrevolutionary state represents their interests, he has sought to censor any content associated with Russia under the guise of national security.

Last month, Poroshenko issued a decree banning a number of Russian sites, including the social networking platform Vkontakte and search engine Yandexthe Russian equivalents of Facebook and Google. It also banned the mail service Mail.ru. All three were among Ukraines most widely used websites on the eve of the ban. In 2016, Vkontakte, for instance, was used by 70 percent of Ukrainian Internet users. The ban followed a similar measure implemented in January when

Go here to read the rest:
Ukraine's Stalled Revolution - Foreign Affairs