Germany slams NATO's Breedlove for his dangerous lies - Breedlove still convinced he's right about everything

breedlove

© Reuters/Valentyn Ogirenko

U.S. General Philip Breed-no-love.



A top NATO European commander's exaggerated comments on the Ukrainian conflict are 'dangerous propaganda,' and put the West at risk of losing credibility, sources in the German Chancellor's Office told .

General Philip Breedlove made harsh remarks on the situation in Ukraine on Wednesday, saying that the self-defense forces, with the assistance of Russia, have prepared "over a thousand combat vehicles" and "sophisticated air defense, battalions of artillery" in the south-east of the country.

"What is clear is that right now it is not getting better, it is getting worse every day," NATO's Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR) concluded.

The comments came on the same day as the OSCE (Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe) stressed that progress in the fulfillment of the Minsk peace deal between Ukrainian government and the militias in Donetsk and Lugansk Regions.

Spokesman for the OSCE Special Monitoring Mission in Ukraine, Michael Bociurkiw, described a decline of ceasefire violations and withdrawal of heavy weaponry by both sides in the conflict.


German authorities were "alarmed" by the stance of the NATO commander and wondered whether "the Americans [are] trying to thwart European efforts at mediation led by Chancellor Angela Merkel?" wrote.




The sources in the Chancellor's office told the magazine that they viewed Breedlove's comments as "dangerous propaganda."

According to the weekly, it is not the first time the German authorities are "alarmed" by the US general's statements on the Ukrainian conflict as his numbers of alleged Russian presence in Donetsk and Lugansk have always been significantly higher than those available to European members of NATO.

Now, the German Chancellery "simply shake their heads" each time Breedlove makes comments on Ukraine, said.

"False claims and exaggerated accounts, warned a top German official during a recent meeting on Ukraine, have put NATO - and by extension, the entire West - in danger of losing its credibility," the paper wrote.


The German authorities described Breedlove as a "'super hawk,' whose role is that of increasing the pressure on America's more reserved trans-Atlantic partners."




Berlin ordered its Federal Intelligence Service to verify the numbers described by the top NATO commander and the check revealed "just a few armored vehicles."

It "remains a riddle until today," how he jumped to such conclusions, one intelligence agent told the weekly.




"The German intelligence services generally appraise the threat level much more cautiously than the Americans do," an international military expert in Kiev said, as cited by .

The magazine drew several more examples of General Breedlove's "slips of the tongue," including one he dropped at the beginning of the crisis; Breedlove said that Russians allegedly gathered 40,000 troops on the Ukrainian border and the situation was "incredibly concerning" as they were preparing for an invasion.


However, the findings of the German intelligence "contradicted Breedlove's view in almost every respect."


"There weren't 40,000 soldiers on the border, they believed, rather there were much less than 30,000 and perhaps even fewer than 20,000. Furthermore, most of the military equipment had not been brought to the border for a possible invasion, but had already been there prior to the beginning of the conflict. Furthermore, there was no evidence of logistical preparation for an invasion, such as a field headquarters," wrote.


The NATO commander also made "inexact, contradictory or even flat-out inaccurate statements," the sources said.


In November, Breedlove spoke of "regular Russian army units in eastern Ukraine" in the interview with German newspaper . But the next day, he then told the website of the German newsmagazine that they were "mostly trainers and advisers."


"I stand by all the public statements I have made during the Ukraine crisis," Breedlove wrote after asked him to comment on his controversial phrases. "It is normal that not everyone agrees with the assessments that I provide."




The NATO General insisted that the alliance strategy is to "release clear, accurate and timely information regarding ongoing events. As an alliance based on the fundamental values of freedom and democracy, our response to propaganda cannot be more propaganda. It can only be the truth."

But it is not only Breedlove the Germans are concerned with as they also view the head of European affairs at the US State Department, Victoria Nuland, among "hindrances in their search for a diplomatic solution to the Ukraine conflict."


The two are "doing what they can to pave the way for weapons deliveries," the magazine wrote.




The weekly reminded that Nuland views Europe as a week player, referring to the German Chancellor's early February visit to Moscow for talks on Ukraine with Vladimir Putin as "Merkel's Moscow stuff."

She also famously said "F*ck the EU" in a leaked phone call, in which she discussed the future composition of the Ukrainian government during Maidan riots in Kiev.


Germany has been one of the most vocal critics of sending arms to Ukraine and now the country's officials question NATO's assessment of the situation in the country.


"The statements [on Ukraine] from our source do not fully coincide with the statements made by NATO and the US," Frank-Walter Steinmeier, German Foreign minister, said on Saturday. "We are interested in not allowing it to grow into a misunderstanding."


The German FM's statement on the same day as the EU's Foreign Policy Chief, Federica Mogherini, stressed that the European has a realistic view of Russian events, but it "will never be trapped or forced or pushed or pulled into a confrontative [sic] attitude" towards Moscow.


The Ukrainian government and the rebels in the south-east of the country struck a peace deal in Belarusian capital Minsk on February 12 after almost a year of fighting.


The signing happened with active mediation from Germany and its 'Normandy Four' partners - Russia and France.


The Ukrainian conflict began in April 2014, after Kiev sent its military to the south eastern regions, in which people refused to recognize the new coup-imposed authorities in the capital.


The fighting has seen over 6,000 killed and nearly 15,000 injured, the UN Human Rights Office said last week.


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