With few prospects for a clear-cut victory over the ethnic Russian resistance in the east -- and with the neo-Nazi/Islamist militias increasingly restless over the stalemate -- the chances to restore any meaningful sense of order in the country appear remote. Unemployment is soaring and the government is essentially bankrupt.
The last best hope for some stability may have been the Minsk-2 agreement in February 2015, calling for a federalized system to give the Donbas more autonomy, but Nuland's Prime Minister Yatsenyuk sabotaged the deal in March by inserting a poison pill that essentially demanded that the ethnic Russian rebels first surrender.
Now, the Ukraine chaos threatens to spiral even further out of control with the neo-Nazis and other right-wing militias -- supplied with a bounty weapons to kill ethnic Russians in the east -- turning on the political leadership in Kiev.
In other words, the neocons have struck again, dreaming up a "regime change" scheme that ignored practical realities, such as ethnic and religious fissures. Then, as the blood flowed and the suffering worsened, the neocons just sought out someone else to blame.
Thus, it seems unlikely that Nuland, regarded by some in Washington as the new "star" in U.S. foreign policy, will be fired for her dangerous incompetence, just as most neocons who authored the Iraq disaster remain "respected" experts employed by major think tanks, given prized space on op-ed pages, and consulted at the highest levels of the U.S. government.
[For more on these topics, see Consortiumnews.com's "Obama's True Foreign Policy Weakness" and "A Family Business of Perpetual War."](Note: You can view every article as one long page if you sign up as an Advocate Member, or higher).