
Members of the Azov Battalion visit Stanford University's Center for International Security and Cooperation, October 1, 2022. Photo: The Grayzone/file photo.
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Members of the Azov Battalion visit Stanford University's Center for International Security and Cooperation, October 1, 2022. Photo: The Grayzone/file photo.
By Noir – Jun 29, 2024
The government-funded research projectās mysterious removal of Azovās profile was followed by a State Department decision to allow the controversial right-wing unit to receive U.S. military aid.
Stanford Universityās Mapping MilitantsĀ ProjectĀ (MMP), a U.S. government-funded initiative that conducts research on āviolent militant or extremist organizations,ā quietly removed their profile on the Azov Battalion early last month. The Azov Battalion (now known as the 12th Special Purpose Brigade āAzovā) is a Ukrainian National Guard unit infamous for its use of neo-Nazi insignia, recruitment of far-right foreign fighters, andĀ allegedĀ war crimes. The Stanford MMPās mysterious removal of its Azov profile was followed about a month later by the U.S. State Department lifting its ban on military assistance to the unit, raising questions about the motives behind removal of the webpage.
MMPās removal of Azov is significant in that it could be used to guide U.S. foreign policy. Though MMP was created and has operated with funding from the Departments of Defense and Homeland Security, the papers written by its researchers are cited inĀ academicĀ research,Ā reportsĀ andĀ testimonyĀ toĀ Congress,Ā governmentāfundedĀ institutionsĀ andĀ initiatives, andĀ federalĀ agencies. The website functions as an authoritative source for information on militant and extremist groups, and their interactions and connections over time. At the very least, Azovās removal means MMPās list no longer contradicts the State Departmentās decision allowing U.S. military assistance to the group, and therefore cannot be used to criticize it.
The Stanford MMPās takedown of its Azov profile also may have occurred in part due to pressure from Ukrainian diplomats. Late last week, Ukrainian Ambassador to the United States Oksana Markarova published aĀ postĀ on Facebook celebrating the MMPās removal of its Azov profile, with a screenshot of the āPage not foundā message that appears if one navigates to the Azov MMP profileāsĀ URL. Curiously, Markarova thanked Stanford for its āresponse,ā and thanked her colleagues at the Ukrainian Embassy and the Association of Families of Azovstal Defenders āfor constantly drawing attention and joint fight against Russian propaganda and disinformation,ā according to Facebookās automatic translation of the post. Markarovaās mention of Stanfordās āresponseā and her diplomatsā āconstantly drawing attentionā raises the possibility of a Ukrainian pressure campaign, spurred by Ukrainian diplomats, to get the MMP to remove its Azov profile.
The State Department and Markarova could not immediately be reached for comment.
Asked about the removal of Azovās profile, one of the academics behind MMP, Professor Martha Crenshaw, toldĀ Noir: āwe plan to update that profile, but I donāt know when the update will be complete.ā When asked for more details, including whether militant group profiles are typically taken down during an update process, when the update would be completed, what kinds of updates were being made, and whether Azovās profile would eventually again be visible on the MMP website, Crenshaw and the other MMP academics provided no specific answers. They also did not clarify whether Ukrainian Ambassador Markarova contacted the MMP about removing its Azov profile.
Founded in March 2014 as a volunteer unit to fight pro-Russian separatists in the eastern Donbass region, Azov was subsequently incorporated into the Ukrainian National Guard, and gained international attention for its role in re-taking the southeastern Ukrainian city of Mariupol from separatist forces in June 2014. During this engagement, Azov also received scrutiny for its neo-Nazi iconography, in particular an inverted Wolfsangel superimposed over a Black Sun (the former an ancient runic symbol appropriated by the Nazis, perĀ the ADL, the latter ābased on a design commissioned by SS leader Heinrich Himmler, and overwhelmingly used by neo-Nazi and esoteric National Socialist movements,ā according to the MMPās now-removed Azov BattalionĀ profile).
Azov is part of the broader āAzov Movement,ā a network of far-right Ukrainian groups that also includes a political wing, the National Corps (led by Azov founder and notorious white nationalist Andriy Biletsky), which the U.S. State DepartmentĀ calledĀ a ānationalist hate group,ā and a paramilitary faction, the National Militia, which hasĀ attackedĀ Roma and other minority communities in Ukraine.
Azov came to renewed prominence following Russiaās February 2022 invasion due to its high-profile defense of Mariupol that spring. The destructive battle, during which large swaths of Mariupolās residential infrastructure were damaged or destroyed, ended in a drawn-outĀ siegeĀ of the Azovstal steel plant, beneath which surviving Azov and Ukrainian servicemembers retreated until their May 2022 surrender. The battle for Azovstal garnered substantial international media attention due in part to Azovās use ofĀ StarlinkĀ terminals to publish videos about the conditions of the Ukrainian defenders.
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Azovās reputation for combat effectiveness and stubborn defense of Mariupol, coupled with a desire to counter Russian President Vladimir Putinās claims of Nazism in Ukraine (with one stated goal of the invasion being ādenazificationā), has motivated many pro-Ukrainian commentators toĀ whitewashĀ the unitās far-right extremism, claiming the unit has been depoliticized and is now entirely distinct from the volunteer battalion that first emerged a decade ago.
This line has also made its way into mainstream media, exemplified by theĀ Guardianās reporting that āThe 5,000-plus strong [Azov] brigade has shed any far-right associations, relentlessly emphasized in Russian pre-invasion propaganda.ā
This is false. As reported byĀ The Nation, many of Azovās current leaders, including Commander Denys Prokopenko and Deputy Commander Sviatoslav Palamar, have years-old ties to far-right groups, and the brigade continues to donĀ Nazi symbolsĀ on the battlefield and social media. Indeed, Azov has never stopped using the Wolfsangel symbol, which is still part of its official logo and featured on its X/TwitterĀ page. Azovās founder, Andriy Biletsky, a blatant white supremacist whoĀ reportedlyĀ said Ukraineās national mission was to ālead the white races of the world in a final crusade ⦠against Semite-led Untermenschen [subhumans],ā remains closely connected to the unit despite his supposed departure in fall 2014. In his 2022 bookĀ From the Fires of War: Ukraineās Azov Movement and the Global Far Right, author and journalist Michael Colborne argues Azov has not divorced itself from the far right, writing that ā[d]espite unconvincing efforts to separate the two, itās clear that the Azov Regiment is part of the broader Azov movement and should not be treated as something distinct from it.ā
The extremism of Azov was essentially undisputed among WesternĀ institutionsĀ andĀ mediaĀ outletsĀ until the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. That was true for MMP too. Prior to its removal, MMPāsĀ Azov profileĀ documented in detail the forceās far-right ideology, ties with foreign white supremacist organizations, and use of Nazi symbols.
MMPās removal of Azovās profile came a little over a month before the State Departmentās decision to lift the longstanding ban on the provision of American weapons to the brigade. The State Department, which originally banned arming Azov due to concerns over its far-right extremism, rescinded this policy because the brigade recently āpassed Leahy vetting as carried out by the U.S. Department of State,ā as reported by theĀ Washington PostĀ on June 10. While a Congressional ban on military assistance to the āAzov Battalionā remains in place underĀ appropriations laws, the State Department said it didnāt believe the congressional ban applied to the group as it exists today, per the Post.
In fact, the State Department has maintained sinceĀ at least April 2023Ā that Azov as currently constituted is a different group from the āAzov Battalionā targeted in the Congressional ban, according to comments from a State Department spokesperson quoted anonymously by the Washington Post. The State Department official said the āAzov Battalionā was a non-state āmilitia groupā that has not existed in over five years, and that Azov is now āa different unit.ā
āLeahy vettingā is in reference to the Leahy Law, which prohibits the United States from funding āforeign security forces where there is credible information implicating that unit in the commission of gross violations of human rights,ā per a State DepartmentĀ fact sheet. In reality, not only is the State Departmentās original concern around Azovās ideological extremism still germane, but the forceās human rights record has remained checkered since its founding as a non-state volunteer militia in 2014. Indeed, Azov has been crediblyĀ accusedĀ ofĀ torture,Ā forcedĀ disappearances, andĀ extrajudicialĀ killing, all of which are āgross violations of human rightsā that would disqualify a military unit from receiving U.S. military aid, according to the State DepartmentāsĀ interpretationĀ of the Leahy Law. Many of Azovās alleged human rights abuses, which also include theĀ useĀ of civilian infrastructure for military purposes andĀ lootingĀ of civilian homes, occurred after the unit was formally integrated into the Ukrainian National Guard in late 2014.
The proximity of the State Department announcement and the removal of the Azov profile could be coincidental, but MMPās close ties to the U.S. Government cast doubt on an innocuous explanation.
Stanford launched MMP in 2009 and operated the project until 2012 using funding from the Department of Defense and the National Science Foundation. In 2019, MMP received funding from the Department of Homeland Security, per the projectāsĀ website. The academics behind MMP also have deep ties to American defense.
Professor Martha Crenshaw, Senior Fellow of Stanford Universityās Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies and Professor Emerita of Government at Wesleyan University, has overseen MMP since it launched. She also served as ālead investigator with the National Center for the Study of Terrorism and the Response to Terrorism (START) at the University of Maryland, funded by the Department of Homeland Securityā from 2005 to 2017, per the StanfordĀ website.
Iris Malone, whoĀ co-directedĀ MMP from 2019 to 2022, simultaneously served as Principal Investigator for a Department of Homeland Security Center of Excellence, the National Counterterrorism Innovation, Technology, and Education Center (NCITE). Professor Kaitlyn Robinson, who has served as a researcher with MMP since 2022, formerly worked as a research assistant for the Department of Defense, per herĀ website. Curiously, Robinson described MMP itself as āa member ofā NCITE on her website.
Noir News is an investigative newsletter run by independent journalists Iain Carlos (Noir founder) and Sam Carlen which covers foreign policy, civil liberties, government misdeeds, and religion, among other topics. Subscribe at https://www.noirnews.org/about