Saturday, March 26, 2022

The Price of Our Values


During his press conference at NATO headquarters yesterday, President Biden stated that military assistance to Ukraine would continue. So too the sanctions on Russia. He also acknowleged that global food shortages were not just a possibility but a reality certain.

“We did talk about food shortages and it's going to be real; the price of these sanctions is not just imposed upon Russia, its imposed upon an awful lot of countries as well including European countries and our country [USA] as well...”
Brilliant! As if this were not foreseeable? The day after sanctions were imposed we noted that imposing them on Russia was tantamount to shooting ourselves in the foot. That was the a priori predictable effect because the essence of an “interconnected globle economy” is precisely the fact that it is... uh... well.... “interconnected."

Did our ruling elites not understand that ? Of course they did. The chorus of elites that joined in preaching to us that “we” would have to make sacrifices to defend our “liberal democratic values” could only speak one thing: they knew. Working for our “liberal democratic values” they spend their lives working out trade deals, loopholes, kick backs and safe-havens. The price of things is the one thing they absolutely know... as well as who actually pays it.

Let us put things in a little over-view perspective. Instead of twisting arms to get the parties to the negotiating table to work out a deal both can swallow while saving face, what is the Liberal Democratic West doing? It is fomenting an ongoing war. It was obvious from day one, when it became clear that Putin was going beyond an incursion into just the Donbas region, that, unless Russia won decisively and swiftly, the conflict would quickly degenerate into an asymmetrical quagmire that could only end up reducing the country to civic, economic, and physical rubble. That too was obvious a priori given the known strengths and weaknesses of each side. And yet, rather than pushing a peace process that will restore some kind of a statu quo ante, the Liberal Democratic West is doing just the opposite.

Oh, it is true; the West is not escalating the war. Apart from the War Whoops coming from chimps and hyenas in Congrease, what the Biden Administration is orchestrating is giving the Ukraine just enough arms to make life bloody and miserable for the Russians, for as long as possible, but not enough arms of such kind and calibre to actually win which is what Zelensky has been asking for. The only problem with making life bloody and miserable for the Russians is that that too boomerangs and inevitably will make life bloody and miserable for the Ukranians.

Certainly escalating the war would entail unthinkable risks and likelihoods. Thus the remaining alternatives are: to seek peace or to add just enough fuel to keep the war simmering.

That fomenting another ongoing war is the aim of the US and its western “allies” was made clear on February 28th when That Creature took to the airwaves to endorse sticking it to Putin. We did this before, Hilllary said, when we gave aid to “the insurgents” in Afghanistan to fight Russia back in 1979. (Cute... really cute. By “the insurgents” Bitch Hillary meant “the Taliban.”) “Of course, that had unintended consequences,” she said with a smile. She ended, in her typical scolding tone of voice, saying that we should turn the screws on Putin. But turning them on him she also turns them on the Ukrainians, whom we from the sidelines cheer on in their defence of our values.

Among those values are the immense profits to be reaped by supplying weaponry to the Ukrainians. The hypocrisy of the West is vile and stunning. Cashing in on the “heroism” of the Ukrainians, urging and enabling them to be more heroic still, we are doing nothing but spreading death and destruction throughout that land. Beware the “West” bearing gifts.

In this regard it might be noted that the he Soviet-Afghan war lasted 10 years, and ended with the collapse of the Soviet Union. The collapse of the Putin regime in Russia is the real end game here. As we have discussed, the roll-back and fragmentation of Russia has been the end game since 1992. That is why NATO was extended eastward, despite assurances to the contrary. That is why Zbigniew BrzeziƄski called for the breakup of Russia. That is why Obama pushed the TPP treaty, explicitly stating that we could not abdicate the Eurasian markets to Russia and China. That is why the legitimately elected Yanukovich was toppled in a meddling CIA “orange revolution.” That is why now, we offer Ukraine the opportunity to become another Success Story in Devastation, like Iraq, Libiya, Somalia, Afghanistan...

The amazing thing is that despite the historical spin and moralizing bullshit that gets fed to the American public, the ghouls behind the policy are actually very open about what they are up to. In an article in Bloomberg, Nial Ferguson quotes a senior administration official as saying, “The only end game now, is the end of Putin regime. Until then, all the time Putin stays, [Russia] will be a pariah state that will never be welcomed back into the community of nations.”

But the converse is also true: Russia will not be welcomed back and the economic sanctions will not end until there is a revolution in Russia that overthrows Putin. In other words, sanctions will be maintained until Russia is defeated. And as long as sanctions are maintained so too the boomerang effect. No one can begrudge Ukrainians their natural and heroic impulse to defend their land. However, that heroism is being used and abused by the West for its own misconceived geo-political ends.

But rejoice! Heroism in defence of values is not limited to the Ukraine. We too are now given the chance to prove our moral fibre in defence of our values by joining in the “price that must be paid.” Having just been hit with sticker shock at the pump, we are now told to prepare for sticker shock on a loaf of bread. The war, will continue, the sanctions will continue and we have to brace ourselves for food shortages.

Of course the price of brioche will never phase the Impeccable von der Lying, just as the price of Belgian chocolate bon bons will never phase Nancy Peelousy and the price of a battery will never cause a tear to Colbert-the-Clown. But the cynicism of these locusts who know the price of everything goes beyond just not being affected by the misery they impose on everyone else. According to Biden,

We [apparently meaning the US and Canada] also discussed how wheat could disseminate more rapidly and in addition to that we also talked about urging European countries and also everyone else to end trade restrictions on sending limitations on sending food as well. So we are in the process of working out with our European friends....
What “trade restrictions” ? Let me think.... Eureka! We can get “our friends” in Europe to lift their restrictions on GMO crops and Monsanto/Bayer's “Franken seeds.” Oh what a windfall for Big Ag and Big Chem!! Ha ha ha.... if they want bread they'll have to renounce their quality and environmental restrictions.

So not only will Europe be forced to forgo cheap Russian gas in favour of more expensive American LNG -- something that Evil Trump tried but failed to get the Euro's to do -- they will now be forced to buy American and Canadian wheat. Ah yes... defending our liberal democratic values turns out to be so profitable for all concerned.

Not only is the Ukraine the latest unlucky proxy in our ongoing geopolitics of power projection and preserving American preeminence, the People of the West will be despoiled just as Ukraine is destroyed.

Biden ran for president on the promise of making some feeble enhancements to America's cruel-joke of social welfare. He failed. Not only did he fail to squeeze the thumbs of two recalcitrant senawhores until they sang they voted as decency required, he actually added to the cost Seniors have to pay for their Medicare premiums, in order to preserve a patent windfall for PharmScam, Inc. Not only did he fail to relieve student loan debt in any meaningfull way, he allowed the child tax credit to expire. Needless to say, neither he nor his Demorat party have done a thing to drive down the costs of housing or to preclude predatory investors from cornering the market and driving the prices up. And, now, after these and other steps back from his progressive promises, Biden now tells the American people that they will have to pay more for fuel and food. None of this is unintended, either These are not “unintended” consequences. They are thought out very well beforehand.

So yes, the United States, leading the Liberal Democracies of the West, has declared war on Russia, a war Ukraine will have to fight. But it has also declared war on its own people. Biden just told you'all to your faces if you will only listen to the words he spoke.

©2022 WCG

Thursday, March 10, 2022

A Rosary with Beads of Blood


In a fuzzy, feel-good war story, BBC reports on the success of a Canadian marketeer who has raised just shy of one million dollars on behalf of the Ukraine by drawing a picture of the Virgin Mary holding a Javelin anti-tank missle. The creator "now plans for the "Saint Javelin" campaign to become a full-time effort ."



BBC goes on to report that the success of the campaign "is is a result of the outsized importance that anti-tank weapons such as the US-produced Javelin are playing in Ukraine's efforts to resist the Russian invasion. ... The US and Nato allies have reportedly already shipped over 17,000 anti-tank missiles - including Javelins - to Ukraine. ...The missiles, he said, have allowed Ukrainian forces to fight the invasion"

WE RESPOND!!! THE PERFIDIOUS RUSSKIES INVADED, AND WE (WITH THE INTERCESSION OF SAINT JAVELIN) RUSH TO THE AID OF THE VALIANT, HEROIC, SUFFERING UKRANIANS!!!

If that's your take-way, you just go snookered big time. Shipping Javelins to the Ukraine was a casus belli -- one of the triggers for -- Russian invasion. Let the facts speak for themselves

Reuters 17 June 2020. "Washington sent a first shipment of Javelin systems worth around $47 million to Kyiv in April 2018." The sale was approved by Putin's Puppet, aka Donald Trump.  [ read ]

The Atlantic Council:

On April 30 [2018], the US Department of State confirmed the delivery of Javelin antitank missile systems to Ukraine. This issue has been long-standing: the Obama administration refused to send the weapons to Kyiv, while President Donald Trump changed course.

Some experts warn that giving Ukraine lethal defensive weapons will only enrage the Russians and escalate the war, while others, including Atlantic Council experts, have insisted that arming Ukraine is the most effective way to change the facts on the ground and force Russian President Vladimir Putin to finally negotiate.

Ian Brzezinski, Senior Fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Scowcroft Center on International Security: "This delivery of Javelins is an operationally and geopolitically significant demonstration of US determination to support Ukraine, an action long overdue following Russia’s 2014 invasion.

"Javelins alone will not enable Kyiv to force Russia out of Crimea and Donbas, but they substantively increase Ukraine’s ability to impose costs on Russian forces. ...In these ways, the Javelins will help to deter further Russian seizures of Ukrainian territory."  [ read ]

Well that worked out well....



But Javelins are just the tip of the arms question. The real issue is the likely re-introduction of theatre range cruise missiles in eastern Europe, including the Ukraine.

In brief, in February 2019, the United States unilaterally withdrew from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty in effect since 1987. Of course the U.S. alleged Russian violations. Whether the allegations are true or not, withdrawing from a treaty can only make matters worse because it repudiates the basis for negotiations.

Precisely for that reason, Trump's withdrawal was Hossanahs for generals who got to plan with new toys and manna from heaven for the defense industry who got to produce them. As stated in a January 2022 article in the Texas [sic] National Security Review:

"The treaty’s end paved the way for the United States to reintroduce these missiles to the battlefield, this time as conventional strike assets instead of the nuclear-armed versions that had dominated the Cold War. Because the U.S. Army had previously established long-range precision fires as its top modernization priority, the associated loosening of missile restrictions created an innovation opportunity for U.S. forces.

"Since the United States withdrew from the treaty, the Army has embarked on numerous projects at varying ranges, including a moderate range increase from its current systems to a 500–600-kilometer range precision strike missile and a more strategically designed 2,700-kilometer range hypersonic missile. Additionally, future long-range strike capabilities have begun to influence emerging U.S. military doctrine..."

As the article noted, there was little to no public discussion on the policy implications of these moves. All of Russia's grievances were swept under the carpet. Very conveniently as it turns out, because by pretending grievances don't exist, the reaction to them appears irrational or malicious.

That is precisely the picture the BBC and the entire cadre of the West's "Truth Delivery System" had contrived to paint.

Simon de Beauvoir famously said that if you treat a man as an inferior he becomes an inferior. Likewise, if you treat a country as an enemy, it will become your enemy. And that is what we have done.

Saint Javelin's rosary will be beaded in blood.


Wednesday, March 9, 2022

Rejoice! We have no Bananas but Victory is at Hand!


The Price at the Pump is about to soar and the ragged hardships of those making under 100K a year is about to get harder.

All we (the West) have managed to do is translate total war over to the economic sphere. Total war in whatever form is totally wrong because it inevitably impacts on civilians.

The whole premise of the modern law of war was to confine it to the military and to military targets. Area bombing was wrong because, by definition, it targeted civilians in order to terrorize them into submission. (Those were the exact words of the theory.) Indiscriminate non-targeted sanctions are no different.

Americans don't seem to realize that, in an interdependent world, economic sanctions automatically boomerang. Hit the other guy; smash yourself. (For the philosophically inclined it's pure Schopenhauer.) That is exactly what is happening now. We hit Russia's oil production and smash ourselves in the wallet.

And, in purest Orwellian fashion, we are told by our politicians that this is good for us; that getting even broker still is something we should take pride in... for freedom's sake.

If the political elites actually had to suffer what ordinary people are told to endure, there would be less war and less sanctions.

What can we in this paragon of liberal democracy do about this? Actually nothing. Our rulers are invulnerable and indifferent to any pathetic squeaks of protest

Tuesday, March 1, 2022

Financial Carpet Bombing - The West's New Nifty Strategic Tool


Western Alliance nations have announced sweeping monetary sanctions against Russia in retaliation for that country's invasion of the Ukraine. They have frozen Russia's assets held in western banks and have cut Russian banks out of the "SWIFT" inter-bank messaging system. Essentially e-mail for banks, the system allows for the near instantaneous coordination of transactions from a bank card transaction at the supermarket to a government transferring billions of its assets. However, no tickee, no shirtee.

Unlike sanctions which target a specific person, entity or industry, targeting a country's currency is a form of collective punishment. “The move on the central bank is absolutely shocking in its sweeping wording,” said Adam Tooze, the director of the European Institute at Columbia University. As stated by John Maynard Keynes: “There is no subtler, no surer means of overturning the existing basis of society than to debauch the currency.”

With Keynes in mind, it can be seen that it is somewhat inaccurate to speak of "sanctions". A sanction is a measure or punishment aimed at inducing compliance. What is being attempted now is the destruction of the Russian state. EU president Ursula von der Leyen put it impeccably: “Putin embarked on a path aiming to destroy Ukraine, but what he is also doing, in fact, is destroying the future of his own country.”

Announcing the Destruction of Russia

Actually, he is not destroying Russia. The sanctions are being imposed by von der Leyen & Cie. It is they who are destroying Russia. That the U.S. and its allies may be doing so in retaliation does not mean that it is not they who are doing it. You can't decide whether an action is justified or not until you first call a spade a spade.

It is par for the course that people who impose sanctions get sanctimonious about it. An impeccable personage like von der Leyen literally cannot conceive of herself doing anything inappropriate much less ill-advised or wrong. She walks through the battlefield with a rose in her hand. Armoured with her self-certainties. She is much the perfect poster-girl for the neo-liberal world order.

We can accept, at least for the sake of argument, that Russia's invasion of the Ukraine was a violation of international law or at a minimum ill-advised. But nothing in that action entailed the destruction of Russia. Indeed, the rationale Putin has given was that he was protecting Russia from having NATO missiles being installed on its very border. The same protection that motivated JFK during the Cuban Missile Crisis.

The sanctions now being imposed are analogous to a medieval siege or to Allied carpet bombing during the World War. They go beyond even collective punishment. They entail collective destruction. It will be useful to think through the analogy.

Throughout the 20th century the United States and the United Kingdom (USUK) resorted to massive use of air power to win their wars. Militarily, air power was used to "soften up" (i.e. blast into oblivion) enemy positions before assaulting them. It was also used to destroy factories and specific instructure that enabled warfare.

Much more controversial was the use of destructive air power that was not targeted; that is, for the purpose of "area" or "carpet" bombing. The idea of indiscriminate bombing derived from the theory of Giulio Drouhet, an Italian general, who theorized that the way to win wars to was to "break the will of the people to fight them." The way to break the will of the people was to "expose" the civilian populations to the terror of bombing, massive destruction of vital infrastructure and to the existential hardships of shortages of heat, food, medicines and just about everything. What gets omitted from this usual formulation is that the “exposure” also destroys people.

In short, Drouhet called for the overturn of the Law of War which, since the days of Grotius, had sought to draw a distinction between "military" and "civilian" so as to confine the horror of war to the former while sparing as much as possible the latter. Drouhet believed that total war was the shortest war.

Drouhet was proved wrong. The massive terror bombing of Germany which destroyed 50% of 80% of its cities did not shorten the war one minute. On the contrary it stiffened the resolve of the Germans. The Allied bombing of German into rubble only produced death, destruction and suffering; but it did not end the war.

Neither did area bombing shorten the Vietnam War. Despite massive defoliation and urban bombing the war dragged on for 13 years. Air power was good at nothing save destruction for destruction's sake.

Certain necessary but inevitably muddy distinctions have to be made at this point. As stated, targeting military positions is legitimate warfare, even if collateral damage results. Similarly where a city is itself the military objective of a campaign, the bombing of that city is inevitable. Such was the case with Stalingrad and Berlin. Humane leaders or commanders usually allow an opportunity for the civilian population to evacuate prior to the assault.

Similarly legitimate, although not without controversy, is the bombing of armaments factories which can be considered by their nature to be "military installations." The difficulty here is that in the modern industrial world almost anything -- cotton for example -- can have a military application. Is bombing a factory that produces cotton which can be used for bandages and explosives a military or a civilian installation?

Grey as these distinctions may be, there is nothing grey in the wholesale and indiscriminate destruction of cities as such. As was said of the Romans, "they created a desert and called it peace." In my view there is no excuse or justification for such barbarism. War is horrible enough with willfully and intentionally making it as horrible as possible.

There are those, particularly in the United States, who hitch up their pants and puff out their chests and say with a jejune belligerence: "Hey, War is hell." They might well recall that General Sherman who shrugged off the total destruction of Georgia "from Atlanta to the sea," also went on to advocate and participate in the total destruction of the American Indians. If a destructive and genocidal psychopath is your hero I have nothing to say to you.

Paradoxical as it may be, in the rage of war, all sides must make an effort to keep one's actions as delineated and proportionate as possible. And in fact, although it is not generally known, they have attempted to do so, howsoever imperfectly. During the World War the armies of each of the belligerents maintained a war crimes bureau to keep track of and investigate violations of the law of war, so that corrective action could be taken.

It is with these considerations in mind, it can be seen that the "total financial war" the West in proposes to wage on Russia is the the equivalent of a financial atomic bomb, which like the atomic bombs the United States dropped on Japan are total, indiscriminate and poisonously long lasting. There is no excuse of a resort to this kind of tactic.

It could be argued that modern war can never be restricted to battlefields; that it is always whole countries that go to war, and that economic sanctions are more humane than artillery barrages. There is merit in that argument. However, this reasoning applies to sanctions that are specifically targeted. A blanket sanction that disables the ability of a country to have an economy at all is total war and total war is always totally destructive. Justice and just wars, on the contrary, always entail discrimination.

Moreover, the tactic is likely to boomerang. The very integration of the world into a global economy means that it operates as a singular organic unit. Hurting Russia is very much like shooting one's self in the foot.

Western leaders have actually acknowledged this, but they say that it is worth the pain to protect “our values”. However, it is not theses pampered princelings -- the Hillaries, the Ursulas, the Kamalas and the Boris-and-Harries of the world -- who will pay the material value for protecting the moral one. “Only little people pay taxes,” quoth Leona Helmsely. Only little people fight the wars and pay at the pump for protecting our “liberal democratic values” so impeccably articulated by von der Leyen.

The West is not in great financial shape. Cutting it off from cheap Russian gas in exchange for more expensive US produced liquid gas might benefit a few American oligarchs but it will cost everyone else. The same can be said of wheat and the myriad other natural resources Russia produces.

The West can probably weather the shock. The working and middle class will get more impoverished but, what they hell, they haven't revolted yet; and, since the narrative is controlled by elites, they most likely won't.

Not so weatherable is a Russia descended into chaos -- the very thing the Giulio Drouhets of the world salivate over. What kind of imbecile thinks that a “terrorized” populace “overthrows” its leadership in an orderly democratic fashion? We bomb. They get demoralized. Leadership changed. Ah yes! so simple but for the fact that overthrows never happen neatly. There is always push-back, conflict, chaos and the rise of despots and desperados.

And yet, the U.S. does it over and over again. Gleefully. According to Hillary an Iraq descended into chaos was a great “opportunity for investment.” According to her, the success story that is Libya was “we came, we saw, he died, ha ha ha.” Great news. Slave markets back, mass immigration into France and Italy start. Not even the Greek playwrights and poets could have conjured up such an image of feminine monstrosity as Hillary.

But to be fair, she is just one horrible visage of the U.S. neocon establishment. There was always Richard Perle for the male version. The point is that these same people who brought us endless “full spectrum” war around the globe actually relish the idea of a Russia descended into chaos. Their mindset (and this is borne out by their own words) is that the more debased and degraded another becomes, the more predominant and victorious the United States is. Their idea of a global world order is simply that of a boot (our boot) on everyone else's neck. Anyone who doubts this can go read their policy papers and manifestos for himself.

So who, I ask, will hold the key to the nuclear arsenal of a Russia descended into chaos? Do these neocon ghouls propose that the United States send in troops to guard the nukes and maintain order (as they did so successfully in Iraq and Afghanistan)? Really?

The imbecilic “press” in the West crows that Putin is a deranged despot trapped in a delusional bubble. The FemWoke Guardian sneers that he has a short man complex. Snicker, snicker. But how much will the Guardiana snicker when the delusional man with a complex is pushed into a corner with nothing but nukes as a last resort? You wanna see penis...?

The idea of “destroying” Russia with financial carpet bombing is the dumbest idea the West has managed to come up with in 70 years.

The West has always been very adept at wrapping itself up in tissues of piety, engaging in barbarism of the most brutal sort while yapping about preserving "liberal democracy." The honeyed phrases of "democratic values" and "liberal democracies" have become dog-whistles for undercover and overt aggression.

It is an established fact that the neocon establishment in the United States has long sought the destruction of Russia. When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1990, there was much talk about the end of the cold war, mutual cooperation and a peace dividend that could be used to improve social welfare rather than being spent on manufacturing weapons of mass and minor destruction.

Two things happened at this point. Under the guise of assisting the "liberalization" of the Russian economy, neo-liberal investors (in tandem with CIA backed NGO's) went to work plundering it. At the same time, neo-conservatives went to work lobbying for increased defence spending on the grounds that the United States had to "maintain" its "predominance" in the world by slapping down "potential" adversaries.

One such "potential adversary" was Russia. The strategy here was to break up and roll back Russia. Zbigniew Brzezinski even wrote a book about it. The two pronged approach worked like a charm and by the end of the decade Russia was an economic, military and political basket case.

Then came Putin who patiently and cunningly put Humpty Dumpty back together again. His tacking and trimming were a marvel to watch. He not only had to stabilize the economy, reorder government finances and rebuild the military, he had to do all this while balancing still extant Communists against Liberals and finding an historical consensus that all could find harbor in. The grotesque caricature of the man served up by the Western Mudia is stuff for infants and idiots.

Putin was never an "anti-capitalist." He accepted the neo-liberal premise of global-free trade and he sought to integrate Russia into that system. He was mostly successful. The very fact that the West can threaten sanctions means that there is something to sanction in the first place. That "something" is a wide array of investments, partnerships, co-ventures and so on between Russian and "Western" companies around the world. However, the one thing Putin could not tolerate was strategic encirclement of his country.

It is a fact that Gorbachev allowed the reunification of Germany on the assurance that, after that, NATO would not advance "one inch eastward" beyond the Oder River. The Western media do their best to blabber away or outright ignore this fact. For example a recent (2/23) New York Times editorial noted that Putin issued a "broad set of grievances and demands, effectively claiming that the United States and its allies reneged on a promise not to expand NATO to Russia's borders."

And...?

... And?

Did the United States reneg on a promise? Yes or No?

Instead the editorial went on to prattle that ""There are areas in which the West Can reassure Mr. Putin...."

Uh huh. And do any of those "areas" involve an insurance of non-expansion of NATO?

Of course not

Here are the facts.  In the ongoing and complex negotiations attending the end of the Cold War and the establishment of a new world order, one thing is clear: Russia was assured that its strategic interests would be respected and that NATO would not expand. In 2004, the Baltic States joined NATO. Putin protested. He was ignored.

Putin may have vented his frustration but he was not checked out of his mind when he called the West an "Empire of Lies." And the western media is very good at packaging lies in the most attractive way possible. Quite frankly Russian propaganda is no match for Western disinformation. But that is another topic. The point at hand is that Putin had every objective reason to suspect that the West was trying to roll Russia back and gut it as an economic or military power.

The tipping point came in 2014. Since 1991, the U.S. had invested $5 billion in the Ukraine cultivating its "European aspirations" -- in other words to bring Ukraine into the Western orbit to the exclusion of Russian influence. Russia also invested in the Ukraine. It underwrote IMF loans to keep Ukraine afloat. It provided under-market gas to Ukrainian households. It promised $16 billion in development aid if the Ukraine stayed economically tied to Russia. The duly and democratically elected Yanukovich vascillated and ultimately went with the Russian offer.

Those with "European aspirations" (amply cultivated by Western NGO's) began to protest. Without delving in detail into the sequence of events, the upshot was basically simple: Yanukovich was run out of office. He was replaced before his term was up. In normal parlance that is what is called a coup.... or in New York Timespeak, a "Maidan Spring." One thing we can all be certain of: Russia did not organize the coup.

What it did do was seize the Crimea. Needless to say, the West which had just seized the Ukraine went into paroxysms of outrage and imposed sanctions on Russia. Omitted from all the moralized frothing was the strategic fact that, under an arrangement with the Ukraine, Sebastopol was the home of the Russian Southern Fleet and, as such, represented an essential, critical national security interest to Russia.

Given all the churning in Pentagon and neocon planning and policy papers about "extending the Homeland's security perimeter eastward" one can see how Russia might reasonably feel that Ukraine's "European aspirations" would include shutting the Russian fleet out of its home port. Putin acted swiftly to protect a vital defence interest.

In my view, all the to'ing and fro'ing about the Minsk Accords and the separatists in the Donbas region is just peripheral noise. The conflict in Eastern Ukraine is nothing everybody can't put up with while they pursue more important interests. What was non-negotiable from Putin's point of view was the admission of the Ukraine into NATO and the installation of NATO missiles on Ukrainian territory. I have never read in the sagacious pages of the Times that the U.S. "and its Allies" ever gave an inch on this issue.

On the contrary. There is no question but that the West (mostly the US) was funding and providing training for right wing militias in the Ukraine (Azov Brigade). Since 2014 the United States has provided $2.7 billion in "security assistance" to the Ukraine. In 2017 Trump (whom the Democrats inanely and viciously accuse of being 'Putin's Puppet') "began providing millions in lethal assistance [to the Ukraine], including Javelin anti-tank missiles – a sensitive defense technology that held symbolic significance for both Russia and Ukraine, as it had generally been reserved only for close U.S. allies and NATO members." (Link)

Of course, the West rationalizes all of this was simply "countering" a Russian "threat." But that pretext ignores the longstanding U.S. policy of extending NATO and pushing Russia "back" into Asia or at least into irrelevance. Let us return to 1990. At that time, the Soviet Union collapsed. It's leadership foreswore communism and sought to "partner" with liberal democracies. What threat was there? The fact that Russia exists at all? Apparently so. Instead of treating Russia as a friend, the American military establishment treated her as an enemy and kicked her while she was down. This was not the policy of American Capital by the way. It was basically the policy of the neocons in the government. But in any event, if you repeatedly beat up on someone, don't be surprised when he retaliates.

Putin's persistent and increasing complaint about Ukraine's drift into NATO were laughed off. His critical speech on 8 January 2022 was not even covered by the U.S. media.  But that it was ignored does not mean that Russia's legitimate security concerns do not exist or that its fears were delusional or as the FemWokeGuardian was wont to say, were the result of a psychological complex for being too short.

It is hardly surprising that Putin felt he needed to do something to be taken seriously by the West. And in fact, that assessment was correct. Once the staging of troops began, then -- all of a sudden -- the telephone calls and the flights to Moscow began.

But amid all the fevered flurry, what the Western media have never made clear is whether anyone in the West gave a commitment to Russia that NATO would not incorporate the Ukraine. Apparently not. All anyone heard was that Ukraine had a sovereign right to join NATO if it so chose.

That was actually not correct. Ukraine has a right to apply but not to be admitted. Admission depends on the unanimous consent of member countries of NATO. Did anyone assure Russia that NATO had no strategic interest in extending eastward and that the Ukraine would not be admitted should it apply? Apparently not. In effect, the West called Putin's bluff and he struck.

In my opinion, the way Putin struck was a mistake and a disaster. I had thought he would send in peacekeepers to the Donbas region. Such a move would have made it impossible for Ukraine to join NATO and probably the EU as well. The night before the invasion, a friend and I agreed that if Putin invaded the whole of the Ukraine he would find himself bogged down in an unwinnable, asymetrical disaster that would make the Russian experience in Afghanistan look like a cake walk.  It would also require escalated responses and thus subject the Ukrainians to endless and increasing misery.  To our surprise that is exactly what Putin did. Perhaps he has lost touch with reality. What is certain to me is that the whole affair can only end in grief and tragedy for Ukrainians and Russians alike. It will not benefit the rest of us either.

But rather than back-pedal, rather than looking to give Putin an off-ramp, the West is doing just the opposite by egging everyone on from the “sidelines” and pushing the aid-envelope as much as it can. Needless to say the moron-chorus that is the Western media, cheers this on and sings the praises of its latest Hero of the Hour. No one can begrudge Zelinsky his patriotism and ardour. For someone in his position, he has stepped up with courage and elan. Hats off! But it is one thing for Zelinsky to rally his country to fight the Russians to the death, it is quite another for the West to allow, much more encourage it. It is in the interest of the whole rest of the world to defuse the conflict before it turns into a disaster for the Ukrainians and indeed for the world.

I am not hopeful. In my view, the kernel of the whole problem is the U.S./Western expansion of NATO. That is a “security architecture” which is either abandoned or not. This means that one side or the other must give on this issue, which neither side shows any signs of doing. With good reason, Putin will not be bought off with more vague assurances that never amounted to more than the breath they were uttered with. Thus, the West will have to come up with some sort of formula that maintains “principle” while making its realization practically impossible. I have seen no sign that the West is moving in that direction.

There are cooler heads in the West. Macron is one of them and, surprisingly, Joe Biden may be another. Their task of diffusing the situation, seriously addressing Russia's concerns and providing Putin a graceful exit from his mistake is a tall order. Whatever means and solutions they come up with, financial terror bombing and the economic destruction of Russia ought not to be one of them.

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