Rehearsing
for World War III
Operation “Anakonda 16” is a
dangerous provocation
by Justin Raimondo,
June 08, 2016
Antiwar.com
As I write
this, US troops are building a bridge across Poland’s Vistula river, and
conducting a nighttime helicopter assault to secure the eastern part of the
country against a Russian assault.
Has World
War III started? Well, not quite yet, although it’s not for want of trying.
This is Operation “Anakonda 16.” Thirty-one thousand troops, 14,000 of them
American, are conducting war games designed to secure an Allied victory in
World War III. The exercises involve “100
aircraft, 12 vessels and 3,000 vehicles,” and precede the upcoming NATO summit,
which is expected to approve the stationing of yet more troops – mostly
Americans – in eastern Europe.
NATO claims
this is all strictly “defensive” in nature, designed to deter Russian
“aggression” – but who is the real aggressor?
It is the Western powers who, ever since the fall of the USSR,
have pushed eastward relentlessly, expanding the “defensive” NATO
alliance to include such useless nonentities as Albania and Montenegro, and
even extending “associate” status to distant Georgia. Their policy has been to eliminate the buffer between
NATO and Russia, absorbing previously neutral Ukraine into the Western orbit by
means of a violent coup d’etat, and launching a propaganda war that targets
Russian President Vladimir Putin as the second coming of Stalin.
The Russian reaction has been to reverse Nikita Khrushchev’s
1954 decision to hand Crimea to Ukraine, pull out of a
treaty limiting the number of troops in Europe, launch a military build up on
their borders, and upgrade their nuclear arsenal to parallel a similar effort by
the US.
With the collapse of international communism, the need for NATO
was obviated, and yet – like any and all government programs – it
not only persisted, it expanded. Complementing the idea of “Greater Europe” and
the creation of the European Union, the NATO-crats enlarged the original
“defensive” vision that was supposedly the rationale for the alliance and
embarked on an ambitious program that involved the creation of a permanent
military architecture which inevitably sought to absorb real estate in the
east. Poland, Romania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, the Baltic states – all
eventually joined NATO’s ranks as Moscow looked on in alarm. As the “war on
terrorism” commenced, NATO became the instrument of Western military operations
in the Middle East, sending its tentacles into the former Soviet republics of
Central Asia and insinuating itself into the Caucasus region.
From a cold
war policy of containment, US/NATO has since moved into regime change mode: the
idea is to encircle Russia militarily, while using “soft power” to undermine
pro-Russian regimes in Russia’s periphery and eventually achieve regime change
in Russia itself. The Ukrainian operation was an example of the “soft power”
approach: utilizing Western-funded “civil society” groups, they succeeded in
evicting the democratically elected government from office and installing one
handpicked in Washington. With the imposition of sanctions, and the continued
encirclement of Russia, the idea is to squeeze the Russian bear until he either
gives up or collapses. Which is why “Anakonda” – an iteration of the giant
snake that crushes its victims to death and then devours them – is truly an
evocative name.
As is usual
with the regime-changers in Washington, they approach their task with little or
no understanding of their intended victim. In Iraq and Afghanistan, they
thought they could destroy the regime, and then create a Middle Eastern version
of Kansas. It didn’t work out that way – but our political class is incapable
of learning the lessons of experience.
In the case of Russia, they believe that a Russian collapse
would have to mean the ascension to power of a figure much like the late Boris
Yeltsin, who was too drunk to resist the incursions of Western
power most of the time, and went along with the marginalization of his country
without too many protests. However, the memory of the Yeltsin era is abhorred
by the Russian people, who saw their country plundered by the oligarchs, and
their standard of living fall into a veritable abyss, while Russia was pushed
around on the international stage like a freshman pledge on fraternity row.
What the NATO-crats want is a “pro-Western” figurehead in power
in Russia, but what they don’t get is that Putin is as pro-Western as they come in the current political milieu. His
main opponent in the election that brought him to power was the virulently
anti-Western Communist Party, which he handily defeated, with the even more
anti-Western Russian nationalists coming in third.
Initially, Putin sought to include Russia in “Greater Europe,”
and he proposed an agreement with NATO to ensure that Europe would be a “common space.”
Yet his initiatives to create an inclusive Europe were met with implacable
hostility by the Western powers, who rejected the idea that Russia would be
treated as an equal and insisted on the primacy of NATO and the EU. This set up
the present standoff, in which the countries of the former Warsaw Pact were
forced to choose between Brussels and Moscow.
If and when
the West succeeds in collapsing the Russian economy and taking down Putin, it
won’t be a Yeltsin-like figure who will inherit the ruins. What comes after
Putin, in this context, is something much worse. And in that case, the prospect
of war will loom large on the horizon.
If Hillary Clinton gets into the White House, you can be sure
the tensions with Russia will reach fever pitch. She has compared Putin to Hitler –
always the signal that we are about to embark on yet another crusade – and her neoconservative supporters are
eager to restart the cold war. The great danger is that a cold war may very
well become a hot one – and that raises the specter that we lived with for half
a century, the very real possibility of a nuclear war.
To compare
Putin to Stalin, or Hitler, is absurd: Russia has come a long way since the
days of the Gulag, when 60 million people were killed and imprisoned. If we
want to push Russia back into the darkness, then the policy we are presently
pursuing is the way to go: if, however, we want peace, then it’s high time to
disband NATO – which is outdated and expensive – give up our dreams of regime
change in Russia, and start cooperating with Moscow in solving our mutual
problems.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario