Putin and Xi Have Red
Lines, Too
by Patrick J. Buchanan Posted on April 13, 2021
https://original.antiwar.com/buchanan/2021/04/12/putin-and-xi-have-red-lines-too/
In recent days, Russian
tanks, artillery, armor, trucks, and troops have been moving by road and rail
ever closer to Ukraine, and Moscow is said to be repositioning its 56th Guards
Air Assault Brigade in Crimea.
Military sources in Kyiv
estimate there are now 85,000 Russian troops between six and 25 miles from
Ukraine’s northern and eastern borders.
"I have real concerns
about Russia’s actions on the borders of Ukraine. There are more Russian forces
massed on those borders than at any time since 2014 when Russia first
invaded," said Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Sunday’s "Meet
the Press." Blinken added this warning:
"President Biden’s
been very clear about this. If Russia acts recklessly, or aggressively, there
will be costs, there will be consequences."
What "costs" and
what "consequences" were left unstated.
Earlier, Biden personally
assured President Volodymyr Zelensky of America’s "unwavering support for
Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity in the face of Russia’s ongoing
aggression in the Donbas and Crimea."
What does that mean?
When Putin was a young KGB
officer, the Black Sea was a virtual Soviet lake, dominated in the west by
Warsaw Pact members Bulgaria and Romania, and on the north and east by the
USSR. Turkey occupied the south bank.
Today, three of the six
countries that front on the Black Sea – Bulgaria, Romania, and Turkey – are NATO
members. Two of the others, Ukraine and Georgia, openly aspire to become
members of NATO.
If Russia feels a sense of
loss and forced isolation, who can blame them?
The transparency of the
Russian military buildup suggests that it is more of a message to the U.S. and
NATO than any preparation for an invasion.
Putin seems to be saying:
Ukraine’s admission to NATO or stationing of US or NATO forces in that
country would cross a red line for Russia. And we will not rule out military
action to prevent or counter it.
The record suggests that
Putin is not bluffing.
We have been here twice
before.
In 2008, when Georgia
invaded South Ossetia, a province that had broken free of Georgia in the 1990s,
Putin sent troops into South Ossetia, drove the Georgians out, and then invaded
Georgia and occupied part of that country as an object lesson.
And though the US had
regarded Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili as a friend and Georgia as a
potential NATO ally, George W. Bush did nothing.
Again, in 2014, when a
U.S.-backed coup overthrew the elected and pro-Russian regime in Kyiv, Putin
occupied and annexed Crimea and assisted pro-Russian rebels in the Donbas in
breaking free of Kyiv’s control.
In short, when it comes to
Ukraine, Russia has demonstrated that it has its own red lines, which it will
back up with military action.
The US and NATO, however,
have shown repeatedly that while they will give moral support and provide
military aid to Ukraine, they are not going to fight Russia over Ukraine, or to
wrest Crimea or the Donbas from Putin’s control.
A similar test is taking
place in the South and East China seas.
Also on Sunday’s "Meet
the Press," Blinken was asked if the United States would fight to defend
Taiwan, which is being harassed and threatened by XI Jinping’s China, which
claims the island as its sovereign national territory.
"Are we prepared to
defend Taiwan militarily?" NBC’s Chuck Todd asked.
Blinken’s response:
"What we’ve seen, and
what is of real concern to us, is increasingly aggressive actions by the
government in Beijing directed at Taiwan, raising tensions in the Straits. And
we have a commitment to Taiwan under the Taiwan Relations Act … All I can tell
you is it would be a serious mistake for anyone to try to change the existing
status quo by force."
Since Biden’s presidency
began, China has been sending military aircraft, fighters, and bombers, into
Taiwanese air space, circumnavigating the island with warships, and openly
warning that any declaration of independence by Taipei would mean war with
Beijing.
Thus, Russia has made clear
what it would fight to prevent – Ukraine’s accession to NATO and NATO troops on
its soil. And China has made clear what its red line is, what it would fight to
prevent – the declared independence of Taiwan.
But US policy in both cases
seems to be one of "strategic ambiguity," leaving the issue open as
to what we would do.
A question arises: Are
Putin’s Russia and Xi’s China, with their advantages of geographic proximity,
threatening military action to jointly test the resolve of the Biden
administration, and colluding to do so – one in Ukraine, the other in the South
and East China Seas?
And, should we fight for
Ukraine, how many NATO allies would be there beside us? And should we fight to
keep Taiwan free, how many Asian allies would fight China alongside us?
Patrick J. Buchanan is the
author of Churchill, Hitler, and
“The Unnecessary War”: How Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost the World. To find out more about
Patrick Buchanan and read features by other Creators writers and cartoonists,
visit the Creators Web page at www.creators.com.
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