GOP war drummers demanding action against Russia
Republicans should demand better from their lawmakers
in DC, lest they risk fighting again for someone else’s war.
JANUARY 4, 2022
Written by
Doug
Bandow
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/2022/01/04/gop-war-drummers-demanding-action-against-russia/
The drums of war are sounding in Washington, D.C., and
Republicans are among the most enthusiastic backers of military action. Some
enthusiastically, almost gleefully, suggest risking nuclear war.
This is no longer the party of Ronald Reagan, who
sought to prevent conflict and especially nuclear conflict. Nor of earlier
Republicans. During his vice-presidential run in 1976, Kansas Sen.
Robert Dole denounced “Democrat wars of the 20th
century.” Democratic presidents took America into World War I, World War II,
the Korean War, and the Vietnam War. In retrospect, only the Second World War
looks necessary, and even then the Democratic administration’s pre-war conduct,
whatever its justification, was deceitful and reckless.
Today the most dangerous spot on earth might be
Ukraine. Despite Washington’s foolhardy arrogance that led successive administrations to lie and
expand NATO to Russia’s borders, dismember Serbia, stage multiple “color
revolutions,” and promise alliance membership to Ukraine and Georgia, GOP
legislators are pressing for
direct confrontation with Russia. Most want to send arms. For instance, Rep.
Mike Turner (R-Ohio) and 14 colleagues wrote a letter pressing President Joe
Biden to provide
intelligence and weapons to Ukraine.
Some advocate sending troops. In a separate letter
with Rep. Mike Rodgers (R-Al.), Turner also advocated that the
administration “deploy a U.S. military presence in the Black Sea to deter a
Russian invasion.” Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) would go much further, proposing
“military action” which, he
explained, “could mean that we standoff with our ships in the Black Sea,
and we rain destruction on Russian military capability.” That’s not all: “It
could mean that we participate, and I would not rule that out, I would not rule
out American troops on the ground. We don’t rule out first use nuclear action.”
Wicker put out a statement asserting:
“President Biden should make clear that there is no scenario under which
Ukraine will be overrun by Russia, period. Putin is already courting a
bloodbath should he attack Ukrainian troops. President Biden should up the ante
by warning him that an invasion would saddle him with an intolerably high
Russian casualty count. This means leaving all options on the table and
granting no concessions.”
Perhaps Wicker assumes that Putin will retreat before
such threats. However, Ukraine matters far more to Russia, and the latter enjoys
local military superiority. The “bloodbath” that Wicker would enthusiastically
impose on Moscow would also consume American and Ukrainian lives.
Equally irrational was Sen. Lindsey Graham’s
endorsement of nuclear war against North Korea back in 2017. Long the loyal
sidekick to war-happy John McCain, Graham gravitated toward Donald Trump, to whom the
senator offered ostentatious subservience.
That appears to include advocating nuclear war. In speaking about South
Korea Graham explained:
“If there’s going to be a war to stop [Kim Jong-un], it will be over there. If
thousands die, they’re going to die over there. They’re not going to die here.”
Graham added: “And that may be provocative, but not really. When you’re
president of the United States, where does your allegiance lie? To the people
of the United States.”
Graham’s war would result in hundreds of thousands, or
more likely, millions of deaths. And many of them would be Americans. The
Republic of Korea hosts a large US population, including service personnel,
military dependents, students, and businessmen, and women. In war, American
forces would surge in to fight North Korean ground forces. US citizens would
die in droves. And the toll among South and North Koreans would be much
greater. When the Clinton administration was contemplating military action
against the North some analysts predicted a
million deaths from a full-scale war.
That was in the “old days,” when the main threat was
the numerous though decrepit North Korean conventional forces. Seoul’s
proximity to the border left it vulnerable to missile and artillery attacks even
if Pyongyang’s tanks could not break through. Last year, reported the Rand Corporation:
“North Korea maintains nearly 6,000 artillery systems within range of major
South Korean population centers, which it could use to kill many thousands in
just an hour, even without resorting to chemical or nuclear weapons.”
However, with enough nuclear
materials to produce scores
of nuclear weapons,
the North also could lay waste to American possessions of Guam and Commonwealth
of Mariana Islands, and Japan, including Okinawa, home to a Marine
Expeditionary Force tagged for action in Korea. The casualty toll would further
escalate if the North’s existing missiles could reach American territory
beyond. Observing Harry Kazianis of
the Center for the National Interest, war game results indicated that “There
was no question millions of people would die—it was just a question of how
many.”
The GOP’s 2016 presidential candidate class was filled
with reckless statesmen-wannabes. Almost all advocated
imposing a “no-fly” zone in Syria: Ohio Gov. John Kasich, former
Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, neurosurgeon
Ben Carson, Sen. Marco Rubio, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, and of course
Graham.
Any serious “no-fly” zone would have to apply to
Russia, an issue which most of the candidates avoided. But not Christie. When
asked by host Wolf Blitzer if he was “prepared to shoot down that Russian plane
and risk war with Russia,” Christie responded:
“Not only would I be prepared to do it, I would do it. A no-fly zone means a
no-fly zone, Wolf. That’s what it means.”
Then the governor, who apparently believed being
tough in politics meant causing a traffic jam to inconvenience the residents of
his political enemies, put on a full faux tough guy performance: “I would make
very clear … I would talk to Vladimir Putin a lot. But I’d say to him, ‘Listen,
Mr. President, there’s a no-fly zone in Syria; you fly in, it applies to you.’
And yes, we would shoot down the planes of Russian pilots if, in fact, they were
stupid enough to think that this president was the same feckless weakling that
the president we have in the Oval Office is right now.”
Mercifully the exchange ended there. Christie did not
enlighten the audience as to what he would do if Putin responded by downing a
couple American planes or destroying a training camp for US-backed insurgents,
followed by issuing a nuclear alert. Russia could not allow itself to be
bullied: it had more at stake in Syria and appeasing Washington would risk even
more imperious American demands.
The Bush administration considered war with Russia
over Georgia. Reported Politico’s Ben Smith: “With desperate Georgians begging
for American help in closing down the key route through which Russian soldiers
were pouring into the country, Bush’s national security aides outlined possible
responses, including ‘the bombardment and sealing of the Roki Tunnel’ and other
‘surgical strikes,’ according to a new history of the conflict and independent
interviews with former senior officials.”
Moscow certainly would have responded, creating an
extraordinarily dangerous situation. Yet, reported Andrew Cockburn:
Saakashvili’s “confidence may have been buoyed by back-channel assurances from
minions of Vice-President Richard Cheney that the U.S. would, in the end, come to
his aid. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and National Security Adviser
Stephen Hadley feared that Cheney might indeed persuade Bush to intervene.”
Today, some officials involved in the debate continue to wonder if
they should have pushed for “harder options,” meaning war.
Obviously, not all Republican politicians plot new
wars. Rep. Ron and Sen. Rand Paul famously opposed the Washington War Party.
Sen. Mike Lee and Rep. Peter Meijer have been skeptics of America’s endless
wars. Rep. Nancy Mace is a new face who has supported repealing the Iraq AUMF.
And both Ronald Reagan and Donald Trump used the military only sparingly,
avoiding new open-ended conflicts.
Yet even the latter offered no principled opposition
to the war. Warned Bonnie Kristian:
“if another GOP president pushed for war in the wake of our hypothetical
terrorist attack, most of the right would be raring to go.”
Republican Party officials appear almost mindlessly
hawkish, even when clearly not in America’s interest. Incredibly, some
officials are willing to risk nuclear war over peripheral stakes. Republican
voters no longer can afford to leave foreign policy to the Washington elite,
even their own. They risk finding themselves fighting and dying, again, in
someone else’s war.
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