BY RICHARD FALK
APRIL 15,
2022
https://www.counterpunch.org/2022/04/15/stop-the-geopolitical-war-now/
In my view, it is best to understand the Ukraine Crisis
as a two-level war with regional and global implications. The surprising
strength of Ukrainian resistance has dramatized the magnitude of Moscow’s
miscalculation in having anticipated quickly subduing resisting to its
aggression and intended occupation. Russia has already been defeated in the
Russia-Ukrainian War on the ground by Ukrainian resistance and the degree of
international solidarity with the Ukrainian defense of their sovereign rights.
The U.S./Europe is guilty of an offsetting miscalculation in the second level
war—the geopolitical war–by expressing its solidarity with the sovereign rights
of Ukraine through a heavy-handed emphasis on a punitive anti-Russian approach
consisting of hostile propaganda, comprehensive sanctions, and the official
demonization of Putin and Russia. Such posture seems calculated to prolong the
war, especially as the expressions of support from American leaders have not
even mentioned the diplomatic alternative of a ceasefire accompanied
by negotiations within an impartial framework.
To its credit, the Biden presidency has so far resisted
pressure to escalate this geopolitical war by fusing its prosecution with that
of Ukrainian resistance forces through such steps as establishing a no-fly zone in Ukraine, supplying offensive weaponry, and deploying NATO forces and
weaponry. This is not enough because its tendency is to prolong the war at the
expense not only of the Ukrainian people, but of millions of non-Ukrainians
already suffering from the spillover effects of the war and sanctions on food
and energy supplies and prices, and worse will come to Ukraine and
internationally, the longer the ground war goes on.
A diplomatic path to conflict resolution is completely
absent, in effect negated, given the political language of demonization relied
upon by Biden from the outset of the Russian aggression on February 24th. To
accuse Russian and its leaders of war crimes that should be prosecuted by the
International Criminal Court in The Hague is both awkwardly hypocritical given the
past U.S. repudiation of the tribunal’s authority and an inflammatory attempt
to politicize a fragile international institution struggling for legitimacy
since it was established more than 20 years ago. To suggest, even to demand,
regime change in Moscow, as Biden has done, is something the West wisely
refrained from doing even with respect to Stalin and Stalinism at the height of
the Cold War. Such a statement unless attributed to an emotional outburst that
a nuclear-armed world can ill afford must be regarded as calculated to enrage
Putin and his entourage, and thus inhibit any willingness to explore prospects
for ending the violence now.
It has become obvious that the priority in the
geopolitical war is weakening Russia rather than saving Ukraine from the
ravages of war and ending the encroachment on its rights as a sovereign state.
The longer this geopolitical war continues the greater the harm done to Ukraine
and its people, while irresponsibly raising the risk of a violent encounter
between Russia and NATO. This encounter has already given rise to heightened
nuclear dangers, and these would increase with any further escalation. There is
also the previously mentioned growing concern about the damage being done to many
countries dependent to various degrees on exports of Russian/Ukrainian wheat,
energy, and fertilizer. In other words, even without direct violence, the
effects of pursuing geopolitical objectives by the U.S. are causing intense
suffering around the world, disproportionately harmful to the most vulnerable
among innocent persons due to the impacts of inflated prices for basic
necessities, supply shortages, and disruption, which leads to political
uprising and chaos (already evident in several countries as remote from the
Ukrainian combat zones as Sri Lanka and Cuba).
There is reason to suspect that the geopolitical war
is being waged by the United States for strategic reasons that extend beyond
even picking a fight with Russia that are likely, unless managed in a manner
sensitive to the precarities of the 21stcentury, to produce a
high-intensity new cold war. Part of this strategic agenda guiding the planners
of the geopolitical war is to signal to China that it will pay a high or higher
price if it should attack and occupy Taiwan. In that sense, the old idea of
‘extended deterrence’ is being revived under much more stressed historical
circumstances.
The intensified hostile propaganda and punitive
initiatives taken by the West and directed at Russia are justified as imposing
increasing costs on Russia that will eventually compel Putin to back down and
tacitly admit ‘enough is enough even though it means being shamed into
withdrawing its troops without tangible results with respect to its security
concerns arising from Ukraine’s willingness to identify so openly with NATO and
the U.S. There are various conjectures that such a strategy might prolong the
Ukraine War by as much as four years, with a high cost in casualties and
devastation. What would undoubtedly be portrayed as a victory for the geopolitical
masterminds in Washington would amount to a bloody sacrifice for the people of
Ukraine, somewhat disguised by a massive program of post-conflict
reconstruction aid, and the unpredictable destabilizing effects of sanctions on
the world economy, especially trade relations and inflation.
There seems little doubt that by conviction or
reflecting leverage, President Volodimir Zelensky, has not reacted publicly to
the cross-purposes resulting from the geopolitical level of encounter. On the
contrary, Zelensky has taken advantage of empathy for the Ukrainian plight to
plead his case in such venues as the UN, European Parliament, U.S. Congress,
and the Israeli Knesset. As with Washington, there is a predominant focus on the
criminalization of Russia and Putin with no attention given to whether there is
a better way to end the war on the ground. We must ask whether Zelensky
has been blind to the costs for Ukraine of this ongoing geopolitical war or has
disastrously bought into its flimsy rationale, whether knowingly or not.
There is a final point that has been made persuasively
by Anatol Lieven of the Quincy Institute in Washington: Whether the war
ends tomorrow or goes on for years, some say it could last for at least five
and maybe even ten years, the outcome in terms of Ukraine’s sovereignty and
security arrangements will be the same: ceasefire, withdrawal of foreign
military forces, neutrality, mutual non-aggression arrangements, a UN
peacekeeping border control, guaranteed autonomy and human rights for East
Ukraine (Dombas).
If this logic is correct, then it is a primary
humanitarian and global human security interest for Ukraine to give Moscow
every public signal that it is ready and eager for a ceasefire and peace talks.
The play of forces in Washington may inhibit the
adoption of this favored course of action. Calling off the geopolitical war
will be alleged to embolden Putin’s expansionist ambitions as well as convey to
China that it can successfully challenge Taiwan’s independence if it shows
sufficient resolve. Biden will be viciously attacked as a weak leader who is
relinquishing U.S. responsibility for upholding global security throughout the
world, given the weakness of the UN, the irrelevance of international law, and the
alien values of China and Russia. To some extent, Biden constructed his own trap
by opting for an untenable geopolitical war waged with inflammatory rhetoric
and further inflated military budgets, backed by the fictitious encounter
between democracies and autocracies as well as the ahistorical belief that
military superiority controls political outcomes in contemporary wars and gives
shape to the history of our times. It is well to wonder why the Philippines,
India, and Brazil are grouped among the world’s democracies and why every
sustained war since 1945 has been won by the weaker side militarily.
It is time for a unilateral decision to renounce the
geopolitical war and encourage the Ukrainian government to seek peace by
proposing an immediate ceasefire and an impartial framework for peace
diplomacy.
Richard Falk is
Albert G. Milbank Professor Emeritus of International Law at Princeton
University and Visiting Distinguished Professor in Global and International
Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
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