Can Europe Afford To Turn a Blind Eye to Evidence of a US Role in Pipeline Blasts?
If Washington was involved, it would mark a
dangerous new stage not only in the Ukraine war but in Europe’s acceptance of the vassal status
by Jonathan
Cook Posted on October 07, 2022
Reprinted from Mint Press News with
the author’s permission.
The sabotage of the two Nord Stream pipelines leaves
Europeans certain to be much poorer and colder this winter and was an act of
international vandalism on an almost unimaginable scale. The attacks severed
Russian gas supplies to Europe and caused the release of enormous quantities of
methane gas, the prime offender in global warming.
This is why no one is going to take responsibility for
the crime – and most likely no one will ever be found definitively culpable.
Nonetheless, the level of difficulty and
sophistication in setting off blasts at three separate locations on the Nord
Stream 1 and 2 pipelines overwhelmingly suggests a state actor, or actors, was
behind it.
Western coverage of the attacks has been decidedly
muted, given that this hostile assault on the globe’s energy infrastructure is
unprecedented – overshadowing even the 9/11 attacks.
The reason why there appears to be so little
enthusiasm to explore this catastrophic event in detail – beyond pointing a finger in
Russia’s direction – is not difficult to deduce.
It is hard to think of a single reason why Moscow
would wish to destroy its own energy pipelines, valued at $20 billion, or allow
in seawater, possibly corroding them irreversibly.
The attacks deprive Russia of its main gas supply
lines to Europe – and with it, vital future revenues – while leaving the field
open to competitors.
Moscow loses its only significant leverage over
Germany, its main buyer in Europe and at the heart of the European project,
when it needs such leverage most, as it faces down concerted efforts by
the United States and Europe to drive Russian soldiers out of Ukraine.
Even any possible temporary advantage Moscow might
have gained by demonstrating its ruthlessness and might to Europe have
been achieved just as effectively by simply turning off the spigot to stop
supplies.
Media taboo
This week, distinguished economist Jeffrey Sachs was
invited on Bloomberg TV to talk about the pipeline attacks. He
broke a taboo among Western elites by citing evidence
suggesting that the US, rather than Russia, was the prime suspect.
Western media like the Associated Press have
tried to foreclose such a line of thinking by calling it a “baseless conspiracy
theory” and Russian “disinformation”. But, as Sachs pointed out, there are good
reasons to suspect the US above Russia.
There is, for example, the threat to Russia made by US
president Joe Biden back in early February, that “there will be no longer a
Nord Stream 2” were Ukraine to be invaded. Questioned by a reporter about how
that would be possible, Biden asserted:
“I promise you, we will be able to do that.”
Biden was not speaking out of turn or off the cuff. At
the same time, Victoria Nuland,
a senior diplomat in the Biden administration, issued Russia much the same
warning, telling reporters:
“If Russia invades Ukraine, one way or another, Nord Stream 2 will not move
forward.”
That is the same Nuland who was intimately involved back
in 2014 in behind-the-scenes maneuvers by the US to help overthrow an elected
Ukrainian government that led to the installation of one hostile to Moscow. It
was that coup that triggered a combustible mix of outcomes – Kyiv’s increasing
flirtation with NATO, as well as a civil war in the east between
Ukrainian ultra-nationalists and
ethnic Russian communities – that provided the chief rationale for President
Vladimir Putin’s later invasion.
And for those still puzzled by what motive the US
might have for perpetrating such an outrage, Nuland’s boss helpfully offered an
answer last Friday. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken described the
destruction of the Nord Stream pipelines, and the consequent environmental
catastrophe, as offering “tremendous strategic opportunity for the years to
come”.
Blinken set out a little too clearly the “cui bono” –
“who profits?” – argument, suggesting that Biden and Nuland’s earlier remarks
were not just empty, pre-invasion posturing by the White House.
Blinken celebrated the fact that Europe would be
deprived of Russian gas for the foreseeable future and, with it, Putin’s
leverage over Germany and other European states. Before the blasts, the danger
for Washington had been that Moscow might be able to advance favorable
negotiations over Ukraine rather than perpetuate a war Biden’s defense
secretary, Lloyd Austin, has already stated is
designed to “weaken” Russia at least as much as liberating Ukraine.
Or, as Blinken phrased it, the attacks were “a
tremendous opportunity once and for all to remove the dependence on Russian
energy, and thus to take away from Vladimir Putin the weaponization of energy
as a means of advancing his imperial designs.”
Though Blinken did not mention it, it was also a
“tremendous opportunity” to make Europe far more dependent on the US for its
gas supplies, shipped by the sea at a much greater cost to Europe than through
Russia’s pipelines. American energy firms may well be the biggest beneficiaries
of the explosions.
Meddling in Ukraine
US hostility towards Russian economic ties with Europe
is not new. Long before Russia’s invasion, Washington had been quite openly seeking
ways to block the Nord Stream pipelines.
One of Blinken’s recent predecessors, Condoleezza
Rice, expressed the Washington consensus way back in 2014 – at the same time as
Nuland was recorded secretly meddling in
Ukraine, discussing who should be installed as president in place of the
elected Ukrainian government was about to be ousted in a coup.
Speaking to German TV, Rice said the
Russian economy was vulnerable to sanctions because 80% of its exports were
energy-related. Proving how wrong-headed American foreign policy predictions
often are, she asserted confidently: “People say the Europeans will run out of
energy. Well, the Russians will run out of cash before the Europeans run out of
energy.”
In Rice's words, breaking Europe’s reliance on Russian energy was “one of the few instruments we have… Over the long term, you
simply want to change the structure of energy dependence.”
She added: “You [Germany] want to depend more on the
North American energy platform, the tremendous bounty of oil and gas that we’re
finding in North America. You want to have pipelines that don’t go through
Ukraine and Russia.”
Now, the sabotage of Nord Stream 1 and 2 has achieved
a major US foreign-policy goal overnight.
It has also preempted the pressure building in
Germany, through mass protests and
mounting business opposition, that might have seen Berlin reverse course on
European sanctions on Russia and revive gas supplies – a shift that would have
undermined Washington’s goal of “weakening” Putin. Now, the protests are
redundant. German politicians cannot cave into popular demands when there is
no pipeline through which they can supply their population with Russian gas.
‘Thank you, USA’
One can hardly be surprised that European leaders are
publicly blaming Russia for the pipeline attacks. After all, Europe falls under
the US security umbrella and Russia has been designated by Washington as the Official Enemy No 1.
But almost certainly, major European capitals are
drawing different conclusions in private. Like Sachs, their officials are
examining the circumstantial evidence, considering the statements of
self-incrimination from Biden and other officials, and weighing the “cui bono”
arguments.
And like Sachs, they are most likely inferring that
the prime suspect, in this case, is the US – or, at the very least, that
Washington authorized an ally to act on its behalf. Just as no European leader
would dare to publicly accuse the US of carrying out the attacks, none would
dare stage such an attack without first getting the nod from Washington.
That was evidently the view of Radek Sikorski, the
former foreign and defense minister of Poland, who tweeted a
“Thank you, USA” with an image of the bubbling seas where one pipeline was
ruptured.
Sikorski, it should be noted, is as well-connected in
Washington as he is in Poland, a European state bitterly hostile to Moscow and its pipelines. His wife, Anne Applebaum, is a staff writer at The
Atlantic magazine and an influential figure in US policy circles who
has long advocated for
NATO and EU expansion into Eastern Europe and Ukraine.
Sikorski hurriedly took down the tweet after it went
viral.
But if Washington is the chief suspect in blowing up
the pipelines, how should Europe read its relations with the US in the light of
that deduction? And what does such sabotage indicate to Europe’s leaders about
how Washington might perceive the stakes in Europe? The answers are not pretty.
Demand for fealty
If the US was behind the attacks, it suggests not only
that Washington is taking the Ukraine war into new, more dangerous territory,
ready to risk drawing Moscow into a round of tit-for-tat that could quickly
escalate into a nuclear confrontation. It also suggests that ties between the
US and Europe have entered a decisive new stage, too.
Or put another way, Washington would have done more
than move out of the shadows, turning its proxy war in Ukraine into a more
direct, hot war with Russia. It would indicate that the US is willing to turn
the whole of Europe into a battlefield, and bully, betray and potentially
sacrifice the continent’s population as cruelly as it has traditionally treated
weak allies in the Global South.
In that regard, the pipeline ruptures are most likely
interpreted by European leaders as a signal: that they should not dare to
consider formulating their own independent foreign policy or contemplate
defying Washington. The attacks indicate that the US requires absolute fealty,
that Europe must prostrate itself before Washington and accept whatever
dictates it imposes.
That would amount to a dramatic reversal of the
Marshall Plan, Washington’s ambitious funding of the rebuilding of Western
Europe after the Second World War, chiefly as a way to restore the market for
rapidly expanding US industries.
By contrast, this act of sabotage strangles Europe
economically, driving it into recession, deepening its debt, and making it a
slave to US energy supplies. Effectively, the Biden administration would have
moved from offering European elites juicy carrots to now wielding a very large
stick at them.
Pitiless aggression
For those reasons, European leaders may be unwilling
to contemplate that their ally across the Atlantic could behave in such a cruel
manner against them. The implications are more than unsettling.
The conclusion European leaders would be left to draw
is that the only justification for such pitiless aggression is that the US is
maneuvering to avoid the collapse of its post-war global dominance and the end of
its military and economic empire.
The destruction of the pipelines would have to be
understood as an act of desperation: a last-ditch preemption by Washington of
the loss of its hegemony as Russia, China, and others find common cause to
challenge the American behemoth, and a ferocious blow against Europe to hammer
home the message that it must not stray from the fold.
At the same time, it would shine a different, clearer
light on the events that have been unfolding in and around Ukraine in recent
years:
- NATO’s relentless expansion across Eastern Europe despite expert
warnings that it would eventually provoke Russia.
- Biden and Nuland’s meddling to help oust an elected Ukrainian
government sympathetic to Moscow.
- The cultivation of a militarized Ukrainian ultra-nationalism pitted
against Russia led to a bloody civil war against Ukraine’s own ethnic
Russian communities.
- And NATO’s exclusive focus on escalating the war through arms
supplies to Ukraine rather than pursuing and incentivizing diplomacy.
None of these developments can be stripped out of a
realistic assessment of why Russia responded by invading Ukraine.
Europeans have been persuaded that they must give
unflinching moral and military support to Ukraine because it is the last
rampart defending their homeland from merciless Russian imperialism.
But the attack on the pipelines hints at a more
complex story, one in which the European public needs to stop fixing their gaze
exclusively on Russia and turn around to understand what has been happening
behind their backs.
Jonathan Cook won the Martha Gellhorn Special
Prize for Journalism. His latest books are Israel
and the Clash of Civilizations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle
East (Pluto Press) and Disappearing Palestine: Israel’s
Experiments in Human Despair (Zed Books). His website is www.jonathan-cook.net.
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