Putin, Holding a Weak Hand, Raises the Stakes
by Patrick J. Buchanan Posted on October 04, 2022
https://original.antiwar.com/buchanan/2022/10/03/putin-holding-a-weak-hand-raises-the-stakes/
In a Kremlin speech last week, President Vladimir
Putin identified Russia’s real "enemy" in Ukraine as "the ruling
circles of the so-called West" whose "hegemony has a pronounced
character of totalitarianism, despotism, and apartheid."
In the West, Putin declaimed, "The repression of
freedom is taking on the outlines of a reverse religion, of real
Satanism," which, on issues like gender identity, amounts to a
"denial of man."
Putin then formally annexed the occupied Ukrainian
regions of Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson and pledged to defend
these new Russian territories with "all the forces and means at our
disposal."
He suggested that those means included nuclear
weapons, for which the Americans "created a precedent" at Hiroshima
and Nagasaki.
Reading Putin’s excoriation, it is hard to recall, in
four decades of Cold War, or the three decades since, a speech of such
relentless vitriol and hostility toward the West.
Beyond the rhetoric, though, what does this tell us
about Putin’s policy?
Putin is drawing a red line at Russia’s annexation and
absorption of the four occupied oblasts in the south and east of Ukraine,
roughly 15% of that country, and declaring it to be sacred Russian soil.
He intends to conscript and commit thousands of fresh
troops to defend these new Russian territories. He will not rule out the use of
nuclear weapons to repel any who attack and attempt to detach these new lands
from Mother Russia. While open to negotiations, he will fight it out on this
line if it takes all winter.
This leaves Ukraine, NATO and the U.S. with some
difficult calculations and hard decisions.
Are they willing to engage the Russian army in the
four oblasts to drive them out, if the Russians, rather than quit these
territories, use a tactical nuclear weapon to repel the attacking Ukrainians?
After Putin’s speech, Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelensky asked for the accelerated admission of Ukraine to the NATO alliance.
Were such an accession process to be expedited and
Ukraine admitted to NATO, the US would be obligated under Article 5 to go to
war against Russia in Ukraine, on Kyiv’s side.
This could mean a U.S.-Russia war, which could
escalate to World War III and nuclear war, and was something that every U.S.
president from Harry Truman to Ronald Reagan saw as his highest priority to
avoid.
Fortunately, membership in NATO, and extension of an
Article 5 war guarantee for the new member, requires a unanimous vote of all 30
member nations in the alliance.
And the requisite enthusiasm, inside NATO, to fight
the world’s largest nuclear power over who rules Luhansk is nonexistent.
Which brings us to the sabotage of the Nord Stream I
and Nord Stream II pipelines built to carry Russian natural gas across the
Baltic Sea to Germany, and from there on to Central and Western Europe.
Late last month, explosions blew holes in both
pipelines, preventing any renewal of Russian gas exports to Germany through the
pipelines, even if Moscow decided to turn on the taps.
NATO Europe is blaming the Russians for blowing up
their own pipelines. But these pipelines are a strategic asset that gives
Moscow leverage over the economies of much of NATO Europe.
Putin blames the Americans and Brits for the sabotage
and has called for the UN Security Council to investigate the act of
"terrorism."
Said Putin, "The sanctions were not enough for
the Anglo-Saxons: They moved onto sabotage."
But, again, though Europeans are pointing the finger
at Moscow, why would Russia sabotage two pipelines it helped to construct,
which give it lasting leverage over the prosperity of NATO Europe?
Why would Putin sabotage his own strategic assets?
What sense would that make?
As of today, the respective goals of the principal
participants in the Ukraine war are becoming as clear as they are irreconcilable.
Putin has annexed and seeks to hold Luhansk, Donetsk,
Kherson, and Zaporizhzhia, attach them to Crimea, declare victory, and end a
war he is not winning. This weekend, Russian forces were driven out of the city
of Lyman they captured in the early days of this war.
Zelensky wants to defeat the Russian invaders, drive
them out of his country, humiliate Putin and achieve a victory for Ukraine that
would put him in its history books as the Winston Churchill of his nation.
However, it appears today that Ukraine will not be
allowed to achieve these goals by Putin’s regime, even if preventing it
requires the use of tactical nuclear weapons.
And the Americans, what do they want?
Given the Russian losses of troops, tanks, aircraft,
armor, artillery, along with the perception that Putin and the Russian army
launched a war of aggression against a smaller power and were defeated,
America, which provided the weaponry to produce this outcome, is already
perceived as a winner.
America should be looking to ending this war before it
expands into a nuclear war, which this country has sought to avoid since the
atomic age began.
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.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario