NATO’s 'war against Russia' inches 'closer to direct conflict'
"We are fighting a war against Russia," the
German Foreign Minister says, as the US and Germany authorize tank shipments,
and new dangers, in the Ukraine proxy war.
https://mate.substack.com/p/natos-war-against-russia-inches-closer
Jan 26
Since the first week of
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, French President Emmanuel Macron has repeated a
mantra on behalf of his NATO partners: “We are not at war with Russia.”
Nearly one year in, that notion has officially been
dispelled.
“We are fighting a war against Russia,” German Foreign
Minister Annalena Baerbock said this week.
Baerbock was trying to assuage NATO allies’
frustration over German reluctance to
send Leopard 2 tanks into Ukraine. She can now claim vindication. In a reversal
of its initial position, the German government has announced it that will
deliver Leopard 2 tanks to the Ukrainian army.
To overcome German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s jitters,
the White House engaged in an about-face of its own, approving the shipment of
31 US-made M1 Abrams tanks to Ukraine. Scholz had insisted on conditioning any
German tanks to a similar US commitment. Up until this week, Pentagon chief
Lloyd Austin was “dead set against providing”
the M1s, and declared there
to be “no linkage between providing M1s and providing Leopards.” Austin had argued that the M1s are
too cumbersome for Ukraine, requiring costly jet fuel, heavy maintenance, and
lengthy training.
Just last
month, a senior US defense official declared that “even one M1 was out of the
question,” according
to the Washington Post. When used by US troops in Iraq, the M1s were “hard
for us to sustain and maintain,” the official noted. For Ukraine, “it would be
impossible.” Even last week, senior Pentagon official Colin Kahl dismissed the
prospect of sending the “very complicated” M1, because “we should not be
providing the Ukrainians systems they can’t repair, they can’t sustain, and
that they, over the long term, can’t afford.”
As Gen. Mark
Milley learned when he
came out in favor of diplomacy with Russia to end the fighting, the
Pentagon’s outlook is no match for Washington’s proxy war fever. The White
House reversed course, Politico
notes, after “a parade of Democrats and Republicans” in Congress “pressured
the Biden administration to grant Berlin’s request to send U.S. tanks first.”
What the Pentagon “was not taking into enough account,” the New
York Times reports, citing a US official, “was the intense fear among
European governments of doing anything to provoke Russia without having the
cover of the United States doing the same thing first.” When it comes to provoking
Russia, the US is undoubtedly first.
When
President Biden overruled the Pentagon and unveiled the M1 approval, Austin
stood by his side. “These tanks are further evidence of our enduring,
unflagging commitment to Ukraine and our confidence in the skill of Ukrainian
forces,” Biden declared.
Yet the
publicly trumpeted US tank shipment comes with a quietly disclosed delay.
The M1s are
“probably not for the near fight,” and in fact “are not likely to arrive for
many months, if not years,” a US official told the Washington
Post. The M1 tanks’ slow journey, the Post explains, results from plans to
have them “ordered from manufacturers, rather than transferred from existing
U.S. stocks.” The administration’s bespoke tank orders are undoubtedly a new
boon for the already
booming US weapons
industry, to the detriment of a Ukrainian military that would prefer an
expedited delivery.
At this
stage, NATO has pledged at
least 105 tanks for Ukraine, well short of the 300 tanks that the head
of Ukraine’s armed forces, Valerii Zaluzhnyi, has said are “urgent
needs” to turn the tide. Germany aims to have the tanks deployed in Ukraine
by the end of March, around the time of an expected Russian spring offensive.
But whether the tanks “will arrive in Ukraine for the next phase of the war is
uncertain,” the Wall
Street Journal notes.
If the
tanks’ likely impact on the battlefield is unclear, they do guarantee another
ascent up the proxy war’s ever-growing escalation ladder. As Branko
Marcetic observes, “the United States and its NATO allies have serially
blown past their own self-imposed lines over arms transfers,” which
“have now escalated well beyond what governments had worried just months ago
could draw the alliance into direct war with Russia.” In an October
2022 interview, Ukraine’s defense minister, Oleksii Reznikov, predicted:
“When I was
in D.C. in November [2021], before the invasion, and asked for Stingers, they
told me it was impossible. Now it’s possible. When I asked for 155-millimeter
guns, the answer was no. HIMARS, no. HARM, no. Now all of that is a yes.
Therefore, I’m certain that tomorrow there will be tanks and ATACMS and F-16s.”
Reznikov’s
prescience on the tanks could well continue. Just hours after the US and
Germany committed tanks, the Ukrainian government began
calling for F-16 fighter jets.
The F-16’s
manufacturer, Lockheed Martin, is happy to oblige. Lockheed will be “ramping
production on F-16s... to get to the place where we will be able to backfill pretty
capably any countries that choose to do third party transfers to help with the
current conflict,” Frank St. John, the military giant’s chief contracting
officer, told
the Financial Times. According to European officials, talks on such
transfers are at an “early stage.”
Just as the
prospect of diplomacy with Moscow is off-limits to Western policymakers, so is
serious consideration of Russia’s response. The more advanced NATO weaponry
pours in, the more that Russia will play its part in “permanent escalation”, as
Russia’s Berlin embassy described
the new tank deliveries. “While it is unclear whether” the German tanks
“will make a decisive difference in the spring offensive” planned by Ukraine,
the New
York Times notes, “it is the latest in a series of gradual escalations that
has inched the United States and its NATO allies closer to direct conflict with
Russia.”
Whatever the
impact of the German tank shipments on the battlefield, their utility is not
strictly military. By convincing Germany to send tanks for battle with Russian
forces, the White House is advancing a goal that long predates the February
2022 invasion of Ukraine: undermine ties between Germany, Western Europe’s
biggest power, and neighboring Russia, the United States’ biggest adversary.
“Germany
built its postwar economy on cheap Russian energy,” the New
York Times notes. The US-forced cancellation and then US-welcomed
(if not planned) bombing of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline took care of
Germany’s cheap energy supply from Russia. The new German tank shipment further
buries the chance of any possible reconciliation.
“Russia does
not threaten America’s global position, but the mere possibility that it might
collaborate with Europe and particularly Germany opens up the most significant
threat in the decade, a long-term threat that needs to be nipped in the bud,”
George Friedman, founder of the private US intelligence firm Stratfor,
explained in a 2010 book.
Therefore, he concluded, “maintaining a powerful wedge between Germany and
Russia is of overwhelming interest to the United States.”
For the US,
Friedman added in 2015, “the primordial fear” is “German technology and German
capital” combining with “Russian natural resources and Russian manpower” to
form “the only combination that has for centuries scared the hell out of the
United States.” In this showdown, the US aims to control “the line from the
Baltics to the Black Sea.” Russia, by contrast, “must have at least a neutral
Ukraine, not a pro-western Ukraine.” Because a neutral Ukraine would impede the
primordial US goal of a Russia-German fissure, the US has opted for a proxy war
instead.
Before
Scholz caved to their pressure campaign, US officials noted that the German
Chancellor “does not believe the world is ready to see German tanks near the
borders of Russia, a reminder of the Nazi invasion in World War II,” according
to the New York Times. Although the Times no longer
allows itself to acknowledge it, there is another fraught historical irony:
Germany is now sending tanks to a Ukrainian military that has formally
incorporated what the Paper of Record once
described as the "openly neo-Nazi" Azov Battalion.
One
inconvenience acknowledged by the Times is opinion polling showing
that “half of Germans do not want to send tanks,” with their country
“profoundly divided about being a military leader and risking a direct
confrontation with Russia.” According to German officials, Scholz was also
“concerned about ending up with a fleet of almost exclusively German-made tanks
being used to fight the Russians in Ukraine, a scenario that could single his
country out as a party to the conflict,” the Wall
Street Journal adds.
In seeking
to force Germany to send its tanks into battle with Russia, the US wants
Germany “to draw Russia’s counterfire,” German
parliamentarian Sevim Dağdelen writes. “One cannot escape the impression
that it is hoped a possible counterstrike would hit Berlin first and foremost.
The United States would thus have achieved one of its long-term strategic
objectives, namely to prevent cooperation between Germany and Russia forever.”
US officials, Dağdelen warns, are “forcing their ally, like a vassal, to
sacrifice itself.”
Dağdelen’s
characterization of the US use of Germany applies to Ukraine as well. According
to Der
Spiegel, Germany’s Federal Intelligence Service (BND) is “alarmed by the
high losses of the Ukrainian army in the battle for the strategically important
city of Bakhmut,” where a “three-digit number” of Ukrainian soldiers are losing
their lives daily. Russia’s capture of Bakhmut, the BND warns, “would have
significant consequences, as it would allow Russia to make further forays into
the interior of the country.” Russian advances on Bakhmut follow a 300,000-plus
troop mobilization that has “appeared to tilt the calculus of attrition in
Moscow’s favor,” the Wall
Street Journal notes.
Perhaps the
coming influx of NATO tanks will reverse that trend. If not, the proxy war’s
NATO architects can point to other victories: Russian forces depleted,
Berlin-Moscow ties severed, and US dominance of NATO strengthened. After all,
it is mainly Ukrainians paying the price of the “war against Russia” fueled
from afar.
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