Giving Ukraine Missiles to Shoot Into Russia Is a Declaration of War
MIKE WHITNEY • MAY 24, 2024
https://www.unz.com/mwhitney/giving-ukraine-missiles-to-shoot-into-russia-is-a-declaration-of-war/
In a desperate attempt to stave off a humiliating
defeat in Ukraine, “Secretary of State Antony Blinken has reportedly asked
President Biden to greenlight Ukrainian missile strikes on targets deep inside
Russia.” The change in policy will have no material impact on the
ongoing ground war in Ukraine, although it could trigger a response that would
put NATO in direct conflict with Moscow. In short, Washington’s
looming defeat in Ukraine has compelled administration decisionmakers to
implement a strategy that could precipitate a Third World War. This is from
the New York Times:
Since the first American shipments of sophisticated
weapons to Ukraine, President Biden has never wavered on one prohibition:
President Volodymyr Zelensky had to agree to never fire them into Russian
territory, insisting that would violate Mr. Biden’s mandate to “avoid World War
III.”
But the consensus around that policy is fraying.
Propelled by the State Department, there is now a vigorous debate
inside the administration over relaxing the ban to allow the Ukrainians to hit
missile and artillery launch sites just over the border in Russia —
targets that Mr. Zelensky says have enabled Moscow’s recent territorial gains….
For months, Mr. Zelensky has been mounting attacks on
Russian ships, oil facilities and electricity plants, but he has been doing so
largely with Ukrainian-made drones, which don’t pack the power and speed of the
American weapons… Now, the pressure is mounting on the United States to
help Ukraine target Russian military sites,… with American-provided arms….
The United States is now considering training
Ukrainian troops inside the country, rather than sending them to a training
ground in Germany. That would require putting American military
personnel in Ukraine, something else that Mr. Biden has prohibited
until now. It raises the question of how the United States would respond if the
trainers, who would likely be based near the western city of Lviv, came under
attack. The Russians have periodically targeted Lviv, though it is distant from
the main areas of combat….
The Russians… have been unsubtle in playing to
American concerns about an escalation of the war. This week they began
very public exercises with the units that would be involved in the use of
tactical nuclear weapons, the kind that would be used on Ukrainian troops.
Russian news reports said it was “a response to provocative statements and
threats from Western officials against Russia.”…
The current exercises… are being dismissed as bluster
and muscle-flexing….
In his interview with the Times, Mr.
Zelensky dismissed fears of escalation, saying President Vladimir V. Putin of
Russia had already escalated the war. And he thought it unlikely that Mr. Putin
would ever make good on his threat to unleash a nuclear weapon…. Inside the White House, a Debate
Over Letting Ukraine Shoot U.S. Weapons Into Russia, New York Times
Let’s not mince words: Missile attacks on
Russian territory is a flagrant act of aggression against the Russian
Federation. It is an open declaration of war. The Biden administration
is committing to a policy that will pit the United States against Russia in a
war between two nuclear superpowers.
Why? Why is Biden doing this?
He’s doing this because the US is heavily invested in
the outcome of the war in Ukraine, and Ukraine is losing the war quite badly.
Here’s a short recap from combat veteran and military analyst Colonel Daniel
Davis:
Trust me when I tell you that there is no
chance that Ukraine will ever succeed in a war against Russia. There
is no path to military victory for Ukraine. Period. It
doesn’t matter whether we give them $60 billion or $120 billion or $200
billion. It won’t change anything, because the foundations on which the
fighting power at the national level is built are irrevocably on the side of
Russia. You can’t reverse the tide because you can’t change the basics.
Air power is on Russia’s side,
air defense is on Russia’s side, military-industrial potential is on Russia’s
side, enabling the production of a large amount of artillery, ammunition, the
weapons themselves, drones, electronic warfare equipment and, above all, people
are all on Russia’s side. Russia has more people and will
always have more people… In my opinion, it is unreasonable to continue to hope
that the Ukrainian side will be able to win if we give just a little more
money, because it will not work….UKRAINE WILL NEVER WIN….Period. Retired
US Army Lt. Col. Daniel Davis: I have over 20 years of military combat
experience. Daniel
Davis@peacemaket71
Not surprisingly, Davis’s
views are shared by the vast majority of military experts who have been closely
following events on the ground. The overall assessment of these experts is
invariably the same: Ukraine is losing, and losing badly. There won’t
be any reversal of momentum because—in every area of combat capability—Russia
has a clear advantage. Ukraine doesn’t have the firepower, the
aircraft, the tanks, the armored vehicles, the missiles, the heavy artillery,
the air-defense systems, the munitions, the industrial capacity or the manpower
to roll back the Russian army or to even stop the persistent Russian
offensive. Simply put, Ukraine cannot and will not win. And, this
is not just the view of men like Davis who think the fighting should stop
immediately. It is also the view of globalist elites, like Richard Haass, who
think the war should be prolonged. Haass is the president emeritus of the
prestigious Council On Foreign Relations, and his views on Ukraine are likely
shared by a large cross-section of wealthy elites who think there is something
to gain by dragging the conflict out for another year or so. Take a look at
this excerpt from a recent article by Haass and see if you can spot the
similarities between his analysis and Davis’:
...what should Ukraine and
its backers in the West seek to achieve? What should constitute success?
Some answer that success
should be defined as Ukraine recovering all of its lost territory, to
re-establish its 1991 borders…. This would be a serious mistake. Don’t get me
wrong: re-establishing rightful, legal borders would be highly desirable,
demonstrating that aggression is not acceptable. But foreign policy must be
doable as well as desirable, and Ukraine is simply not in a position to
liberate Crimea and its eastern regions through military force.
The maths is unavoidable. Russia
has too many soldiers and a wartime economy capable of producing large amounts
of arms and ammunition. Despite sanctions, Russia has been able to ramp up its
military-industrial base and has access to weaponry and ammunition produced
in Iran and North Korea and to Chinese manufactured goods and technologies that
contribute to the Kremlin’s war effort.
Another factor militating
against a Ukraine effort to recapture its lands by force is that offensive
operations tend to require much more in the way of manpower, equipment, and
ammunition than do defensive efforts. This is especially so when defences have
had the chance to build fortifications, as Russia has in much of the Ukrainian
territory it occupies. Why
Mounting another Counteroffensive in 2025 would be a Mistake, Novaya
Gazeta
So, Haass openly admits that
the war is a mismatch and that Ukraine cannot reasonably expect to retake the
territory it has lost. He admits that “Russia has too many soldiers” (unlimited
manpower) “a wartime economy capable of producing large amounts of arms and
ammunition”(Unlimited industrial capacity) and “Russia… has access to weaponry
and ammunition… that contribute to the Kremlin’s war effort.” (Unlimited
weapons production) In short, Haass’s analysis is identical to Davis’s. They
both agree on the fundamentals, that is, that Ukraine cannot and will not win.
But then the article takes an
unusual turn, in which, Haass inexplicably draws the exact opposite conclusions
from his analysis than Davis. It is an astonishing rhetorical sleight-of-hand
that would make Svengali envious. Here’s what says after listing the numerous
reasons why Ukraine will not win the war:
“Some answer that success
should be defined as Ukraine recovering all of its lost territory, to
re-establish its 1991 borders…. This would be a serious mistake.”
Think about that for a minute.
So, according to Haass—winning the war no longer means winning the war. It does
not mean retaking captured territory, it does not mean expelling the Russians
from eastern Ukraine, and it does not mean prevailing in the ground war. It
means, ‘what’ exactly?
Haass explains:
“What strategy… should Ukraine
and its supporters pursue? First, Ukraine should emphasise the defensive, an
approach that would allow it to husband its limited resources and frustrate
Russia.
Second, Ukraine should
be given the means — long-range strike capabilities — and the freedom to attack
Russian forces anywhere in Ukraine, as well as Russian warships in the Black
Sea and economic targets within Russia itself. Russia must come to
feel the cost of a war it initiated and prolongs.
Third, Ukraine’s backers must
commit to providing long-term military aid. The goal of all of the above is to
signal to Vladimir Putin that time is not on Russia’s side and that he cannot
hope to outlast Ukraine.Why
Mounting another Counteroffensive in 2025 would be a Mistake, Novaya
Gazeta
So, this is the new strategy?
This is Plan B?
Yes, apparently. And look at
what Plan B involves:
1. Hunkering
down in a defensive posture
2. Using
“long-range strike capabilities” to attack targets in Russia (Is
this where Blinken got the idea?)
3. Pumping
billions more into the Ukrainian ‘black hole’ to prolong a war that cannot be
won.
In short, provoke, hector and
inflict as much pain as possible on Russia for as long as it takes.
As long as what takes? What
does that mean?
Haass explains that too:
An interim ceasefire almost
certainly would not lead to anything resembling peace, which will
likely have to wait for the arrival of a Russian leadership that
chooses to end the country’s pariah status. That might not happen for
years or decades.
Oh, so the real objective, is
regime change. What a surprise!
This is more than just “moving
the goalposts” (by changing the definition of “winning” a war). This is
a revelation of the elite agenda, which looks beyond the fatuous
propaganda about “unprovoked aggression” and focuses entirely on geopolitics,
the driving force in international relations. In Haass’s mind, Ukraine is not a
battlefield on which Ukrainian and Russian patriots sacrifice their lives for
their countries. No. In Haass’s mind, Ukraine is the critical gateway
to Central Asia which is expected to be the most prosperous region of the next
century. Western plutocrats intend to be the main players in Central Asia’s
development,(pivot to Asia) which is why they are trying to remove the biggest
obstacle to western penetration, which is Russia. Once Russia has been
weakened and rolled-back, Washington will be free to spread its military bases
across Eurasia laying the groundwork for containing rival China through
provocations, encirclement and economic strangulation.
That is why Haass’s definition
of “success” is more flexible than ordinary people who evaluate these matters
in terms of the enormous human suffering they cause. In the globalist view,
these things are only of secondary importance. What really matters is power;
raw, geopolitical power in the form of global hegemony. That is the
ultimate strategic objective. Nothing else matters.
And that is why the Biden
administration is about to approve the use of American-made long-range strike
weapons to destroy targets on Russian territory. Because—even though it does
not increase Ukraine’s chances of winning the war—it does help to
advance the globalist geopolitical agenda which regards Ukraine as a mere
springboard for launching attacks on Russia.
The elites are so drunk with
hubris, they have convinced themselves that Putin will not see these
missile-strikes on Russian territory as a declaration of war. Which they are.
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