I thought about writing about this outstanding analysis by Chris Hedges, but decided to post it as is, since it clearly demonstrates what I've been struggling to say about the backstory of the war in Ukraine. Only one thing is missing and I hope to be able to write about that soon; besides the profits of the military-industrial complex, which Eisenhower warned us about 61 years ago, what are the economic forces driving BOTH the US/NATO and Russia/China in this new Cold War. (I'm somewhat reluctant to call it "new", since as Hedges points out, this started just as the "old" Cold War was ending.)
Hedges: Chronicle of a War Foretold - Feb. 26, 2022After the fall of the Soviet Union, there was a near
universal understanding among political leaders that NATO expansion would be a
foolish provocation against Russia. How naive we were to think the
military-industrial complex would allow such sanity to prevail.
I was in Eastern Europe in 1989, reporting on the
revolutions that overthrew the ossified communist dictatorships that led to the
collapse of the Soviet Union. It was a time of hope. NATO, with the breakup of
the Soviet empire, became obsolete. President Mikhail Gorbachev reached out to
Washington and Europe to build a new security pact that would include Russia.
Secretary of State James Baker in the Reagan administration, along with the
West German Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher, assured the Soviet leader
that if Germany was unified NATO would not be extended beyond the new borders. The
commitment not to expand NATO, also made by Great Britain and France, appeared
to herald a new global order. We saw the peace dividend dangled before us, the
promise that the massive expenditures on weapons that characterized the Cold
War would be converted into expenditures on social programs and infrastructures
that had long been neglected to feed the insatiable appetite of the military.
There was a near universal understanding among diplomats and
political leaders at the time that any attempt to expand NATO was foolish, an
unwarranted provocation against Russia that would obliterate the ties and bonds
that happily emerged at the end of the Cold War.
How naive we were. The war industry did not intend to shrink
its power or its profits. It set out almost immediately to recruit the former
Communist Bloc countries into the European Union and NATO. Countries that
joined NATO, which now include Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Bulgaria,
Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Albania, Croatia,
Montenegro, and North Macedonia were forced to reconfigure their militaries,
often through hefty loans, to become compatible with NATO military hardware.
There would be no peace dividend. The expansion of NATO
swiftly became a multi-billion-dollar bonanza for the corporations that had
profited from the Cold War. (Poland, for example, just agreed to spend $ 6
billion on M1 Abrams tanks and other U.S. military equipment.) If Russia would
not acquiesce to again being the enemy, then Russia would be pressured into
becoming the enemy. And here we are. On the brink of another Cold War, one from
which only the war industry will profit while, as W. H. Auden wrote, the little
children die in the streets.
The consequences of pushing NATO up to the borders with
Russia — there is now a NATO missile base in Poland 100 miles from the Russian
border — were well known to policy makers. Yet they did it anyway. It made no
geopolitical sense. But it made commercial sense. War, after all, is a
business, a very lucrative one. It is why we spent two decades in Afghanistan
although there was near universal consensus after a few years of fruitless
fighting that we had waded into a quagmire we could never win.
In a classified diplomatic cable obtained and released by
WikiLeaks dated February 1, 2008, written from Moscow, and addressed to the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, NATO-European Union Cooperative, National Security Council, Russia
Moscow Political Collective, Secretary of Defense, and Secretary of State,
there was an unequivocal understanding that expanding NATO risked an eventual
conflict with Russia, especially over Ukraine.
“Not only does Russia perceive encirclement [by NATO], and
efforts to undermine Russia’s influence in the region, but it also fears
unpredictable and uncontrolled consequences which would seriously affect
Russian security interests,” the cable reads. “Experts tell us that Russia is
particularly worried that the strong divisions in Ukraine over NATO membership,
with much of the ethnic-Russian community against membership, could lead to a
major split, involving violence or at worst, civil war. In that eventuality,
Russia would have to decide whether to intervene; a decision Russia does not
want to have to face. . . . Dmitri Trenin, Deputy Director of the Carnegie
Moscow Center, expressed concern that Ukraine was, in the long-term, the most
potentially destabilizing factor in U.S.-Russian relations, given the level of
emotion and neuralgia triggered by its quest for NATO membership . . . Because
membership remained divisive in Ukrainian domestic politics, it created an
opening for Russian intervention. Trenin expressed concern that elements within
the Russian establishment would be encouraged to meddle, stimulating U.S. overt
encouragement of opposing political forces, and leaving the U.S. and Russia in
a classic confrontational posture.”
The Obama administration, not wanting to further inflame
tensions with Russia, blocked arms sales to Kiev. But this act of prudence was
abandoned by the Trump and Biden administrations. Weapons from the U.S. and
Great Britain are pouring into Ukraine, part of the $1.5 billion in promised
military aid. The equipment includes hundreds of sophisticated Javelins and
NLAW anti-tank weapons despite repeated protests by Moscow.
The United States and its NATO allies have no intention of
sending troops to Ukraine. Rather, they will flood the country with weapons,
which is what it did in the 2008 conflict between Russia and Georgia.
The conflict in Ukraine echoes the novel “Chronicle of a
Death Foretold” by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. In the novel it is
acknowledged by the narrator that “there had never been a death more foretold” and
yet no one was able or willing to stop it. All of us who reported from Eastern
Europe in 1989 knew the consequences of provoking Russia, and yet few have
raised their voices to halt the madness. The methodical steps towards war
took on a life of their own, moving us like sleepwalkers towards
disaster.
Once NATO expanded into Eastern Europe, the Clinton
administration promised Moscow that NATO combat troops would not be stationed
in Eastern Europe, the defining issue of the 1997 NATO-Russia
Founding Act on Mutual Relations. This promise again turned out to be a
lie. Then in 2014 the U.S. backed a coup against the Ukrainian President Viktor
Yanukovych who sought to build an economic alliance with Russia rather than the
European Union. Of course, once integrated into the European Union, as seen in
the rest of Eastern Europe, the next step is integration into NATO. Russia,
spooked by the coup, alarmed at the overtures by the EU and NATO, then annexed
Crimea, largely populated by Russian speakers. And the death spiral that led us
to the conflict currently underway in Ukraine became unstoppable.
The war state needs enemies to sustain itself. When an enemy
can’t be found, an enemy is manufactured. Putin has become, in the words of
Senator Angus King, the new Hitler, out to grab Ukraine and the rest of Eastern
Europe. The full-throated cries for war, echoed shamelessly by the press, are
justified by draining the conflict of historical context, by elevating
ourselves as the saviors and whoever we oppose, from Saddam Hussein to Putin,
as the new Nazi leader.
I don’t know where this will end up. We must remember, as
Putin reminded us, that Russia is a nuclear power. We must remember that once
you open the Pandora’s box of war it unleashes dark and murderous forces no one
can control. I know this from personal experience. The match has been lit. The
tragedy is that there was never any dispute about how the conflagration would
start.
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