For a long time now the Canadian socialist Stephen Gowans – author of the excellent Israel: a beachhead for imperialism in the middle east – has been forcefully pushing his take on the Ukraine war that Russia and the US Empire are equally culpable. His December 19 post, There are no Lesser Evils in Imperialism, is the latest of many in the same vein.
For reasons I’ve set out often, and will summarise in a forthcoming response to Steve’s post, I disagree. He did get one thing right though, as I acknowledged in recent exchanges with Jams O’Donnell, below my post on Biden’s role in the US war in Ukraine:
There were those, including me, who as late as February did not think Russia would invade. I can’t speak for others but mine was a military rather than political assessment. Since my knowledge of military strategy could be written on the back of a stamp, I trusted – too much I fear – to the judgment of others, who argued that Russia wouldn’t invade because she didn’t need to. She could, these sources argued, achieve stated objectives, in particular as regards protecting Luhansk and Donetsk, through missile supremacy without need to send in troops. Wiping egg from face – practice has made me pretty good at that – I’m now a tad warier.
What had carried most weight for me was the judgment of former Reagan Treasury appointee, Paul Craig Roberts. In a January 29 piece – Update on the Ukrainian Front – he wrote:
Ukraine understands that Russia can wipe out its forces with conventional missiles without sending troops across the border.
On the face of it, he was wrong. As was I in following him. But look again at his phrasing. The operative word is “can”. What if Russia could indeed have destroyed Ukraine’s forces, without setting a single Russian boot on Ukrainian soil, but chose not to?
For light on that we might look to what Mr Roberts was writing at least as early as March 2018. In a piece headed, Can Nuclear War Be Avoided?, he opened with this:
Two factors are driving the world to nuclear war. One is the constant stream of insults, false accusations and broken agreements that the West has been dumping on Russia year after year. The other is Russia’s response, or, perhaps more correctly, the lack thereof
The article continues along the same lines: i.e. that in being too placatory, Neville Chamberlain style, Moscow has sent all the wrong signals; making it almost as culpable as Washington in endangering us all. Not, pace Stephen Gowans, because both are recklessly pursuing a course of imperial aggression. Rather, because Vladimir Putin allowed US transgressions which, as with Czechoslovakia 1938, should have been punished instantly and decisively.
On which note I invite you to this dialogue of December 19. It’s an interview by Mike Whitney of Paul Craig Roberts. (Both men having featured in other posts on this site.) Besides adding much needed nuance to the debate over America’s proxy war on Russia (and, by extension, on China and Iran) it revisits the question of whether Russia could have achieved all of her objectives in Ukraine without ever crossing the border – or indeed, without firing a single missile.
Putin Has Misread the West And if He Doesn’t Wake Up Soon, Armageddon Is Upon Us
Mike Whitney: You think Putin should have acted more forcefully from the beginning in order to end the war quickly. Is that an accurate assessment of your view on the war? And—if it is—then what do you think is the downside of allowing the conflict to drag on with no end in sight?
Paul Craig Roberts: Yes, you have correctly stated my position. But as my position can seem “unAmerican” to the indoctrinated and brainwashed many, those who watch CNN, listen to NPR, and read the New York Times, I am going to provide some background before going on with my answer.
I was involved in the 20th century Cold War in many ways: As a Wall Street Journal editor; as an appointee to an endowed chair in the Center for Strategic and International Studies, part of Georgetown University at the time of my appointment, where my colleagues were Henry Kissinger, National Security Advisor and Secretary of State, Zbigniew Brzezinski, National Security Advisor, and James Schlesinger, a Secretary of Defense and CIA director who was one of my professors in graduate school at the University of Virginia; as a member of the Cold War Committee on the Present Danger; and as a member of a secret presidential committee with power to investigate the CIA’s opposition to President Reagan’s plan to end the Cold War.
With a history such as mine, I was surprised when I took an objective position on Russian President Putin’s disavowal of US hegemony, and found myself labeled a “Russian dupe/agent” on a website, “PropOrNot,” which may have been financed by the US Department of State, the National Endowment for Democracy, or the CIA itself, still harboring old resentments against me for helping President Reagan end the Cold War, which had the potential of reducing the CIA’s budget and power. I still wonder what the CIA might do to me, despite the agency inviting me to address the agency, which I did, and explain why they went wrong in their reasoning.
I will also say that in my articles I am defending truth, not Putin, although Putin is, in my considered opinion, the most honest player, and perhaps the most naive, in the current game that could end in nuclear Armageddon. My purpose is to prevent nuclear Armageddon, not to take sides. I remember well President Reagan’s hatred of “those godawful nuclear weapons” and his directive that the purpose was not to win the Cold War but to end it. 1
Now to Mike’s question, which is to the point. Perhaps to understand Putin we need to remember life, or how it was presented by the West to the Soviet Union and the American broadcasts into the Soviet Union of the freedom of life in the West where streets were paved with gold and food markets had every conceivable delicacy. Possibly this created in the minds of many Soviets, not all, that life in the Western world was heavenly compared to the hell in which Russians existed. I still remember being on a bus in Uzbekistan in 1961 when a meat delivery truck appeared on the street. All traffic followed the truck to the delivery store where a several block long line already waited. When you compare this life with a visit to an American supermarket, Western superiority stands out. Russian hankerings toward the West have little doubt constrained Putin, but Putin himself has been affected by the differences in life between the US in those times and the Soviet Union.
Putin is a good leader, a human person, perhaps too human for the evil he faces. One way to look at my position that Putin does too little instead of too much is to remember the World War II era when British Prime Minister Chamberlin was accused of encouraging Hitler by accepting provocation after provocation. My own view of this history is that it is false, but it remains widely believed. Putin accepts provocations despite having declared red lines that he does not enforce. Consequently, his red lines are not believed. Here is one report:
RT reported on December 10 that “The US has quietly given Ukraine the go-ahead to launch long-range strikes against targets inside Russian territory, the Times reported on Friday, citing sources. The Pentagon has apparently changed its stance on the matter as it has become less concerned that such attacks could escalate the conflict.”
In other words, by his inaction Putin has convinced Washington and its European puppet states that he doesn’t mean what he says and will endlessly accept ever worsening provocations, which have gone from sanctions to Western financial help to Ukraine, weapons supply, training and targeting information, provision of missiles capable of attacking internal Russia, attack on the Crimea bridge, destruction of the Nord Stream pipelines, torture of Russian POWs, attacks on Russian parts of Ukraine reincorporated into the Russian Federation, and attacks on internal Russia.
At some point there will be a provocation that is too much. That’s when the SHTF.
Putin’s goal has been to avoid war. Thus, his limited military objective in Ukraine to throw the Ukrainian forces out of Donbass meant a limited operation that left Ukrainian war infrastructure intact, able to receive and deploy advanced weapons from the West, and to force Russian withdrawals to lines more defensible with the very limited forces Putin committed to the conflict. The Ukrainian offensives convinced the West that Russia could be defeated, thus making the war a primary way of undermining Russia as an obstacle to Washington’s hegemony. The British press proclaimed that the Ukrainian Army would be in Crimea by Christmas.
What Putin needed was a quick victory that made it completely clear that Russia had enforceable red lines that Ukraine had violated. A show of Russian military force would have stopped all provocations. The decadent West would have learned that it must leave the bear alone. Instead the Kremlin, misreading the West, wasted eight years on the Minsk Agreement that former German Chancellor Merket said was a deception to keep Russia from acting when Russia could have easily succeeded. Putin now agrees with me that it was his mistake not to have intervened in Donbass before the US created a Ukrainian army.
My last word to Mike’s question is that Putin has misread the West. He still thinks the West has in its “leadership” reasonable people, who no doubt act the role for Putin’s benefit, with whom he can have negotiations. Putin should go read the Wolfowitz Doctrine. If Putin doesn’t soon wake up, Armageddon is upon us, unless Russia surrenders.
Mike Whitney: I agree with much of what you say here, particularly this: “Putin’s inaction has convinced Washington… that he doesn’t mean what he says and will endlessly accept ever worsening provocations.”
You’re right, this is a problem. But I’m not sure what Putin can do about it. Take, for example, the drone attacks on airfields on Russian territory. Should Putin have responded tit-for-tat by bombing supply lines in Poland? That seems like a fair response but it also risks NATO retaliation and a broader war which is definitely not in Russia’s interests.
Now, perhaps, Putin would not have faced these flashpoints had he deployed 500,000 combat troops to begin and leveled a number of cities on his way to Kiev, but keep in mind, Russian public opinion about the war was mixed at the beginning, and only grew more supportive as it became apparent that Washington was determined to defeat Russia, topple its government, and weaken it to the point where it could not project power beyond its borders. The vast majority of the Russian people now understand what the US is up-to which explains why Putin’s public approval ratings are presently at 79.4% while support for the war is nearly universal. In my opinion, Putin needs this level of support to sustain the war effort; so, postponing the mobilization of additional troops has actually worked to his benefit.
More importantly, Putin must be perceived to be the rational player in this conflict. This is absolutely essential. He must be seen as a cautious and reasonable actor who operates with restraint and within the confines of international law. This is the only way he will be able to win the continued support of China, India etc. We must not forget that the effort to build a multipolar world order requires coalition building which is undermined by impulsive, violent behavior. In short, I think Putin’s “go-slow” approach (your words) is actually the correct course of action. I think if he had run roughshod across Ukraine like Sherman on his way to the sea, he would have lost critical allies that will help him establish the institutions and economic infrastructure he needs to create a new order.
So, my question to you is this: What does a Russian victory look like? Is it just a matter of pushing the Ukrainian army out of the Donbas or should Russian forces clear the entire region east of the Dnieper River? And what about the west of Ukraine? What if the western region is reduced to rubble but the US and NATO continue to use it as a launching pad for their war against Russia?
I can imagine many scenarios in which the fighting continues for years to come, but hardly any that end in either a diplomatic settlement or an armistice. Your thoughts?
Paul Craig Roberts: I think, Mike, that you have identified the reasoning that explains Putin’s approach to the conflict in Ukraine. But I think Putin is losing confidence in his approach. Caution about approaching war is imperative. But when war begins it must be won quickly, especially if the enemy has prospects of gaining allies and their support. Putin’s caution delayed Russia’s rescue of Donbass for eight years, during which Washington created and equipped an Ukrainian army that turned what would have been an easy rescue in 2014 like Crimea into the current war approaching a year in duration. Putin’s caution in waging the war has given Washington and the Western media plenty of time to create and control the narrative, which is unfavorable to Putin, and to widen the war with US and NATO direct participation, now admitted by Foreign Minister Lavrov. The war has widened into direct attacks on Russia herself.
These attacks on Russia might bring the pro-Western Russian liberals into alignment with Putin, but the ability of a corrupt third world US puppet state to attack Russia is anathema to Russian patriots. The Russians who will do the fighting see in the ability of Ukraine to attack Mother Russia the failure of the Putin government.
As for China and India, the two countries with the largest populations, they have witnessed Washington’s indiscriminate use of force without domestic or international consequence to Washington. They don’t want to ally with a weak-kneed Russia.
I will also say that as Washington and NATO were not constrained by public opinion in their two decades of wars in the Middle East and North Africa, based entirely on lies and secret agendas, what reason does Putin have to fear a lack of Russian public support for rescuing Donbass, formerly a part of Russia, from neo-Nazi persecution? If Putin must fear this, it shows his mistake in tolerating US-financed NGOs at work in Russia brainwashing Russians.
No, Putin should not engage in tit-for-tat. There is no need for him to send missiles into Poland, Germany, the UK, or the US. All Putin needs to do is to close down Ukrainian infrastructure so that Ukraine, despite Western help, cannot carry on the war. Putin is starting to do this, but not on a total basis.
The fact of the matter is that Putin never needed to send any troops to the rescue of Donbass. All he needed to do was to send the American puppet, Zelensky, a one hour ultimatum and if surrender was not forthcoming shut down with conventional precision missiles, and air attacks if necessary, the entirety of the power, water, and transportation infrastructure of Ukraine, and send special forces into Kiev to make a public hanging of Zelensky and the US puppet government.
The effect on the degenerate Woke West, which teaches in its own universities and public schools hatred of itself, would have been electric. The cost of messing with Russia would have been clear to all the morons who talk about Ukraine being in Crimea by Christmas. NATO would have dissolved. Washington would have removed all sanctions and shut up the stupid, war-crazy neoconservatives. The world would be at peace.
The question you have asked is, after all of Putin’s mistakes, what does a Russian victory look like? First of all, we don’t know if there is going to be a Russian victory. The cautious way that Putin reasons and acts, as you explained, is likely to deny Russia a victory. Instead, there could be a negotiated demilitarized zone and the conflict will be set on simmer, like the unresolved conflict in Korea.
On the other hand, if Putin is waiting the full deployment of Russia’s hypersonic nuclear missiles that no defense system can intercept and, following Washington, moves to first use of nuclear weapons, Putin will have the power to put the West on notice and be able to use the power of Russian military force to instantly end the conflict.
Mike Whitney: You make some very good points, but I still think that Putin’s slower approach has helped to build public support at home and abroad. But, of course, I could be wrong. I do disagree strongly with your assertion that China and India “don’t want to ally with weak-kneed Russia”. In my opinion, both leaders see Putin as a bright and reliable statesman who is perhaps the greatest defender of sovereign rights in the last century. Both India and China are all-too-familiar with Washington’s coercive diplomacy and I’m sure they appreciate the efforts of a leader who has become the world’s biggest proponent of self-determination and independence. I’m sure the last thing they want, is to become cowering houseboys like the leaders in Europe who are, apparently, unable to decide anything without a ‘nod’ from Washington. (Note: Earlier today Putin said that EU leaders were allowing themselves to be treated like a doormat. Putin: “Today, the EU’s main partner, the US, is pursuing policies leading directly to the de-industrialization of Europe. They even try to complain about that to their American overlord. Sometimes even with resentment they ask ‘Why are you doing this to us?’ I want to ask: ‘What did you expect?’ What else happens to those who allow feet to be wiped on them?”)
Paul Craig Roberts: Mike, I agree that Russia for the reasons you provide is the choice partner of China and India. What I meant is that China and India want to see a powerful Russia that shields them from Washington’s interference. China and India are not reassured by what at times seems to be Putin’s irresolution and hesitancy. The rules that Putin plays by are no longer respected in the West.
Putin is correct that all European, and the Canadian, Australian, Japanese, and New Zealand governments, are doormats for Washington. What escapes Putin is that Washington’s puppets are comfortable in this role. 2 Therefore, how much chance does he have in scolding them for their subservience and promising them independence? A reader recently reminded me about the Asch experiment in the 1950s, which found that people tended to conform to the prevalent narratives, and of the use to which Edward Bernays analysis of propaganda is put. And there is the information given me in the 1970s by a high government official that European governments do what we want because we “give the leaders bags of money. We own them. They report to us.”
In other words, our puppets live in a comfort zone. Putin will have a hard time breaking into this with merely exemplary behavior.
Mike Whitney: For my final question, I’d like to tap into your broader knowledge of the US economy and how economic weakness might be a factor in Washington’s decision to provoke Russia. Over the last 10 months, we’ve heard numerous pundits say that NATO’s expansion to Ukraine creates an “existential crisis” for Russia. I just wonder if the same could be said about the United States? It seems like everyone from Jamie Diamond to Nouriel Roubini has been predicting a bigger financial cataclysm than the full-system meltdown of 2008. In your opinion, is this the reason why the media and virtually the entire political establishment are pushing so hard for a confrontation with Russia? Do they see war as the only way the US can preserve its exalted position in the global order?
Paul Craig Roberts: The idea that governments turn to war to focus attention away from a failing economy is popular, but my answer to your question is that the operating motive is US hegemony. The Wolfowitz Doctrine states it clearly. The doctrine says the principal goal of US foreign policy is to prevent the rise of any country that could serve as a constraint on US unilateralism. At the 2007 Munich security conference Putin made it clear that Russia will not subordinate its interest to the interest of the US.
There are some crazed neoconservatives in Washington who believe nuclear war can be won and who have shaped US nuclear weapons policy into a pre-emptive attack mode focused on reducing the ability of the recipient of a first strike to retaliate. The US is not seeking a war with Russia, but might blunder into one. The operative neoconservative policy is to cause problems for Russia that can cause internal problems, distract the Kremlin from Washington’s power moves, isolate Russia with propaganda, and even possibly pull off a color revolution inside Russia or in a former Russian province, such as Belarus, as was done in Georgia and Ukraine. People have forgot the US-instigated invasion of South Ossetia by the Georgian army that Putin sent in Russian forces to stop, and they have forgot the recent disturbances in Kazakhstan that were calmed by the arrival of Russian troops. The plan is to keep picking away at the Kremlin. Even if Washington doesn’t meet in every case with the success enjoyed in the Maidan Revolution in Ukraine, the incidents succeed as distractions that use up Kremlin time and energy, result in dissenting opinions within the government, and that require military contingency planning. As Washington controls the narratives, the incidents also serve to blacken Russia as an aggressor and portray Putin as “the new Hitler.” The propaganda successes are considerable–the exclusion of Russian athletes from competitions, refusals of orchestras to play music of Russian composers, exclusion of Russian literature, and a general refusal to cooperate with Russia in any way. This has a humiliating effect on Russians and might be corrosive of public support for the government. It has to be highly frustrating for Russian athletes, ice skaters, entertainers, and their fans.
Nevertheless, the conflict in Ukraine can turn into a general war intended or not. This is my concern and is the reason I think the Kremlin’s limited go-slow operation is a mistake. It offers too many opportunities for Washington’s provocations to go too far.
There is an economic element. Washington is determined to prevent its European empire from being drawn into closer relations with Russia from energy dependence and business relationships. Indeed, some explain the economic sanctions as de-industrializing Europe in behalf of Washington’s economic and financial hegemony.
* * *
- As had the late Stephen Cohen – Russia expert and a fellow Reagan appointee – Paul Craig Roberts holds Reagan in excessively high esteem. It’s a fault I can overlook, on subjects whose specifics are not clouded by it, given both men’s cogent opposition to US policy towards Russia from Bush Snr onwards.
- “Putin is correct that all European, and the Canadian, Australian, Japanese, and New Zealand governments, are doormats for Washington. What escapes Putin is that Washington’s puppets are comfortable in this role.” I address this in my December 5 post, which opens with the question: why do the political elites of a nation or bloc pursue courses of action they know will bring great harm to their citizens?
I have been reading your blog for several years and your worldview is very similar to mine and I am in agreement with your ‘takes’, as the kids say, far more often than not. Even when I don’t agree 100% I still respect your always well-argued perspective. In this case my intention is not to agree or disagree but to add a perspective to the discussion that I think is important.
When it comes to the war in Ukraine I am very cautious about ‘buying in’ to confidently delivered statements by the many commentators who claim to know exactly how the war is playing out. Propaganda production goes into overdrive during wartime and many otherwise very sharp and intelligent minds seem to forget that information gleaned from official Russian sources must also be taken with a grain of salt. The Russian MOA spins its ‘public facing’ information too and indeed it would be very foolish if it did not. Then there is also the ‘fog of war’ problem where even people on the ground, including military commanders, can have difficulty figuring out exactly what is going on and how all the various bits of information they’ve received fit together.
There are also ‘back channel’ aspects to wars and conflicts that never get aired in public and only become common knowledge after the fact. For example, most westerners think the US ‘prevailed’ during the Cuban Missile Crisis by refusing to compromise and compelling the Soviets to withdraw their nuclear tipped missiles from Cuba. That is pure fiction and even Wikipedia, that indispensable repository of the official Atlanticist line, admits as much. In its Cuban Missile Crisis article the Results box lists:
– Publicized removal of the Soviet Union’s nuclear missiles from Cuba
– Non-publicized removal of American nuclear missiles from Turkey and Italy
– Agreement with the Soviet Union that the United States would never invade Cuba without direct provocation
– Creation of a nuclear hotline between the United States and the Soviet Union
The second bullet point in that list is especially relevant (I hope the HTML formatting came through correctly). [IT DIDN’T, HUGO. I’VE SUBSTITUTED A SIMPLE HYPHEN TO DISTINGUISH LIST ITEMS FROM PRECEDING AND SUCCEEDING TEXT. TELL ME IF I GOT IT WRONG. PHIL.]
My, perhaps overstated, point is that I think it is impossible to know much about this war beyond the very few indisputable facts and I am very wary of the many arm chair generals and keyboard Clausewitz’s that claim to know which side is ‘winning’ or will ‘win’ and how the war is progressing from day to day.
For the first six or so months of this war I closely followed several Telegram channels and Twitter accounts and often read blog posts by various commentators giving ‘pro-Russia’ perspectives. (Western media reporting on the conflict was, and is, so atrocious, often just verbatim repetition of Zelensky’s ravings and official Ukrainian MOD announcements, that it’s not even worth going to the BBC News or Guardian website to read between the lines.) But I’ve since stopped following the war on a daily basis as it just made me more anxious while not providing any important information.
It’s clear is that neither side can easily achieve their stated aims and win a decisive victory. It also seems quite obvious that without NATO shovelling in weapons and providing real time intelligence the Ukrainian military would have been defeated many months ago. The west is effectively fighting a hybrid war against Russia (and also China) with the shooting bits confined (for now) mostly to eastern Ukraine. Needless to say a very dangerous situation with a very real risk of nuclear war.
But I want to stress again that I think all of us Ukraine war observers are sitting in Plato’s cave and interpreting shadows on the wall and I try to avoid getting wrapped up in the endless threads of minutiae and the conjecture they inspire.
So…do I think Putin is being ‘too soft’? Well the ardent Russian nationalists I closely followed certainly think so and as of late summer 2022 have become shrilly pessimistic about Russia’s chances of prevailing in this war. But they too are in the cave and interpreting the flickering on the walls. Could Russia escalate and, say, begin carpet bombing western Ukraine? Yes. But Putin has always been very cautious despite the sometimes fiery rhetoric that comes from his corner and this is easily interpreted as weakness by the ‘hard nationalist’ macho chest thumpers. Perhaps Putin actually is the fabled ‘moderate’ the west seems to think will take over if he is deposed?
It’s been said that Russia is never as strong or as weak as its enemies assume and I think that while the Russian military is certainly not the Red Army of the Soviet era, it is also not the weak and ineffectual force of the the western media’s fevered imagination. If nothing else they still have nukes, a lot of nukes. Should NATO be grateful that Putin is ‘too soft’ and not going all out or is this interpreted as a sign of Russian military weakness that can be exploited? Does NATO (i.e. the United States) really want to try pushing Russia into a tight corner and hoping that they don’t use a nuclear weapon or that any exchange of nukes will be ‘limited’ or ‘contained’?
If Putin orders his commanders to ‘get hard’ and e.g. step up saturation bombing of Ukrainian infrastructure the west would be screaming about Russian escalation and war crimes. On the other hand if Putin holds back the west will scoff and attribute it to Russian military weakness and order its proxies to keep prodding the bear.
It’s very very clear that NATO’s publicly stated goal of bringing Russia to its knees via its Ukrainian proxies is not achievable short of a cataclysmic nuclear war in which case not only Russia will be brought down. If that really is NATO’s actual end goal it’s pure madness. At the same time, short of a nuclear war, Russia is not going to be able to change the west’s imperial mindset. At best Russia can achieve a buffer zone in eastern Ukraine between itself and the NATO west and perhaps some sort of binding resolution that keeps western Ukraine out of NATO.
This is a serious war between two nuclear armed powers with no clear path to a negotiated peace or even an extended ceasefire. Furthermore, the maximalist rhetoric from both sides makes further escalation inevitable. In this light asking whether Putin is ‘too soft’ is curious if one would like to see this war end as soon as possible and prevent more bloodshed and mission creep that could end with a nuclear weapons being exchanged.
One reason I stopped following commentary on this war is that it came to resemble sport fans cheering on their team. The ‘is Putin too soft?’ question is very much like asking if a star football player is playing badly. Given what’s at stake I think stopping the war is the only sensible goal. Unfortunately the anti-war sentiment that was prevalent on the left throughout the US-USSR cold war up until the Iraq invasion of 2003 is completely absent in the mainstream and barely alive even in the ‘old school’ left.
In Vienna last summer there was a large banner hanging from a building on the Stefansplatz emblazoned with a white dove and the words ‘STOP WAR’ which was reminiscent of the peace movement of yore…except that it was coloured in the blue and yellow of the Ukrainian flag. Whether it was a conscious co-opting of anti-war symbolism by a pro-Ukraine group or the work of badly misguided ‘peacniks’ I don’t know, but seeing it was extremely disheartening and depressing.
To end this hopefully not too incoherent rant…I think that wondering whether Putin is ‘too soft’ makes sense only if one is fully on board with further escalation and all that it entails or if one is looking at the war from a ‘bloodless’ military strategy perspective. From what I have seen almost all people who ask this question are in the former camp. All wars must at some point end and unless one side can force its enemy into surrendering unconditionally, this involves diplomacy and a negotiated end to the fighting. In the atomic age a negotiated end to a war between nuclear powers is the only one that ensures life on earth survives to see the dawn of another day.
Thank you for reading.
Hi Hugo. Two generalities before I respond to specifics. One, thanks for your kind words. It’s always good to learn that people ‘out there’ and unknown to me read this blog. Two, your perceptive and helpful comment is neither incoherent nor a rant …
Agreed. My featuring of voices counter to the single and simplistic account put out by corrupt mainstream media is not because I think Doctorow, Saker, Ritter, Mercurius, the two men featured in this post and others have uniquely privileged access to the truth. It is because, for the reasons you give, we need to triangulate information from multiple sources to have any hope of getting close to truth – and even then we have to leave a lot of room, again for the reasons you give, for what we don’t and can’t know.
Yes. And as you imply, ‘sports fans’ on both sides can and do lose sight of this in their boyish enthusing for ‘their team’. I have to say this applies especially to voices like Pepe Escobar, Jimmy Dore and in his own way Alexander Mercurius. That I feature them at all is despite this tendency, not because of it. They are commentators of perception and, as far as I can tell, relevant expertise. I do wish they’d dial down the tone is all …
… and that otherwise solid pieces in The Saker would tone down the Russian nationalism and Orthodox Christianity, and drop the not so funny forays into antisemitism altogether. IMO Paul Craig Roberts gets close (not to antisemitism, I hasten to add) with his reference, devoid of class analysis, to “the decadent West”. I see where he’s coming from, and have sympathy. But when we go down that road, without referring to the elephant in the room which is class, we open the door on metaphysical spaces the far right are more adept at occupying than are socialists and anti-imperialists.
My choice of title was intentionally provocative because by and large the people I try to reach are westerners brainwashed (none more so than the liberal intelligentsia which is my own milieu) by “Putin is Hitler” propaganda. I try to offer a different perspective. If we can get to see that Putin is no Hitler, progress is made. And Mike Whitney’s questions do bring in nuance.
I see this stuff everywhere. Your Vienna experience shows, to the few who stop to think, how successfully the logically absurd and empirically nonsensical “Putin’s war” narrative has stuck. See in this regard my April post, Ukraine in La La Land
(Just after penning that last paragraph, in the early hours of Xmas Eve, an alert to today’s Economist popped up in my inbox. Intellectuals who know themselves critical thinkers – they have degrees and doctorates to prove it – can rest assured of instant erudition once they’ve read and digested its piece on – ta-da! – “Making sense of Vladimir Putin’s war”. The kicker is even more surreal – “How the Kremlin’s unprovoked invasion led Russia into a bloody morass”.
Unprovoked!!
Thanks again for so intelligent a contribution. Season’s greetings.
All very interesting reading from Phil and Hugo. I don’t follow this war at all closely. I just have an awareness of the overall scenario ie NATO, so the US, aided by our deranged British leaders, provoked Putin by doing everything we’re aware they’ve done for years. I’m also aware of the “Putin’s war” thing spouted ad nauseum. And that claims of war crimes, murder of civilians in Bucha for instance are laid at the door of the Russian military evidence free amongst all the other stuff corrupt media spout. Putin blew up his own pipelines was another one.
Anyway I’m highly impressed with all the above. I would just say though, and Phil will I hope correct me if I’m wrong, that when he asked if Putin is too soft he wasn’t wanting an escalation of the war. He knows as well as I do that as our Australian friend Caitlin says, war is the worst thing in the world, by a massive distance.
I have been scared stiff about the danger of everyone in the world including my kids, husband and our family dog dying. I thought I was dying a few months ago because I had a cancer diagnosis but I’ve had very successful surgery and confirmed completely free of cancer! So frightening year but so happy to be alive.
Again, great posts.
Peace and a Merry Christmas and safe New Year.
Xxx
Merry Xmas Margaret.
The widespread acceptance of the thesis that Putin blew up Nordstrom – when she could have cut off Europe simply by turning the tap off, and when America had means, motive, opportunity and Biden’s de facto promise to sabotage it – is surely an example of how successfully a mix of systemically corrupt media, and deep rooted ideological faith in the moral superiority of the West, can fool us. PCR was right to cite the Solomon Asch experiments.
You got my position right on the question of whether Mr Putin is ‘soft’. Whether or not PCR overstates his case, as Mike Whitney’s interjections imply, it’s vastly superior to the “Putin’s War” nonsense not only of the mainstream and the soft left – and of economic radicals like MMT blogger Richard Murphy – but, in “plague on both houses” fashion, by far left currents like WSWS, SWP and of course Stephen Gowans. The core of PCR’s argument was given with his assertion that:
How could that not be true, whether as a military or humanitarian proposition? I guess our answer may lie in the simple arithmetic of utilitarianism.
PS – very glad to hear the threat of cancer has lifted. Your voice is needed x
[An observation from memory]
“McClaran: Hey, which side are you on Fletch? Ours of theirs?
Norman Stanley Fletcher (AKA Fletch, played by the late Ronnie Barker): Neither mate. I’m on mine.”
From the TV series ‘Porridge’.
A position which, far from being fictional, is demonstrated daily and epitomised by the well known example (at least in these parts) of a sizable chunk of workers in firms like Shardlow’s during the 50’s and 60’s regularly voting for Communist Shop Stewards whilst at the same time voting Tory in elections.
Or newly ‘converted’ to Christianity colonial people continuing to practice their traditional (considered pagan by their new overlords) religion at the same time.
My point? No one in the real world really picks a side in the literal meaning of the way the term is so often used or implied.
Listen to the clip of US Neo-con Lindsey Graham in this Duran podcast:
https://www.rokfin.com/post/114879/Graham-WE-are-in-it-to-win-it-break-Russia-take-Putin-out-WaPo-Russia-not-behind-NS-attack-U1
Even without the subsequent subjective based commentary and analysis of what Graham said who in their right mind want’s that to prevail given the well documented track record over generations which is clear to a blind man on a galloping horse.
The Fletcher response provides the only sane, rational and logical position. A position in which the only ‘side’ taken is of that which judges the least worst option for those taking it.
Merry Christmas.
I certainly want Russia to prevail, Dave. I see that as the best outcome for humanity, but it’s vital that we don’t let wishful thinking cloud our assessments of how things are actually progressing …
… and more vital still that we don’t lose sight of how insanely reckless this all is – for which, in descending order of culpability, I blame:
Washington and Wall Street
The cravenly compliant leaders of “the West”
(pace Paul Craig Roberts) an overly accommodating Moscow
Too right Phil, in every aspect of the ongoing conflict. Not least of which is the PPP of the Russians in the information and propaganda sphere. As Larry Johnson and Andrei Martyanov, among others, often point out, on that metric the Azov, Right Sector et al will occupy Moscow by New Years day.
PCR provides some useful analysis from time to time but often seems to comes across as having a chip on his shoulder over something or other which colour’s his assessment. Like Scott Ritter he occasionally appears a tad impatient for some good ol’ ‘shock and awe.’ Hence the focus on whether ‘progress (whatever that means in context) is down to someone being too soft or not ruthless enough.
Given his background Larry Johnson seems to offer more practical and sober assessments and asks more pertinent questions like ‘What is the endgame’ for all involved. This being but one example among many:
https://sonar21.com/has-natos-strategy-to-bleed-russia-backfired/
In the context of the key points made by Larry Johnson in this link Mike Whitney’s point about being seen to be the more rational player in the above published exchange appears to have gone over PCR’s head. Possibly not recognising that one approach and accompanying narrative focuses on what that narrative defines as ‘The international Community’ whilst the other approach has the wider focus – pace Pepe Escobar – of the majority less self-important parts of the World. At the same time attempting to manage escalation in terms of trying to avoid a scenario which leaves the only response as nuclear.
Both Johnson and Whitney’s point to the question Whitney explores with PCR can be boiled down to the observation that the well worn phrase ‘war is politics by other means’ is equally applicable the other way around.
Anyway, given the time of year I’ll leave this scene from a well known film with everyone to ponder:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-cSrqRdlFeo