Marching Into the New Year with World Wars III, IV, and V (Part 1)
Jim Kavanagh
Last
year, right after Russian troops entered Ukraine, I said that we
were already in World War III between the US/NATO and Russia (“WWIII is not a
remote possibility. We are already in it”). I’ve repeated
that a number of times, and in October,
gave even odds on the chance of nuclear war. Since then, actions and statements
of principals on both sides of the conflict have only confirmed and worsened
that assessment.
Regarding statements, we had Ukraine’s former president, Petro Poroshenko, hand-picked by Victoria Nuland, admitting in November that Ukraine used the Minsk Agreements to build a NATO army, to “train the Ukrainian military together with NATO to create the best armed forces in Eastern Europe, created according to NATO standards.” That admission was confirmed in December by Angela Merkel, who said that Minsk “was an attempt to buy time for Ukraine… to become stronger, as you can see today.” It was re-confirmed by François Hollande, who said, “Yes, Angela Merkel is right on this point.” And it was quite emphatically confirmed in January by Ukraine’s Defense Minister, Oleksii Reznikov, who said that Ukraine has "already become a de facto member of the NATO alliance" that is “carrying out NATO’s mission today,” “defending the entire civilized world, the entire West,” and would “absolutely” enter formally into NATO.
The kicker, of course, is German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock’s recent statement that "We are fighting a war against Russia.” It’s a war against Russia she intends to prosecute for “as long as” necessary, “No matter what my German voters think.”
Baerbock’s
“we” is Ukraine and the EU/NATO under the leadership of the U.S.—exactly what
Reznikov and she consider “the entire civilized world,” echoing EU foreign-policy chief Josep Borrell’s
equally spontaneous and sincere remark that
“Europe is a garden” and “most of the rest of the world is a jungle.” That makes
Russia, in their eyes, another jungle bunny.
Baerbock
is a most senior German government official. She spoke clearly and sincerely
and with passion. Everybody, including Russia, heard and understood her
correctly. The EU and NATO are fighting a war against Russia. No backsies on
that.
In
fact, Baerbock’s attitude has now been emphatically seconded by Tobias Ellwood,
the head of Britain’s Parliamentary Defense Committee:
#Britain is at #War with #Russia.
— Arthur Morgan (@ArthurM40330824) February 1, 2023
Don't take my word for it!
This statement was made by the head of the #British Parliamentary Defense Committee, Tobias Ellwood. He argues that Britain is already involved in the conflict and must face Russia "head to head"
Ppl of #UK R U ready? pic.twitter.com/hsA81uo2kh
“We are now at war in Europe…We are involved in that…We need to face Russia directly.” [His emphases]
Tanks
A Lot
More
importantly, regarding action, there is no denying the US/NATO are making war
against Russia. In October, I cited the
former US Deputy Attorney General’s legal opinion that “the United States and
several NATO members have become co-belligerents with Ukraine against
Russia.” Whatever the legal arguments, the substantive case is impossible
to ignore.
The
decision to send Main Battle Tanks (MBT)—American Abrams, British Challengers,
German Leopards—and other armored vehicles from various countries Is the latest
incidence of the US/NATO “serially blown[ing] past their own self-imposed lines over arms transfer,”
as Branko Marcetic puts it. It
was taken over the strong objections of military and political leaders, who
point out that these transfers are going to weaken their own
national armies. Olav Scholz in particular, whose Leopard tanks were apparently
Ukraine’s favorite, is said to be “furious” at
the pressure he came under from the U.S. and his own hawkish cabinet members—to
whom he of course buckled, because that’s what European poodle leaders always
do.
The
significance of that decision is not in these 100-200 tanks. They will have to
be built from scratch or de-furbished to strip out classified armor and systems
that nobody wants Russia to capture, so they won’t even arrive for months,
if not next year. They won’t be decisive anyway. Ukraine had almost 3,000
tanks when this battle started. What happened to them? Ukraine now supposedly
has about 1,000 left. Russia had 22,000—15 years ago.
If
you want to say, “Oh, but these tanks will be so much better!” I suggest you
read the analysis of U.S.
tank commander, Lt. Col Daniel Davis. He’ll tell you how, in Desert Storm, U.S.
M1A1 Abrams tanks “destroyed more than 3,000 Iraqi [T-72] tanks” without losing
“a single Abrams tank.” He’ll also tell you “a little-known truth: if the
Iraqis had had the same M1A1s that we had, or if we had been outfitted with the
same T72s Iraq had, we still would have won” [my emphasis]. Why? Because
“the T-72 operators were poorly trained while our side was highly trained,” and
“ultimately, it is the man operating the tools of war that wins, not the tools
themselves.” He’ll tell you
that “highly trained” means things like, “a complete annual training cycle to
achieve baseline proficiency required to properly manage maintenance, train for
gunnery, and understand mounted maneuver tactics.”
It’s
going to be practically impossible for a sufficient number of Ukrainian
soldiers to “learn how to use and sustain the multiple versions of armored
vehicles provided by different countries” in any relevant timeframe. All of
which means many of those tanks will not be manned by Ukrainians, but by
re-costumed NATO crews.
Not
to mention that tanks don’t win battles without “intense coordination between
armor, infantry, artillery, engineering support, and air support” [my
emphasis]. Thus, fighter jets (F-16s) immediately slide into the queue—as
everybody knew they must. These fighter jets also have stringent training
requirements—Ukraine says they can train in six months,
the UK says the
“fastest” training program is thirty-five months and their current one “lasts
five years." So many of these jets will therefore have to be flown by
US/NATO pilots, out of NATO airbases (since there are problems with Ukraine’s “airfield infrastructure”), against the best air-defense system in the world.
Just
like they ruled out sending long-range munitions and attacking Crimea—both of which they are now OK with—Biden and other
Western leaders will rule out
sending those jets, until NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg
and U.S. neocons and Pentagon “military officials” and Poland remind
them that "Russia's victory in the war against Ukraine will be a defeat of
NATO. This cannot be allowed."
The point isn’t the tanks or the jets; the point is the logic that’s being accepted: Nothing in the queue works without everything that follows, and everything cannot be done in time, if at all. As The Economist points out (cited by MoonofAlabama), Ukraine is demanding an arsenal that is “bigger than the total armoured forces of most European armies.” Last June, Ukraine's Defense Minister said that “[the weapons] we have already received…would have been enough for a victorious defense operation against any army in Europe. But not against Russia.” So, Ukraine is demanding that the EU/NATO/US—overwhelmingly, the U.S.—rebuild its army to be the most powerful army in Europe again. To be destroyed by Russia, again?
It’s
an inexorable and accelerating ladder of escalation, and Western political
leaders have repeatedly committed themselves to climbing it wherever it goes.
But nothing in the queue of wonder weapons is going to prevent Russia’s victory
over Ukraine, which cannot be allowed. When F-16s fail to prevent that, what’s
the next rung?
The
only question in this conflict between Russia and the US/NATO is whether Russia
will force the capitulation of the Kiev proxy regime before US/NATO directly
attacks Russian forces, initiating a final escalatory cycle that may well
will likely lead to a nuclear exchange. The odds of avoiding that disaster are
no better than even. And shrinking.
The
media light shone on weapons distracts from the dangerous involvement of
US/NATO personnel—from the “much larger presence of both CIA and U.S. special
operations personnel and resources in Ukraine…conduct[ing] a broad program
of clandestine operations inside the country,” reported by The
Intercept, to the “40,000 US troops [including the 101st
Airborne Division], 30,000 Polish troops and 20,000 Romanian troops” on
Ukraine’s borders that Douglas Macgregor thinks Jake
Sullivan threatened “his Russian counterparts” would “jump in” to prevent
Russia from “win[ning] this war on your terms,” to the CIA “paramilitary
officers…commanding and controlling” sabotage operations inside Russia,
“using an allied intelligence service” to give cover, according to
Jack Murphy.
After
all the artillery, and tanks, and planes—which John Helmer reasonably suggests are
really “for the last-ditch fortification of the western lines defending the
regime between Lvov and Kyiv”—the only thing that may stop Russia from
winning this war on its terms would be the direct intervention of NATO armed
forces. Except those forces have depleted
their own stocks of conventional arms (the U.S. itself is scrounging around for
ammunition),
and the U.S. cannot
launch a ground offensive. Fortunately, the U.S. has (tactical nuclear) weapons
designed to make up for
such “surprising military developments.” Nuclear war will only get more likely
with each Leopard and F-16 delivered and destroyed.
Tail.
Dog. Wag.
It’s
important to recognize who is playing whom in this game—namely, everybody and
everybody. Kiev knows it’s not going to win with some more Bradleys or tanks or
F-16s, and it is not seeking victory through them. It is using them to
draw the US and EU up the ladder. Kiev knows that only U.S./NATO—which means,
overwhelmingly, U.S.— armed forces have any possibility of winning this battle.
The fascist forces dominant in the Kiev regime want this to become
explicitly a U.S.-Russian war, at whatever level it takes. That is not
something they are hoping to avoid. It’s something they know is necessary, and
are seeking to make happen.
People
say, correctly, that the neocons in the U.S. don’t care what happens to Ukraine
and the Ukrainian people, whom they are using as cannon fodder against Russia.
Also true is that the fascists in Ukraine don’t care what it costs the U.S. and
European countries, whom they want to use in their war against Russia.
Per fascist father-of-the-country Stepan Bandera, as recently ratified by the
Rada: “The complete and final victory of Ukrainian nationalism will be won only
when the Russian empire no longer exists.” Ukrainian fascists want the
destruction of Russia above all, and are convinced, not without reason, that,
as long as Russia is destroyed, whatever the damage to Ukraine, the
U.S., Europe, et. al., they will be left standing as a stronger political
force. That’s what makes them such convenient partners for the neocons. It’s a
tail-dog circle wag. Together, they have succeeded in making it politically
impossible for Western leaders not to defeat Russia. Unfortunately,
that can only seem to be done by blowing up the world.
Everyone
in the US/NATO leadership knows all this. (Except maybe Slow Joe.) They know
that, whatever weapons they send, Ukraine is not going to defeat Russia. They
also know they will soon lose the ability to deceive people about that. Reports
from establishment sources—RAND, CSIS, Washington Post—are
now acknowledging that neither Ukraine nor the U.S. is ready for the kind of
industrial warfare Russia is mounting. Russia is not the kind of lightly armed
“war on terror” adversary the U.S. has been fighting (and largely losing to)
for the past 20 years. See retired Lt. Col. Alex Vershinin’s analysis
that “due to supply chain issues[,]…a lack of trained personnel [and] the
degradation of the US manufacturing base”—problems that cannot be solved in a
few months—“the West may not have the industrial capacity to fight a
large-scale war.” It seems that the financialization of late-stage capitalism in
the imperial center—Lenin’s definition of “imperialism”—has taken its
toll. Of particular interest in that regard is Vershinin’s observation that:
This situation is especially critical because behind
the Russian invasion stands the world’s manufacturing capital – China. As the
US begins to expend more and more of its stockpiles to keep Ukraine in the war,
China has yet to provide any meaningful military assistance to Russia. The West
must assume that China will not allow Russia to be defeated, especially due to
a lack of ammunition.
Understanding
all this, saner minds, including ruling-class actors who do not relish blowing
up the world for the neocon/Banderite agenda—are in a panic mode, on tilt,
alternately offering sticks and carrots—all, as Pepe Escobar says, “to
stall…in the hope of delaying or even cancelling the planned offensive of the
next few months.” Jake Sullivan sends his “We’ll jump in!” message one week;
the next, it is said, CIA Director William Burns offers and/or Antony Blinken
implies (in his Washington Post interview) some
kind of secret deal.
This
flurry of threats and inducement is a sign of their palpable and growing fear.
Western
leaders may have persuaded themselves that, because Putin has not reacted to
their escalations as forcefully as they think he should have, he never will.
So, as Caitlin Johnstone says, they
are “actively incentiviz[ing Russia] to react forcefully to those escalations,”
with the clear message: “[you’re] going to get squeezed harder and harder until
[you] attack NATO itself.”
Now,
fearing, and entirely unprepared for, the inevitable result of that escalatory
logic, U.S. leaders (or some less neocon faction thereof), throw out some
kinda-sorta status quo ante, half-a-loaf for everyone, proposals. These
are presented, dishonestly and insultingly (to Russia and to our intelligence)
as a kindness to Putin, giving him a face-saving way out of a conflict he is
losing. Really, these proposals are attempts to give US/NATO a way out
of a conflict it knows it cannot win, while allowing their proponents to pose
as peacemakers who tried really, really hard to stop the apocalypse they have
been leading us to for nine years. In
their unmitigated and unmerited arrogance, they think they get away with “I’m
coaching and fighting on Ukraine’s side, now let me be the referee.”
Neither
Russia nor Ukraine is eating that shit, which would demand that each party
renounce core demands it is fighting for and accept another eternally
unresolved stalemate. I’m for peace! Give us fifteen more years to build up
NATO to a point where we might be able to defeat you! Of course, the U.S.
could force Ukraine to accept anything. Russia, not so much. Russian Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov, who is not in a panic because he knows the real
disposition of forces, sharply swatted
away Blinken’s camouflaged overture.
Per John Helmer’s
“Moscow sources”: “The Russians will not tolerate half-measures. Not like the
Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan, not like Yeltsin in Serbia. Not like Nord
Stream or the Crimean Bridge. Not now. Read Putin’s lips.”
Anything
can happen in war, and Russia has been notoriously careful and tight-lipped,
but Western leaders fear (and I agree) that military analysts like Scott
Ritter, Douglas Macgregor, and Erich Vad
are right—Russian leadership is not afraid but patient, not avoiding
confrontation but meticulously preparing for it, not panicked but confident,
and Russian forces in Ukraine will advance slowly, slowly, then all at
once.
Vladimir
Putin is well aware that he
has been played: “The West lied to us
about peace while preparing for aggression, and today, they no longer hesitate
to openly admit it.” In a ceremony
commemorating the Soviet Union’s momentous victory at the Battle of Stalingrad,
which “stopped and sent into irreversible retreat” the army of Hitlerian
fascism, he stated quite
clearly what shit he will no longer eat:
Now we are seeing that unfortunately, the ideology of
Nazism – this time in its modern guise – is again creating direct threats to
our national security, and we are, time and again, forced to resist the aggression
of the collective West.
However incredible, it is a fact – we are again being
threatened with German Leopard tanks with crosses on board. There is again a
plan to fight Russia on Ukrainian land using Hitler’s successors, the
Banderites…
However, those that are dragging European countries, including Germany,
into a new war with Russia, and especially those that are irresponsibly talking
about it as a fait accompli, those who are hoping to defeat Russia on the
battlefield, apparently fail to understand that a modern war against Russia
will be a completely different war for them. We do not send our tanks to
their borders but we have what to respond with, and it is not limited to the
use of armour. Everyone must realise this.
[my emphasis]
Every
day that passes without a strike on US/NATO co-belligerents is a day of Russian
restraint. Those days are numbered by the words of politicians like Annalena
Baerbock’s and Tobias Ellwood and the actions of their governments, who are “at
war in Europe” and “need to face Russia directly.”
Anna
and Tobias will get what they asked for, and the result will not play out only
on the territory and people of Ukraine and Russia. Read his lips: Putin will
not allow the US neocons, Ukrainian fascists, and European poodles to have the
last word. As the head of the Russian arms-control delegation in Vienna, Konstantin
Gavrilov, says: "If
Washington and NATO countries provide Kyiv with weapons for striking against
the cities deep inside the Russian territory and for attempting to seize our
constitutionally affirmed territories, it would force Moscow to undertake harsh
retaliatory actions…Do not say that we did not warn you."
Note
well that Putin has now suggested
changing Russia’s military doctrine on nuclear-weapons use to mirror the more permissive policy of the
United States:
Vladimir Putin said Russia may consider formally
adding the possibility of a preventive nuclear first strike to disarm an
opponent to its military doctrine…[P]erhaps we should think about using the
approaches of our American partners,” he said, citing what he called US
strategies to use high-accuracy missiles for a preventive strike.
Also
note that Russia works with a broad definition of “nuclear weapons.” Regarding
depleted-uranium munitions that are regularly used by Leopards, Abrams,
and Bradleys, Gavrilov stated:
"If Kyiv were to be supplied with such munitions for the use in Western
heavy military hardware, we would regard it as the use of 'dirty nuclear bombs'
against Russia, with all the consequences that entails." So, even under
Russia’s more restrictive doctrine, tanks firing depleted-uranium munitions
would be considered a first use of nuclear weapons.
I’m
afraid there will be more weapons delivered and more red lines drawn and
crossed. Russia will show it is not afraid, but confident of its ability, to
respond to any escalation, and the US/NATO will be faced with accepting defeat
or using nuclear weapons.
Panic
at the disco. Not a happy new year.
_________________________
(For World Wars IV and V, see Part 2 on my Substack, oŕ up here tomorrow.)
Related articles: Will There Be A Nuclear War?, Ukraine Negotiation Kabuki, Stop Believing: Be Skeptical of the Civilian-casualty Narrative, The Battle of Ukraine and the War It’s Part Of, Path to War, New World Order. The US Lost. From 2014: Charge of the Right Brigade: Ukraine and the Dynamics of Capitalist Insurrection, Good for the Gander: Ukraine's Demise Accelerates. From 2018: The Warm War: Russiamania At The Boiling Point.
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