Zombie War: Plan B for Ukraine
Jim Kavanagh
Something’s Gotta Give
Voices on all sides—U.S., Ukraine, Russia—assure us that a
major break in the military situation in Ukraine is imminent. Even as the
Russian forces (RF) advance steadily in the area of Bakhmut and Avdivka, the
Ukraine army (UA) is said to be poised for a last-ditch major offensive, driving
toward Crimea on the southern front, which it must launch and must win.
It’s impossible to know what’s true and what’s feint about
all this, and one can never be certain of the outcome once armies start blowing
each other up, but I feel comfortable saying that: 1) There will be a Ukrainian
offensive. The Ukrainians will throw everything they have into it and will make
immediate territorial advances. 2) It is very unlikely that Ukraine will
advance far enough to seriously threaten to re-take Crimea, and impossible that
it will drive Russia to capitulate. 3) It is likely that the UA will exhaust
itself, that enormous, irreplaceable, quantities of its manpower and materiel
will be destroyed, and that the massive Russian force that has been held back
until now will begin its own offensive that will be able to advance at will. It
will be evident and undeniable that there is no longer any military impediment
to the RF moving as far west in Ukraine as it wants.
I understand that surprises can come from many directions—incompetence of key commanders, political pressure from citizens in various countries, immediate NATO intervention, etc.—but I think it’s important to address the predicament that last outcome—a decisive military defeat of Ukraine—will create. That outcome will be an urgent crisis for the US/NATO/Kiev, requiring immediate decision and action. It’s also the outcome they expect and fear, and for which they are already considering their choices.
All it takes to understand how much they fear and expect
that outcome is to read carefully the many statements and analyses of Western
leaders and pundits, as well as of Zelensky and Ukrainian officials, which,
even when optimistically glossed, express in detail their anxiety about the depletion
of Ukraine’s manpower and of its and the U.S./NATO’s supplies of
ammunition and materiel, and their desperation about Ukraine’s chances.
There are too many such statements to cite, but one of
the most striking and cogent is an Asia Times article
by the pseudonymous “Spengler,” who attended “a recent private gathering
of former top US soldiers, intelligence officials and scholars with resumes
reaching from the Reagan to the Trump administrations”—i.e., a cross-section of
the permanent Deep State.
The participants in that meeting expressed what I think is
now the dominant attitude about the Ukraine situation in U.S. foreign policy and
military circles. They have “a gloomy assessment of Ukraine’s prospects for
victory against Russia.” They know that “Ukraine seems less likely to defeat
Russia, even if the West makes the maximum effort and risks escalation,” given
that “the entire army that NATO trained between 2014 and 2022 in preparation
for a Russian attack is dead, and recruits are being thrown into battle lines
with three weeks of training.” They also, “overwhelmingly,” “leaned towards
escalation in the form of providing additional weapons to Ukraine,” including,
possibly, “a ‘foreign legion’ of fighters from other countries.” Indeed—and
here’s the impossible-to-overstate danger—despite knowing that Ukraine cannot
win, “The great majority of participants favored risking everything for
absolute victory over Russia.”
So, here’s what I foresee and fear:
Sometime this year, probably before the end of summer, the
Ukrainian army will be decisively defeated, Russia will establish full control
of the four oblasts (Donetsk, Lugansk, Kherson, Zaporizhzhia) and there will be
no Ukrainian force left capable of reversing that or of stopping a Russian
advance to Kiev.
At that point, in order to avoid either accepting a world-changing
defeat or entering into direct war with Russia, all the U.S./Western voices who
have been adamantly excluding the possibility of a ceasefire, Antony
Blinken included, will suddenly start calling for one. They will be joined,
they hope, by other global actors (by China, they especially hope) and antiwar
voices, who will, without strong objection from the West’s Blinkens, see this
as a welcome concession to those antiwar activists’ sincere and long-standing
demands to stop the killing. Indeed, the US/NATO ceasefire proposal will be saturated
with pacifistic concern and what will be easy to portray—given the radical shift
in tone—as reasonable compromises. Actually,
it will be their Plan B to continue the war they have lost. “Absolute victory,”
postponed.
It will go something like this:
Let’s pause the fighting and everyone go to
their corners. Both sides will stop all military attacks. We (the US/NATO/Kiev)
will indefinitely suspend any Ukrainian request to join NATO. We will not
contest your (Russia’s) control of and claim to Crimea and the four oblasts. Nor
will we formally recognize it. We’ll leave “final status” issues to be
determined in a negotiated “peace process.” You will not move your military
forces one inch west of line x and will not interfere in the internal politics
of Kiev. To oversee and enforce this ceasefire, we will introduce a contingent
of international peacekeepers and establish a no-fly zone over Ukraine west of
line x. Can’t we all just get along?
To which Russia will respond something like this:
Nope. There will be no Minsk 3. We reject any
attempt by the parties that are losing, and only because they are losing, to
again postpone the resolution of this conflict forever. Our objectives are
clear and remain: We require that the Kiev government permanently renounce any
objective of joining NATO; that it remove extant NATO military infrastructure, separate
from the NATO alliance, and declare itself a neutral country; that it formally
recognize Crimea and the four oblasts as part of Russia (could have been two if
you hadn’t stopped negotiations last year); and that it reconfigure its
political and social policies to eliminate the dominance of murderously
Russophobic, fascist, Banderite nationalism. We will require any ceasefire for
negotiations and any settlement to be explicit, signed, and overseen by a trustworthy
third party—i.e., not the U.S., the EU, the UN, or any party dominated by “the
West” or other declared enemy. (China? India?) We will fight on until we achieve
those objectives, and we will treat any international ground or air armed
forces introduced into or over the territory of Ukraine without our agreement as
enemy combatants and legitimate military targets.
I am convinced this is the situation we are heading into.
I think the US/NATO/Kiev side will be forced to make a proposal like this, and
the Russian side will not (and would be foolish to) accept it. Russia will
fight on until the capitulation of Kiev, and the U.S./NATO or their confected
“foreign legions” will have to enter as direct combatants, with likely use of
tactical nuclear weapons, or accept an existential defeat.
China Syndrome
Please note how Blinken, et. al., are establishing the
framework that will work to their benefit when this situation arises. They are
adamantly refusing a ceasefire now because they know they will be
desperately needing one soon. They are setting themselves up to be in the
politically advantageous position of looking like the reasonable, compromising
party when they finally demand agree to a ceasefire and the Russians
refuse. See, we’re the peacemakers; Putin is the warmonger. We are agreeing
to the ceasefire that China and Western peaceniks wanted; Russia is insisting
on continuing the war. Who can blame the “international community” now for
bringing in “peacekeepers” and instituting a no-fly zone—just to stop the
killing? You know, like Libya.
The point is to get those “foreign legions” and foreign
air forces in—preferably as “peacekeepers” rather than overt combatants, but
with a similar purpose: to avoid inevitable defeat by establishing a kind of
Korean-stalemate-meets-Israel-Palestine-“peace process.” The U.S.’s favorite “peaceful
resolution”: A Zombie war, sustained by a constant infusion of arms and money
until it can be fully revived.
One of the main elements in that set-up—one which has
been swallowed whole by Western antiwar voices—is the notion that, in that
situation, the U.S. will be accepting a ceasefire that China has called for. When
antiwar voices today say: “Why doesn’t the U.S./NATO/Kiev go along with China’s
ceasefire proposal?” they are naively reciting a script being written by Western
politicians and media in preparation for the day when they do want a ceasefire.
There is no “ceasefire proposal” or “peace plan” from
China, in the sense of a concrete plan of immediate action to stop the fighting,
and the Blinkens who are ostensibly rejecting it know that. They are suggesting
a fictitious “ceasefire” proposal that they can reject as it gathers the
support of pacifistic antiwar voices, so they can replace it, when the time
comes, with the real “ceasefire” they are planning for, having pre-emptively
co-opted that antiwar sentiment. OK, you got what you and China want. Let’s
give peace a chance.
The U.S. has no intention of accepting a putative
ceasefire proposed by China; it has a plan for demanding one of its
design and to its benefit. But it will want you to think it is doing the
former.
Whatever criticism it deserves, the U.S. is not right now
preventing a ceasefire. When Antony Blinken says:
“For some, the idea of a ceasefire may be tempting, and I understand this, but
if it amounts to …, this will not be a just peace,” he is—with the ellipsis
filled in appropriately—articulating the position of Russia, as well as of the
U.S/NATO and Kiev. No party to this conflict wants a ceasefire now, and none
will until one of them thinks it’s necessary (probably because it's losing).
China knows this, and has not made any proposal for everybody to put aside their fundamental interests and objectives and stop fighting now. Here is the entirety of China’s position on “Ceasing Hostilities,” and the only mention of “ceasefire” within its 12-point “Position on the Political Settlement of the Ukraine Crisis”:
3. Ceasing hostilities. Conflict and war benefit no one. All parties must stay rational and exercise restraint, avoid fanning the flames and aggravating tensions, and prevent the crisis from deteriorating further or even spiraling out of control. All parties should support Russia and Ukraine in working in the same direction and resuming direct dialogue as quickly as possible, so as to gradually deescalate the situation and ultimately reach a comprehensive ceasefire.[my emphasis]
This, like all of the 12-point position paper, is a general statement of principle, not a plan of action. It is as neutral, diplomatic, and non-committal as language gets. I have no idea how anyone got a “peace plan” out of this. (Unless it suits their purpose to find it.) Like it or not, China is carefully avoiding telling either party specifically when and how to stop fighting. Urging “restraint” so as to “ultimately” reach a ceasefire is not the call for immediate ceasefire that wishful-thinking antiwar activists would like China to be making, and that forward-thinking neocons want you to think they are rejecting.
There’s recently been talk
of China teaming up with Brazil to craft a Ukraine “peace plan”—more
speculation and wishful thinking that mean nothing specific in the moment. From
other statements and actions, we know that China is developing a valued relationship
with Russia. But China is being very careful in its diplomatic language regarding
the conflict in Ukraine not to explicitly take a side or push a plan that takes
a side. If and when China feels it needs explicitly to propose an actual plan,
it will do so, and it’s unlikely to need Lula for that.
Everyone wants China to be on their side. At this point
in their delusion, some neocons may think, when they propose their ceasefire,
that China will go along with the idea that it’s China’s own. When China
doesn’t (as it almost certainly won’t), the neocons will definitely present
that as evidence that China, like Russia, is a dishonest warmonger, abandoning
its “own” imputed peace plan. Again, a line that everyone now saying, “Why
doesn’t the U.S. go along with China’s ceasefire proposal?” is helping to set
up.
So, again, whatever ceasefire the U.S./NATO/Kiev proposes
when faced with the prospect of imminent defeat in Ukraine will not be a Chinese
plan, but an American neocon gambit. It’s unlikely that China would help to force
such a thing on any of the parties. China would more likely play a significant
role in resolving this conflict as the third-party overseer of the negotiated
conditions of Ukraine’s surrender, under the Russian position.
Purgeatory
Please note another important element of the different
proposals that will be put forth in this situation: The most difficult demand
from the Russian side, which almost requires them to move on Kiev, is the
call for “de-Nazification.” It’s the demand that will be most resisted as
“political interference,” since it does, indeed, require “regime change” in the
deepest sense. I’ve said before
how nearly impossible it will be in western Ukraine, where fascistic, Banderite
ideology is entwined in Ukrainian nationalism, has deep historical roots, and
has become ascendant since 2014.
But here’s the thing: No matter how impossible it is,
it’s necessary—for the American ceasefire plan as well as for the Russian
project.
Everyone understands that no government in Kiev, even if
the U.S. can’t or won’t stop it, will be able to make and keep the capitulatory
settlement Russia demands unless the armed fascist forces are purged. But it’s
also the case that no government in Kiev will be able to make and keep the kind
of ceasefire agreement the U.S. will claim it wants unless the armed fascist forces
are purged.
The American ceasefire will be a hard sell to Ukrainian fascists.
They will be in no mood to accept any long-term deferral of fighting. They are
at least as eager as Russia to resolve this promptly, and must by now be as
doubtful as Russia of America’s long-term reliability. They have seen how the
Americans upend a country and then go home. They can also see the growing
antiwar pressure on European governments.
The fascists will kill Zelensky or any leader that
accedes to the kind of extended de facto concession of territory in such
a plan unless the U.S. assures them it’s another ploy to build up for a
future assault before long. If there is no purging of the fascists in Kiev
(which will take a battle), the Russians will know that’s exactly what the U.S.
has done.
So, if Russia doesn’t force “de-Nazifying” regime change
in Kiev, the U.S. will have to—for either’s plan to succeed. Russia and
the U.S. know this. Russia is facing it. The U.S. is not. Which is one major
reason why Russia cannot trust a U.S. ceasefire agreement.
This is what I foresee: A failed attempt to suck Russia
into a forever stalemate-peace process that rearms and resuscitates a
twice-defeated fascist Ukraine, dressed up as the “compromise” ceasefire that
everyone (said China) was calling for. As Emmanuel Todd says:
“No more than Russia, [America] cannot withdraw from the conflict, they cannot
let go. This is why we are now in…a confrontation whose outcome must be the
collapse of one or the other.” The war will go on until one party (Ukraine) accepts
defeat. Or the world is incinerated in a nuclear exchange.
It’s a nasty piece of work, this Ukraine beast. It is killing
the world we’re familiar with, and there will be no reviving its corpse.
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