In the 1930s, the tops and cuffs of shirts were often made of celluloid for greater durability; decades indeed. So somewhere beneath the floor of Westminster Abbey, under the engraved words “Neville Chamberlain”, a skull in nothing other than a wing collar wears a rictus grin and taunts us: “Appeasement, huh? Czechoslovakia, huh? Not so easy is it, arseholes! Not so easy!”
It is not so easy indeed. Five days into Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and it is clear there will be no substantial assistance in any form from Europe and NATO to a country which has never stopped pursuing substantial alignment with NATO, despite Russia’s clear indication that it would amount to a casus belli.
Thus on January 17 Ukraine and NATO signed a technology development cooperation initiative, i.e. cyber- and automated-war cooperation, presumably the proximate prompt for Russia’s decision to invade. This was the latest stage in a series of moves towards full European integration, with the Ukrainian government reinstating its official intent to join NATO after the very murky “revolution” against a pro-Russian president in 2014.
In September 2020 President Volodymyr Zelenskyy approved a fully revised national security strategy, including a path to NATO membership. As far as national security goes, that does not appear to have been a success. Leaving aside Vladimir Putin’s traditional rambling press conference, Russia’s decision to invade is clearly rational, though a gamble, in realpolitik terms — to attack and cut the link between Ukraine and NATO, the EU and Europe in general before a new stage of consolidation occurs.
The gamble has worked at one level. NATO has done nothing and can do nothing to help Ukraine in military terms, unless it wants to have direct NATO-Russia military conflict. Even if this were somehow to exclude nuclear exchange by de facto agreement of both sides, this would involve a massive mobilisation.
That can’t and won’t happen. It would have had to begin months ago, and it wasn’t. Its aim would have been to hold Kyiv, two-thirds of the way across the country and 70 kilometres from the Russian border. It would have had to involve either US/Canadian and western European troops invading a Slavic heartland to protect it from another Slavic country, or it would have had to involve nearer troop bodies, which would mean Slavs fighting Slavs.
Did Zelenskyy imagine that NATO would come to Ukraine’s aid if the situation escalated after he signed the NATO technology cooperation agreement? If he did, why did he imagine the situation would be anything different from the plight of Georgia, when Russia launched a quick corrective invasion in 2008? The Georgian leaders — a bunch of 30-something, Economist-reading kids — appealed to the world, and the world turned its back. Two months later, the Russians were out, having made their point and secured Russian ethnic enclaves as self-declared republics.
Zelenskyy has not been so unrealistic, simply appealing for non-troop assistance and getting it in the form of sanctions, materiel and protests. How long the latter will last remains to be seen. Ukraine’s appeal for non-weapons military materiel was well founded; the country, the old USSR’s weapons manufacture hub, has warehouses of AK-47s apparently, but lacks helmets, shields and the like. Ammunition is due to run out in a week or so, it is said.
The resistance by Ukrainians is obviously heroic. How widespread it is remains to be seen. This “plucky little Ukraine” narrative — training with wooden guns, knitting Molotov cocktails, Miss Ukraine with AK-47, etc — has a strong whiff of a PR effort about it. So many grins of people who might be about to die in street fighting! The reality is probably amid the undoubted patriotic gusto many miserable and frightened people debating whether to put up a fight or not.
Now, in response to this global opposition — hardly global really, outside the fevered enthusiasms of the Western mainstream media, as China passively supports Russia, India remains neutral, and much of what was the Third World stays out of it (more on that tomorrow) — Russia has announced that it has put its nuclear forces on “high alert” in line with the “statement of use” it revised last year.
What that means militarily is unclear, since such forces are always on alert. But its purpose may be to remind the West that it has recently changed its “statement of use” on nukes from “only if the existence of the state were threatened” to “achieve victory in a battlefield situation”, i.e. if we want to. Russia has between 6000 and 8000 nuclear weapons, many of them “small” tactical battlefield devices.
Would Russia, facing stasis and defeat of its quick war, use three or four battlefield nukes on Ukrainian military or small cities? It would be a point of no return if it did. Even the Chinese might find that a bit much. But when this time last week you made a restaurant booking for tomorrow, did you think a Eurasian land war would start in the interim?
Even if it escalated to that, what would or could NATO do? Launch direct strikes? With an escalation to where? If Russia is losing this war — as many are suggesting — so too is NATO as any sort of meaningful or credible force. Surely it is now just an anachronism and an absurdity, as are suggestions for mid-scale action, such as Tony Abbott’s pathetic and delusional bleat in The Wall Street Journal for NATO to impose a “no-fly zone” (it would be for the dozens of NATO jets downed by Russian missiles).
NATO’s statement on the invasion called on Russia to “stop this senseless war”, like it was the Macquarie University No Borders Peace collective. Since for Russia the war makes a great deal of sense, it is unlikely to be heeded.
There is more to say, a lot more. This war is obviously rearranging the world — but largely by making visible shifts that occurred some time ago. In 48 hours everything may have shifted again. In the meantime, let Chamberlain, shiny wing collar pointed to heaven, have his Holbeinesque chuckle: “Not so easy is it, jerks! Not so easy!”
If showing the world you are prepared to kill civilians and also at the same time demonstrate to the world your military is poorly organised, weak and crippled with shortages is rational. Russia have succeeded. What we are seeing is a failing, paranoid and soon to be middle power that has nukes. Maybe Keane can pick up how rational this truly is.
The rationality is in deciding that theinvasion is necessary to Russia’s interests, despite the inevitable reversals of war
Why does a middle power, about the size of Australia, have the right to ensure a buffer area of compliant states around itself?
I think your are confusing rights with reasons. They are not the same. This is attempting an analysis of how we got here and where we may be going, it’s not an ethical discussion.
On a PPP basis*, the Russian economy is about 3 times the size of Australia’s. Nevertheless, I believe that your point re buffer area remains valid.
*IMF estimates for 2021
And I think about 6 times our population. But nukes added. Always remember the nukes…
I think you need to reassess the physical size of Russia vs Australia as well as what constitutes a Middle Power. Russia is more than twice as large as Australia, is a Nuclear Power and has an actual military capability of taking Australia out many times over. Australia is a “middling” power not a middle power.
Obviously, I meant in GDP terms, not area. And many countries big and small (apart from those of us ‘girt by sea’) have less than friendly countries on their borders. It’s not a causus belli.
The idea of buffer zones for great powers has been a standard part of geopol for centuries. What misapplication of liberalism says a power should stand by and let an adversarial power creep up to its borders on 3 sides?
Is Russia really a great power any more? Sure, it has nukes, but so do India and Pakistan, and they put up with each other at their border. And I repeat, NATO is not on 3 sides of Russia!
The difference is that Russia can deliver those Nukes in sufficient quantity, at any point in the globe. India and Pakistan cannot.
Alaska, Poland/The Baltics, and then Ukraine. Three sides of Russia.
A short stretch of of Russia’s borders. What about China, Mongolia, Kazakhstan and North Korea?
Me think these are the ones Russia needs to be worried about (with China in the background watching); especially when defence and/or internal security forces are focused elsewhere. Russia does not have unlimited human resources nor bott son the ground.
1. Poland and Ukraine are on the same side.
2. The US just pulled out of Afghanistan, suggesting one less side for Russia to worry about and if anything, a de-escalation.
3. The US purchased Alaska in 1867 so unlikely part of some strategy to provoke Putin into military action.
Poland/Baltics and Ukraine are both on the Western side, so they do not constitute two different sides. Obviously geography is another thing you know absolutely nothing about.
Because land grabs often lead to lebensraum, and we all know how that ends.
Plus having an adversarial power (Russia) creep up on it’s borders (Ukraine) is precisely the cause of the current war.
Double plus, what fear does Russia have when it posseses the same number of nukes as the entire NATO alliance? It’s not as if NATO will nip over the border in
some Napoleonic cavalry charge.
There is also the principle that dictatorships that are allowed to run amok tend to keep at it. Russia is not the sort of bad actor the world needs. North Korea gets away with posturing because it keeps within its kingdom. For that matter, the United States needs the same treatment. These foreign adventures kill innocent people and the world should step in.
How is spurring NATO back into life at all in Russia’s interests? Even if Putin ‘conquers’ Ukraine, this is only going to galvanise NATO and push countries on Russia’s borders into its fold — cf Finland.
Pretty sure Putin could have achieved concessions re Ukraine without invading the country.
Not a Causus Belli? It is when your legitimate security concerns are continually thrown back at you as “Non-Starters”. NATO, the US and EU have been piss poor at “Diplomacy” to say the least. You don’t go into negotiations and say “screw you” and still expect to reach an equitable arrangement.
Oh I don’t know, if you’re up against is authoritarian, white supremacist extremism mixed with a dose of paranoic thuggism and delusions of grandeur, meaningful diplomacy probably isn’t an option. NATO, the EU and Ukraine weren’t ever going to ‘win’ against an expectation of complete capitulation.
We are not discussing the US Bref!
Why not?
The Hegemon’s actions dominate most of the known/real world.
Other nations must suffer its wild flailings.
Not at the moment, no.
My mistake. When you said “authoritarian, white supremacist extremism mixed with a dose of paranoic thuggism and delusions of grandeur, meaningful diplomacy probably isn’t an option” I, not unreasonably thought you were describing the United Snakes to a tee.
True but it is, most assuredly, casus belli.
Russia’s interests, or Putin’s interests? Not the same thing. Putin is a murderous kleptocrat. Russians aren’t allowed “more ideas, analysis and opinion”, they get arrested for trying that.
Why is it necessary to Russia’s interests?
How is a war of “Denazification” of a country that has an elected jew as President rational? Putin is a bad actor – full stop.
A Jew and a native Russian speaker who got 70% of the vote in a freer election than Russia has had in almost 20 years.
But, but, but, but the USA is bad, which means everything Putin does is good according to Guy Dzughashvili and his loyal followers.
As an excuse – or reason, depending where you stand – for a military incursion into a sovereign nation ‘we don’t like you flirting with NATO’ is incredibly weak. What does it even mean, that Russia doesn’t want NATO on its doorstep? Where even is its doorstep? If Russia succeeds in whatever its aim is in Ukraine – puppet government, annexation, who knows – then its new state or country or whatever will border other countries which have been NATO members for a long time. If Ukraine becomes part of Russia, Putin will have brought about the result he says he doesn’t want. What is he going to do then? Invade Poland and Romania? If Putin genuinely has this concern then he needs to continue to take it up with NATO and work through diplomatic channels.
I don’t pretend to even understand what other reasons Putin might have for invading Ukraine. And I don’t think his rambling speech the other day gives us any guidance either, despite numerous commentators trying to read reasons into it. It makes no sense to me except that it seems to be part of some long game to destabilise liberal democracies, as evidenced by Russia’s interference in various elections around the world. But for commentators who are sneering at the take from western msm and politicians to take on face value what Putin says it’s about seems to be either disingenuous or totally naïve. Especially given that the same commentators would not for a second take on face value, and rightly so, anything that the US gives as a reason for its military intervention in other countries.
According to the Worm, the reason was always “de-militarise and de-genocide”, presumably followed by leaving peacefully. Since none of that correlates with observed reality or makes any sense, it seems clear that “reason” doesn’t have much of a look-in to the proceedings.
Be sure to send Putin a letter specifying he should take his concerns up thru channels.
I’m sure better and more able people than me have done this in the past and are discussing this with him now. That is a stupidly snide comment, Guy, and unworthy of you.
VJ, its simply that yr applying an idea of justice that applies to persons within a jurisdiction, to nations, who, by having access to mass violence, have no absolute law above them. Who decides whether NATO is doorstepping russia? Russia, the nuclear power does, and we decide whether that motive is real, rational and operant for action. Im arguing that it is, that action could be expected in response, and such extension was therefore unwise. Not a moral question, a strategic one.
Include a reminder that the world is round and the more he expands the greater will be the number of states he is “surrounded” by,
You’re arguing with yourself, Guy. If NATO is no longer a meaningful or credible force, then why is Putin staking so much on this adventure – one that is so far costing his kleptocrat pals squillions of roubles and trashing what is left of the reputation of his gangster-run economy? Putin is visibly losing it. As many others have observed, he is looking and sounding physically and emotionally wrecked. He’s desperate and cornered. This is not the act of a rational regime.
As to Chamberlain, he had it a lot easier than current Western leaders for the simple reason that Hitler didn’t have the threat of mutually assured destruction up his sleeve.
Youve missed my point. The inability to respond in a military fashion to a military threat, has shown NATO’s uselessness – indeed its counterproductive character for this era. Russia doesnt want to be wholly encircled. Thats rational
Five days into a weird-ass invasion might be a tad premature in calling NATO useless. That is the traditional conservative slur anyway. The Ukraine isn’t even part of NATO (yet). What’s the legal pretext for throwing in its lot?
I suppose that you could argue that Russia is acting ‘rational’ according to its lights. If so, the West is also acting very rational according to theirs.
Yes, the west is acting rationally. But who was NATO defending against, post 1991? And what is that country doing now?
“Who was NATO defending against, post 1991″?
Given that neither Russia nor its nukes disappeared overnight, NATO would have considered Russia still a threat.
Perestroika, Glanost, Gorbachev, Yeltsin? After 35 years of Cold War, neither words nor leaders could have offered absolute guarantee that the then Soviet Union would not somehow fracture, become any number of heavily armed warring states, or even revert back to kind.
Traditional weapons are not the only ways of pressuring Russia. The mutual obligations under NATO also explain while member states have been so quick to enact financial sanctions with the prospect of real bite. I think you’re also under-estimating this event as a reminder of WHY NATO exists.
Agreed. At the risk of the howling “SHOCK and AWE ” made this invasion look like a boy scouts exercise and it took place a long way from home , for what?
Russia never will be wholly encircled by NATO or NATO aspirants. It’s a huge country.
School atlases are cheap in op-shops.
For NATO to defend a member country it would need bases, troops and plenty of military hardware stationed in that country and the military technology and strategies in place to defend it. That is how NATO planned to defend it member states during the cold war. It doesn’t have these things in Ukraine – a non-member state which is a large country on the far eastern periphery of any sphere of influence NATO might presume to have. NATO is as “useless” at defending a non-member like Ukraine as Australia was at defending West Papua or East Timor. Does this mean it would be useless at defending the UK or states on the western seaboard of Europe?
The US troops in Germany since WWII were intended as sacrificial martyrs – in the 60/70s they were the conscript dregs not even worth sending to the meat grinder in Vietnam.
Perhaps Guy this is what the U.S. intended all along? The one thing it hasn’t wanted is a strong EU as a trading block and regional power. Stronger ties between Germany and Russia as evidenced by Gazprom has been their target for a number of years…all those pollies and business people trotting backwards and forwards. Whatever help arrives for Ukraine the invoice will quickly follow.
Half right, focus on US #KochNetwork (look through Twitter & their informed US critics) which is linked to think tanks aka IPA locally, and UK pro Brexit IEA (at 55 Tufton St.), backed by many fossil fuel donors with investments in Russia….. they despise the EU, not Germany so much (coincidentally symbiotic relationship with Fox and MSM).
Confusing messaging coming out in US media linking Putin (or often disappeared) &/or Ukraine to Xi-China then the fun begins; Biden – Democrats are ‘weak’ as the mid term campaigning starts and suggesting Trump is a ‘strong’ leader (& best for fossil fuels etc.).
Also Oz where the PM was given opportunity to describe Albanese as the ‘Manchurian candidate’….
In the 80s Reagan threatened sanctions against Germany and any companies participating in the first gas pipeline which, back in the Dark Ages, crossed the Ukraine.
Schroeder, and even the utterly compromised Kohl, ignored the ultimatum and remained warm.
And also to over-extend Russia, as recommended by a 2019 Rand report to the US army:
https://consortiumnews.com/2022/02/23/diana-johnstone-us-foreign-policy-is-a-cruel-sport/
Russia doesn’t want to be encircled? Have you seen a map of the world recently? It’s not like Russia is lacking land mass. Shall we give them a piece of Finland, China, Mongolia and Kazakhstan, too, so they don’t feel too hemmed in?
And how about landlocked Germany? Would they be justified in invading Czeckoslovakia, Poland, Denmark, France? Or maybe they did once and that ‘rational’ choice didn’t work out so well for either them or anyone else?
The trouble, of course, with encirclement theory as justification for war is that, once the encirclement is broken by invading a buffer country, that buffer country then becomes incorporated and part of what is encircled.
Ukraine, as part of Greater Russia is encircled then by Poland and the Czech Republic.
Yup. As I mentioned above, time to remind Mr Putin that the world is round.
It was once said that ‘A little learning is a dangerous thing‘ but nowhere near as dangerous as utter ignorance.
Like Putin (& oligarchs) have shared interest with many in the US e.g. Fox, Trump, GOP, Koch Network etc., and like Brexit, NATO and the EU.
The latter is especially troubling for many old ‘fossils’, a proxy for democracies, open society, transition from fossil fuels, environmental regulation, financial transparency, joined up intelligence database on espionage, crime, inc. white collar or corporate (Brexit cut the Anglosphere or the ‘five eyes’ off from effective access) etc.
War is evil. It can be more evil when the reasons for the war and its consequences are greed and the preservation of a corrupt state.
This discussion is about Russia not the United Snakes of America.
The parallels are obvious .The shock and awe opening attack on Baghdad was many times worse than this current atrocity