Spreekt voor zichzelf.
Ik wilde het vertalen met DeepL, maar dat meldt dat sommige paragrafen te groot zijn. Ik moet het splitsen. Later misschien. Dan maar in het Engels.
Elke bron heeft een hoge mate van 'autoriteit' ( oped in Atlantioc Council, een CFR lid etc ) èn hun mening is redelijk 'explosief'.
Vandaar dat ik er een blog aan wijd.
Putin going to war would be good for US - op.ed. in NATO
Atlantic Council
(1) NATO brains trust put Case for Risking War in Ukraine (Dec 22, 2021)
(2) Putin going to war would be good for US - op.ed. in NATO Atlantic 
Council
(3) Ukraine was becoming a de facto member of NATO; that's the cause of 
the war
(4) CFR Senior Fellow denounces Neocon "Idealism", calls for return
to 
Realism
(5) Neocons saw Ukraine as a trap to lure Putin into war; he warns US to 
back off
(6) US recruits Israel against Russia
Charles A. Kupchan, in item 4, notes that the 2008 war was initiated by 
Georgia:
"NATO in 2008 pledged that Georgia and Ukraine "will become members
of 
NATO," Georgia's president, Mikheil Saakashvili, launched an offensive 
against pro-Russian separatists in South Ossetia with whom the country 
had been sporadically fighting for years. Russia promptly carved up 
Georgia, grabbing control of South Ossetia and Abkhazia. Mr. Saakashvili 
thought the West had his back, but he miscalculated and overreached.
"In a similar fashion, NATO encouraged Ukraine to beat a path toward the 
alliance. The 2014 Maidan Revolution toppled a pro-Moscow regime and put 
Ukraine on a westward course, resulting in Russia's intervention in 
Crimea and Donbas. NATO's open-door then beckoned, prompting Ukrainians 
in 2019 to enshrine their NATO aspirations in the Constitution."
(1) NATO brains trust put Case for Risking War in Ukraine (Dec 22, 2021)
https://www.wsj.com/articles/strategic-case-risking-war-ukraine-russia-invasion-putin-national-security-nato-europe-eu-11640186454
The Strategic Case for Risking War in Ukraine
An invasion would be a diplomatic, economic and military mistake for 
Putin. Let him make it if he must.
By John R. Deni
Dec. 22, 2021 12:31 pm ET
As Russia continues its destabilizing military buildup around Ukraine, 
the U.S. and its allies have made clear they prefer to resolve the 
crisis through diplomacy. This reflects not simply the preference of the 
Biden administration when it comes to national-security matters but also 
the West's desire to avoid inflaming and escalating the situation 
through military action.
This makes good sense. Any Russo-Ukrainian war is likely to be bloody 
for the combatants, result in a wave of refugees heading west, and 
further destabilize an already precarious regional security situation. 
Nonetheless, as diplomatic efforts unfold, there are good strategic 
reasons for the West to stake out a hard-line approach, giving little 
ground to Moscow over its demand to forsake Ukrainian membership in 
Western institutions and halt military activity in Central and Eastern 
Europe. Rather than helping Russian President Vladimir Putin back down 
from the position he's taken, the West ought to stand firm, even if it 
means another Russian invasion of Ukraine.
This makes good sense. Any Russo-Ukrainian war is likely to be bloody 
for the combatants, result in a wave of refugees heading west, and 
further destabilize an already precarious regional security situation. 
Nonetheless, as diplomatic efforts unfold, there are good strategic 
reasons for the West to stake out a hard-line approach, giving little 
ground to Moscow over its demand to forsake Ukrainian membership in 
Western institutions and halt military activity in Central and Eastern 
Europe. Rather than helping Russian President Vladimir Putin back down 
from the position he's taken, the West ought to stand firm, even if it 
means another Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Russia's efforts to destabilize and undermine the Ukrainian government 
by keeping alive the smoldering war in the Donbas region haven't 
returned Kyiv to Moscow's orbit. Instead, Ukraine has used the past 
several years to boost its military capabilities gradually, strengthen 
its ties to the West, and improve its economy. It's unclear why Mr. 
Putin has chosen this moment to demand assurances that Ukraine won't 
become a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization or the 
European Union. Perhaps the Kremlin believes time isn't on its side as 
Ukraine continues to slide closer to the West. Or Mr. Putin might assume 
Washington is more willing to accommodate Russia's demands, given the 
intensifying American rivalry with China. Or it could even be that Mr. 
Putin hopes to bolster his declining public support with a jingoistic 
foreign adventure.
Regardless, Mr. Putin's tactics have placed the West in a reactive mode, 
hoping to avoid a war in Europe that could result in tens of thousands 
of casualties. The death and destruction could far outpace that of the 
relatively more limited war in Donbas, where as many as 14,000 have died 
since 2014. But Mr. Putin's price for turning down the heat is anathema 
to Western values of national self-determination and sovereignty. 
Moreover, a NATO-Russia agreement preventing Ukraine from seeking 
membership would violate a 1975 Helsinki agreement on security and 
cooperation in Europe—signed by Moscow—which said European states have 
the right to belong to any international alliance they choose.
Mr. Putin therefore appears to have taken quite a risk—and the West 
ought to exploit his gamble by maintaining a hard-line stance in 
diplomatic discussions. In the best case, Mr. Putin is forced to back 
down, losing face domestically and internationally, even if his state 
media spins it as a victory or claims the buildup was merely part of an 
exercise.
In the worst case, if Mr. Putin's forces invade, Russia is likely to 
suffer long-term, serious and even debilitating strategic costs in three 
ways. First, another Russian invasion of Ukraine would forge an even 
stronger anti-Russian consensus across Europe. Although the EU has shown 
a remarkable degree of solidarity in maintaining its limited sanctions 
on Russia since the 2014 invasion of Ukraine, there are cracks in the 
edifice. Germany's new left-leaning government hasn't yet found its 
footing on Russia. Italy, Austria, Hungary and even France have shown a 
willingness to consider opening up to the Kremlin, despite the Russian 
forces in Crimea and Donbas. And NATO's attention and resources remain 
split between Russia on the one hand, and instability and insecurity 
emanating from across the Mediterranean Sea on the other. Russian tanks 
crossing into Ukraine would focus minds and effort.
Second, a Russian reinvasion of Ukraine would likely result in another 
round of more debilitating economic sanctions that would further weaken 
Russia's economy. Disconnecting Russia from the tools of global finance 
and investment—such as the Swift banking-payment system—would make it 
difficult for Moscow to earn money from its oil exports. Similarly, a 
ban on Western institutions' trading of existing Russian debt in 
secondary markets would limit Moscow's ability to finance development. 
Over time, a stronger, more effective round of sanctions would hasten 
Russia's economic decline relative to the West, reduce its power 
overall, and make it far more expensive for Mr. Putin to intimidate and 
destabilize his neighbors.
Third, another Russian invasion of Ukraine, even if militarily 
successful in the short run, is likely to spawn a guerrilla war in those 
areas of Ukraine occupied by Russian forces. This will sap the strength 
and morale of Russia's military while undercutting Mr. Putin's domestic 
popularity and reducing Russia's soft power globally.
If Russian forces enter Ukraine yet again, Kyiv is likely to lose the 
war and the human toll will be extensive. The long-term damage suffered 
by Moscow, however, is likely to be substantial as well. The seemingly 
impetuous (onbezonnen, ontsatuimig)  Mr. Putin has maneuvered his way into a strategically risky 
position, and the West ought to leverage the Kremlin's mistake and drive 
a hard bargain in any diplomacy.
(Ze hebben uiteraard uitgebreid bestudeerd ( gegamed)hoe hij denkt en handelt. Wat zijn on-vervreemdbare waarden zijn. En daar hebben ze ene plot bij bedacht om hem in de val te lokken. Kleuren revoluties haddenm onvoldoende effect. Toen moest de EU goiuden bergen beloven, en hoge verwachtingen wekken bij het volk. Dan kreeg Yanukovich een aanbod dat hioj onmogelijk kòn accepteeren ( 1 miljard schadevergoeding ipv 162 miljard , die de schade zou bedragen als hij alle economische banden met de RF zou doorsnijden) , en zo werd 'De Maidan' bewust veroorzaakt. ( 2 maanden eerder waren al 3 TV stations opgericht om de Maidan uit te zenden) Azov werd in dewatten gelegd. Kolomoisky financierde een TV serie om Zelensky tot held te maken. Zelensky won de verkiezingen door Vrede in Donbass te beloven. Zelensky werd on camrea bedreigd ( Azov) met de dood als hij geen oorlog zou voeren, en kon daarna zelf steedsd fanatieker worden, zonder dat hij als verrader kon worden aangemerkt. Hij is de acteur die alles 'verkopt ' aan het westen: Bloed en Puin en Babies. Westerse Media doen de rest. En zo veroorzaken we onze nucleaire oorlog. De Neocons zullen heel tevreden zijn. JV. )
Mr. Deni is a research professor at the U.S. Army War College's 
Strategic Studies Institute, a nonresident senior fellow at the Atlantic 
Council and author of "Coalition of the Unwilling and Unable: European 
Realignment and the Future of American Geopolitics."
(2) Putin going to war would be good for US - op.ed. in NATO Atlantic 
Council
https://fair.org/home/calling-russias-attack-unprovoked-lets-us-off-the-hook/
MARCH 4, 2022
BRYCE GREENE
Russia's invasion of Ukraine can fairly be called many things, but 
"unprovoked" (Roll Call, 2/24/22) is not one of them.
Many governments and media figures are rightly condemning Russian 
President Vladimir Putin's attack on Ukraine as an act of aggression and 
a violation of international law. But in his first speech about the 
invasion, on February 24, US President Joe Biden also called the 
invasion "unprovoked."
It's a word that has been echoed repeatedly across the media ecosystem. 
"Putin's forces entered Ukraine's second-largest city on the fourth day 
of the unprovoked invasion," Axios (2/27/22) reported; "Russia's 
unprovoked invasion of Ukraine entered its second week Friday," said 
CNBC (3/4/22). Vox (3/1/22) wrote of "Putin's decision to launch an 
unprovoked and unnecessary war with the second-largest country in Europe."
The "unprovoked" descriptor obscures a long history of provocative 
behavior from the United States in regards to Ukraine. This history is 
important to understanding how we got here, and what degree of 
responsibility the US bears for the current attack on Ukraine.
Ignoring expert advice
The story starts at the end of the Cold War, when the US was the only 
global hegemon. As part of the deal that finalized the reunification of 
Germany, the US promised Russia that NATO would not expand "one inch 
eastward."  Despite this, it wasn't long before talk of expansion
began 
to circulate among policy makers.
In 1997, dozens of foreign policy veterans (including former Defense 
Secretary Robert McNamara and former CIA Director Stansfield Turner) 
sent a joint letter to then-President Bill Clinton calling "the current 
US-led effort to expand NATO…a policy error of historic proportions." 
They predicted:
In Russia, NATO expansion, which continues to be opposed across the 
entire political spectrum, will strengthen the nondemocratic opposition, 
undercut those who favor reform and cooperation with the West [and] 
bring the Russians to question the entire post-Cold War settlement.
NYT: And Now a Word From X
Diplomat George Kennan (New York Times, 5/2/98) said  NATO expansion 
would be "a tragic mistake."
New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman (5/2/98) in 1998 asked famed 
diplomat George Kennan—architect of the US Cold War strategy of 
containment—about NATO expansion. Kennan's response:
I think it is the beginning of a new cold war. I think the Russians will 
gradually react quite adversely and it will affect their policies. I 
think it is a tragic mistake. There was no reason for this whatsoever. 
No one was threatening anybody else.
Of course there is going to be a bad reaction from Russia, and then [the 
NATO expanders] will say that we always told you that is how the 
Russians are—but this is just wrong.
Despite these warnings, Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic were 
added to NATO in 1999, with Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, 
Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia following in 2004.
US planners were warned again in 2008 by US Ambassador to Moscow William 
Burns (now director of the CIA under Joe Biden). WikiLeaks leaked a 
cable from Burns titled "Nyet Means Nyet: Russia's NATO Enlargement 
Redlines" that included another prophetic warning worth quoting in full 
(emphasis added):
Ukraine and Georgia's NATO aspirations not only touch a raw nerve in 
Russia, they engender serious concerns about the consequences for 
stability in the region.  Not only does Russia perceive encirclement, 
and efforts to undermine Russia's influence in the region, but it also 
fears unpredictable and uncontrolled consequences which would seriously 
affect Russian security interests.
Experts tell us that Russia is particularly worried that the strong 
divisions in Ukraine over NATO membership, with much of the ethnic 
Russian community against membership, could lead to a major split, 
involving violence or at worst, civil war.  In that eventuality, Russia 
would have to decide whether to intervene; a decision Russia does not 
want to have to face.
A de facto NATO ally
NYT: NATO Signals Support for Ukraine in Face of Threat From Russia
As Russia threatened to invade Ukraine over the threat of NATO 
expansion, NATO's response was to emphasize that Ukraine would some day 
join the alliance (New York Times, 12/16/21).
But the US has pushed Russia to make such a decision. Though European 
countries are divided about whether or not Ukraine should join, many in 
the NATO camp have been adamant about maintaining the alliance's "open 
door policy." Even as US planners were warning of a Russian invasion, 
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg reiterated NATO's 2008 plans to 
integrate Ukraine into the alliance (New York Times, 12/16/21). The 
Biden administration has taken a more roundabout approach, supporting in 
the abstract "Kyiv's right to choose its own security arrangements and 
alliances." But the implication is obvious.
Even without officially being in NATO, Ukraine has become a de facto 
NATO ally—and Russia has paid close attention to these developments. In 
a December 2021 speech to his top military officials, Putin expressed 
his concerns:
Over the past few years, military contingents of NATO countries have 
been almost constantly present on Ukrainian territory under the pretext 
of exercises. The Ukrainian troop control system has already been 
integrated into NATO. This means that NATO headquarters can issue direct 
commands to the Ukrainian armed forces, even to their separate units and 
squads….
Kiev has long proclaimed a strategic course on joining NATO. Indeed, 
each country is entitled to pick its own security system and enter into 
military alliances. There would be no problem with that, if it were not 
for one "but." International documents expressly stipulate the
principle 
of equal and indivisible security, which includes obligations not to 
strengthen one's own security at the expense of the security of other 
states ….
In other words, the choice of pathways towards ensuring security should 
not pose a threat to other states, whereas Ukraine joining NATO is a 
direct threat to Russia's security.
In an explainer piece, the New York Times (2/24/22) centered NATO 
expansion as a root cause of the war. Unfortunately, the Times omitted 
the critical context of NATO's pledge not to expand, and the subsequent 
abandonment of that promise. This is an important context to understand 
the Russian view of US policies, especially so given the ample warnings 
from US diplomats and foreign policy experts.
The Maidan Coup of 2014
A major turning point in the US/Ukraine/Russia relationship was the 2014 
violent and unconstitutional ouster of President Viktor Yanukovych, 
elected in 2010 in a vote heavily split between eastern and western 
Ukraine. His ouster came after months of protests led in part by 
far-right extremists (FAIR.org, 3/7/14). Weeks before his ouster, an 
unknown party leaked a phone call between US officials discussing who 
should and shouldn't be part of the new government, and finding ways to 
"seal the deal." After the ouster, a politician the officials
designated 
as "the guy" even became prime minister.
The US involvement was part of a campaign aimed at exploiting the 
divisions in Ukrainian society to push the country into the US sphere of 
influence, pulling it out of the Russian sphere (FAIR.org, 1/28/22). In 
the aftermath of the overthrow, Russia illegally annexed Crimea from 
Ukraine, in part to secure a major naval base from the new Ukrainian 
government.
The New York Times (2/24/22) and Washington Post (2/28/22) both omitted 
the role the US played in these events. In US media, this critical 
moment in history is completely cleansed of US influence, erasing a 
critical step on the road to the current war.
Keeping civil war alive
In another response to the overthrow, an uprising in Ukraine's Donbas 
region grew into a rebel movement that declared independence from 
Ukraine and announced the formation of their own republics. The 
resulting civil war claimed thousands of lives, but was largely paused 
in 2015 with a ceasefire agreement known as the Minsk II accords.
Nation: Ukraine: The Most Dangerous Problem in the World
Anatol Lieven (The Nation, 11/15/21):
"US administrations, the political establishment, and the mainstream 
media have quietly buried…the refusal of Ukrainian governments to 
implement the solution and the refusal of the United States to put 
pressure on them to do so."
The deal, agreed to by Ukraine, Russia and other European countries, was 
designed to grant some form of autonomy to the breakaway regions in 
exchange for reintegrating them into the Ukrainian state. Unfortunately, 
the Ukrainian government refused to implement the autonomy provision of 
the accords. Anatol Lieven, a researcher with the Quincy Institute for 
Responsible Statecraft, wrote in The Nation (11/15/21):
The main reason for this refusal, apart from a general commitment to 
retain centralized power in Kiev, has been the belief that permanent 
autonomy for the Donbas would prevent Ukraine from joining NATO and the 
European Union, as the region could use its constitutional position 
within Ukraine to block membership.
Ukraine opted instead to prolong the Donbas conflict, and there was 
never significant pressure from the West to alter course. Though there 
were brief reports of the accords' revival as recently as late January, 
Ukrainian security chief Oleksiy Danilov warned the West not to pressure 
Ukraine to implement the peace deal. "The fulfillment of the Minsk 
agreement means the country's destruction," he said (AP, 1/31/22). 
Danilov claimed that even when the agreement was signed eight years ago, 
  "it was already clear for all rational people that it's impossible
to 
implement."
Lieven notes that the depth of Russian commitment has yet to be fully 
tested, but Putin has supported the Minsk accords, refraining from 
officially recognizing the Donbas republics until last week.
The New York Times (2/8/22) explainer on the Minsk accords blamed their 
failure on a disagreement between Ukraine and Russia over their 
implementation. This is inadequate to explain the failure of the 
agreements, however, given that Russia cannot affect Ukrainian 
parliamentary procedure. The Times quietly acknowledged that the law 
meant to define special status in the Donbas had been "shelved" by
the 
Ukranians,  indicating that the country had stopped trying to solve the 
issue in favor of a stalemate.
There was no mention of the comments from a top Ukrainian official 
openly denouncing the peace accords. Nor was it acknowledged that the US 
could have used its influence to push Ukraine to solve the issue, but 
refrained from doing so.
Ukrainian missile crisis
WaPo: Putin's attack on Ukraine echoes Hitler's takeover of Czechoslovakia
The Washington Post's Hitler analogy (2/24/22) is a bit much, 
considering that the Ukrainian government provides veterans benefits to 
militias that actually participated in the Holocaust (Kyiv Post, 12/24/18).
One under-discussed aspect of this crisis is the role of US missiles 
stationed in NATO countries. Many media outlets have claimed that Putin 
is Hitler-like (Washington Post, 2/24/22; Boston Globe, 2/24/22), 
hellbent on reconquering old Soviet states to "recreat[e] the Russian 
empire with himself as the Tsar," as Clinton State Department official 
Strobe Talbot told Politico (2/25/22).
Pundits try to psychoanalyze Putin, asking "What is motivating him?"
and 
answering by citing his televised speech on February 21 that recounted 
the history of Ukraine's relationship with Russia.
This speech has been widely characterized as a call to reestablish the 
Soviet empire and a challenge to Ukraine's right to exist as a sovereign 
nation. Corporate media ignore other public statements Putin has made in 
recent months. For example, at an expanded meeting of the Defense 
Ministry Board, Putin elaborated on what he considered to be the main 
military threat from US/NATO expansion to Ukraine:
It is extremely alarming that elements of the US global defense system 
are being deployed near Russia. The Mk 41 launchers, which are located 
in Romania and are to be deployed in Poland, are adapted for launching 
the Tomahawk strike missiles. If this infrastructure continues to move 
forward, and if US and NATO missile systems are deployed in Ukraine, 
their flight time to Moscow will be only 7–10 minutes, or even five 
minutes for hypersonic systems. This is a huge challenge for us, for our 
security.
The United States does not possess hypersonic weapons yet, but we know 
when they will have it…. They will supply hypersonic weapons to Ukraine 
and then use them as cover…to arm extremists from a neighbouring state 
and incite them against certain regions of the Russian Federation, such 
as Crimea, when they think circumstances are favorable.
Do they really think we do not see these threats? Or do they think that 
we will just stand idly watching threats to Russia emerge? This is the 
problem: We simply have no room to retreat.
Having these missiles so close to Russia—weapons that Russia (and China) 
see as part of a plan to give the United States the capacity to launch a 
nuclear first-strike without retaliation—seriously challenges the cold 
war deterrent of Mutually Assured Destruction, and more closely 
resembles a gun pointed at the Russian head for the remainder of the 
nuclear age. Would this be acceptable to any country?
Media refuse to present this crucial question to their audiences, 
instead couching Putin's motives in purely aggressive terms.
As the threat of war loomed, Secretary of State Antony Blinken (Twitter, 
1/27/22) framed the issue of NATO expansion as "Kyiv's right to choose 
its own security arrangements and alliances"—as though NATO were a 
public accommodation open to anyone who wanted to join.
By December 2021, US intelligence agencies were sounding the alarm that 
Russia was amassing troops at the Ukrainian border and planning to 
attack. Yet Putin was very clear about a path to deescalation: He called 
on the West to halt NATO expansion, negotiate Ukrainian neutrality in 
the East/West rivalry, remove US nuclear weapons from non proliferating 
countries, and remove missiles, troops and bases near Russia. These are 
demands the US would surely have made were it in Russia's position.
Unfortunately, the US refused to negotiate on Russia's core concerns. 
The US offered some serious steps towards a larger arms control 
arrangement (Antiwar.com, 2/2/22)—something the Russians acknowledged 
and appreciated—but ignored issues of NATO's military activity in 
Ukraine, and the deployment of nuclear weapons in Eastern Europe 
(Antiwar.com, 2/17/22).
On NATO expansion, the State Department continued to insist that they 
would not compromise NATO's open door policy—in other words, it asserted 
the right to expand NATO and to ignore Russia's red line.
While the US has signaled that it would approve of an informal agreement 
to keep Ukraine from joining the alliance for a period of time, this 
clearly was not going to be enough for Russia, which still remembers the 
last broken agreement.
Instead of addressing Russian concerns about Ukraine's NATO 
relationship, the US instead chose to pour hundreds of millions of 
dollars of weapons into Ukraine, exacerbating Putin's expressed 
concerns. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy didn't help matters by 
suggesting that Ukraine might begin a nuclear weapons program at the 
height of the tensions.
After Putin announced his recognition of the breakaway republics, 
Secretary of State Antony Blinken canceled talks with Putin, and began 
the process of implementing sanctions on Russia—all before Russian 
soldiers had set foot into Ukraine.
Had the US been genuinely interested in avoiding war, it would have 
taken every opportunity to de-escalate the situation. Instead, it did 
the opposite nearly every step of the way.
In its explainer piece, the Washington Post (2/28/22) downplayed the 
significance of the US's rejection of Russia's core concerns, writing: 
"Russia has said that it wants guarantees Ukraine will be barred from 
joining NATO—a non-starter for the Western alliance, which maintains an 
open-door policy." NATO's open door policy is simply accepted as an 
immutable policy that Putin just needs to deal with. This very 
assumption, so key to the Ukraine crisis, goes unchallenged in the US 
media ecosystem.
'The strategic case for risking war' WSJ: The Strategic Case for Risking 
War in Ukraine
John Deni (Wall Street Journal, 12/22/21): "There are good strategic 
reasons for the West to stake out a hard-line approach, giving little 
ground to Moscow."
It's impossible to say for sure why the Biden administration took an 
approach that increased the likelihood of war, but one Wall Street 
Journal piece from last month may offer some insight.
The Journal (12/22/21) published an op-ed from John Deni, a researcher 
at the Atlantic Council, a think tank funded by the US and allied 
governments that serves as NATO's de facto brain trust. The piece was 
provocatively headlined "The Strategic Case for Risking War in
Ukraine." 
Deni's argument was that the West should refuse to negotiate with 
Russia, because either potential outcome would be beneficial to US 
interests.
If Putin backed down without a deal, it would be a major embarrassment. 
He would lose face and stature, domestically and on the world stage.
But Putin going to war would also be good for the US, the Journal op-ed 
argued. Firstly,  it would give NATO more legitimacy by "forg[ing] an
even stronger anti-Russian consensus across Europe." Secondly, a major 
attack would trigger "another round of more debilitating economic 
sanctions," weakening the Russian economy and its ability to compete 
with the US for global influence. Thirdly, an invasion is "likely to 
spawn a guerrilla war" that would "sap the strength and morale of 
Russia's military while undercutting Mr. Putin's domestic popularity and 
reducing Russia's soft power globally."
In short, we have part of the NATO brain trust advocating risking 
Ukrainian civilians as pawns in the US's quest to strengthen its 
position around the world.
'Something even worse than war'
NYT: Europe Thinks Putin Is Planning Something Even Worse Than War
What would be worse than thousands of Ukrainians dying? According to 
this New York Times op-ed (2/3/22), "a new European security 
architecture that recognizes Russia's sphere of influence in the 
post-Soviet space."
A New York Times op-ed (2/3/22) by Ivan Krastev of Vienna's Institute of 
Human Sciences likewise suggested that a Russian invasion of Ukraine 
wouldn't be the worst outcome:
A Russian incursion into Ukraine could, in a perverse way, save the 
current European order. NATO would have no choice but to respond 
assertively, bringing in stiff sanctions and acting in decisive unity. 
By hardening the conflict, Mr. Putin could cohere his opponents.
The op-ed was headlined "Europe Thinks Putin Is Planning Something Even 
Worse Than War"—that something being "a new European security 
architecture that recognizes Russia's sphere of influence in the 
post-Soviet space."
It is impossible to know for sure whether the Biden administration 
shared this sense that there would be an upside to a Russian invasion, 
but the incentives are clear, and much of what these op-eds predicted is 
coming to pass.
None of this is to say that Putin's invasion is justified—FAIR 
resolutely condemns the invasion as illegal and ruinous—but calling it 
"unprovoked" distracts attention from the US's own contribution to
this 
disastrous outcome. The US ignored warnings from both Russian and US 
officials that a major conflagration could erupt if the US continued its 
path, and it shouldn't be surprising that one eventually did.
Now, as the world once again inches toward the brink of nuclear 
omnicide, it is more important than ever for Western audiences to 
understand and challenge their own government's role in dragging us all 
to this point.
(3) Ukraine was becoming a de facto member of NATO; that's the cause of 
the war
The Economist is solidly anti-Putin; this article is a rare exception - 
Peter M.
https://www.economist.com/by-invitation/2022/03/11/john-mearsheimer-on-why-the-west-is-principally-responsible-for-the-ukrainian-crisis
By Invitation | Russia and Ukraine
John Mearsheimer on why the West is principally responsible for the 
Ukrainian crisis
The political scientist believes the reckless expansion of NATO provoked 
Russia
Mar 19th 2022
THE WAR in Ukraine is the most dangerous international conflict since 
the 1962 Cuban missile crisis. Understanding its root causes is 
essential if we are to prevent it from getting worse and, instead, to 
find a way to bring it to a close.
There is no question that Vladimir Putin started the war and is 
responsible for how it is being waged. But why he did so is another 
matter. The mainstream view in the West is that he is an irrational, 
out-of-touch aggressor bent on creating a greater Russia in the mould of 
the former Soviet Union. Thus, he alone bears full responsibility for 
the Ukraine crisis.
But that story is wrong. The West, and especially America, is 
principally responsible for the crisis which began in February 2014. It 
has now turned into a war that not only threatens to destroy Ukraine, 
but also has the potential to escalate into a nuclear war between Russia 
and NATO.
The trouble over Ukraine actually started at NATO's Bucharest summit in 
April 2008, when George W. Bush's administration pushed the alliance to 
announce that Ukraine and Georgia "will become members". Russian
leaders 
responded immediately with outrage, characterising this decision as an 
existential threat to Russia and vowing to thwart it. According to a 
respected Russian journalist, Mr Putin "flew into a rage" and warned 
that "if Ukraine joins NATO, it will do so without Crimea and the 
eastern regions. It will simply fall apart." America ignored Moscow's 
red line, however, and pushed forward to make Ukraine a Western bulwark 
on Russia's border. That strategy included two other elements: bringing 
Ukraine closer to the eu and making it a pro-American democracy.
These efforts eventually sparked hostilities in February 2014, after an 
uprising (which was supported by America) caused Ukraine's pro-Russian 
president, Viktor Yanukovych, to flee the country. In response, Russia 
took Crimea from Ukraine and helped fuel a civil war that broke out in 
the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine.
The next major confrontation came in December 2021 and led directly to 
the current war. The main cause was that Ukraine was becoming a de facto 
member of NATO. The process started in December 2017, when the Trump 
administration decided to sell Kyiv "defensive weapons". What counts
as 
"defensive" is hardly clear-cut, however, and these weapons certainly
looked offensive to Moscow and its allies in the Donbas region. Other 
NATO countries got in on the act, shipping weapons to Ukraine, training 
its armed forces and allowing it to participate in joint air and naval 
exercises. In July 2021, Ukraine and America co-hosted a major naval 
exercise in the Black Sea region involving navies from 32 countries. 
Operation Sea Breeze almost provoked Russia to fire at a British naval 
destroyer that deliberately entered what Russia considers its 
territorial waters.
The links between Ukraine and America continued growing under the Biden 
administration. This commitment is reflected throughout an important 
document—the "us-Ukraine Charter on Strategic Partnership"—that was 
signed in November by Antony Blinken, America's secretary of state, and 
Dmytro Kuleba, his Ukrainian counterpart. The aim was to "underscore … a 
commitment to Ukraine's implementation of the deep and comprehensive 
reforms necessary for full integration into European and Euro-Atlantic 
institutions." The document explicitly builds on "the commitments
made 
to strengthen the Ukraine-u.s. strategic partnership by Presidents 
Zelensky and Biden," and also emphasises that the two countries will be 
guided by the "2008 Bucharest Summit Declaration."
Unsurprisingly, Moscow found this evolving situation intolerable and 
began mobilising its army on Ukraine's border last spring to signal its 
resolve to Washington. But it had no effect, as the Biden administration 
continued to move closer to Ukraine. This led Russia to precipitate a 
full-blown diplomatic stand-off in December. As Sergey Lavrov, Russia's 
foreign minister, put it: "We reached our boiling point." Russia 
demanded a written guarantee that Ukraine would never become a part of 
NATO and that the alliance remove the military assets it had deployed in 
eastern Europe since 1997. The subsequent negotiations failed, as Mr 
Blinken made clear: "There is no change. There will be no change." A 
month later Mr Putin launched an invasion of Ukraine to eliminate the 
threat he saw from NATO.
This interpretation of events is at odds with the prevailing mantra in 
the West, which portrays NATO expansion as irrelevant to the Ukraine 
crisis, blaming instead Mr Putin's expansionist goals. According to a 
recent NATO document sent to Russian leaders, "NATO is a defensive 
Alliance and poses no threat to Russia." The available evidence 
contradicts these claims. For starters, the issue at hand is not what 
Western leaders say NATO's purpose or intentions are; it is how Moscow 
sees NATO's actions.
Mr Putin surely knows that the costs of conquering and occupying large 
amounts of territory in eastern Europe would be prohibitive for Russia. 
As he once put it, "Whoever does not miss the Soviet Union has no heart. 
Whoever wants it back has no brain." His beliefs about the tight bonds 
between Russia and Ukraine notwithstanding, trying to take back all of 
Ukraine would be like trying to swallow a porcupine. Furthermore, 
Russian policymakers—including Mr Putin—have said hardly anything about 
conquering new territory to recreate the Soviet Union or build a greater 
Russia. Rather, since the 2008 Bucharest summit Russian leaders have 
repeatedly said that they view Ukraine joining NATO as an existential 
threat that must be prevented. As Mr Lavrov noted in January, "the key 
to everything is the guarantee that NATO will not expand eastward."
Tellingly, Western leaders rarely described Russia as a military threat 
to Europe before 2014. As America's former ambassador to Moscow Michael 
McFaul notes, Mr Putin's seizure of Crimea was not planned for long; it 
was an impulsive move in response to the coup that overthrew Ukraine's 
pro-Russian leader. In fact, until then, NATO expansion was aimed at 
turning all of Europe into a giant zone of peace, not containing a 
dangerous Russia. Once the crisis started, however, American and 
European policymakers could not admit they had provoked it by trying to 
integrate Ukraine into the West. They declared the real source of the 
problem was Russia's revanchism and its desire to dominate if not 
conquer Ukraine.
My story about the conflict's causes should not be controversial, given 
that many prominent American foreign-policy experts have warned against 
NATO expansion since the late 1990s. America's secretary of defence at 
the time of the Bucharest summit, Robert Gates, recognised that "trying 
to bring Georgia and Ukraine into NATO was truly overreaching". Indeed, 
at that summit, both the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, and the 
French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, were opposed to moving forward on 
NATO membership for Ukraine because they feared it would infuriate Russia.
The upshot of my interpretation is that we are in an extremely dangerous 
situation, and Western policy is exacerbating these risks. For Russia's 
leaders, what happens in Ukraine has little to do with their imperial 
ambitions being thwarted; it is about dealing with what they regard as a 
direct threat to Russia's future. Mr Putin may have misjudged Russia's 
military capabilities, the effectiveness of the Ukrainian resistance and 
the scope and speed of the Western response, but one should never 
underestimate how ruthless great powers can be when they believe they 
are in dire straits. America and its allies, however, are doubling down, 
hoping to inflict a humiliating defeat on Mr Putin and to maybe even 
trigger his removal. They are increasing aid to Ukraine while using 
economic sanctions to inflict massive punishment on Russia, a step that 
Putin now sees as "akin to a declaration of war".
America and its allies may be able to prevent a Russian victory in 
Ukraine, but the country will be gravely damaged, if not dismembered. 
Moreover, there is a serious threat of escalation beyond Ukraine, not to 
mention the danger of nuclear war. If the West not only thwarts Moscow 
on Ukraine's battlefields, but also does serious, lasting damage to 
Russia's economy, it is in effect pushing a great power to the brink. Mr 
Putin might then turn to nuclear weapons.
At this point it is impossible to know the terms on which this conflict 
will be settled. But, if we do not understand its deep cause, we will be 
unable to end it before Ukraine is wrecked and NATO ends up in a war 
with Russia.
John J. Mearsheimer is the R. Wendell Harrison Distinguished Service 
Professor of Political Science at the University of Chicago.
(4) CFR Senior Fellow denounces Neocon "Idealism", calls for return
to 
Realism
https://afroworldnews.com/putins-war-in-ukraine-is-a-watershed-time-for-america-to-get-real/
Putin's War in Ukraine Is a Watershed. Time for America to Get Real.
By Charles A. Kupchan
Mr. Kupchan Is A Professor Of International Affairs At Georgetown 
University And A Senior Fellow At The Council On Foreign Relations. 
April 11, 2022
During his recent speech in Warsaw, President Biden said that Vladimir 
Putin "cannot remain in power," only to clarify a few days later that
he 
was merely expressing outrage, not announcing a new U.S. policy aimed at 
toppling Russia's leader. The episode, interpreted by many as a 
dangerous gaffe, underscored the tension in U.S. foreign policy between 
idealism and realism.
Mr. Putin's invasion of Ukraine should provoke moral outrage in all of 
us, and, at least in principle, it warrants his removal from office. But 
Mr. Putin could well remain the leader of a major power into the next 
decade, and Washington will need to deal with him.
This friction between lofty goals and realpolitik is nothing new. The 
United States has since the founding era been an idealist power 
operating in a realist world — and has on balance succeeded in bending 
the arc of history toward justice. But geopolitical exigency at times 
takes precedence over ideals, with America playing power politics when 
it needs to.
During the Cold War, Washington promoted stability by tolerating a 
Soviet sphere of influence and cozying up to unsavory regimes willing to 
fight Communism. In contrast, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, 
America operated under conditions of geopolitical slack; great-power 
rivalry was muted, enabling Washington to put front and center its 
effort to promote democracy and expand a liberal, rules-based 
international order.
What, then, is the path forward? The war in Ukraine now confronts the 
United States with the need to tilt back toward the practice of 
realpolitik. Washington's commitment to keeping NATO's doors open to 
Ukraine was a laudable and principled stand against an autocratic 
Russia. Yet America's idealist cause has run headlong into Russian 
tanks; Washington's effort to do right by Ukraine has culminated in 
Russia's ruthless effort to put the country back under Moscow's sway.
Mr. Putin has just sent history into reverse. The United States should 
seek to foil and punish Moscow's aggression, but Washington also needs 
to be pragmatic to navigate a world that, even if more unruly, is also 
irreversibly interdependent.
The Gap Between Means and Ends
Russia's invasion of Ukraine has exposed a gap between America's 
ideological aspirations and geopolitical realities that has been 
widening since the 1990s. During the heady decade after the end of the 
Cold War, Washington was confident that the triumph of American power 
and purpose cleared the way for the spread of democracy. A primary 
instrument for doing so was the enlargement of NATO.
But from early on, the American foreign policy establishment allowed 
principle to obscure the geopolitical downsides of NATO enlargement. 
Yes, NATO membership should be open to all countries that qualify, and 
all nations should be able to exercise their sovereign right to choose 
their alignments as they see fit. But geography and geopolitics still 
matter; major powers, regardless of their ideological bent, don't like 
it when other major powers stray into their neighborhoods.
It's true that Moscow's dismay at the prospect of Ukraine's membership 
in NATO most likely is fed in part by nostalgia for the geopolitical 
heft of the Soviet days, Mr. Putin's paranoia about a "color
revolution" 
arising in Russia, and mystical delusions about unbreakable 
civilizational links between Russia and Ukraine. But it is also true 
that the West erred in dismissing Russia's legitimate security concerns 
about NATO setting up shop on the other side of its 1,000-mile-plus 
border with Ukraine.
All major powers desire strategic breathing room — which is precisely 
why Russia has objected to NATO's eastern expansion since the end of the 
Cold War. NATO may be a defensive alliance, but it brings to bear 
aggregate military power that Russia understandably does not want parked 
near its territory.
Indeed, Moscow's objections to NATO membership for Ukraine are very much 
in line with America's own statecraft, which has long sought to keep 
other major powers away from its borders.
The United States spent much of the 19th century ushering Britain, 
France, Russia and Spain out of the Western Hemisphere. Thereafter, 
Washington regularly turned to military intervention to hold sway in the 
Americas. The exercise of hemispheric hegemony continued during the Cold 
War, with the United States determined to box the Soviet Union and its 
ideological sympathizers out of Latin America. When Moscow deployed 
missiles to Cuba in 1962, the United States issued an ultimatum that 
brought the superpowers to the brink of war.
After Russia recently hinted that it might again deploy its military to 
Latin America, the State Department spokesman, Ned Price, responded, "If 
we do see any movement in that direction, we will respond swiftly and 
decisively." Given its own track record, Washington should have given 
greater credence to Moscow's objections to bringing Ukraine into NATO.
NATO's open door policy has meanwhile encouraged countries in Europe's 
east to lean too far over their strategic skis. While the allure of 
joining the alliance has encouraged aspirants to carry out the 
democratic reforms needed to qualify for entry, the open door has also 
prompted prospective members to engage in excessively risky behavior.
Not long after NATO in 2008 pledged that Georgia and Ukraine "will 
become members of NATO," Georgia's president, Mikheil Saakashvili, 
launched an offensive against pro-Russian separatists in South Ossetia 
with whom the country had been sporadically fighting for years. Russia 
promptly carved up Georgia, grabbing control of South Ossetia and 
Abkhazia. Mr. Saakashvili thought the West had his back, but he 
miscalculated and overreached.
In a similar fashion, NATO encouraged Ukraine to beat a path toward the 
alliance. The 2014 Maidan Revolution toppled a pro-Moscow regime and put 
Ukraine on a westward course, resulting in Russia's intervention in 
Crimea and Donbas. NATO's open-door then beckoned, prompting Ukrainians 
in 2019 to enshrine their NATO aspirations in the Constitution.
Now Russia has again invaded the country to block its westward path. 
Given its unenviable proximity to Russia, Ukraine would have been better 
off playing it safe, quietly building a stable democracy while sticking 
with the neutral status that it embraced when it exited the Soviet 
Union. Indeed, Ukraine's potential return to neutrality figures 
prominently in the talks between Kyiv and Moscow to end the war.
NATO has wisely avoided direct involvement in the fighting in Ukraine in 
order to avert war with Russia. But NATO's unwillingness to protect 
Ukraine has exposed a troubling disconnect between the organization's 
stated goal of making the country a member and its judgment that 
defending Ukraine is not worth the cost.
In effect, the United States and its allies, even as they impose severe 
sanctions on Russia and send arms to Ukraine, are revealing that they do 
not deem the defense of the country to be a vital interest. But if that 
is the case, then why have NATO members wanted to extend to Ukraine a 
security guarantee that would obligate them to go to war in its defense?
NATO should extend security guarantees to countries that are of 
intrinsic strategic importance to the United States and its allies, but 
it should not make countries strategically important by extending them 
security guarantees. In a world that is rapidly reverting to the 
Hobbesian logic of power politics, when adversaries may regularly test 
U.S. commitments, NATO cannot afford to be profligate in handing out 
such guarantees. Strategic prudence requires distinguishing vital 
interests from lesser ones and conducting statecraft accordingly.
Beginning the World All Over Again
Americans have long understood the purpose of their power to be not only 
security but also the spread of liberty at home and abroad. As Thomas 
Paine wrote in 1776, "We have it in our power to begin the world all 
over again."
Paine was surely engaging in hyperbole. But successive generations of 
Americans have taken the nation's exceptionalist calling to heart, with 
quite impressive results. Through the power of its example as well as 
its many exertions abroad — including World War I, World War II and the 
Cold War — the United States has succeeded in expanding the footprint of 
liberal democracy.
But the ideological aspirations of the United States have at times 
fueled overreach, producing outcomes at odds with the nation's idealist 
ambitions. The founding generation was determined to build an extended 
republic that would stretch to the Pacific Coast. The exalted banner of 
Manifest Destiny provided ideological justification for the nation's 
westward expansion — but also moral cover for trampling on Native 
Americans and launching a war of choice against Mexico that led to U.S. 
annexation of roughly half of Mexico's territory.
President William McKinley in 1898 embarked on a war to expel colonial 
Spain from Cuba, insisting that Americans had to act "in the cause of 
humanity." Yet victory in the Spanish-American War turned the United 
States itself into an imperial power as it asserted control over Spanish 
possessions in the Caribbean and Pacific, including the Philippines. The 
resulting Filipino insurgency led to the deaths of some 4,000 U.S. 
troops and more than 200,000 Filipino fighters and civilians.
As he prepared the country for entry into World War I, President Woodrow 
Wilson declared before Congress that "the world must be made safe for 
democracy." After U.S. forces helped bring the war to a close, he played 
a leading role in negotiations over the League of Nations, a global body 
that was to preserve peace through collective action, dispute resolution 
and disarmament. But such idealist ambitions proved too much even for 
Americans. The Senate shot down U.S. membership in the League; Wilson's 
ideological overreach cleared the way for the stubborn isolationism of 
the interwar era.
"The Iraqi people are deserving and capable of human liberty,"
President 
George W. Bush proclaimed just before launching the invasion of Iraq in 
2003. But the war resulted in far more bloodshed and chaos than liberty. 
Likewise, two decades of exhaustive U.S. efforts to bring stability and 
democracy to Afghanistan fell far short, with the American withdrawal 
last summer giving way to Taliban rule and a humanitarian nightmare. 
Across these historical episodes, noble ambitions became divorced from 
strategic realities, yielding dreadful results.
Getting Real
NATO meant well in opening its doors to Ukraine, yet good intentions 
have again stumbled on geopolitical realities. To be sure, Mr. Putin had 
the opportunity to settle his objections to Ukraine's membership in NATO 
at the negotiating table. Last June, President Biden admitted that 
whether Ukraine joins the alliance "remains to be seen"; more
recently, 
President Emmanuel Macron of France floated the idea of
"Finlandization" 
for Ukraine — effective neutrality — and proposals for a formal 
moratorium on further enlargement circulated. Mr. Putin could have 
picked up these leads, but he instead opted for war — and now owns the 
resulting death and destruction.
Russia's relationship with the West is fast heading toward militarized 
rivalry. In light of the tight strategic partnership that has emerged 
between Moscow and Beijing — and China's own geopolitical ambitions — 
the next Cold War may well pit the West against a Sino-Russian bloc 
stretching from the Western Pacific to Eastern Europe.
The return of a two-bloc world that plays by the rules of realpolitik 
means that Washington will need to dial back its efforts to expand the 
liberal order, instead of returning to a strategy of patient containment 
aimed at preserving geopolitical stability and avoiding great-power war. 
A new strategic conservatism will require avoiding the further extension 
of defense commitments into geographic areas that Russia and China 
consider their rimlands.
Instead, the United States should seek stable balances of power in the 
European and Asia-Pacific theaters. Washington will need to strengthen 
its forward presence in both theaters, requiring higher and smarter 
military spending and the strict avoidance of demanding wars of choice 
and nation-building adventures in the Middle East or other peripheral 
regions.
At the same time, taming an interdependent world will require working 
across ideological lines. Washington should ease off on the promotion of 
democracy and human rights abroad and the Biden administration should 
refrain from its tendency to articulate a geopolitical vision that too 
neatly divides the world into democracies and autocracies. Strategic and 
economic expedience will at times push the United States to partner with 
repressive regimes; moderating oil prices, for example, may require 
collaboration with Iran, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela.
Even though the United States will continue teaming up with its 
traditional democratic allies in Europe and Asia, many of the world's 
democracies will avoid taking sides in a new era of East-West rivalry. 
Indeed, Brazil, India, Israel, South Africa and other democracies have 
been sitting on the fence when it comes to responding to Russia's 
invasion of Ukraine.
Russia clearly poses the most immediate threat to geopolitical stability 
in Eurasia, but China, because of its emergence as a true competitor of 
the United States, still poses the greater geopolitical challenge in the 
longer term. Now that Russia and China are regularly teaming up, they 
could together constitute an opposing bloc far more formidable than its 
Soviet forebear. Accordingly, the United States should exploit 
opportunities to put distance between Moscow and Beijing, following the 
lead of the quintessential realists Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger, 
who in the 1970s weakened the Communist bloc by driving a wedge between 
China and the Soviet Union.
The United States should play both sides. Russia's invasion of Ukraine 
marks a fundamental breach with the Atlantic democracies, yet the West 
cannot afford to completely turn its back on Russia; too much is at 
stake. As during the Cold War, Washington will need a hybrid strategy of 
containment and engagement. Russia should remain in the penalty box for 
now, with the United States pushing back against the Kremlin's 
territorial expansionism and other aggressive behavior by reinforcing 
NATO's eastern flank and maintaining harsh economic sanctions.
But Washington should also remain on the lookout for opportunities to 
engage with Moscow. Its invasion of Ukraine has just made Russia an 
economic and strategic dependent of China; Mr. Putin will not relish 
being Xi Jinping's sidekick. The United States should exploit the 
Kremlin's discomfort with becoming China's junior partner by signaling 
that Russia has a Western option.
Assuming an eventual peace settlement in Ukraine that permits the 
scaling back of sanctions, the Western democracies should remain open to 
cautious and selective cooperation with Moscow. Areas of potential 
collaboration include furthering nuclear and conventional arms control, 
sharing best practices and technologies on alternatives to fossil fuels, 
and jointly developing rules of the road to govern military and economic 
activity in the Arctic.
Russia needs China more than China needs Russia, so Washington should 
also seek to pull Beijing away from Moscow. Beijing's ambiguous response 
to the invasion of Ukraine suggests at least a measure of discomfort 
with the economic and geopolitical disruption that has been produced by 
Russian recklessness. Yet Beijing continues to benefit from Russian 
energy and strategic cooperation and from the fact that Mr. Putin is 
forcing the United States to focus on Europe, thereby stalling the U.S. 
"pivot to Asia." Nonetheless, Washington should keep an eye out for 
opportunities to work with Beijing in areas of common interest — trade, 
climate change, North Korea, digital governance, public health — to 
improve relations, tackle global problems and potentially weaken the 
bond between China and Russia.
(5) Neocons saw Ukraine as a trap to lure Putin into war; he warns US to 
back off
https://www.indianpunchline.com/putin-warns-the-us-to-back-off-in-ukraine/
APRIL 27, 2022 BY M. K. BHADRAKUMAR
Putin warns the US to back off in Ukraine
The Western narrative of the two-month old war in Ukraine imbued with 
the rhetoric of "democracy versus autocracy," has dramatically changed
with the assertion by the US Secretary of Defence Lloyd Austin at a news 
conference in Poland Monday following his and Secretary of State Antony 
Blinken's trip to Kiev, that Washington wants to "to see Russia
weakened."
David Sanger at the New York Times noted that Austin was "acknowledging 
a transformation of the conflict, from a battle over control of Ukraine 
to one that pits Washington more directly against Moscow." But this is 
not really a transformation. Sanger's colleague at the Washington Post, 
David Ignatius, had written over three months ago that the Biden 
Administration was working on a road map to get Russia blogged down in 
Ukraine and attrition it in a way that it becomes a much diminished 
power on the world stage.
For the Kremlin, most certainly, Austin's remark would not have come as 
surprise. As recently as on Monday, President Vladimir Putin repeated at 
a meeting in the Kremlin that the US and its allies have sought to 
"split Russian society and destroy Russia from within." Putin
revisited 
the topic again on Wednesday pointing out that "the forces that have 
been historically pursuing a policy aimed at containing Russia just 
don't need such an independent and large country, even enormously large, 
in their view. They believe that its very existence poses a threat to 
them."
In fact, several perceptive Western observers had estimated that the 
Kremlin has effectively fallen into a trap laid by the US that is 
intended to bring down Putin's regime. Come to think of it, that famous 
gaffe on 26 March wasn't a gaffe after all, when President Biden, 
speaking in Warsaw, had blurted out the impromptu, unscripted remark: 
"For God's sake, this man (Putin) cannot remain in power."
All the same, Austin's remark signifies that a dramatic change is taking 
place in the geopolitical situation, which could have positive or 
negative results. On Monday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov 
warned the West that staying involved in the Russia-Ukraine war posed 
"serious" and "real" risks of a World War III and "we
must not 
underestimate it."
To be sure, the conflict is slowly but steadily turning into a new 
phase. Foreign fighters and soldiers from NATO regular units are 
increasingly beefing up the depleted Ukrainian army's front lines.
That said, the optics also need to be understood. Austin's war cry comes 
soon after Mariupol fell to the Russian forces. A couple of thousands 
Ukrainian nationalists and a few hundred military personnel from NATO 
countries are trapped in an underground labyrinth at the Azovstal 
complex in the city, which Russian forces have sealed off. It has been a 
severe blow to the US' prestige.
The Russian special operation is on track — "grinding" the Ukrainian 
forces to the ground, to borrow the graphic expression from UK prime 
minister Boris Johnson. On Monday, Russian high-precision missiles hit 
at least six railway substations in Western Ukraine destroying railway 
facilities in Krasnoe, Zdolbunov, Zhmerinka, Berdichev, Kovel, Korosten, 
which were meant to be key transshipment points for the supply of 
Western weaponry to the Ukrainian forces in the Donbas region. Rail 
communication in several western regions of Ukraine is effectively blocked.
Reports from the east show that Ukrainian forces are suffering heavy 
losses. Russian forces have taken the city of Kremennaya and are 
approaching the town of Lyman, which would give them control of a direct 
road to Slavyansk from the east.
Austin's hyped up rhetoric notwithstanding, Ukraine is not only not 
showing any signs of winning but keeps bleeding, and the territory under 
the actual control of the Ukrainian government is steadily shrinking. 
The US officials admit that Pentagon lacks the ability to track the 
weapons that are going in. Yet, the Biden administration has so far 
spent around $4 billion on Ukraine. Therein hangs a tale. Who are the 
real beneficiaries of the US supplies? The level of corruption in 
Ukraine is a legion.
The plain truth is that it will be many weeks or months before 
meaningful volumes of heavy weapons could be delivered to Ukrainian 
combat units but in the meanwhile, the Battle of Donbass will be fought 
almost entirely on the basis of the current strength on the ground. In a 
<https://www.19fortyfive.com/2022/04/can-western-tanks-artillery-and-missiles-save-ukraine-dont-count-on-it/>
detailed analysis this week, a former colonel in the US Army and 
prolific media commentator Daniel Davis concluded: "It will take too 
long for Western governments to come up with a coherent equipping plan 
and then prepare, ship, and deliver the kit to its destination in a 
timeframe that could provide Kyiv's troops the ability to tip the 
balance against Russia."
The bottom line is this: The Biden Administration's geopolitical agenda 
is to prolong the military conflict, which apart from weakening Russia 
militarily and diplomatically, turns Europe into a battlefield and makes 
the continent heavily dependent on the US leadership for a very long 
time to come. For Biden, the war provides a useful distraction in US 
politics in an election year.
Austin hosted a conference of the US' allies on Monday at the American 
base in Germany to 
<https://www.defensenews.com/global/europe/2022/04/26/us-allies-to-meet-monthly-on-ukraine-defense-needs/>
form a monthly contact group on Ukraine's self defence to coordinate the 
"efforts to strengthen Ukraine's military for the long haul." It has
the 
ominous look of a "coalition of the willing." 
<https://www.defensenews.com/global/europe/2022/04/26/us-allies-to-meet-monthly-on-ukraine-defense-needs/>
Even Israel was recruited. But the US is underestimating the steely 
Russian resolve to fully realise the objectives behind the special 
operation in Ukraine. Moscow will not brook any roadblocks, no matter 
what it takes.
<https://tass.com/politics/1444327
Putin issued a stern warning today: 
"If someone from outside moves to interfere in the current developments, 
they should know that they will indeed create strategic threats to 
Russia, which are unacceptable to us, and they should know that our 
response to encounter assaults will be instant, it will be quick."
He was explicit that Russia has military capabilities that the US cannot 
match. "We have all the tools to do it, the tools that others can't 
boast of at the moment, but as for us, we won't be boasting. We will use 
them if the need arises and I would like everyone to be aware of it. We 
have made all the necessary decisions in this regard," Putin warned.
(6) US recruits Israel against Russia
https://www.indianpunchline.com/us-recruits-israel-against-russia/
APRIL 25, 2022 BY M. K. BHADRAKUMAR
For more than one reason, the US President Joe Biden's call with Israeli 
Prime Minister Naftali Bennett on Sunday is hugely consequential. This 
has been Biden's second phone conversation with Bennett in four weeks. 
On March 30 Biden called to express his "deepest condolences"
following 
the terrorist attacks that killed 11 people in three Israeli cities.
This time around, his call coincided with the joint meeting of the US 
secretaries of state and defence with the Ukrainian president in Kiev on 
Sunday signifying that Washington is raising the ante in the conflict 
with Russia and marking a shift in the conflict, signalling readiness to 
wade deeper into the conflict after initial qualms.
The US and NATO allies are showing readiness to supply heavier equipment 
and more advanced weapons systems to Ukraine. After the trip to Kiev, 
Defence Secretary Austin told journalists in Poland that Ukraine can win 
the war against Russia if it has the right equipment. "We believe that 
we can win, they can win if they have the right equipment, the right 
support," he said.
Officials in Kiev had earlier drawn up a list of weapons that they 
urgently needed from the US, which includes anti-missile and 
anti-aircraft systems. Ukraine is known to have sought advanced weaponry 
from Israel previously, including the famous "Iron Dome" anti-missile
system and the infamous Pegasus spyware for use against Russia. But 
Israel didn't want to stick out its neck for Ukraine due to fears of 
jeopardising its tacit deconfliction measures with Moscow during its 
operations against Iranian targets in Syria.
However, things changed dramatically in the past fortnight or so, as 
Israel gave up its neutrality toward Russia's special operation and 
accused Moscow of committing war crimes. Biden's conversation with 
Bennett took place as Russia-Israel relations began plummeting. 
Interestingly, the White House readout flagged a pointed reference by 
Biden to Israel's Iron Dome system.
Both the White House readout (here) and the statement from Bennett's 
office (here) mentioned the situation around Iran. It is entirely 
conceivable that the sudden unexplained shift in Israel's stance 
vis-a-vis Russia in the Ukraine conflict is prompted by some sort of 
modus vivendi with the Biden Administration regarding the lifting of 
sanctions against Iran.
Israel has been pulling out all stops to prevent the Biden 
administration from conceding the Iranian demand for the removal of the 
Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) from Washington's watchlist on 
terror groups. The Israeli statement not only mentioned that the IRGC 
issue was  discussed but quoted Bennett as saying, "I am sure that 
President Biden, who is a true friend of Israel and cares about its 
security, will not allow the IRGC to be removed from the list of 
terrorist organisations. Israel has clarified its position on the issue: 
The IRGC is the largest terrorist organisation in the world." Biden has 
accepted an invitation from Bennett to visit Israel "in the coming
months."
In the entire West Asian landscape, there is not a single country other 
than Israel that the US can count on today as an ally against Russia. 
Clearly, the security climate in West Asia will change phenomenally if 
the Biden Administration were to turn its back at this point on the 
negotiations relating to JCPOA. The White House readout highlighted that 
Biden and Bennett discussed "shared regional and global security 
challenges, including the threat posed by Iran and its proxies."
A powerful lobby in the Beltway, starting with none other than the 
Democratic Senator Bob Menendez, Chairman of the Senate Foreign 
Relations Committee, is opposed to any deal with Iran. These lobbyists 
argue that with Iran continuing to rapidly escalate its nuclear program 
and making clear that its ballistic missiles and regional policies are 
not negotiable, there is little left for the US to salvage out of the JCPOA.
Speaking at the US Senate Armed Services Committee, the Chairman of the 
US Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Mark Milley, said recently, "In my 
personal opinion I believe the IRGC Quds Force to be a terrorist 
organisation and I do not support them being delisted from the Foreign 
Terrorist Organisations list." ...
Viewed from another angle, now that Europe is not contemplating an oil 
/> gas embargo against Russia, Washington is no longer under pressure to 
lift the sanctions against Iran's energy exports. And at any rate, the 
US will be mindful of the possibility that Iran may provide a lifeline 
to Russia to beat Western sanctions.
Meanwhile, Biden administration's priority is also shifting away from 
economic sanctions against Russia to "finally breaking the back of 
Russia's ability to project power outside of Russia to threaten Georgia, 
to threaten Moldova, to threaten our Baltic allies" — to borrow the 
words of former US Army Europe Commander Ben Hodges from a recent interview.
Austin has called at short notice a meeting tomorrow at the American 
base in Germany with counterparts from allied countries to discuss the 
scope for vastly increased military supplies to Ukraine on a long-term 
basis. Biden's call to Bennett just prior to that meeting suggests that 
the US may have persuaded Israel to be an active participant in the war 
in Ukraine, which would "bleed" Russia "white."
What motivates Israel would be that the Biden administration is willing 
to accommodate Israeli concerns over a US-Iran nuclear deal. That 
explains Bennett's "confidence" that Biden will not concede Iran's 
demand to remove IRGC from the terror watchlist.
The bottom line is that Tehran is left with no other option now but to 
either accept a new deal or stick to its demands and pay for the 
consequences. The US estimates that Tehran, having come so close to the 
US lifting the sanctions, which will of course be a game changer for 
Iran's besieged economy, would think twice about walking away with empty 
hands.
Biden's call with Bennett messages to Tehran that the US is prepared to 
turn to other options if the negotiations fail in Vienna.
 
[Zoals inm het volgende blog bnlijkt hebben ze in de VS dit goed in hun oren geknoopt.
ReplyDeleteIemand als Putin kun je mooi uitlokken tot de 'aanval'.
En dan is het kinderpel als je de medioa 100% controleert om hem als de Grot eBoosdoener weg te zetten, waarna je de hele westerse wereld achter je hebt om hem en zijn land kapot te maken.
Putin bedoelde het als afschrikking.
Maar in hun 'game-theorie' wisten ze nu met zekerheid dat hij zou gaan binnen vallen. ]
Ze hebben alleen een paar dingen vergeten in hun 'game-theorie'. Ten eerste: Putin is ook geduldig en heeft het voordeel (gehad) van het kiezen van het moment van die aanval (niet de V.S.). Ten tweede: Putin heeft net zo lang gewacht met die aanval (tot verdriet en wanhoop (neem ik aan) van de mensen in de Donbass) tot zijn land sterk genoeg was (ook qua bondgenootschappen) om de V.S. niet alleen te weerstaan (economisch en militair) maar zelfs te verslaan. Ten derde: is de eerste klap nog altijd een daalder waard. En ten vierde: theorie en praktijk (kennis die iedere praktisch geschoolde heeft) komen niet altijd (zelfs vaak niet) overeen.
Van NOS TT:
ReplyDelete[Johan Derksen stopt per direct bij de
SBS-talkshow Vandaag Inside.Dat heeft
Talpa,de producent van het programma
laten weten.Ook presentator Wilfred
Genee en mede-analist René van der Gijp
willen niet verder.
Op het uitzendtijdstip van Vandaag
Inside is de komende tijd een ander
programma te zien.
Derksen lag deze week onder vuur omdat
hij een verhaal vertelde waarmee hij
impliceerde een kaars in een
bewusteloze vrouw te hebben gestopt.
Later zwakte hij dat af.Gisteren werden
excuses verwacht,maar die kwamen niet.
Derksen zei toen wel te stoppen. ]
Zullen we nu ophouden over Derksen? Die man is nooit een stuiver waard geweest, qua moraliteit.
Delete@JV: Ken je deze al? 't Is wel geschiedenis, maar toch. Polen is de laatste tijd weer in het nieuws als struikrover...
Ik heb gehoord dat er veel Duitsers werde vermoord in Polen, in de jaren kort voor de oorlog.
DeleteIk meen dat dit werd aangemoedigd door Roosevelt.
En dat het Hitler radeloos maakte. Hitler riep in 1938 en 1939: Ze lokken een oorlog uit !
De documenten die jij nu als link geeft, lijken dat te bevestigen.
Ik moet er eenkeer meer aandacht aan besteden.
Er zijn ook wreedheden begaan door de Polen nà WO2, en daarvan staan ook getuigen-verklaringen op dit artikel ( De hel van Lambsdorf)
Daarvan wist ik niks.
NB: Eigenlijk zien we un in Oekraine een exacte kopie van 1938:
Amerika stimuleert genocide op leden van het land dat ze kapot willen maken, En daqn wachten ze tot het slachtoffer-land aanvalt uit woede. En dan kunnenn ze de wereld voorliegen dat ze met een agressor te maken hebben en zelf het slachtoffer uithangen.
[Eigenlijk zien we un in Oekraine een exacte kopie van 1938]
DeleteKlopt. Daarom linkte ik die ook. Het is iedere keer dezelfde truc en daarom snap ik niet, dat 'de mensen' er iedere keer weer intrappen.
Verder is de RF goed bezig met waarschuwingen over false flags, die worden uitgebroed door de UFA. Door daar veel aandacht aan te geven, worden mensen gewaarschuwd erop te letten. Daarom is het onderwerp de laatste weken een beetje uit het zicht verdwenen, al blijft de dreiging wel aanwezig.
[Het is iedere keer dezelfde truc en daarom snap ik niet, dat 'de mensen' er iedere keer weer intrappen.]
DeleteOmdat 'de mensen' die kennis gewoon niet hebben. De informatiecontrole was totaal tot de opkomst van internet. Om die kennis te verkrijgen, moest je veel meer moeite doen dan de afgelopen 2 decennia. Je moest naar de bibliotheek, de juiste boeken vinden, de juiste mensen tegenkomen. Internet maakte (nu niet meer) dit stukken gemakkelijker.
@SDR: [de afgelopen 2 decennia.]
DeleteHet proces van onderzoek vóór die tijd, was inderdaad moeilijk en heb ik ook gehad.
Maar nadien was het toch véél makkelijker met het Internet, toen maakte ik een behoorlijke inhaalslag.
Totdat men sedert 2015 ook dat ging censureren. Maar nog steeds kan je 'onwelgevallige' info vinden hoor, al gaat dat wel steeds moeilijker.
Extreemrechtse denkbeelden zélfs bij NPO' | NPO Radio 1
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/P1aBGyPT0Ms
Bertholee cs steunden de vernietiging van Irak en Libië op grond van leugen-argumenten. Nu steunen ze de agressie van het Westen tegen Rusland , in Oekraine. Het westen lokte die oorlog uit, door beloften van veiligheid ( not one inch en 'Minsk2') NIET uit te voeren. En nou zijn de mensne die dit alles wèl begrijpen de extremisten ! Het moet niet gekker worden. Ù bent de extremist, beste Bertholee, omdat U zich door de Neocon misleiding laat meevoeren brengt U een wereldoorlog dichterbij.
Bij Moon of Alabama word een interview gelinkt naar Michae;l Brenner.
ReplyDeleteDat wil ik wel gaan beluisteren. Deze professor tootn aan dat de VS de oorzaak van de oorlog is.
Helemaal onderaan dit artikel, de laatste twee links:
https://www.moonofalabama.org/2022/04/ukraine-doubling-down.html#more
Ik ben eens even in de tekst gedoken en kwam de volgende zin tegen in het eerste gedeelte:
ReplyDelete"Moreover, a NATO-Russia agreement preventing Ukraine from seeking membership would violate a 1975 Helsinki agreement on security and cooperation in Europe—signed by Moscow—which said European states have the right to belong to any international alliance they choose.
Daar heeft de RF even over heen gekeken, toen zij Oekraïne verboden om lid te worden van de navo.
Of hebben ze gedacht: Het LeugenImperium heeft zoveel verdragen éénzijdig opgezegd, dan kunnen wij het ook wel een keertje doen.
Of het verdrag is later gewijzigd/herroepen en hebben wij er geen weet van. Moeilijk, moeilijk, moeilijk.
Even nagedacht: in 1975 was de Oekraïne nog onderdeel van de RF/USSR. Dus met een kronkel kan je redeneren, dat dat verdrag niet voor de huidige Oekraïne geldt. De huidige staat is pas later ontstaan.
DeleteDe Helsinki akkoorden waren toch niet tussen de NAVO en Rusland? Daar waren een hele serie staten bij betrokken. Het is een 'agreement', de juridische status daarvan is niet bindend zoals bij een 'treaty'.
DeleteZie:
[The Helsinki Accords on Security and Cooperation (1975)], bron: https://alphahistory.com/coldwar/helsinki-accords-security-cooperation-1975/
This comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteMensen, het is weekend.
ReplyDeleteLaat de oorlog tot maandag liggen.
Nu: Roddel !
Wat hebben we... Derksen. Die is al weer oud nieuws.
Dan: Johnny Depp en Amber Heard !
Het zal Sofia geen plezier doen (maar mij wel) : die Amber zakt lelijk door het ijs !
Ze zou de helft van het geld dat ze zou krijgen ( schadevergoeding van Johnny wegens huiselijk geweld) aan een Goed Doel geven.
3,3 miljoen: 2 = 1,7 miljoen. Maar ze kregen dar maar 1,4 miljoen... en de helft was door Elon Musk betaald..
Dus Amber speelde mooi weer, maar gaf maar een schijntje .
Verder: Het blijkt dat ze helemaal niet geslagen is.
Ze zei: Ik hebde blauwe plekken met een heel speciaal middel gecamoufleerd.
Oei! Dat middel is pas recent op de markt gekomen, en was er nog niet in de tijd dat het speelde !
Er zijn getuigen die zeggen dat juist Johnny door haar werd mishandeld..
Hier Joe Rogan: 12 minten Leuk !
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4H66pDhczzw
[Het zal Sofia geen plezier doen (maar mij wel) : die Amber zakt lelijk door het ijs]
DeleteWat heb jij een rare kijk op mensen en specifiek blijkbaar op vrouwen. Ik volg die showbizz rotzooi helemaal niet. Verder ben ik niet zo'n vrouw die het opneemt voor vrouwen omdat ze vrouw zijn. Zo kijk ik helemaal niet naar de wereld. De wereld zit heel wat ingewikkelder in elkaar dan dat zwart/wit gedoe wat jij er blijkbaar op na houdt.
En waarom mogen we niet verder over Derksen maar moeten we het nu wel gaan hebben over showbizz gedoe aan de andere kant van de wereld? Leidt dat niet af van een mogelijke kernoorlog?
Sofia,
Deleteje bent altijd zo snel boos... daar wordt misbruik van gemaakt , dat zie je toch ! ( Door mij)
Wat moeten we nog over Derksen zeggen?
Ik zie het als een teken van opdrijven van de politieke Correctheid: het enige doel is dat straks het woord 'jood' of 'joden' toaal niet eens meer gedacht mag worden. Laat staan gebruikt. En al helemaal niet om duidelijk te maken dat dit de enige groep ter wereld is die
1) De ambitie heeft alle non jews te doden.
2) Zelfs de heilige plicht heeft om dat te doen
3) De mogelijkheden heeft om het te doen.
4) Dat je uit 1, 2 en 3 af kan leiden dat we in verzet moeten komen.
Kan allemaal niet meer gezegd worden . Dank zij Derksen ( en andere incidenten die gebruikt worden om de massa te informeren: "Dat kan echt niet meer gezegd of gedaan worden !"
Ik zie dit niet als showbizz gedoe. Dit is wel groter: een wereldster die door een vrouw volledig zwart werd gemaakt. Depp lag er helemaal uit. ( Contract voor Pirates verscheurd) En nou blijkt dat de rollen omgedraaid zijn. Lijkt wel op het Putin verhaal: de media brengen graag sensatie: ze maken je een Hitler of een Heilige.
[je bent altijd zo snel boos... daar wordt misbruik van gemaakt , dat zie je toch !]
DeleteIk ben helemaal niet boos, hoe kom je daar nu bij. Ik verbaas me alleen over jouw selectieve verontwaardiging.
[Ik zie het als een teken van opdrijven van de politieke Correctheid: het enige doel is dat straks het woord 'jood' of 'joden' toaal niet eens meer gedacht mag worden.]
Wel nee, als Derksen zijn mond had dicht gehouden, was er niets gebeurd. Die vrouw heeft blijkbaar nooit aangifte gedaan. Het gaat mij (net zoals Jensen blijkbaar) niet eens om het incident zelf maar om het stuitende hypocriete gedrag van Derksen. Jensen heeft er gister aandacht aan besteed in zijn uitzending, het hoe en waarom.
Dat stuitende hypocriete gedrag vertonen veel politici en mediamensen. Dat gedrag moet aan de kaak gesteld worden juist om die doorgeschoten politieke correctheid te doorbreken.
Een zeer goed blog van Jan Bonte over hypocriete mensen:
ReplyDelete[#Kutkaag], bron: https://janbhommel.nl/kutkaag/
Zeer de moeite van het lezen waard!
Kijk, dat vind ik al een beetje 'shownieuws' achtig. Maar ik moet het nog beluisteren, Ik spreek dus voor mijn beurt.
DeleteKaag heeft een elitair woordgebruik. Dat is een handicap, maar anderzijds: te veel aanpassen aan wat 'men' wil, vind ik ook hypocriet. ( Casus hier casus daar.... lachen! )
D66 is ànti D ( democraten). Ja, dat is erg.
Van Drimmelen is een enorme oetlul, En de zuivering had veel eerder moeten gebeuren. Ja, dat moet je ze zeker kwalijk nemen. Maar hij wierf alle fondsen. Bracht al het geld binnen.
Dit is alles wat ik opgevangen heb over Kaag.
Als ik tijd heb ga ik luisteren.
[Kijk, dat vind ik al een beetje 'shownieuws' achtig. Maar ik moet het nog beluisteren, Ik spreek dus voor mijn beurt. ]
DeleteJa, je spreekt inderdaad voor je beurt. Ten eerste moet je het LEZEN en ten tweede is het (indirect) een tirade tegen de politieke correctheid, het hypocriete gedrag van de 'boven ons gestelden'.
En als je dan toch bezig bent, doe deze er dan maar achteraan. Vooral het onderste stuk over 'nudging' goed tot je laten doordringen.
DeleteDát zie je niet bij shownieuws. (Ik denk, dat je weer te veel aan de wijn hebt zitten lurken. Dan moet je niet gaan internetten.)
Ik zit nu naar Jensen te kijken en ben bij het item 'Neurenberg'.
ReplyDeleteWil even in dat kader een trieste mededeling doen: Mijn schoonzus (bijna 66) heeft longkanker in de 4e fase. Ik wijt het aan de 'prikjes'. Ze heeft ze allemaal gehad. "Moest van de baas". (Min.van Justitie) Ik ben des duivels.
Haar man heeft darmkanker gehad + alle 'prikjes'. Leeft nog wel, maar als een kasplantje. Hun 4 kinderen zijn straks in een keer allebei hun ouders kwijt. Ik had voorspeld, dat zij eind 2022 niet zouden halen...
Mijn kind sms-te ons zo juist: Ik ben zoooooo blij, dat jullie die prikken niet hebben gehaald. Tranen in de ogen.