Military
Defeat as a Financial Collapse Trigger
By
Dmirty Orlov
September
19, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- ClubOrlov
- Back
in 2007 I wrote
Reinventing Collapse,
in which I compared the collapse of the USSR to the
forthcoming collapse of the USA. I wrote the
following:
“Let us
imagine that collapsing a modern military-industrial
superpower is like making soup: chop up some
ingredients, apply heat and stir. The ingredients I
like to put in my superpower collapse soup are: a
severe and chronic shortfall in the production of
crude oil (that magic addictive elixir of industrial
economies), a severe and worsening foreign trade
deficit, a runaway military budget and ballooning
foreign debt. The heat and agitation can be provided
most efficaciously by a humiliating military defeat
and widespread fear of looming catastrophe.” (p. 2)
A decade later these ingredients are all in place,
with a few minor quibbles. The shortfall of oil is
in the case of the US not the shortfall of physical
oil but of money: against the backdrop of terminal
decline of conventional oil in the US, the only
meaningful supply increase has come from fracking,
but it has been financially ruinous. Nobody has made
any money from selling fracked oil: it is too
expensive.
Meanwhile, the trade deficit has been setting new
records, defense spending has continued its upward
creep and the levels of debt are at this point
nothing short of stratospheric but continuing to
rise. Fear of catastrophe is supplied by hurricanes
that have just put significant parts of Texas and
Florida under water, unprecedented forest fires in
the West, ominous rumblings from the Yellowstone
supervolcano and the understanding that an entire
foamy mess of financial bubbles could pop at any
time. The one ingredient we are missing is a
humiliating military defeat.
Military defeats come in many shapes and sizes, and
having the enemy slaughter all of your troops is
just one of them. Equally palpable is the defeat of
being unable to prevail against a weaker and smaller
opponent. Accidentally inflicting damage on one’s
own forces can also be quite humiliating. And the
ultimate coup de grâce for a military empire is to
be unable to join the opponent in battle at all.
We now have samples of all of these. We have fast US
navy ships, equipped with all of the most modern
radar and navigation equipment, inexplicably
colliding with large, slow-moving cargo ships,
resulting in the death of sailors. We have the
example of Syria, where several years of concerted
effort to dismember the country and dislodge its
president have resulted in one disaster after
another. And now we have the example of North Korea,
which tests ballistic missiles and nuclear weapons
to everyone’s great consternation while the US holds
meaningless military exercises—meaningless because
it has absolutely no military cards to play that
wouldn’t result in the complete annihilation of the
very same ally the US has sworn to protect.
The North Korean impasse is likely to drag on for
some time, but the Syrian defeat is already very
close to complete, so let us look at it in detail,
because it provides a very interesting view into
what makes the US, at this point, so much less than
a military superpower. (Research credit for this
goes to Yevgeny Krutikov in particular, and to
others too numerous to mention here.) The Syrian
defeat is not the result of a single operation, but
an entire sequence of them, each resulting in what
can only described as an epic fail. The entire US
Syrian campaign can be described as a relentless
pursuit of failure. It illustrates many of the
features that make the US military machine worse
than useless. Once upon a time the purpose of
American military spending was to justify American
military spending; now it can’t even do that. Key
elements of this failure are:
• The complete inability to hold accountable those
who are responsible for failure, be they politicians
or military officers.
• The complete inability to learn from mistakes and
adjust strategies, doing things that have been
proven not to work over and over again.
• The complete inability to accept the truth of the
situation, instead preferring to inhabit a fictional
realm full of moderate terrorists, friendly tribal
leaders, rainbows and unicorns.
• The complete inability to resist corruption of
every sort, including fraudulent schemes that
include outright theft of government property.
The entire US military involvement started back in
the summer of 2014. At the time, there was some sort
of armed compound near Raqqa, swarming with bearded
jihadists that may or may not have been associated
with ISIS. They held quite a lot of hostages that
included Syrian soldiers as well as American and
British citizens who had somehow ended up in Syria.
After a lengthy analysis, the CIA decided that the
compound should be attacked and occupied and the
hostages released.
In early June, a few dozen special forces troops
were dropped off in the vicinity of the encampment.
After a three-hour battle (this already signals a
failure; operations to free hostages should last
minutes, not hours) the American troops killed five
of the terrorists and took control of a perfectly
empty building standing alone in the middle of the
desert. There were no hostages, no high-ranking
enemy types—nothing useful there. Later it turned
out that the hostages were transported out a day
before the start of the operation, giving rise to
all sorts of questions within the CIA concerning
possible leaks.
A few days later “Jihadi John” and his group of
three British Arabs calling themselves “the Beatles”
and acting under the pseudonyms John, Paul and Ringo
beheaded a bunch of people on camera. Among them
were the photographer James Foley, the journalist
Steven Sotloff, humanitarian mission worker David
Heins, British taxi driver Alan Henning (who worked
for the same humanitarian mission as Heins) and,
last but not least, Peter Kassig, a former member of
the US military but at the time also working for
some humanitarian mission with bases in Beirut and
in Turkey, but regularly finding himself inside
Syria—illegally and for unknown purposes.
Specifically, it was Kassig’s death that elicited a
curiously strong reaction from Barak Obama, who
declared that Kassig “was taken from us in an act of
pure evil by a terrorist group that the world
rightly associates with inhumanity.” This outburst
was widely taken to mean that Kassig worked for
either the CIA or US military intelligence. Notably,
he was the only one who, while in captivity,
converted to Islam and took an Islamic name.
Later, other strange facts began to surface. In
particular, it became known that “Jihadi John” had
negotiated with the US government and with the
family of James Foley, demanding either a 100 or,
for whatever strange reason, specifically 132
million dollars as ransom. The last communication
from him was a week before the unsuccessful
operation by US special forces, but the Americans
refused to pay. Pentagon’s official representative
Rear Admiral James Kirby blamed it all on the CIA.
Most notably, those responsible for this amazing
cock-up didn’t shoot themselves in the head like
they should have as a question of honor but
blissfully carried on with their illustrious
careers.
To be sure, there were soon other, even more epic
failures to behold. The US started up surveillance
flights over Syrian territory, carefully mapping out
the desert using first drones, then regular
aviation, still not having the foggiest notion of
what they were looking at. But apparently they saw
pictures of things that looked like they would make
nice targets, because in the fall of the same year
Obama announced his intention to start bombing ISIS
in Syria.
He also announced the start of a program to “train
and equip” Free Syrian Army with the goal of
overthrowing Bashar Assad. The CIA picked out
promising groups, gave them weapons, and then
watched as they joined either ISIS or Jabhat an-Nusra
en masse. As this went on, US officials continued to
refer to these eager new terrorists as “moderate
opposition.” Eventually, the US-cultivated myth
called the Free Syrian Army fell apart altogether,
to everyone’s great embarrassment. But once again
the embarrassment was insufficient to cause those
responsible to do the honorable thing and shoot
themselves in the head.
Done with fiasco number two—onward to fiasco number
three. Once the fictional Free Syrian Army
evaporated like the morning mist, the CIA decided to
stake it all on the Kurds and Operation Timber
Sycamore was born. It was declared top secret and
authorized directly by Obama with most of the
documents bearing Hillary Clinton’s signature. In
many ways it replicated unlearned lessons from a
previous American fiasco known as Iran-Contras or
the Oliver North Affair.
Saudi money was used to buy up obsolete Soviet-era
weapons, primarily in the Balkans, and then ship
them to Turkey and Jordan, all using forged
paperwork to avoid appearance of illegality. From
there they were supposed to filter into Syria and
end up in the hands of the Kurds, who were at the
time defending the town of Kobani from ISIS. Quite
unsurprisingly, none of this went according to plan.
The arms black market in the Middle East started
overflowing with weapons, including heavy weaponry.
US intelligence officers started buying up Ferraris,
refusing to accept bribes in paper money—only in
gold bars. Small-time arms dealers suddenly became
very rich and started battling each other over
market share. Just one shoot-out at a Jordanian army
base claimed the lives of two Jordanian officers,
two American contractors and one South African.
(What illegal arms deal can ever go down without a
South African being involved?) When the scale of the
fiasco became obvious, the Jordanians involved in it
were fired, but nothing was confiscated. Hillary
Clinton was particularly livid; she was made to look
really bad when some smart person posted on an
official US government web site a contract for the
delivery of tonnes of weapons from Bulgaria to the
ports of Tasucu (Turkey) and Aqaba (Jordan) and
Wikileaks got busy digging up more details.
It turns out that altogether the Obama
administration squandered half a billion dollars on
just the Free Syrian Army and Timber Sycamore.
Instead of blaming themselves, those involved (most
of them still on the job, with nary a much-deserved
bullet to the head among any of them) got busy
blaming Russia for not letting them “finish the
job.” Here is a very nice graphic, courtesy of
Wikileaks, that details the staggering amount of
funds squandered by the US on its mischief in Syria.
Done with fiasco number three—onward with fiasco
number four. Instead of just tossing in the general
direction of Syria tonnes of obsolete Soviet-era
weapons bought up in Eastern Europe using laundered
money and forged paperwork, the US decided to
actually play an active role “on the ground.” In
October of 2015 the first 15 American instructors
were helicoptered into Syrian Kurdistan. From that
moment on the Americans wholeheartedly dedicated
themselves to cultivating Syrian Democratic Forces
(the two largest Kurdish armed groups) plus, for the
sake of ethnic diversity, a couple of local Arab
tribes.
In May of 2015 General Joseph L. Votel, commander of
US forces in the Middle East, was flown into Syria
in (relative) secrecy and met with Kurdish
commanders. He attempted to force through the idea
of having American advisors in Kurdistan and of
having them prepare the locals for action. The
Kurdish commanders and the tribal leaders were
unreceptive to these ideas, and demanded that the
Americans supply them with heavy weapons. Luckily,
Votel had no authority to do so, and so when the
Kurds started besieging the ISIS stronghold of Raqqa
it was the Americans who fired the mortars and the
artillery, with American Marines providing security
for them. The effectiveness of these actions remains
questionable.
The Kurds have shown themselves to be willful and
uncooperative as allies. Their main goal is to bite
off as much territory as they can and to later use
it in negotiation with the government in Damascus in
order to establish the largest possible Syrian
Kurdish autonomy. They are generally unwilling to
venture outside of their established range. They
weren’t particularly willing to fight even for
Manjib, which is mostly ethnically Kurdish, and
their interest in capturing Raqqa has been largely
nonexistent.
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And yet
the Americans consider it reasonable to think
that once ISIS is completely routed (a matter of
a couple of months at this rate) these same
Kurds will help them establish and maintain
control over the entire eastern shore of
Euphrates all the way to the Iraqi border. Not
only are the Kurds quite unmotivated to do so,
but the Syrians are currently busy fortifying a
beachhead and erecting a pontoon bridge in Ayash
north of recently recaptured Deir ez-Zor. In the
past couple of days they have moved heavy
weaponry across the Euphrates to its eastern
shore, knocked ISIS remnants out of the
surrounding villages and are getting ready to
advance toward the Iraqi border. They have made
no secret of their plan to reestablish control
over all of Syrian territory.
Looks like fiasco number four is already very
much baked into the cake. But as usual, this is
not stopping the Americans from pumping in more
advisors and weapons, who will advise people who
will refuse to heed their advice and arm people
who will just as easily fight for them as
against them. They are also pumping in other
resources into constructing military bases on
Syrian territory, which they will not control
for any length of time. There is the airfield in
Rmeilan, a larger base in Kobani and yet another
airfield in Tal Beidir. Syrian Kurdistan is now
playing host to a few hundred Americans armed
with light weapons, Hummers and Strykers who
never cease complaining about the substandard
living conditions and the lack of good
intelligence about what’s going on around them.
Not content to wait for fiasco number four to
run its course, the Americans have launched
preemptively into fiasco number five:
constructing a military base in the south of
Syria. Amazingly, even after all that has
happened, they saw it fit to try to breathe some
new life into the Free Syrian Army, and also to
find some use for their bases in Jordan which
had been thoroughly discredited by their
performance in Timber Sycamore. To this end,
they cozied up to some obscure armed groups that
had crossed into Syria from Jordan and with
their help established a base at Al Tanf,
sufficiently heavily armed to hold that
territory for a long time, and possibly to serve
as forward position for an invasion from the
south.
What happened instead is that the Syrians and
the Iranians quickly circumvented Al Tanf and
took control of the Iraqi border (with full
Iraqi cooperation), rendering the Al Tanf base
completely irrelevant. In recognition of this
fact the Americans started dismantling and
evacuating the base while the obscure armed
groups they had cozied up to gave up and either
surrendered to the Syrians or ran off and joined
ISIS. Fiasco number five is now complete.
Fiasco number four is still ongoing, but the end
result is already clear. Pretty soon there will
no longer be any ISIS left in Syria for the
Americans to pretend to be fighting. Their
position, both in the Middle East and all around
the world, is increasingly weak. Other than
Syria, the country that has the most to gain
from this situation is Russia. Consider the
following:
• Saudi Arabia has been the major financier of
the Syrian conflict, but even the Saudis have
grown weary of American fecklessness and are
trying to work out deals with the Russians.
• When the Israelis recognized that Syria has
been conclusively “lost” to them, Netanyahu
immediately jumped on a plane to… Moscow, of
course, to beg for a few crumbs off the master’s
table.
• Turkey has decided that cooperating with NATO
is no longer on strategy and has put a down
payment on Russian S-400 air defense systems
which, unlike NATO-approved, US-supplied
weapons, are not hindered by an inflexible
friend-or-foe identification system and are
perfectly happy to shoot down NATO targets.
• Even Germany—America’s most obedient lapdog
since the end of World War II—has just launched
an investigation into arms shipments to
internationally recognized terrorist groups in
Syria that went through the Rammstein military
base and are illegal under German law.
As ISIS is being destroyed by the Syrians, with
Russian air support, the Americans, in keeping
with tradition, are blaming Russia for their
loss of face, if not outright strategic defeat.
If that silly blame game isn’t a sure sign of
extreme weakness, I don’t know what is. The end
game may not be entirely clear yet, but what is
already clear is this: in order for a superpower
to cease being a superpower a relatively small
military defeat is sufficient, provided it is
sufficiently meaningful. American performance in
Syria is such that the US will no longer be
party to international negotiations over Syria’s
future—because its position is now so weak that
it can simply be disregarded. And when it comes
to meaningful military defeats, a self-inflicted
one is by far the most efficacious.
Syria is not the only place where US military
power is turning out to be not the least bit
powerful. There is also Afghanistan, where the
Taliban is busy reconquering the north of the
country—the part of it that was most easily
“liberated” when the Americans first invaded
back in 2001. And there is also North Korea,
whose leadership has successfully checkmated the
US, leaving it with exactly zero viable military
options—a situation the Americans are
constitutionally incapable of accepting. And so
they trash-talk the North Koreans, who
trash-talk right back at them, making the rest
of the world laugh nervously.
In conclusion, let me go out on a limb and
venture a guess as to where this is all heading.
I think that now that all the evidence is in
that America’s superpower status is just a bit
of Cold War nostalgia what comes next is…
punishment. What do mommy and daddy do with a
spoiled brat who has maxed out his credit cards
squandering money on bar tabs, fancy toys and
hookers? Why, take the credit cards away, of
course!
In the case of the US, this action goes by the
name of dedollarization. Those who have
attempted it before—figures such as Saddam
Hussein and Muammar Qaddafy—were swiftly killed
and their countries destroyed. But now such
countries as China and Russia are heading up the
dedollarization drive—countries that the US
cannot hope to oppose, especially when they act
in concert—and the American response so far has
amounted to empty threats, toothless sanctions
and a great deal of angry but incoherent
mumbling.
To describe the situation in the simplest terms
possible: the function of the US military is to
intimidate other countries into letting the US
buy whatever it wants by printing US dollars as
needed, essentially robbing the rest of the
world at gunpoint. Once their ability to
intimidate the world into submission is gone so
will be their ability to endlessly fleece the
planet. And once that ability is gone all that
will remain of the “richest country in the
world” is a pile of worthless paper. When
precisely that moment arrives is anyone’s guess,
but you shouldn’t need to time it exactly
provided you can plan for it. I recommend that
you do so—if you haven’t already.
Dmitry Orlov is a Russian-American engineer and a
writer on subjects related to "potential economic,
ecological and political decline and collapse in the
United States," something he has called “permanent
crisis”. Orlov believes collapse will be the result
of huge military budgets, government deficits, an
unresponsive political system and declining oil
production. Dmitry Orlov Website -
https://cluborlov.blogspot.com
This article was first published by
ClubOrlov
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