Washington Resurrected the Arms Race
By Paul
Craig Roberts
February 01, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
-
The meetings in Beijing during January 30-31
between Washington, Russia, China, France and
the UK apparently failed to preserve the
commitment to prohibit intermediate range
nuclear weapons. Washington stuck to its
determination to withdraw from the historic
agreement of Reagan and Gorbachev to destroy all
land-based intermediate range nuclear missiles.
This US withdrawal from a nuclear weapons
reduction agreement follows the George W.
Bush/Cheney regime’s withdrawal from the
anti-ballistic missile treaty. Indeed, since the
Clinton regime, every US president has produced
worsening trust between the two major nuclear
powers.
No good
can come of this as Russia’s Deputy Foreign
Minister Sergey Ryabkov said at the Beijing
meeting.
The
intermediate range nuclear missile treaty (INF)
does not involve US security. It protects Europe
from Russian missiles and Russia from US
missiles stationed in Europe. Trump’s
announcement that he is breaking free of the
treaty tells the Russians that they are going to
have missiles on their borders that allow them
no response time. The Europeans are crazy to go
along with this as they will be targeted by
Russia in turn, but the Europeans are
Washington’s vassals.
Ever
since Clinton broke Washington’s promise not to
move NATO eastward, Russia has known that
Washington seeks military advantage over Russia.
By leaving the ABM treaty, the George W. Bush
regime told Russia that Washington intended to
gain superiority by constructing an
anti-ballistic missile shield that would negate
Russia’s retaliatory capability, thus subjecting
Russia to nuclear blackmail.
Russia
responded with new hypersonic ICBMs that cannot
be intercepted and now holds nuclear superiority
over the US, but does not exploit it. The US
response is to tear up the INF treaty and put
its missiles back on Russia’s borders.
Another
way to look at the INF treaty’s demise is that
the Obama regime committed one trillion dollars
of taxpayers’ money (in addition to the annual
one trillion dollar budget of the
military/security complex) to build more nuclear
weapons, none of which are needed as the US
alone has enough to blow up the world several
times. Breaking the INF treaty is a sure-fire
way to initiate a new arms race which would
provide justification for the trillion dollars
of taxpayers’ money that Washington is handing
over to the military/security complex for more
nuclear weapons.
Yet
another way to look at the demise of the treaty
is that Washington wants out of the treaty so
that it can deploy intermediate range missiles
against China. Washington has actually drawn up
plans for war against Russia and China and has
conducted simulations of what the outcome would
be. America wins, of course.
The
dangerous idea that a nuclear war can be won has
been pushed for some years by the
neoconservatives who are committed to US
hegemony over the world. This idea definitely
serves the material interest of the
military/security complex and is very popular
among the power brokers in Washington.
Washington’s excuse for breaking the INF treaty
is that Russia is cheating and has violated the
treaty. But Russia has no interest in violating
a treaty that protects Russia. Russia’s
intermediate range missiles cannot reach the US,
and the only reason Russia would target Europe
would be to retaliate for Europe hosting US
missiles on Russia’s borders.
The
beneficiaries of a renewed nuclear arms race are
the stockholders of the military/security
complex. Washington is feeding their profits by
placing humanity at greater risk of nuclear
Armageddon. Weapons are piling up, the use of
which would destroy all life on the planet. This
makes the weapons the very opposite of security.
Trump whose goal was to normalize relations with
Russia is now under the thumb of the
military/security complex and has announced US
intentions to withdraw from the last remaining
arms control agreement—the Strategic Arms
Reduction Treaty (START).
The
situation is serious. Very little is reported in
US media of the resurrection of the nuclear arms
race, and what is reported is blamed on Russia
and China. Americans hear that it is China, not
the US, that is militarizing the South China Sea
and Russia that intends to restore the Soviet
empire and that these intentions are threats to
American national security. The evidence
consists of assertion. The Russians have offered
proof that they have not violated the INF
treaty, but Washington doesn’t care because
Washington is not leaving the treaty because of
Russian violations.
Washington is leaving the treaty because
Washington wants military hegemony over Russia
and China and a good excuse to hand over another
trillion dollars to the military/security
complex. In the end capitalism does more than
exploit labor. It ends life on earth
Traditionally, an aggressor paves the way to war
with constant propaganda against the country to
be attacked. The propaganda creates public
support and justifies the attack. The constant
stream of provocative accusations out of
Washington against Russia and China (and Iran)
in order to justify treaty breaking and higher
armaments spending sounds to Russia and China
like they are being set up for attack. It is
reckless and irresponsible to convince nuclear
powers that they are going to be attacked. There
is no more certain way of producing war. Russia
and China are hearing what Saddam Hussein heard,
what Gaddafi heard, what Assad heard, what Iran
hears. Unlike these victims of Washington,
Russia and China have substantial offensive
capability. When a country is convinced it is
targeted for attack, does the country just sit
there and await the attack?
Washington might be setting up America for a
first strike with the extraordinary stream of
accusations and provocations issuing from people
too stupid to be in possession of nuclear
weapons. In the nuclear era, it is reckless for
a government to replace diplomacy with threats
and coercion. Washington’s recklessness is the
most dangerous threat that the world faces.
Dr. Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of
the Treasury for Economic Policy and associate
editor of the Wall Street Journal. He was
columnist for Business Week, Scripps Howard News
Service, and Creators Syndicate. He has had many
university appointments. His internet columns
have attracted a worldwide following. Roberts'
latest books are
The Failure of Laissez Faire
Capitalism and Economic Dissolution of the West,
How America Was Lost,
and
The Neoconservative Threat to
World Order.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.