2022: The Year the US
achieves Collapse
By Dmitry Orlov
December 30, 202:
Information Clearing
House
-- I have been studying
the forthcoming collapse of the USA for
25 years and publishing books and
articles on this subject for the last
15, with good results: CCCP 2.0 is
developing quite nicely. The 30-year
reprieve which the US was granted thanks
to the collapse of the USSR has now
expired, every effort at imperial
expansion since then (Afghanistan, Iraq,
Syria, Libya and the “suicide belt” of
Eastern Europe) has been a total
failure. Meanwhile a reborn Russia,
backed by much of the rest of Eurasia,
is now turning the tables and ordering
the US around in perfectly undiplomatic
terms. And now this:
Barbara Water of US San Diego
recently appeared on CNN to explain that
the US is now in a zone of high risk for
political violence and civil war.
And what this means is that the US
has finally achieved Total Collapse
Preparedness. Let us look into the
details of this.
Just yesterday Russia Foreign Ministry
published a couple of documents which
people have been struggling to interpret
ever since, to little useful effect. I
would like to offer my own explanation
of what these documents mean, which will
probably differ a great deal from most
other explanations you are likely to
hear. Time will tell how close they are
to the truth; for now, I am happy to
simply add to the spectrum of ideas that
are available to it.
The two documents
describe in detail what Washington must
do to avoid the consequences of breaking
its verbal agreement entered into with
Mikhail Gorbachev to not expand NATO
eastward toward Russia’s
borders—essentially, to freeze NATO
forces where they were in 1997, before
NATO expanded farther east. The
documents also address other aspects of
deescalation, such as removing all US
nuclear weapons from foreign territory
and confining US forces to waters and
airspace from which they cannot threaten
the territory of Russia.
One line of explanation, most
recently expressed in Washington and
elsewhere, is that these documents are a
negotiating gambit (not an ultimatum),
to be discussed privately (to avoid
complete loss of face by the US) and in
consultation with NATO members and
partners, plus, maybe, the European
Union, the Council of Europe, the OSCE,
Amnesty International and Greenpeace (to
avoid making their combined irrelevance
apparent to all). I agree that there is
little to be gained from public
discussions; after all Moscow has
already achieved the required bombshell
effect through the public release of
these documents and in forcing
Washington to acknowledge their receipt
and to consent to “negotiations”.
I disagree that there is anything to
be negotiated: these documents are not
intended to be used as a starting point
for negotiations; they are an invitation
for Washington to acknowledge and remedy
its transgressions. Washington broke the
deal it made with Moscow not to expand
east. It could do so because in the
years following the breakup of the USSR
Moscow was too weak to resist and run by
people who thought it possible for
Russia to integrate into the West,
perhaps even to join NATO. But that era
has ended some time ago and the
collective West now has to put its
collective toes back behind the red
line—whether voluntarily or not—and that
is the only thing yet to be determined.
That is the only choice to be made:
stand down voluntarily and make amends
or refuse and be punished.
I also disagree that this
choice—between making amends and
accepting punishment—has anything to do
with the EU, or NATO, or various
“members” or “partners”. Moscow has no
relationship with NATO, seeing it as a
mere piece of paper that grants
Washington rather questionable legal
authority to deploy its military forces
in countries around the world. Moscow
has some vestigial diplomatic
representation with the EU, but doesn’t
see it as important and concentrates on
bilateral relations with EU members. As
for its Eastern European neighbors, the
Ukraine is, viewed from Moscow, a US
colony and thus entirely a US concern,
Poland can go and partition itself again
(or not), and, as far as those tiny yet
politically annoying statelets of
Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, so sorry,
but the Russian army is equipped with
binoculars, not microscopes.
The choice, really, is between facing
an increasing risk of a nuclear exchange
between two nuclear superpowers—one that
is rapidly fading in strength and one
that is growing stronger all the
time—and reducing that risk as much as
possible. Only the two nuclear
superpowers need to come to an
understanding; everyone else can simply
do as they say so that nobody gets hurt.
In the case of the Europeans, they
should be quite interested in doing so
(if they still know what’s good for
them) because NATO’s eastward expansion
has left them with huge nuclear target
signs painted all over them which they
would do well to try to remove. Not only
that, but NATO’s encroachment on
Russia’s borders has increased the risk
of a nuclear confrontation breaking out
accidentally: all those nuclear-armed
bombers, ships and submarines could make
a wrong turn somewhere and then—kaboom!—no
more Europe.
You might thing that those bombers
and ships and submarines must loiter
around Russia’s borders in order to
“contain” Russia, but this is false.
Russia does an acceptably good job of
containing itself, and the little
territorial disputes that are likely to
crop up here and there periodically are
certainly not going to be solved by
increasing the risk of nuclear war. The
Russian Federation has land borders with
over a dozen countries, most of which
have Russian citizens living on both
sides of them, and that makes land
disputes inevitable, but none of them
will ever be worth blowing up the planet
over.
You might think that NATO forces need
to show activity and act dangerous in
order to justify their existence and
their ridiculously bloated defense
budgets. Also, if they didn’t get a
chance to be threatening toward Russia,
they might become despondent and just
sit around drinking, doing drugs and
having gay sex, and that would be bad
for morale. (But then what’s wrong with
a little gay sex between consenting
off-duty gender-ambiguous
servicepersons?) I’d think that these
are all rather minor, if not trifling,
concerns, considering that what’s on the
other side of the scale is the risk of a
planetary conflagration.
You might also think that
Washington’s eastward expansion is not a
crime because, you see, Gorbachev failed
to get its promise not to expand east
committed to in writing. Well, let me
offer you a tiny insight into the inner
workings of Russian civilization. If you
enter into a verbal agreement with the
Russians, break it, and then taunt them
by saying “But you didn’t get it in
writing!” you have just made the problem
much worse for yourself. We all make
mistakes and must sometimes break our
promises, in which the proper course of
action is to be contrite, apologize
sincerely and offer to make amends. If,
instead, you claim that the promise is
null and void because a certain piece of
paper cannot be located, then you have
compounded you dishonorable conduct with
willful disregard and have singled
yourself out for exemplary punishment.
This punishment may be slow to arrive,
taking decades, perhaps even centuries,
but you can be sure that you will be
punished eventually.
Once upon a time Moscow was weak and
Washington strong, but now the balance
has shifted in Moscow’s favor and the
time for Washington’s punishment has
finally come. The only remaining
question is, What form will this
punishment take? The one proposed by
Moscow is in the form of submission to
public humiliation: Washington signs the
security guarantees drafted in Moscow,
drags itself back to its kennel and lies
quietly like a good doggo licking its
balls to console itself. And that’s the
more pleasant alternative, a win-win
sort of thing, offered in good faith.
The less pleasant alternative would
be, I can’t help but imagine, much less
pleasant, very confusing and quite
dangerous. Think about Poseidons—undetectable
nuclear-powered torpedos—endlessly
cruising in thousands of feet of water
of water off the continental shelf along
the US coasts, ready to wash them off
with entirely accidental tsunamis, their
sporadic pings causing the Joint Chiefs
of Staff to soil their diapers every
time. Think about NATO planes, ships and
submarines quietly going missing for no
adequately explored reason, their crews
later turning up on some faraway beach
very drunk and wearing Speedos in the
colors of the Russian flag. Think of
hypersonic something-or-others
periodically doing zigzags in low Earth
orbit over the US mainland, causing
every cable TV channel to broadcast
Russia Today, in turn causing CNN’s
talking heads to explode in impotent
fury.
I would think that, in their own
enlightened best interest,
right-thinking Americans, regardless of
party affiliation or lack thereof, would
want to clamor for their elected
representatives to quit making any more
trouble and to just sign the damned
security guarantees! But that’s just my
own, private opinion.
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