Peeking Past the Pall Put Over Arms Talks
With Russia
By Ray McGovern
January 18, 2022:
Information Clearing House-- "Antiwar"
----Western media are painting an image
of gross failure for Russia at the U.S.-Russia
bilateral talks in Geneva, as well as subsequent
talks between Russia and NATO in Brussels and the
Organization for Co-operation and Security in Europe
(OSCE) in Vienna.
Adamant! is the impression being fostered by both
Russia and the West (largely for domestic
consumption): Russia will continue to oppose NATO
membership for countries like Ukraine and Georgia;
NATO, for its part, will continue to reject Russian
opposition as “none of your business”. (Bear in mind
that Ukraine and Georgia are each several years away
from qualifying for NATO membership in any case.)
The corporate media takeaway is that Russian
President Vladimir Putin abjectly failed to get the
West to agree formally on no further expansion of
NATO and that, in these circumstances, no one can
divine how he might lash out (maybe invade
Ukraine?). World War III, anyone?
Did Western pundits really believe that Putin
expected early acquiescence to that “non-starter”
proposal on NATO expansion? Far easier to make
believe he did, show how he went down to defeat, and
conveniently ignore signs of real progress with
respect to what Moscow’s (and President Joe Biden’s)
actual priorities are.
Media mention of those priorities has inched
forward into subordinate clauses of lead paragraphs
– usually after the word "but."
Here’s how NPR played it: "The United States and
NATO rejected key Russian security demands for
easing tensions over Ukraine but left open Wednesday
the possibility of future talks with Moscow on arms
control, missile deployments and ways to prevent
military incidents between Russia and the West."
Likewise,
the Washington Post: "The United States
and Russia remained deadlocked after crisis talks
Monday over Moscow’s desire to block any future NATO
expansion to the east, but officials agreed to
continue discussions on other high-stakes security
issues …"
Other High-Stakes Security Issues?
What strategic challenge does President Vladimir
Putin consider most threatening?
Watching this 12-minute video –
(See video and transcript below) especially minutes 4 to 6:30 – in
which
Putin tries to get through to Western reporters
severand al years ago, will provide a good clue for
Western reporters whose dogs ate their homework.
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While Putin has been outspoken for 20 years on
the precarious strategic situation following the
Bush administration’s tearing up the ABM Treaty that
had been the cornerstone of strategic balance, this
video is unusually effective in showing Putin’s
understandable concern and frustration.
Are dogs the standard excuse? Do Western
journalists even do homework? Good question. The NY
Times’ Bureau Chief in Moscow Anton Troianovsky has
confessed that, after an event-packed week, he,
Western officials, and Russian experts are "stumped"
to explain Russian behavior. Putin, he says, is to
blame for keeping people confused and "on edge",
adding that "the mystery surrounding the Russian
leader’s intentions was thick as fog again this
week….". (See:
Putin’s Next Move on Ukraine Is a Mystery. Just the
Way He Likes It.)
It is precisely in this context that watching
Putin explain Russia’s post-demise-of-the-ABM-Treaty
concerns five years ago might help lazy or simply
inexperienced journalists understand the importance
of highly significant events over the past couple of
weeks: first and foremost, President Joe Biden’s
promise to Putin on Dec. 30
not to emplace offensive strike missiles in Ukraine.
And, equally instructive: the importance of the U.S.
negotiators’ confirming that Washington takes
Moscow’s concerns seriously enough to negotiate
about them – and other confidence building measures,
as well.
"Progress": The Forbidden Word
Is it unreasonable, then, to look forward to
productive bilateral talks in the coming months that
address what might be termed "Putin’s Pet Peeve"
(although the issue is dead serious, so to speak,
far more serious than the commonly understood
"pet-peeve" minor annoyance)? A lot of this comes
through clearly in the video, which shows Putin
losing his cool watching the sleepy nonchalance on
the faces of the Western journalists who are his
audience: "I don’t know how to get through to you
any more."
What is important is that Putin got through to
Biden on that Dec. 30 telephone call which Putin had
called for with some urgency (and which was widely
neglected in the Establishment media.) Hours later,
the official Kremlin readout included: The
presidents agreed to personally supervise these
negotiating tracks, especially bilateral, with a
focus on reaching results quickly. In this context,
Joseph Biden emphasised that Russia and the
US shared a special responsibility for ensuring
stability in Europe and the whole world and that
Washington had no intention of deploying offensive
strike weapons in Ukraine. [Emphasis added.]
At the same time as the Kremlin readout, Putin’s
main adviser on these issues, Yuri Ushakov, told
reporters that Moscow was pleased with the
Biden-Putin conversation on Dec. 30, adding that
Biden’s pledge not to deploy offensive arms in
Ukraine amounted to acknowledgment of Russia’s
security concerns. Speaking to Russian media,
Ushakov pointed out that this was also one of the
goals Moscow hopes to achieve with its proposals for
security guarantees to the US and NATO.
Ushakov, actually, is understating the case. The
US non-deployment-of-offensive-missiles pledge
addresses a key issue embedded in no fewer than five
of the eight Articles of the Russian draft treaty on
security guarantees. In contrast, only Article 4,
which includes: "The United States of America shall
undertake to prevent further eastward expansion of
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and deny
accession to the Alliance to the States of the
former Union of Soviet Socialist Republics",
addresses head-on the NATO expansion issue.
Back to the Putin Video
The 12-minute video includes subtitles in
English courtesy of translator "Inessa S." Putin was
speaking to reporters attending the St. Petersburg
International Economic Forum, 2016. I have taken
Inessa’s subtitles and strung them together below
into a full text for those who prefer to read rather
than watch.
Putin to Western Reporters, June 17, 2016
Your people, in turn, do not feel a sense of the
impending danger – this is what worries me.
Now, about the missile defense system, listen to
me, we are all adults at this table, and experienced
[professionals] at that.
But I am not even going to hope that you are
going to relay everything, exactly how I said it, in
your publications.
Neither will you attempt to influence your media
outlets.
I just want to tell you this, on a personal level
I must remind you, though you already know this,
that major global conflicts have been avoided in the
past few decades, due to the geostrategic balance of
power, which used to exist.
The two super-nuclear powers essentially agreed
to stop producing both offensive weaponry, as well
as defensive weaponry.
It is simple how it works – where one side
becomes dominant in their military potential, they
are more likely to want to be the first to be able
to use such power.
This is the absolute linchpin to international
security. The anti-missile defense system [as
previously prohibited in international law], and all
of the surrounding agreements that used to exist.
It’s not in my nature to scold someone – but when
the United States unilaterally withdrew from the ABM
Treaty of 1972 they delivered a colossal blow to the
entire system of international security.
That was the first blow, when it comes to
assessing the strategic balance of power in the
world.
At that time [2002] I said that we will not be
developing such systems also, because A) it is very
expensive, and B) we aren’t yet sure how they will
work [for the Americans].
We’re not going to burn our money.
We’re going to take a different option, and
develop offensive weaponry, in order to retain said
geo-strategic balance.
That was all.
Not to threaten someone else.
They said – "Fine, our defense system is not
against you, and we assume that your weaponry is not
against us."
"Do what you like!"
As I already mentioned, this conversation took
place in the early 2000s. Russia was in a very
difficult state at that time.
Economic collapse, civil war and the fight
against terrorism in our Caucasus region, complete
destruction of our military-industrial complex …
They wouldn’t have been able to imagine that
Russia could ever again be a military power.
My guess is they assumed that even that which was
left over from the Soviet Union would eventually
deteriorate.
So they said, "sure, do what you like!"
But we told them about the measures we were going
to take in reaction. And that is what we did.
And I assure you – that today, we have had every
success in that area.
I’m not going to list everything, all that
matters is we have modernized our
military-industrial complex.
And we continue to develop new generation
warfare. I’m not even going to mention systems
against the missile-defense system!
No matter what we said to our American partners
[to curb the production of weaponry] they refused to
cooperate with us, they rejected our offers, and
continue to do their own thing.
Some things I cannot tell you right now publicly,
I think that would be rude of me.
And whether or not you believe me, we offered
real solutions to stop this [arms race].
They rejected everything we had to offer.
4-MINUTE MARK
So here we are today – and they’ve placed their
missile defense system in Romania.
Always saying "we must protect ourselves from the
Iranian nuclear threat!"
Where’s the threat?
There is no Iranian nuclear threat.
You even have an agreement with them – and the US
was the instigator of this agreement, where we
helped.
We supported it.
But if not for the US then this agreement would
not exist – which I consider Obama’s achievement.
I agree with the agreement, because it eased
tensions in the area. So President Obama can put
this in his list of achievements.
So the Iranian threat does not exist.
But the missile systems are continuing to be
positioned …
That means we were right when we said that they
are lying to us.
Their reasons were not genuine, in reference to
the "Iranian nuclear threat."
Once again, they lied to us.
So they built this system and now they are being
loaded with missiles.
You, as journalists, should know that these
missiles are put into capsules
Which are utilized from sea-based, midrange
Tomahawk rocket launchers
These are being loaded with "anti-missiles’ that
can penetrate distances of up to 500km.
But we know that technologies advance …
We even know in which year the Americans will
accomplish a new missile, which will be able to
penetrate distances of up to 1000km, and then even
further …
And from that moment on they will be able to
directly threaten
Russia’s nuclear potential
We know year by year what’s going to happen – and
they know that we know!
It’s only that you tell tall-tales to, and you
spread it to, the citizens of your countries.
Your people, in turn, do not feel a sense of the
impending danger – this is what worries me.
How can you not understand that the world is
being pulled in an irreversible direction?
That’s the problem.
Meanwhile, they pretend that nothings going on …
I don’t know how to get through to you any more.
MINUTE 6:30
And they justify this as a "defense" system, not
weaponry that is used for purposes of offense.
Systems that "prevent aggression."
That is absolutely not true.
A missile defense system is one element of a
whole system of offensive military potential.
It works as part of a whole that includes
offensive missile launchers.
One complex blocks, the other launches a high
precision weapon, the third blocks a potential
nuclear strike, and the fourth sends out its own
nuclear weapon in response.
This is all designed to be part of one system.
This is how it works in current, non-nuclear, but
high precision missile defense systems.
Well okay, let’s put aside the actual missile
‘defense’ issue.
But those capsules into which ‘anti-missiles’ are
inserted, as I’ve mentioned, they are sea based …
On warships which can carry the Tomahawk subsonic
cruise missile system
One could deploy it to position in a matter of
hours, and then what kind of "antimissile" system is
that?
How do we know what kind of missile is in there?
All you have to do is change the programme!
(non-nuclear to nuclear)
That’s all it would take.
This would happen very quickly, and even the
Romanian government itself won’t know what’s going
on.
Do you think they let the Romanians call any
shots?
Nobody is going to know what is being done-not
the Romanians, and the Polish won’t either.
Do you think I am not familiar with their
strategies? Ha!
From what I can see, we are in grave danger.
We had conversation once with our American
partners – where they said they’d like to develop
ballistic missiles, but without a nuclear warhead.
And we said – "Do you actually understand what
that might entail?"
So you’re going to have missiles launching from
submarines, or ground territories – this is not a
ballistic missile, how do we know whether or not it
has a nuclear warhead?!
Can you imagine what kind of scenario you can
create?
But as far as I am aware, they did not go through
with developing these weapons – they have paused for
now.
But the other one they continue to implement.
I don’t know how this is all going to end.
What I do know is that we will need to defend
ourselves.
And I even know how they will package this –
"Russian aggression "again!
But this is simply our response to your actions.
Is it not obvious that I must guarantee the
safety of our people?
And not only that, but we must attempt to retain
the necessary strategic balance of power, which is
the point that I began with. Let me return to it in
order to finish my response.
It was precisely this balance of power that
guaranteed the safety of humanity from major global
conflict, over the past 70 years.
It was a blessing rooted in a "mutual threat" but
this mutual threat is what guaranteed mutual peace,
on a global scale.
How they could so easily tear it down, I simply
don’t know.
I think it is gravely dangerous. I not only think
that, I am assured of it.
Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, a
publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the
Saviour in inner-city Washington. His 27-year career
as a CIA analyst includes serving as Chief of the
Soviet Foreign Policy Branch and preparer/briefer of
the President’s Daily Brief. He is co-founder of
Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
(VIPS).
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