February 13, 2022:
Information Clearing House
-- "SCF"
ISTANBUL – Emmanuel Macron is no
Talleyrand. Self-promoted as “Jupiterian”, he
may have finally got down to earth for a proper
realpolitik insight while ruminating one of the
former French Minister of Foreign Affairs key
bon mots: “A diplomat who says ‘yes’
means ‘maybe’, a diplomat who says ‘maybe’ means
‘no’, and a diplomat who says ‘no’ is no
diplomat.”
Mr. Macron went to Moscow to see Mr. Putin with a
simple 4-stage plan in mind. 1. Clinch a
wide-ranging deal with Putin on Ukraine, thus
stopping “Russian aggression”. 2. Bask in the glow
as the West’s Peacemaker. 3. Raise the EU’s tawdry
profile, as he’s the current president of the EU
Council. 4. Collect all the spoils then bag the
April presidential election in France.
Considering he all but begged for an audience in
a flurry of phone calls, Macron was received by
Putin with no special honors. Comic relief was
provided by French mainstream media hysterics,
“military strategists” included, evoking the “French
castle” sketch in Monty Python’s Holy Grail while
reaffirming every stereotype available about
“cowardly frogs”. Their “analysis”: Putin is
“isolated” and wants “the military option”. Their
top intel source: Bezos-owned CIA rag The Washington
Post.
Still, it was fascinating to watch – oh, that
loooooong table in the Kremlin: the only EU leader
who took the trouble to actually listen to Putin was
the one who, months ago, pronounced NATO as
“brain-dead”. So the ghosts of Charles de Gaulle and
Talleyrand did seem to have engaged in a lively
chat, framed by raw economics, finally imprinting on
the “Jupiterian” that the imperial obsession on
preventing Europe by all means from profiting from
wider trade with Eurasia is a losing game.
After a strenuous six hours of discussions Putin,
predictably, monopolized the eminently quotable
department, starting with one
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that will be reverberating all across the Global
South for a long time: “Citizens of Iraq, Libya,
Afghanistan and Yugoslavia have seen how peaceful is
NATO.”
There’s more. The already iconic
Do you want a war between Russia and NATO? –
followed by the ominous “there will be no winners”.
Or take this one, on Maidan: “Since February 2014,
Russia has considered a coup d’état to be the source
of power in Ukraine. This is a bad sandbox, we don’t
like this kind of game.”
On the Minsk agreements, the message was blunt:
“The President of Ukraine has said that he does not
like any of the clauses of the Minsk agreements.
Like it, or not – be patient, my beauty. They must
be fulfilled.”
The “real
issue behind the present crisis”
Macron for his part stressed, “new mechanisms are
needed to ensure stability in Europe, but not by
revising existing agreements, perhaps new security
solutions would be innovative.” So nothing that
Moscow had not stressed before. He added, “France
and Russia have agreed to work together on security
guarantees.” The operative term is “France”. Not the
non-agreement capable United States government.
Anglo-American spin insisted that Putin had
agreed not to launch new “military initiatives” –
while keeping mum on what Macron promised in return.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov did not confirm any
agreement. He only said that the Kremlin will engage
with Macron’s dialogue proposals, “provided that the
United States also agrees with them.” And for that,
as everyone knows, there’s no guarantee.
The Kremlin has been stressing for months that
Russia has no interest whatsoever in invading de
facto black hole Ukraine. And Russian troops will
return to their bases after exercises are over. None
of this has anything to do with “concessions” by
Putin.
And then came the bombshell: French Economy
Minister Bruno Le Maire – the inspiration for one of
the main characters in Michel Houellebecq’s cracking
new book, Anéantir – said that the launch
of Nord Stream 2 “is one of the main components of
de-escalating tensions on the Russian-Ukrainian
border.” Gallic flair formulated out loud what no
German had the balls to say.
In Kiev, after his stint in Moscow, it looks like
Macron properly told Zelensky which way the wind
blows now. Zelensky hastily confirmed Ukraine is
ready to implement the Minsk agreements; it never
was, for seven long years. He also said he expects
to hold a summit in the Normandy format – Kiev, the
breakaway republics of Donetsk and Luhansk, Germany
and France – “in the near future”. A meeting of
Normandy format political advisers will happen in
Berlin on Thursday.
Way back in August 2020, I was
already pointing to which way we were heading in
the master chessboard. A few sharp minds in the
Beltway, emailing their networks, did notice in my
column how “the goal of Russian and Chinese policy
is to recruit Germany into a triple alliance locking
together the Eurasian land mass a la Mackinder into
the greatest geopolitical alliance in history,
switching world power in favor of these three great
powers against Anglo-Saxon sea power.”
Now, a very high-level Deep State intel source,
retired, comes down to the nitty gritty, pointing
out how “the secret negotiations between Russia and
the US center around missiles going into Eastern
Europe, as the US frantically drives for completing
its development of hypersonic missiles.”
The main point is that if the US places such
hypersonic missiles in Romania and Poland, as
planned, the time for them to reach Moscow would be
1/10 the time of a Tomahawk. It’s even worse for
Russia if they are placed in the Baltics. The source
notes, “the US plan is to neutralize the more
advanced defensive missile systems that seal
Russia’s airspace. This is why the US has offered to
allow Russia to inspect these missile sites in the
future, to prove that there are no hypersonic
nuclear missiles. Yet that’s not a solution, as the
Raytheon missile launchers can handle both offensive
and defensive missiles, so it’s possible to sneak in
the offensive missiles at night. Thus everything
requires continuous observation.”
The bottom line is stark: “This is the real issue
behind the present crisis. The only solution is no
missile sites allowed in Eastern Europe.” That
happens to be an essential part of Russia’s demands
for security guarantees.
Sailing to
Byzantium
Alastair Crooke has
demonstrated how “the West slowly is discovering
that that it has no pressure point versus Russia
(its economy being relatively sanctions-proof), and
its military is no match for that of Russia’s.”
In parallel, Michael Hudson has
conclusively shown how “the threat to US
dominance is that China, Russia and Mackinder’s
Eurasian World Island heartland are offering better
trade and investment opportunities than are
available from the United States with its
increasingly desperate demand for sacrifices from
its NATO and other allies.”
Quite a few of us, independent analysts from both
the Global North and South, have been stressing
non-stop for years that the pop Gotterdammerung
in progress hinges on the end of American
geopolitical control over Eurasia. Occupied Germany
and Japan enforcing the strategic submission of
Eurasia from the west down to the east; the
ever-expanding NATO; the ever de-multiplied Empire
of Bases, all the lineaments of the 75-year-plus
free lunch are collapsing.
The new groove is set to the tune of the New Silk
Roads, or BRI; Russia’s unmatched hypersonic power –
and now the non-negotiable demands for security
guarantees; the advent of RCEP – the largest free
trade deal on the planet uniting East Asia; the
Empire all but expelled from Central Asia after the
Afghan humiliation; and sooner rather than later its
expulsion from the first island chain in the Western
Pacific, complete with a starring role for the
Chinese DF-21D “carrier killer” missiles.
The Ray McGovern-coined MICIMATT
(military-industrial-congressional-intelligence-media-academia-think
tank complex) was not capable to muster the
collective IQ to even begin to understand the terms
of the
Russia-China joint statement issued on an
already historic February 4, 2022. Some in Europe
actually did – arguably located in the Elysée
Palace.
This enlightened
unpacking focuses on the interconnection of some
key formulations, such as “relations between Russia
and China superior to political and military
alliances of the Cold War era” and “friendship which
shows no limits”: the strategic partnership, for all
its challenges ahead, is way more complex than a
mere “treaty” or “agreement”. Without deeper
understanding of Chinese and Russian civilizations,
and their way of thinking, Westerners simply are not
equipped to get it.
In the end, if we manage to escape so much
Western doom and gloom, we might end up navigating a
warped remix of Yeats’ Sailing to Byzantium.
We may always dream of the best and the brightest in
Europe finally sailing away from the iron grip of
tawdry imperial Exceptionalistan:
“Once out of nature I shall never take / My
bodily form from any natural thing, / But such a
form as Grecian goldsmiths make / Of hammered gold
and gold enameling / To keep a drowsy Emperor awake;
/ Or set upon a golden bough to sing /To lords and
ladies of Byzantium / Of what is past, or passing,
or to come.”
Pepe Escobar
is correspondent-at-large at
Asia Times.
His latest book is
2030. Follow him on
Facebook.
The views expressed in this article are
solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
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