By Ray McGovern
July 04, 2022:
Information Clearing House
-- Incongruity was
the hallmark of the extraordinary NATO
summit just concluded in Madrid. NATO
offered bluster and promised muster: more
troops against its "most significant and
direct threat ," Russia. Meanwhile, Russian
"cauldron"maneuvers in Donbas methodically
destroyed or enveloped major units of Kyiv’s
army, further strengthening Russia’s
position there.
Those of realistic and compassionate bent
can but harbor hope that, before there is
only a cadaver of Ukraine left to defend,
Kyiv sees the handwriting on the wall and
cries Uncle, despite what they are hearing
from an Uncle Sam. He seems to have a
remarkable tolerance for carnage – in
Ukraine.
As for NATO bluster, it was "One for all
and all for one" – as if Dumas composed yet
another swashbuckling adventure meme for The
Thirty Musketeers. Part of the U.S. muster
of troops is destined for Poland, where
President Biden says the US is establishing
a permanent headquarters.
Polish President Andrzej Duda claims
"Russia is a threat for all of NATO" … and
that multiplying NATO’s "Rapid Reaction
Force" will make Europe "safer." No, this is
not a Polish joke.
Granted, the Polish people have suffered
more than their share of invasion,
occupation, partition. But still; that was a
while ago. And the last time Russia tried to
do that, well, it did not end well. A
serious claim that Russia wants to attack
Poland or any other NATO member should be
accompanied by evidence. No one is entitled
to employ the "Giuliani Dictum."
‘Lots of Theories, But No Evidence’
This aphorism, popularized by former NY
Mayor Rudy Giulani (reluctantly conceding
the lack of evidence of election fraud),
must not be "admitted" into "evidence."
Serious people have to "get real."
Professor John Mearsheimer, of the
"Realist School of Thought," has this
prickly habit of sticking to the evidence
(as we erstwhile CIA analysts used to do).
Here is what he said two weeks ago in a
lecture on The Causes and Consequences of
the Ukraine War.
I might note that in all of Putin’s
public statements during the months leading
up to the war, there is not a scintilla of
evidence that he was contemplating
conquering Ukraine and making it part of
Russia, much less attacking additional
countries in eastern Europe. Other Russian
leaders – including the defense minister,
the foreign minister, the deputy foreign
minister, and the Russian ambassador to
Washington – also emphasized the centrality
of NATO expansion for causing the Ukraine
crisis. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov made
the point succinctly at a press conference
on January 14, 2022, when he
said, "the key to everything
is the guarantee that NATO will not expand
eastward."
Shadowboxing With Incongruity
Since there is zero evidence Moscow plans
to attack a NATO country, I would guess that
Russian leaders have mixed reactions to the
announcement that NATO’s rapid response
force will increase from 40,000 to 300,000
troops. Rapid response to what? The Kremlin
cannot afford to laugh it off.
Nor can they dismiss this gesture out of
hand. The fact remains that some of the
increase will end up in Poland and the
Baltic countries, all of whom have large
chips on their shoulders and an inclination
to prod the Russian bear – with or without
telling their NATO partners – think
Lithuania, for example.
While Russian ground troops are well
suited to the missions set out for them in
southeastern Ukraine, I doubt that even the
most rabid Russophobes in the Institute for
the Study of War (the corporate media’s
go-to "think tank") would argue that Moscow
is about to attack any NATO country anytime
soon. OK, they would argue. But EVIDENCE?
What DOES Worry Putin
Meanwhile, no doubt as advance warning to
the ‘30 Blind Mice’ in Madrid, Putin said
Saturday that Russia planned to send
nuclear-capable missiles to
Belarus within months, apparently
reflecting a boldness born of Russia’s
recent advances in Ukraine’s southeastern
regions.
Putin made the promise in a meeting with
Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko,
who has publicly supported Russia in its
invasion of Ukraine. "We will transfer to
Belarus Iskander-M tactical missile systems,
which can use ballistic or cruise missiles,
in their conventional and nuclear versions,"
he said, according to Russia’s state-owned
Tass news agency. "It’s a deal."
Watch the
choreographed tête-à-tête between Putin
and Lukashenko – and shudder:
Former Russian president Dimitry Medvedev
also
threatened to move the Iskander
hypersonic missiles "onto the threshold" of
Russia’s Scandanavian and Baltic State
neighbors.
This primary concern will have to be on
the table when negotiations on an end to the
war in Ukraine eventually become possible.
Moscow’s approach on this issue
mirror-images its acute concern over U.S.
missile launch sites already emplaced in
Romania, and almost complete in Poland, that
can host offensive, nuclear-capable missiles
threatening western Russia. Putin has
worried aloud at having a mere 5 to 7
minutes warning time in such case.
Appeal to Common Sense
Medvedev appealed to the "common sense"
of the Western public and policy makers: "Nobody
in their right mind wants higher prices and
taxes, mounting tension along the borders,
Iskanders, hypersonic weapons or ships with
nukes a stone’s throw from their house.
Let’s hope that the common sense of our
neighbors eventually prevails. Yet if not,
then, as they say, "they started it," he
said.
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).
Ray
McGovern works with Tell the Word,
the publishing arm of the ecumenical
Church of the Saviour in inner-city
Washington. In the Sixties he served
as an infantry/intelligence officer
and then became a CIA analyst for
the next 27 years. He is on the
Steering Group of Veteran
Intelligence Professionals for
Sanity (VIPS)