The Europeans have been nicely played by the
Americans
By MK Bhadrakumar
Former Ambassador
October 18, 2022:
Information Clearing House
-- " Two massive
terrorist strikes misfired spectacularly and a
terrible beauty is born in the Ukraine war.
These two carefully planned attacks in quick
succession — on Nord Stream gas pipelines and
Crimean Bridge — were intended as a knockout
blow to Russia. According to President Vladimir
Putin, people ‘who want to finally sever ties
between Russia and the EU, weaken Europe’ are
behind the Nord Stream blasts. He named the US,
Ukraine and Poland as ‘beneficiaries’.
India should expect the
defeat of the US and NATO, which completes
the transition to a multipolar world order.
Last Wednesday, Russia’s domestic
intelligence service FSB identified Ukraine’s
military intelligence chief, Kyrylo Budanov, as
the mastermind behind the Crimean attack. The
New York Times and Washington Post also pointed
fingers at Kiev, quoting ‘sources’. While Nord
Stream-1 has been crippled, one of the strings
of Nord Stream-2 remains intact. Putin said last
week that the pipeline could be restored and
Russia could deliver about 27 billion cubic
metres of gas. ‘The ball is on the side of the
European Union, if they want — let’s turn on the
tap,’ he said.
But mum’s the word from Brussels. It is a
profoundly embarrassing moment for the EU. The
triumphalism has vanished as Europe is
threatened by years of recession caused by the
blowback from sanctions against Russia, where
the US insisted on the cut off of energy ties
with Moscow. The EU has now become a captive
market for Big Oil and is left to buy LNG from
the US at the asking price, which is six to
seven times higher than the domestic price in
the US. (Contracted price for long-term Russian
supply for Germany used to be about $280 per
1,000 cubic metres as against the current market
price hovering around $2,000.)
Plainly put, the Europeans have been nicely
played by the Americans. India should take note
of the US’ sense of entitlement. Basically, the
Biden administration created a contrived energy
crisis whose real aim is war profiteering.
The Crimean Bridge attack of October 8 is
much more serious. Zelenskyy has crossed a red
line that Moscow had repeatedly warned him
against. Putin has disclosed that there have
also been three terrorist attacks against the
Kursk NPP. Russians will settle for nothing less
than the ouster of the Zelenskyy regime.
Russia’s retaliation against Ukraine’s
‘critical infrastructure’, something Moscow
refrained from so far, has serious implications.
Since October 9, Russia has begun systematically
targeting Ukraine’s power system and railways.
Noted Russian military expert Vladislav Shurygin
told Izvestia that if this tempo was kept up for
a week or so, it ‘will disrupt the entire
logistics of the Ukrainian military — system for
transporting personnel, military equipment,
ammunition, related cargo, as well as the
functioning of military and repair plants.’
The Americans are cocooned in a surreal world
of their self-serving narrative that Russia
‘lost’ the war. In the real world, though, Ivan
Tertel, KGB chief in Belarus, who has an insider
view of Moscow, said last Tuesday that with
Russia boosting its troop strength in the war
zone — 3 lakh troops who have been mobilised
plus 70,000 volunteers — and the deployment of
advanced weaponry, ‘the military operation will
enter a key phase. According to our estimates, a
turning point will come in the period from
November of this year to February of next year.’
Policy-makers and strategists in Delhi should
make a careful note of the timeline. The bottom
line is, Russia is looking for an all-out
victory and will not settle for anything less
than a friendly government in Kiev. Western
politicians, including Biden, understand that
there is nothing stopping the Russians now. The
US’ weapon kitty is running dry as Kiev keeps
asking for more.
When asked whether he’d meet Biden at the G20
in Bali, Putin derisively remarked on Friday,
‘He (Biden) should be asked whether he is ready
to hold such negotiations with me or not. To be
honest, I don’t see any need, by and large.
There is no platform for any negotiations for
the time being.’
However, Washington has not yet thrown in the
towel and the Biden administration remains
obsessed with exhausting the Russian military —
even at the cost of Ukraine’s destruction. And,
for the Russians too, there is still much to be
worked out on the battlefield: the oppressed
Russian populations in Odessa (which suffered
unspeakable atrocities from the neo-Nazis),
Mykolaiv, Zaporizhya, Dnipropetrovsk, Kharkov
are expecting ‘liberation’. It’s a highly
emotive issue for Russia. Again, the overarching
agenda of ‘demilitarisation’ and
‘denazification’ of Ukraine must be taken to its
logical conclusion.
When all that is over, Putin knows Biden will
not even want to meet him. Hungarian PM Viktor
Orban said last week, ‘Anyone who seriously
believes that the war can be ended through
Russian-Ukrainian negotiations lives in another
world. Reality looks different. In reality, such
issues can only be discussed between Washington
and Moscow. Today, Ukraine is able to fight only
because it receives military assistance from the
United States…
‘At the same time, I do not see President
Biden as the person who would really be suitable
for such serious negotiations. President Biden
has gone too far. Suffice it to recall his
statements to Russian President Putin.’
India should expect the defeat of the US and
NATO, which completes the transition to a
multipolar world order. Sadly, Indian elites are
yet to purge their ‘unipolar predicament’.
Europe, including Britain, is devastated and
there is palpable discontent over the US’s
‘transatlantic leadership’. Indo-Pacific
strategy is hopelessly adrift. New power centres
are emerging in India’s extended neighbourhood,
as the OPEC’s rebuff to Washington shows. A
profound adjustment is needed in the Indian
strategic calculus.
Views expressed in this article are
solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
in this article are
solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
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