Col. MacGregor: The
GATHERING Storm in Ukraine Spells Doom for the
West
By Col. MacGregor
March 22,
2023:
Information Clearing House-- The crisis of
American national power has begun. America’s economy is
tipping over, and Western
financial markets are quietly
panicking. Imperiled by rising interest
rates, mortgage-backed securities and U.S.
Treasuries are losing their value. The market’s
proverbial “vibes”—feelings,
emotions, beliefs, and psychological
penchants—suggest a dark turn is underway inside
the American economy.
American national power is measured as much
by American military capability as by economic
potential and performance. The growing
realization that American and
European military-industrial capacity cannot
keep up
with
Ukrainian
demands for ammunition and equipment is an
ominous signal to send during a proxy war that
Washington insists its Ukrainian surrogate is
winning.
Russian economy-of-force operations in
southern Ukraine appear to have successfully
ground down attacking Ukrainian forces with the
minimal expenditure of Russian lives and
resources. While Russia’s implementation of
attrition warfare worked brilliantly, Russia
mobilized
its reserves of men and equipment to field a
force that is several magnitudes larger and
significantly more lethal than it was a year
ago.
Russia’s massive arsenal of artillery systems
including rockets, missiles, and drones linked
to overhead surveillance platforms
converted Ukrainian soldiers fighting to
retain the northern edge of the Donbas into
pop-up targets. How many
Ukrainian soldiers have died is unknown, but
one recent estimate wagers between
150,000-200,000 Ukrainians have been killed in
action since the war began, while
another estimates about 250,000.
Given
the glaring weakness of NATO members’
ground, air, and air defense forces, an unwanted
war with Russia could easily bring hundreds of
thousands of
Russian Troops to the Polish border, NATO’s
Eastern Frontier. This is not an outcome
Washington promised its European allies, but
it’s now a real possibility.
In contrast to the Soviet Union’s hamfisted
and ideologically driven foreign policymaking
and execution, contemporary
Russia has skillfully cultivated support for
its cause in Latin America, Africa, the Middle
East, and South Asia. The fact that the West’s
economic sanctions
damaged the U.S. and European economies
while turning the Russian ruble into one of the
international system’s strongest currencies has
hardly enhanced Washington’s global standing.
Biden’s policy of forcibly pushing NATO to
Russia’s borders forged a strong commonality of
security and trade interests between Moscow and
Beijing that is attracting strategic partners in
South Asia like India, and partners like Brazil
in Latin America. The global economic
implications for the
emerging Russo-Chinese axis and their
planned industrial revolution for some 3.9
billion people in the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization (SCO) are profound.
In sum, Washington’s military strategy to
weaken, isolate, or even destroy Russia is a
colossal failure and the failure puts
Washington’s proxy war with Russia on a truly
dangerous path. To press on, undeterred in the
face of Ukraine’s descent into oblivion, ignores
three metastasizing threats: 1. Persistently
high inflation and rising interest rates
that signal economic weakness. (The first
American bank failure since 2020 is a
reminder of U.S. financial fragility.) 2. The
threat to stability and prosperity inside
European societies already reeling from several
waves of
unwanted refugees/migrants. 3. The threat of
a
wider European war.
Inside presidential administrations, there
are always competing factions urging the
president to adopt a particular course of
action. Observers on the outside seldom know
with certainty which faction exerts the most
influence, but there are figures in the Biden
administration seeking an off-ramp from
involvement in Ukraine. Even
Secretary of State Antony Blinken, a rabid
supporter of the proxy war with Moscow,
recognizes that Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelensky’s demand that the West help him
recapture Crimea is a red line for Putin that
might lead to a dramatic escalation from Moscow.
Backing down from the Biden administration’s
malignant and asinine demands for a humiliating
Russian withdrawal from eastern Ukraine before
peace talks can convene is a step Washington
refuses to take. Yet it must be taken. The
higher
interest rates rise, and the more Washington
spends at home and abroad
to prosecute the war in Ukraine, the closer
American society moves toward internal political
and social turmoil. These are
dangerous conditions for any republic.
From all the wreckage and confusion of the
last two years, there emerges one undeniable
truth.
Most Americans are right to be distrustful
of and dissatisfied with their government.
President Biden comes across as a cardboard
cut-out, a stand-in for ideological fanatics in
his administration, people that see executive
power as the means to
silence political opposition and retain
permanent control of the federal government.
Americans are not fools. They know that
members of Congress
flagrantly trade stocks based on inside
information, creating conflicts of interest that
would land most citizens in jail. They also know
that since 1965 Washington led them into a
series of failed military interventions that
severely
weakened American political, economic, and
military power.
Far too many Americans believe they have had
no real national leadership since January 21,
2021. It is high time the Biden administration
found an off-ramp designed to extricate
Washington, D.C., from its proxy Ukrainian war
against Russia. It will not be easy. Liberal
internationalism or, in its modern guise,
“moralizing globalism,” makes prudent diplomacy
arduous, but now is the time. In Eastern Europe,
the spring rains present both Russian and
Ukrainian ground forces with
a sea of mud that severely impedes movement.
But the Russian High Command is preparing to
ensure that when the ground dries and Russian
ground forces attack, the operations will
achieve an unambiguous decision, making it clear
that Washington and its supporters have no
chance to rescue the dying regime in Kiev. From
then on, negotiations will be extremely
difficult, if not impossible.
Douglas Macgregor, Col. (ret.) is a senior
fellow with The American Conservative,
the former advisor to the Secretary of Defense
in the Trump administration, a decorated combat
veteran, and the author of five books.
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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