By Frank T. Fitzgerald
April 19, 2023:
Information
Clearing House -- "
Anti War " -- Just after Russia
attacked Ukraine on February 24, 2022,
President Biden walked into the East Room of the White House and condemned
the invasion with a barrage of adjectives: unprovoked, unjustified, brutal,
without cause, premeditated, unnecessary. One of these quickly rose to
prominence. Following Biden’s initial statement, government spokespeople, the
mainstream media, professional pundits and many others routinely call the war in
Ukraine "unprovoked."
It is a well-chosen term, a rhetorical bon mot, and central to the
official story that sole responsibility for the war in Ukraine belongs to Russia
and Putin alone. It is also a term that gets continually reinforced by rampant
speculation seeking the origin of the invasion in
Putin’s brain: Is he insane? Terminally ill? Suffering form a messiah
complex? Obsessed with reconstituting Tsarist Russia or the Soviet Union. Based
on patchy, ambiguous or often no evidence, the list is potentially endless but
always dubious.
The overriding function of presenting the war in Ukraine as a crime
perpetrated by one country, even by one allegedly whacked-out leader, is to
relieve the U.S., NATO and actors within Ukraine of even the slightest
responsibility for the war. Russia and Putin are the only perpetrators; everyone
else is either an innocent bystander or an unfortunate victim – so goes the
official story.
A much-needed antidote to this story is provided by Benjamin Abellow’s recent
book,
How The West Brought War To Ukraine. Based on the critiques of a
range of scholars, US government officials and military observers, and on his
own investigations and interpretations, Abelow shows in compelling detail how
the official story misleads. His short, seventy-one-page book is a compendium of
the many ways that the Russian invasion of Ukraine was provoked.
In the current political climate dominated by the official story, saying any
such thing easily gets one tagged an apologist for Putin or Russia. Abelow makes
clear, however, that he is a neither a fan of Putin nor a supporter of Russia’s
invasion of Ukraine. Without specifying what they were, Abelow contends that
Russia and Putin had alternatives to war. The implication, of course, is that
these alternatives should have been pursued. Since they were not, considerable
responsibility for the horrifying and condemnable war in Ukraine, insists
Abelow, falls on Russia and Putin.
But Abelow departs from the official story by showing that others were also
responsible for the war in Ukraine. Although beyond the scope of and never
mentioned in Abelow’s book, these would include various political actors within
Ukraine itself, all of whom have been amply and deftly explored in Richard
Sakwa’s
Frontline Ukraine. Abelow’s focus is on the many ways in which
the war in Ukraine was provoked by the US and NATO.
Here are a fraction of the provocations that Abelow examines:
During German reunification in 1990-91, US and NATO officials assured Soviet
leaders that NATO would never expand into Eastern Europe. Despite such initial
assurances and subsequent Russian complaints about having been duped, NATO
proceeded to expand right up to the borders of the Russian Federation. Western
assurances were never reduced to writing, but their abrogation undermined
Russian trust in Western promises. Many prominent diplomatic experts, including
George F. Kennan, famous for formulating the Cold War policy of containing
Communism, warned that disregarding Russia’s real security concerns and pushing
NATO eastward was foolhardy and would likely lead to war.
As NATO expanded, the US and NATO engaged in a variety of actions that
Russian leaders would predictably see as militarily threatening. The U.S.
withdrew from the Anti-Ballistic and the intermediate-range nuclear missile
treaties, and then ignored Russian attempts to negotiate a bilateral moratorium
on deployments. The U.S. deployed nuclear-capable missile launch systems in
Romania and planned them for Poland and perhaps elsewhere. The US and NATO
conducted live-fire rocket exercises in Estonia to practice striking targets
within Russia, and the US and NATO conducted massive 32-nation military training
exercises near Russia’s border.
In Ukraine specifically, the US and NATO exacerbated the country’s internal
divisions. The US involved itself in the 2014 coup against the democratically
elected President of Ukraine and in the choice of his replacement. Instead of
pressing for a negotiated settlement between Ukraine’s post-coup government and
pro-Russian autonomists in the Donbas, the US poured armaments into Ukraine,
stepped up military training of Ukrainian forces, and supported
ultra-nationalist and anti-Russian (some Neo-Nazi) groups and militias,
Even on the precipice of war in late 2021, the U.S. and NATO refused to
renounce plans to incorporate Ukraine into NATO. Indeed, the US refused to even
discuss the question.
Abelow makes two convincing points about these US and NATO provocations:
First, if Russia had committed even some of the above actions above close to
U.S. borders, the US surely would have gone to war, even nuclear war, as it
almost did during the 1962 Cuban missile crisis, when the Soviets installed
missiles in Cuba.
Second, but for these provocations by the US and NATO, it is virtually
inconceivable that Russia would have invaded Ukraine in 2022. The war in
Ukraine, with all its horrors and its potential for escalating and spinning out
of control, would not today be raging.
Abelow’s conclusion about the war in Ukraine is notable: "when all is taken
into account, primary responsibility lies with the West, in particular with the
United States." I agree, but it is not necessary to go so far to recognize the
importance of Abelow’s arguments. Any reader of Abelow’s book who is not
irreversibly blinded by the official story has to see that responsibility for
the war in Ukraine is at least shared.
This point is not of just historical interest. For the official story informs
not just the question of how the war in Ukraine began but also of how it might
be ended. Since the US, NATO and Ukrainian spokespeople persist in viewing
Russia and Putin as the war’s sole perpetrators, they insist that the war cannot
end until Russia is totally defeated, strategically weakened and forced to
return all previously Ukrainian territory, including Crimea. Such goals are not
only unrealistic, they block any serious effort to end the war through
negotiations.
Realistically, the only alternatives to negotiations now are a long,
simmering slog back and forth through Ukrainian fields and towns, a slog that
will eventually grind down both sides and grind up their fighters and civilians,
or another endless and escalating war that may spread uncontrollably beyond
Ukraine and that may end us all in Nuclear Armageddon.
Despite its misleading nature and it ugly consequences, however, the official
story is likely to persist. Erasing the official story and ending the war in
Ukraine will require more than books like Abelow’s. It will require pushing
peace initiatives like China’s (a topic for a future essay), which despite US
and NATO attempts to discredit it as biased toward Russia, is remarkably
even-handed in seeing the war in Ukraine as a shared responsibility between
Russia and the US and NATO. Beyond that, ending the war in Ukraine will require
sustained opposition by a growing peace movement, a peace movement that will
surely find Abelow’s short book extremely useful.
Frank T. Fitzgerald, Ph.D. is a retired sociology professor and longtime
peace and justice activist and author. He can be reached at
fitzgerf@icloud.com.