UK Establishment Press Ruefully Admits Defeat
By John V. WalshMay 20, 2023:
Information
Clearing House -- "Anti
War" --
The US with its EU vassals in tow has carried out a two-pronged
attack on Russia. The first is Joe Biden’s cruel proxy war on Russia, with its
cynical use of Ukrainians as cannon fodder. The second prong is the sanctions
war designed to destroy Russia’s economy.
The economic war is a failure. Russia has won. This verdict comes not from a
Russia-friendly source but from two well-known British publications. One is the
UK’s oldest political magazine, The Spectator. The other is The Daily
Telegraph, a British broadsheet that supports the Ukraine war and has always
endorsed Conservative candidates. Boris Johnson was once the editor of the
former and a columnist for the latter.
This writer, no follower of the British press, was made aware of both pieces
by Alexander Mercouris who discussed the articles on his own YouTube channel
both here and, together with his
partner Alex Christoforou, on The Duran Channel
here. (I cannot recommend these sites
highly enough for their daily posts on geopolitics, with a focus on the crisis
in Ukraine and Europe.)
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The Spectator Admits Failure in the Economic War on Russia
The first, the
Spectator article, titled bluntly "Why the economic war against
Russia has failed," reads in part:
"The other prong, though, has turned out to be blunt: the plan to wage
economic war with Moscow, unleashing financial shock and awe on a scale never
seen before. Russia was to be cut off almost entirely, with sanctions and
boycotts on all imports and exports save for humanitarian ones such as
medicines. Putin’s Russia, went the theory, would be impoverished into
surrender." (The brutality of the phrase "impoverished into surrender" slips
so easily onto the page of this piece, because it is standard Western imperial
behavior, now normalized. ~ jw)
"Few people in the West are aware of how badly this aspect of the war is
going. Europe has itself paid a high price to effect a partial boycott of
Russian oil and gas. …."
"It soon became clear that while the West was keen on an economic war, the
rest of the world was not. As its oil and gas exports to Europe fell, Russia
quickly upped its exports to China and India – both of which preferred to buy
oil at a discount than to make a stand against the invasion of Ukraine. Worse,
some of the Russian oil exported to India appears to have been siphoned back to
Europe, with a rise in the number of ships taking refined oil from India through
the Suez Canal.
"The West embarked on its sanctions war with an exaggerated sense of its
own influence around the world. As we have discovered, non-western countries
lack the will (sic!) to impose sanctions on either Russia or on Russian
oligarchs. The results of the miscalculation are there for all to see. In April
last year, the IMF forecast that the Russian economy would contract by 8.5 per
cent in 2022 and by a further 2.3 per cent this year. As it turned out, GDP fell
by just 2.1 per cent last year, and this year the IMF is forecasting a small
rise of 0.7 per cent. … The Russian economy has not been destroyed; it has
merely been reconfigured, reorientated to look eastwards and southwards rather
than westwards."
The Telegraph Article Admits Failure in the Economic War on
Russia
The second article, this one in in
The Daily Telegraph paints an equally grim picture:
"Russia was
meant to have collapsed by now. Britain, America and Europe’s
gambit was that drastic trade, financial and technological sanctions, a cap on
the price of Russian seaborne oil, and substantial help to Ukraine would be
enough to defeat Moscow. It hasn’t worked. For all of the sacrifices of the
Ukrainian people, the war has reached a stalemate, at least until Kyiv’s
counter-offensive.
"The reason? China has quietly stepped in, bailing out Putin’s shattered
economy on a transformational scale, swapping energy and raw materials for goods
and technology. The sanctions are a joke. Russian-Chinese trade rose 41.3 per
cent in the first four months of the year to $73 billion, financing Putin’s
war. China’s exports to Russia were up 153 per cent in April 2023 alone; their
rise more than cancels out the decline in German and French trade, as Robin
Brooks, of the Institute for International Finance, points out. China’s trade
has also shot up with Belarus, Kazakhstan, Georgia and Turkey, all with easy,
porous access to Russia.
"No wonder Russian society hasn’t imploded. There may no longer be any
McDonald’s in Moscow, but sales of Chinese cars are buoyant. We were told Russia
couldn’t survive without Western technology, but it is switching instead to
China’s rival systems."
Mercouris describes the tone of these articles as bitter. And indeed, it
seems that the Anglo-Saxons have got the taste of some very bitter fruits of
defeat.
After Three Economic Assaults by the US, Russia Heads East
This is the third time since the end of Cold War 1.0 that the US has tried to
destroy the Russian economy. The
first was carried out by Bill Clinton in the 90s and resulted in a deeper
and longer lasting Depression than the worldwide Great Depression of the 1930’s,
with a declined of GDP of 43% and a shortening of lifespan by four years. Such
is the cruelty of economic warfare.
The second came after the US-backed coup in Ukraine in 2014 and the shelling
of the Donbas with the subsequent referendum in Crimea and its reincorporation
into Russia, providing the perfect excuse for brutal sanctions against Russia.
Russia learned how to handle those sanctions, one reason why it has succeeded in
evading the present ones. The present failure is the third. It is hardly
surprising that Russia has had quite enough and has turned decisively to China
and the other dynamic economies of East Asia.
Both articles, but especially the one in the Telegraph, blame China
for Russia’s successful evasion of the Western imperial maw. The Telegraph
article is titled, "Xi Jinping is running out of time and he knows it." On this
view, although China (leading the rest of the Global South) was the Great
Enabler allowing Putin to pivot to the East, its time is running out. Soon China
will reach its peak and start to descend, a prediction we have heard repeatedly
for the last quarter century but is yet to be realized.
In this telling Russia always comes out as a haplessly colonized nation with
China as the cunning overlord. The only possibility is a win-lose outcome, which
tells us more about the West’s world view than anything else. The idea of a
win-win multipolar world with respect among nations as sovereign equals is
simply not in the vocabulary of the West. Let’s hope that changes before we
consume ourselves in nuclear war or in so busying ourselves with war and
conflict that we fail to address the looming threats to our survival.
John V. Walsh, until recently a Professor of Physiology and Neuroscience
at the University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, has written on issues of
peace and health care for the San Francisco Chronicle, EastBayTimes/San Jose
Mercury News, Asia Times, LA Progressive, Antiwar.com, CounterPunch and others.