Three Fronts For Russia:
How Washington Will Fan The Flames Of Chaos
In Central Asia
By Ivan Lizan for Odnako
February 23, 2015 "ICH"
- U.S. Gen. “Ben” Hodges’ statement
that within four or five years Russia could
develop the capability to wage war
simultaneously on three fronts is not only
an acknowledgment of the Russian
Federation’s growing military potential but
also a promise that Washington will
obligingly ensure that all three fronts are
right on the borders of the Russian
Federation.
In the context of China’s inevitable rise
and the soon-to-worsen financial crisis,
with the concomitant bursting of asset
bubbles, the only way for the United States
to maintain its global hegemony is to weaken
its opponents. And the only way to achieve
that goal is to trigger chaos in the
republics bordering Russia.
That is why Russia will inevitably enter a
period of conflicts and crises on its
borders.
And so the first front in fact already
exists in the Ukraine, the second will most
likely be between Armenia and Azerbaijan
over Nagorno-Karabakh, and the third, of
course, will be opened in Central Asia.
If the war in Ukraine leads to millions of
refugees, tens of thousands of deaths, and
the destruction of cities, defrosting the
Karabakh conflict will completely undermine
Russia’s entire foreign policy in the
Caucasus.
Every city in Central Asia is under threat
of explosions and attacks. So far this
“up-and-coming front” has attracted the
least media coverage – Novorossiya dominates
on national television channels, in
newspapers, and on websites –, but this
theater of war could become one of the most
complex after the conflict in the Ukraine.
A subsidiary of the Caliphate under
Russia’s belly
The indisputable trend in Afghanistan – and
the key source of instability in the region
– is to an alliance between the Taliban and
the Islamic State. Even so, the formation of
their union is in its early days, references
to it are scarce and fragmentary, and the
true scale of the activities of the IS
emissaries is unclear, like an iceberg whose
tip barely shows above the surface of the
water.
But it has been established that IS
agitators are active in Pakistan and in
Afghanistan’s southern provinces, which are
controlled by the Taliban. But, in this
case, the first victim of chaos in
Afghanistan is Pakistan, which at the
insistence of, and with help from, the
United States nurtured the Taliban in the
1980s. That project has taken on a life of
its own and is a recurring nightmare for
Islamabad, which has decided to establish a
friendlier relationship China and Russia.
This trend can be seen in the Taliban’s
attacks on Pakistani schools, whose teachers
now have the right to carry guns, regular
arrests of terrorists in the major cities,
and the start of activities in support of
tribes hostile to the Taliban in the north.
The latest legislative development in
Pakistan is a constitutional amendment to
expand military court jurisdiction [over
civilians]. Throughout the country,
terrorists, Islamists and their sympathizers
are being detained. In the northwest alone,
more than 8,000 arrests have been made,
including members of the clergy. Religious
organizations have been banned and IS
emissaries are being caught.
Since the Americans do not like putting all
their eggs in one basket, they will provide
support to the government in Kabul, which
will allow them to remain in the country
legitimately, and at the same time to the
Taliban, which is transforming itself into
IS. The outcome will be a state of chaos in
which the Americans will not formally take
part; instead, they will sit back on their
military bases, waiting to see who wins. And
then Washington will provide assistance to
the victor. Note that its security services
have been supporting the Taliban for a long
time and quite effectively: some of the
official security forces and police in
Afghanistan are former Taliban and
Mujahideen.
Method of destruction
The first way to destabilize Central Asia is
to create problems on the borders, along
with the threat that Mujahideen will
penetrate the region. The testing of the
neighbours has already started; problems
have arisen in Turkmenistan, which has even
had to ask Kabul to hold large-scale
military operations in the border provinces.
Tajikistan has forced the Taliban to
negotiate the release of the border guards
it abducted, and the Tajik border service
reports that there is a large group of
Mujahideen on its borders.
In general, all the countries bordering
Afghanistan have stepped up their border
security.
The second way is to send Islamists behind
the lines. The process has already begun:
the number of extremists in Tajikistan alone
grew three-fold last year; however, even
though they are being caught, it obviously
will not be feasible to catch all of them.
Furthermore, the situation is aggravated by
the return of migrant workers from Russia,
which will expand the recruiting base. If
the stream of remittances from Russia dries
up, the outcome may be popular discontent
and managed riots.
Kyrgyz expert Kadir Malikov reports that $70
million has been allocated to the IS
military group Maverenahr, which includes
representatives of all the Central Asian
republics, to carry out acts of terrorism in
the region. Special emphasis is placed on
the Fergana Valley as the heart of Central
Asia.
Another point of vulnerability is
Kyrgyzstan’s parliamentary elections,
scheduled for this fall. The initiation of a
new set of color revolutions will lead to
chaos and the disintegration of countries.
Self-supporting wars
Waging war is expensive, so the
destabilization of the region must be
self-supporting or at least profitable for
the U.S. military-industrial complex. And in
this area Washington has had some success:
it has given Uzbekistan 328 armored vehicles
that Kiev had requested for its war with
Novorossiya. At first glance, the deal isn’t
profitable because the machines were a gift,
but in reality Uzbekistan will be tied to
U.S. spare parts and ammunition. Washington
made a similar decision on the transfer of
equipment and weapons to Islamabad.
But the United States has not been
successful in its attempts to impose its
weapons systems on India: the Indians have
not signed any contracts, and Obama was
shown Russian military hardware when he
attended a military parade.
Thus the United States is drawing the
countries in the region into war with its
own protégés – the Taliban and Islamic State
– and at the same time is supplying its
enemies with weapons.
***
So 2015 will be marked by preparations for
widespread destabilization in Central Asia
and the transformation of AfPak into an
Islamic State subsidiary on the borders of
Russia, India, China, and Iran. The start of
full-scale war, which will inevitably follow
once chaos engulfs the region, will lead to
a bloodbath in the “Eurasian Balkans,”
automatically involving more than a third of
the world’s population and almost all the
United States’ geopolitical rivals. It’s an
opportunity Washington will find too good to
miss.
Russia’s response to this challenge has to
be multifaceted: involving the region in the
process of Eurasian integration, providing
military, economic, and political
assistance, working closely with its allies
in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and
the BRICS, strengthening the Pakistani army,
and of course assisting with the capture of
the bearded servants of the Caliphate.
But the most important response should be
the accelerated modernization of its armed
forces as well as those of its allies and
efforts to strengthen the Collective
Security Treaty Organization and give it the
right to circumvent the highly inefficient
United Nations.
The region is extremely important: if
Ukraine is a fuse of war, then Central Asia
is a munitions depot. If it blows up, half
the continent will be hit.
Source:
http://www.odnako.org/blogs/tri-fronta-dlya-rossii-kak-vashington-razduet-plamya-haosa-v-sredney-azii/
- Translated by Robin - Via
http://www.vineyardsaker.blogspot.com
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