The Demonisation Of Russia
Risks Paving The Way For War
Politicians and the media are using Vladimir
Putin and Ukraine to justify military
expansionism. It’s dangerous folly
By Seumas Milne
March 05, 2015 "ICH"
- "The
Guardian" - A
quarter of a century after the end of the
cold war, the “Russian threat” is
unmistakably back.
Vladimir Putin, Britain’s defence
secretary Michael Fallon declares, is as
great a danger to Europe as “Islamic State”.
There may be no ideological confrontation,
and Russia may be a shadow of its Soviet
predecessor, but the anti-Russian drumbeat
has now reached fever pitch.
And much more than in Soviet
times, the campaign is personal. It’s all
about Putin. The Russian president is an
expansionist dictator who has launched a
“shameless aggression”. He is the epitome of
“political depravity”, “carving up” his
neighbours as he crushes dissent at home,
and routinely is compared to Hitler. Putin
has now become a cartoon villain and Russia
the target of almost uniformly belligerent
propaganda across the western media. Anyone
who questions the dominant narrative on
Ukraine – from last year’s overthrow of the
elected president and the
role of Ukrainian far right to war
crimes carried out by Kiev’s forces – is
dismissed as a Kremlin dupe.
That has been ratcheted up
still further with the
murder of the opposition politician Boris
Nemtsov. The Russian president has, of
course, been blamed for the killing, though
that makes little sense. Nemtsov was a
marginal figure whose role in the
“catastroika” of the 1990s scarcely endeared
him to ordinary Russians. Responsibility for
an outrage that exposed the lack of security
in the heart of Moscow and was certain to
damage the president hardly seems likely to
lie with Putin or his supporters.
But it’s certainly grist to
the mill of those pushing military
confrontation with Russia. Hundreds of US
troops are arriving in Ukraine this week to
bolster the Kiev regime’s war with
Russian-backed rebels in the east. Not to be
outdone, Britain is sending 75 military
advisers of its own. As 20th-century history
shows, the dispatch of military advisers is
often how disastrous escalations start. They
are also a direct violation of
last month’s Minsk agreement, negotiated
with France and Germany, that has at least
achieved a temporary ceasefire and some
pull-back of heavy weapons. Article 10
requires the withdrawal of all foreign
forces from Ukraine.
But Nato’s hawks have got
the bit between their teeth. Thousands of
Nato troops have been sent to the Baltic
states – the Atlantic alliance’s new
frontline – untroubled by their
indulgence of neo-Nazi parades and
denial of minority ethnic rights. A string
of American political leaders and generals
are calling for the US to arm Kiev, from the
chairman of the joint chiefs of staff,
General Martin Dempsey, to the
new defence secretary, Ashton Carter.
For the western military complex, the
Ukraine conflict has the added attraction of
creating new reasons to increase arms
spending, as the US army’s General Raymond
Odierno made clear when he complained this
week about British defence cuts in the face
of the “Russian threat”.
Putin’s authoritarian
conservatism may offer little for Russia’s
future, but this anti-Russian incitement is
dangerous folly. There certainly has been
military expansionism. But it has
overwhelmingly come from Nato, not Moscow.
For 20 years, despite the commitments at the
end of the cold war, Nato has marched
relentlessly eastwards, taking in first
former east European Warsaw Pact states,
then republics of the former Soviet Union
itself. As the academic Richard Sakwa puts
it in his book
Frontline Ukraine, Nato now “exists to
manage the risks created by its existence”.
Instead of creating a
common European security system including
Russia, the US-dominated alliance has
expanded up to the Russian border –
insisting that is merely the sovereign
choice of the states concerned. It clearly
isn’t. It’s also the product of an alliance
system designed to entrench American
“leadership” on the European continent –
laid out in
Pentagon planning drawn up after the
collapse of the Soviet Union to “prevent
the re-emergence of a new rival”.
Russia has now challenged
that, and the consequences have been played
out in Ukraine for the past year: starting
with the western-backed ousting of the
elected government, through the installation
of a Ukrainian nationalist regime, the
Russian takeover of Crimea and Moscow-backed
uprising in the Donbass. On the ground, it
has meant thousands of dead, hundreds of
thousands of refugees, indiscriminate
shelling of civilian areas and the rise of
Ukrainian fascist militias
such as the Azov battalion,
supported by Kiev and its western
sponsors, now preparing to “defend” Mariupol
from its own people. For the bulk of the
western media, that’s dismissed as Kremlin
propaganda.
Russian covert military
support for the rebels, on the other hand,
is denounced as aggression and “hybrid
warfare” – by the same governments that have
waged covert wars
from Nicaragua to Syria, quite apart
from outright aggressions and illegal
campaigns in Kosovo, Libya and Iraq.
That doesn’t justify less
extreme Russian violations of international
law, but it puts them in the context of
Russian security. While Putin is portrayed
in the west as a reckless land-grabber, in
Russian terms he is a centrist. As the
veteran Russian leftist Boris Kagarlitsky
comments, most Russians want Putin to take a
tougher stand against the west “not because
of patriotic propaganda, but their
experience of the past 25 years”.
In the west, Ukraine –
along with Isis – is being used to revive
the
doctrines of liberal interventionism and
even neoconservatism, discredited on the
killing fields of Iraq and Afghanistan. So
far, Angela Merkel and François Hollande
have resisted
American pressure to arm Kiev. But when
the latest Minsk ceasefire breaks down, as
it surely will, there is a real risk that
Ukraine’s proxy conflict could turn into
full-scale international war.
The alternative is a
negotiated settlement which guarantees
Ukraine’s neutrality, pluralism and regional
autonomy. It may well be too late for that.
But there is certainly no military solution.
Instead of escalating the war and fuelling
nationalist extremism, western powers should
be using their leverage to wind it down. If
they don’t, the consequences could be
disastrous – far beyond
Ukraine.
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