Stumbling to War With Russia?
By Patrick J. Buchanan
November 28, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - Turkey’s decision to
shoot down a Russian warplane was a provocative and portentous act.
That Sukhoi Su-24, which the Turks say intruded
into their air space, crashed and burned — in Syria. One of the
Russian pilots was executed while parachuting to safety. A Russian
rescue helicopter was destroyed by rebels using a U.S. TOW missile.
A Russian marine was killed.
“A stab in the back by the accomplices of
terrorists,” said Vladimir Putin of the first downing of a Russian
warplane by a NATO nation in half a century. Putin has a point, as
the Russians are bombing rebels in northwest Syria, some of which
are linked to al-Qaida.
As it is impossible to believe Turkish F-16 pilots
would fire missiles at a Russian plane without authorization from
President Tayyip Recep Erdogan, we must ask: Why did the Turkish
autocrat do it?
Why is he risking a clash with Russia?
Answer: Erdogan is probably less outraged by
intrusions into his air space than by Putin’s success in securing
the Syrian regime of Bashar Assad, whom Erdogan detests, and by
relentless Russian air strikes on Turkmen rebels seeking to
overthrow Assad.
Imperiled strategic goals and ethnicity may
explain Erdogan. But what does the Turkish president see down at the
end of this road?
And what about us? Was the U.S. government aware
Turkey might attack Russian planes? Did we give Erdogan a green
light to shoot them down?
These are not insignificant questions.
For Turkey is a NATO ally. And if Russia strikes
back, there is a possibility Ankara will invoke Article V of NATO
and demand that we come in on their side in any fight with Russia.
And Putin was not at all cowed. Twenty-four hours
after that plane went down, his planes, ships and artillery were
firing on those same Turkmen rebels and their jihadist allies.
Politically, the Turkish attack on the Sukhoi
Su-24 has probably aborted plans to have Russia join France and the
U.S. in targeting ISIS, a diplomatic reversal of the first order.
Indeed, it now seems clear that in Syria’s civil
war, Turkey is on the rebel-jihadist side, with Russia, Iran and
Hezbollah on the side of the Syrian regime.
But whose side are we on?
As for what strategy and solution President Obama
offers, and how exactly he plans to achieve it, it remains an
enigma.
Nor is this the end of the alarming news.
According to The Times of Israel, Damascus reports
that, on Monday, Israel launched four strikes, killing five Syrian
soldiers and eight Hezbollah fighters, and wounding others.
Should Assad or Hezbollah retaliate, this could
bring Israel more openly into the Syrian civil war.
And if Israel is attacked, the pressure on
Washington to join her in attacking the Syrian regime and Hezbollah
would become intense.
Yet, should we accede to that pressure, it could
bring us into direct conflict with Russia, which is now the fighting
ally of the Assad regime.
Something U.S. presidents conscientiously avoided
through 45 years of Cold War — a military clash with Moscow — could
become a real possibility. Does the White House see what is
unfolding here?
Elsewhere, yet another Russia-NATO clash may be
brewing.
In southern Ukraine, pylons supporting the power
lines that deliver electricity to Crimea have been sabotaged, blown
up, reportedly by nationalists, shutting off much of the electric
power to the peninsula.
Repair crews have been prevented from fixing the
pylons by Crimean Tatars, angry at the treatment of their kinfolk in
Crimea.
In solidarity with the Tatars, Kiev has declared
that trucks carrying goods to Crimea will not be allowed to cross
the border.
A state of emergency has been declared in Crimea.
Russia is retaliating, saying it will not buy
produce from Ukraine, and may start cutting off gas and coal as
winter begins to set in.
Ukraine is as dependent upon Russia for fossil
fuels as Crimea is upon Ukraine for electricity. Crimea receives 85
percent of its water and 80 percent of its electricity from Ukraine.
Moreover, Moscow’s hopes for a lifting of U.S. and
EU sanctions, imposed after the annexation of Crimea, appear to be
fading.
Are these events coordinated? Has the U.S.
government given a go-ahead to Erdogan to shoot down Russian planes?
Has Obama authorized a Ukrainian economic quarantine of Crimea?
For Vladimir Putin is not without options. The
Russian Army and pro-Russian rebels in southeast Ukraine could
occupy Mariupol on the Black Sea and establish a land bridge to
Crimea in two weeks.
In Syria, the Russians, with 4,000 troops, could
escalate far more rapidly than either us or our French allies.
As of today, Putin supports U.S.-French attacks on
ISIS. But if we follow the Turks and begin aiding the rebels who are
attacking the Syrian army, we could find ourselves eyeball to
eyeball in a confrontation with Russia, where our NATO allies will
be nowhere to be found.
Has anyone thought this through?
Patrick Buchanan has been a senior advisor to
three Presidents, a two-time candidate for the Republican
presidential nomination, and was the presidential nominee of the
Reform Party in 2000.