On the 19th
Day of Christmas...
By Dmitry
Orlov
December 22, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
With all the action in Syria, the Ukraine is no
longer a subject for discussion in the West. In
Russia, where the Ukraine is still a major problem
looming on the horizon, and where some 1.5 million
Ukrainian refugees are settling in, with no
intentions of going back to what's left of the
Ukraine, it is still actively discussed. But for the
US, and for the EU, it is now yet another major
foreign policy embarrassment, and the less said
about it the better.
In the meantime, the Ukraine is in full-blown
collapse—all five glorious stages of it—setting the
stage for a Ukrainian Nightmare Before Christmas, or
shortly after.
Phase 1. Financially, the Ukrainian government is in
sovereign default as of a couple of days ago. The
IMF was forced to break its own rules in order to
keep it on life support even though it is clearly a
deadbeat. In the process, the IMF stiffed Russia,
which happens to be one of its major shareholders;
what gives?
Phase 2. Industry and commerce are approaching a
standstill and the country is rapidly
deindustrializing. Formerly, most of the trade was
with Russia; this is now over. The Ukraine does not
make anything that the EU might want, except maybe
prostitutes. Recently, the Ukraine has been selling
off its dirt. This is illegal, but, given what's
been happening there, the term “illegal” has become
the stuff of comedy.
Phase 3. Politically, the Ukrainian government is a
total farce. Much of it has been turned over to
fly-by-night foreigners, such as the former Georgian
president Saakashvili, who is a wanted criminal in
his own country, which has recently stripped him of
his citizenship. The parliament is stocked with
criminals who bought their seat to gain immunity
from prosecution, and who spend their time brawling
with each other. Prime Minister Yatsenyuk was
recently hauled off the podium by his crotch; how
dignified is that? He seemed unfazed. Where are his
testicles? Perhaps Victoria Nuland over at the US
State Dept. is keeping them in a jar. This sort of
action may be fun to watch on Youtube, but the
reality is quite sad: those who “run” the Ukraine
(if the term still applies) are only interested in
one thing: stealing whatever is left.
Phase 4. Ukrainian society (if the term still
applies) has been split into a number of warring
factions. This was, to some extent, inevitable. What
happens if you take bits of Poland, Hungary, Romania
and Russia, and stick them together willy-nilly?
Well, results may vary; but if you also spend $5
billion US (as the Americans did) turning the
Ukrainians against Russia (and, since they are
mostly Russian, against themselves), then you get a
complete disaster.
Phase 5. Cultural collapse is quite advanced. The
Ukraine once had the same world-class educational
system as Russia, but since independence they
switched to teaching in Ukrainian (a made-up
language) using nonexistent textbooks. The kids have
been taught a bogus history hallucinated by rabid
Ukrainian nationalists. They've been told that
Russia is backward and keeping them back, and that
they deserve to be happy in the EU. (Just like the
Greeks? Yeah...) But now the population has been
reduced to levels of poverty not commonly seen
outside of Africa, and young people are fleeing, or
turning to gangsterism and prostitution, to merely
survive. This doesn't make for a happy cultural
narrative. What does it mean to be “a Ukrainian”
now? Expletives deleted. Sorry I asked.
Now, here's what it all really means. With so much
going wrong, the Ukraine has been unable to secure
enough natural gas or coal supplies to provide a
supply cushion in case of a cold snap this winter. A
few weeks of frosty weather will deplete the supply,
and then pipes will freeze, rendering much of the
urban areas unlivable from then on (because, recall,
there is no longer any money, or any industry to
speak of, to repair the damage). That seems bad
enough, but we aren't quite there yet.
You see, the Ukraine produces over half of its
electricity using nuclear power plants. 19 nuclear
reactors are in operation, with 2 more supposedly
under construction. And this is in a country whose
economy is in free-fall and is set to approach that
of Mali or Burundi! The nuclear fuel for these
reactors was being supplied by Russia. An effort to
replace the Russian supplier with Westinghouse
failed because of quality issues leading to an
accident. What is a bankrupt Ukraine, which just
stiffed Russia on billions of sovereign debt, going
to do when the time comes to refuel those 19
reactors? Good question!
But an even better question is, Will they even make
it that far? You see, it has become known that these
nuclear installations have been skimping on
preventive maintenance, due to lack of funds. Now,
you are probably already aware of this, but let me
spell it out just in case: a nuclear reactor is not
one of those things that you run until it breaks,
and then call a mechanic once it does. It's not a
“if it ain't broke, I can't fix it” sort of
scenario. It's more of a “you missed a tune-up so I
ain't going near it” scenario. And the way to keep
it from breaking is to replace all the bits that are
listed on the replacement schedule no later than the
dates indicated on that schedule. It's either that
or the thing goes “Ka-boom!” and everyone's hair
falls out.
How close is Ukraine to a major nuclear accident?
Well, it turns out, very close: just recently one
was narrowly avoided when some Ukro-Nazis blew up
electric transmission lines supplying Crimea,
triggering a blackout that lasted many days. The
Russians scrambled and ran a transmission line from
the Russian mainland, so now Crimea is lit up again.
But while that was happening, the Southern
Ukrainian, with its 4 energy blocks, lost its
connection to the grid, and it was only the very
swift, expert actions taken by the staff there that
averted a nuclear accident.
I hope that you know this already, but, just in
case, let me spell it out again. One of the worst
things that can happen to a nuclear reactor is loss
of electricity supply. Yes, nuclear power stations
make electricity—some of the time—but they must be
supplied with electricity all the time to
avoid a meltdown. This is what happened at Fukushima
Daiichi, which dusted the ground with radionuclides
as far as Tokyo and is still leaking radioactive
juice into the Pacific.
And so the nightmare scenario for the Ukraine is a
simple one. Temperature drops bellow freezing and
stays there for a couple of weeks. Coal and natural
gas supplies run down; thermal power plants shut
down; the electric grid fails; circulator pumps at
the 19 nuclear reactors (which, by the way, probably
haven't been overhauled as recently as they should
have been) stop pumping; meltdown!
And so, if you want to say a prayer for the Ukraine
this holiday season, don't bother because it's well
and truly fucked. But do say a prayer for global
warming. If this winter stays very, very warm, then
the “19 Fukushimas” scenario just may be averted.
This is not impossible: we've been seeing one
freakishly warm winter after another, and each
passing month is setting new records. The future is
looking hot—as in very warm. Let us pray that it
doesn't also turn out to be hot—as in radioactive.
Dmitry Orlov
is a Russian-American engineer and a writer on
subjects related to "potential economic, ecological
and political decline and collapse in the United
States," something he has called “permanent crisis”.
http://cluborlov.blogspot.com |