War With
Russia Without Public Debate?
NATO is continuing its military buildup and
“exercises” on Russia’s borders, Moscow is taking
“counter-measures,” while the US mainstream media
remains silent.
By Stephen F. Cohen
June 11,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Nation"
- Nation contributing editor Stephen F.
Cohen and John Batchelor continue their weekly
discussions of the new US-Russian Cold War.
(Previous installments are at
TheNation.com).
This installment returns to the large-scale NATO
military buildup on Russia’s Western frontiers,
again on land, sea, and in the air, now featuring
Operation “Anaconda-2016,” an “exercise” involving
more than 30,000 American and other NATO forces in
Poland.
Batchelor asks whether alarmed warnings by
informed analysts, including three longtime Russian
residents in the United States, that actual war may
be imminent are plausible. Cohen thinks this
worst-case scenario cannot be ruled out, for several
reasons. The NATO build up is not episodic but
intended to grow and be permanent, and be ratified
at the NATO summit in Warsaw in July. No such
hostile forces have amassed on Russia’s Western
frontiers—now from the Baltic to the Black Sea—since
the Nazi German invasion in 1941. (The inclusion of
a German contingent among the NATO forces has
further awakened that memory in Russia.) The only
explanation given by the US-led NATO is “Putin’s
aggression” in Ukraine, but that was more than two
years ago. (Claims that he is now menacing the small
Baltic states and Poland are clearly without any
basis in fact.) Not surprisingly, Cohen reports,
Moscow is reinforcing its own conventional and
strategic (probably nuclear) forces on its Western
territories, bringing the two powers to a Cuban
missile crisis–like confrontation. Even leaving
aside accidental military acts, there are many other
potential tripwires, from Ukraine and Turkey to
Syria.
Astonishingly, this looming possibility of war
with Russia has gone largely unreported and entirely
undebated in mainstream American media. Neither
Batchelor nor Cohen can think of a precedent for
such a media blackout or indifference. The
situation, according to Cohen, is quite different in
Russia, where NATO’s buildup is hotly debated on,
for example, prime-time television talk shows.
Opinions vary as to the actual threat, but one
growing opinion is that “a scent of a great war is
in the air” and that Putin has not done enough to
ready the country at home or abroad. Analogously, a
leading Russian journalist publicly criticized the
Kremlin for not having intervened militarily in Kiev
in February 2014, when the ongoing crisis began with
the overthrow of a pro-Russian Ukrainian president.
That is, Putin also has a public opinion to consider
as he decides how to react to NATO’s buildup. |