By Sheldon Richman
March 07, 2022:
Information Clearing House
-- Contrary to what
hypocritical U.S. rulers and their loyal mass
media suggest, two propositions can both be –
and indeed are – true:
- that Russia has grossly, brutally, and
criminally mishandled the situation it has
faced with respect to Ukraine, and
- that the US government since the late
1990s has been entirely responsible
for imposing that situation on Russia.
If you want the fine details, you can do no
better than to watch my Libertarian Institute
colleague Scott Horton’s excellent cataloging of
the irresponsible misdeeds of Presidents Bill
Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, Donald
Trump, and Joseph Biden in
this
recent lecture. If, after absorbing this
shocking record of indisputable facts, you are
seething at what the US government has done to
squander a historic chance for good relations
with Russia, you will be fully justified – and
then some. (See also this
2015
lecture by John Mearsheimer, the respected
“realist” foreign policy analyst at the
University of Chicago.)
To appreciate what bipartisan US foreign
policy has wrought, think about 1989 when the
undreamt-of virtually bloodless dismantling of
the Soviet empire began. At that point humanity
was on the verge of a new chapter in which the
world’s largest nuclear superpowers would no
longer confront each other, holding everyone
hostage. Think about that, and then learn how
the US government blew it deliberately, despite
all the warnings that the consequences would be
dire.
How so? By kicking the Russian people in the
teeth repeatedly in all kinds of ways when they
were reeling from seven decades of communism. If
the US government’s intent had been to destroy
the chance for this historic turn, it couldn’t
have done a better job.
Americans have a funny way of thinking that
history began the day of the latest crisis. The
politicians and media feed this bad habit. So if
Russia invades Ukraine, the only explanation is
that he’s power-mad, if not just plain mad. The
idea that the US might have set the stage isn’t
allowed to be entertained. With social-media
magnates sucking up to the power elite, this is
serious stuff.
Do Americans want to know why Russia went to
war? They might not like to hear that “their”
government must shoulder a good deal of blame,
but it’s undeniable that since World War II the
power that occupies Middle North America has had
its heavy hand in virtually every part of the
world. The rules of international law that all
nations are supposed to observe simply don’t
apply to the United States. Just look at the
invasions and regime changes that have gone on
since 2001, not to mention back to the early
1950s. That’s what it means to be the
exceptional nation. The rules apply to everyone
except America’s rulers. (See Robert Wright’s
“In Defense of Whataboutism.”)
This history forms the larger context in
which the unconscionable Russian war on Ukraine
– with all the terror it’s inflicting on
innocents – is taking place. It is unseemly for
an American president to piously admonish the
Russian government about its breaches of
national sovereignty in light of the shameful US
record.
Since the end of the Soviet Union in 1991, US
presidents have taken a series of actions that
seemed designed to make the Russians distrust
the West in the new era. This is not hindsight.
As noted, many respected establishment
foreign-policy figures warned against such
measures.
The measures included the bombing of Russia’s
ally Serbia in the late 1990s; the repeated
expansion of NATO, the postwar alliance founded
to counter the Soviet Union, to include former
Soviet allies and republics; the public talk of
including the former Soviet republics Ukraine
and Georgia in the Western alliance; the
trashing of long-standing anti-nuclear-weapons
treaties with Russia; the placing of defensive
missile launchers (which could be converted to
offensive launchers) in Poland and Romania: the
attempts to sabotage the Russia-to-Germany Nord
Stream 2 natural-gas pipeline deal; instigating
the 2014 regime change in Ukraine (following
earlier regime-changes operations in Ukraine and
Georgia); the arming of Ukraine since 2017; the
conducting of NATO war exercises, with US
personnel, near the Russian border; the
years-long evidence-free effort to persuade
Americans that Russia manipulated the 2016
presidential election to elect Donald Trump; and
much, much, much more. Trump – recall
his goading of NATO members into spending more
on their militaries – was among the offenders:
his anti-Russia moves, including NATO expansion
like all of his 21st-century predecessors, would
fill a list as long as Wilt Chamberlain’s arm.
If he was a Russian puppet, as the Democrats,
intelligence apparatus, and mainstream media
want us to believe, then the Russians have a
great deal to learn about puppeteering.
Take one of the biggest spurs to war: the
eastward expansion of NATO, which the US
government and Western Europe promised would not
happen after Germany was reunited while the
Soviet Union was heading toward termination. It
happened anyway, but not because Russia had
behaved badly toward the West. It hadn’t. In
fact, after 9/11 Russian ruler Vladimir Putin
was the first to call Bush II to offer his
support. Later Putin even suggested that Russia
be invited to join NATO, something President
George H. W. Bush had once mentioned. One
wonders why NATO was even necessary with the
Soviet Union gone, but if Russia could join –
really, what was the point?
The expansion of NATO by 1,200 miles toward
Russia demonstrates how myopic American rulers
can be. American critics repeatedly pointed out
that no president would not have tolerated
Russia’s inviting Mexico and Canada into its
now-defunct Warsaw Pact. Yet NATO now includes
the Baltic states – those former Soviet
republics on the Russian border, Lithuania,
Latvia, and Estonia – and Eastern European
states that were once in the Warsaw Pact.
Indeed, we already know how the US government
reacts when its security concerns are flouted.
In 1962 President John F. Kennedy was ready to
launch a nuclear war against the Soviet Union
when it placed nuclear missiles in Cuba. For
days the world sat on the edge of its seat
wondering if the end was near. (I remember it!)
Finally, Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev
withdrew the missiles, but only when Kennedy
secretly agreed to remove American
nuclear-tipped missiles from Turkey.
Later American presidents forgot about that
crisis. Clinton added Warsaw Pact states late in
his second term. Then it was Bush II’s turn. At
its April 2008 Bucharest summit, NATO declared
that it “welcomes Ukraine’s and Georgia’s Euro
Atlantic aspirations for membership in NATO. We
agreed today that these countries will become
members of NATO.” This was a fateful move. As
noted, pillars of the foreign policy
establishment from George Kennan to Paul Nitze
to Robert McNamara had already forcefully spoken
out against the first rounds of NATO expansion,
which included the Baltic states. No less a
figure than William Burns, Bush II’s ambassador
to Russia and now Biden’s CIA chief,
said in 2008,
Ukrainian entry
into NATO is the brightest of all red lines for
the Russian elite (not just Putin). In more than
two and a half years of conversations with key
Russian players, from knuckle-draggers in the
dark recesses of the Kremlin to Putin’s sharpest
liberal critics, I have yet to find anyone who
views Ukraine in NATO as anything other than a
direct challenge to Russian interests.
Putin responded to the summit declaration,
saying he deemed it a “direct threat” to Russia.
A few months later, the emboldened president of
Georgia, on Russia’s southern border, attacked
EU-authorized Russian peacekeepers in the
Republic of South Ossetia, which had earlier
broken away from Georgia. Russia responded by
invading and occupying Georgia. Georgian
President Mikheil Saakashvili thought – no doubt
lead on by the U.S. government – that the West
would back him up, but it did not. Washington,
London, Paris, and the rest of NATO were not
willing to go to risk a nuclear war with Russia
over South Ossetia. (Ukrainian
president Volodymyr Zelensky seems to be
imitating Shaakashvili.)
This is all too similar to what’s going on
today, but with something more. After talking
about bringing Ukraine into NATO, the US and EU
in February 2014 instigated a coup in Kyiv, in
which opponents of the government, including
neo-Nazis, drove a democratically elected
and Russia-friendly president, Viktor
Yanukovych, from office. A leaked recording of a
phone call between US Assistant Secretary of
State Victoria Nuland (now a Biden official) and
US ambassador to Ukraine Geoffrey Pyatt revealed
that the coup and the new leadership of the
country were orchestrated by the US State
Department. This followed billions of dollars in
US aid to “pro-democracy,” that is,
anti-Yanukovych, organizations.
Yanukovych had been willing to deal with the
European Union, but when he balked at the terms
of the proposed loan, Russia offered Ukraine $15
billion under more favorable terms. This the EU
and US government could not tolerate. Yanukovych
had to go.
Keep in mind that eastern Ukraine and Crimea,
which is filled with Russian-speaking people,
had voted heavily for Yanukovych, with the
western part going for his opponent. So driving
out the elected president was a direct slap at
the ethnic Russians. When the new government
came to power, it downgraded Russians from
official-language status and tried to cut back
on the autonomy of the far-eastern provinces,
the Donbas region, which borders Russia.
Violence erupted and has continued. Meanwhile,
Russia annexed Crimea, which has been a Russian
security concern and the home of its only
year-round warm-water naval base since the 18th
century. Russia could not take the risk that
Crimea would become a base for NATO forces. The
predominantly ethnic Russians in Crimea approved
of the annexation. But one thing Russia refused
to do was to accept an annexation invitation
from the people in the Donbas.
As a result, the US government sent large
amounts of aid to Ukraine, but Obama refused to
send weapons because he did not want to escalate
the conflict or risk direct war with Russia. He
noted, properly, that Ukraine was a core
security interest of Russia but not of the
United States and that in a conflict over nearby
Ukraine, Russia would have a large advantage
over the United States, despite America’s much
larger military. Trump, however, reversed
Obama’s policy and sent massive arms shipments
to Ukraine, including anti-tank and
anti-aircraft weapons.
As Russia increased pressure on Ukraine over
the last year, with a buildup of troops near the
border, it made clear its demands: no NATO
membership for Ukraine and no missile launchers
in Eastern Europe. Since taking office, Biden
has talked tough, proclaiming that the United
States would support Ukrainian sovereignty,
while also saying, first, that US troops would
not be committed, second, that Ukraine would not
be joining NATO anytime soon, and third, that
offensive nuclear missiles would not be placed
in Eastern Europe. Nevertheless, he scoffed at
Russia’s demands, insisting that no one but NATO
would decide who became a member. This sounded
like schoolyard pettiness, with Biden refusing
to formalize for Russia his disavowal of things
that Biden had already said he would not do.
Would Russia have shelved plans for the
invasion had Biden not been so wrongheaded? Who
can say? But what was there to lose?
So here we are. The situation is dangerous in
a global sense because, in the fog of war, shit
happens. (Sorry.) It doesn’t help that some
prominent Americans, still in the minority, want
the US government to do more than impose
sanctions, send even more troops to neighboring
NATO countries, and further arm Ukraine, all of
which Biden is doing – some, like President
Zelensky, are calling for a U.S.-enforced no-fly
zone over Ukraine, which would bring America
into direct military conflict with Russia. Some
are even calling for
regime change in Russia. Need we be reminded
that, like the US government, Russia has
thousands of hydrogen bombs ready to launch. Are
these people nuts?
No, history did not begin on February 24,
2022, or even March 18, 2014, when Russia
annexed Crimea.
What now? It’s ridiculous to think that
Russia – given its $1.5 trillion GDP (smaller
than Italy’s and Texas’s) and $60 billion
military budget (6 percent of the total US
military budget) – is out to re-establish the
Russian empire of old or the Soviet Union. To
put things in perspective, the US government has
had recent annual increases in military
spending that exceeded Russia’s entire military
budget.
The goal must be a ceasefire. Biden can
facilitate that by doing what he should have
done long ago: put in writing that Ukraine and
Georgia will not join NATO, that the missile
launchers will be removed from Eastern Europe,
and that the war exercises on Russia’s border
will end. Ukraine could help by accepting the
status of neutrality with Finland-like
assurances that it will not let its territory be
used offensively against Russia. Biden should
also propose that the arms-control treaties
trashed by Bush II and Trump will be reinstated
in talks with Russia.
Russia, of course, should pledge to leave
Ukraine and offer compensation, while the
heavily ethnic Russian areas in the east are
given the freedom to join Russia.
We need not be at war – even if it’s a new
cold war – with Russia.
Sheldon Richman is the executive editor of
The Libertarian Institute, senior fellow and
chair of the trustees of the
Center for a
Stateless Society, and a contributing editor
at Antiwar.com.
He is the former senior editor at the Cato
Institute and Institute for Humane Studies,
former editor of The Freeman, published by the
Foundation for
Economic Education, and former vice
president at the
Future of Freedom Foundation. His latest
book is
What Social Animals Owe to Each Other.
The views expressed in this article are
solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
Reader financed- No
Advertising - No Government Grants -
No Algorithm - This
Is Independent
Registration is not necessary to post comments.
We ask only that you do not use obscene or offensive
language. Please be respectful of others.