Ukraine Conflict Marks End of Era Dominated
by Western Power
Editorial
The
old U.S.-led order has to go, and it will go
precisely because it is no longer
sustainable as far as the rest of humanity
is concerned.
April 19, 2022:
Information Clearing House
-- The ongoing military
conflict in Ukraine is a watershed event of
immense historical significance. It marks a
break from the past and the beginning of a
new geopolitical reality, one that will
encompass progress in international
relations towards greater economic
development, justice, and peace.
The military
conflict in Ukraine is not about a narrow
conflict between Ukraine and Russia. It is
but the outward sign of a bigger
confrontation between, on the one hand, the
U.S.-led Western order and, on the other,
nations like Russia, China, and others who
refuse to accept a subordinate role. Our
interview
with Bruce Gagnon this week elucidates the
bigger geopolitical picture and what is at
stake.
A
sure sign of the bigger dimensions is the
way the U.S., NATO, and European allies have
rapidly deployed a total hybrid war on
Russia, in an attempt to destroy the
latter’s economy. The Western claims about
“defending democracy, sovereignty, and
international law” are contemptible and
fraudulent. By funneling weapons to a
repressive, corrupt regime whose military is
infested with Nazi regiments?
No,
the U.S. and its Western allies are using
the conflict – one which Russia assiduously
tried to avoid by making reasonable appeals
for security treaties with NATO – as an
opportunity to crush Russia. And it’s not
simply about crushing Russia. It’s about
crushing any challenge to the Western order.
That inevitably involves confrontation with
China and others who seek to defy the
“Washington Consensus”.
The
draconian censorship of Russia’s
international media outlets and the blockade
on Russia’s economy indicates a full-court
campaign of hostility from Western powers
that were ready to go. Russia’s intervention
in Ukraine on February 24 – based on
plausible principles of self-defense –
provided the launchpad for pent-up Western
hostility. But this hostility is not merely
towards Russia. It is aimed at confronting
the emergence of a multipolar world order
that is beyond the control of U.S.-led
dominance. That dominance – or hegemony – is
based on U.S. control of the global
financial system as well as on brute
American military power, assisted by its
NATO adjuncts.
Russia’s immediate concerns about Ukraine
were based on the increasing threat that
this western neighboring country posed from
its treacherous involvement with NATO and
the unacceptable assaults the Kiev regime
was inflicting on the Russian-speaking
population in the Donbass region over the
past nearly eight years. But by defending
those national concerns, the military
intervention in Ukraine has also challenged
the entire system of the U.S.-dominated
Western order.
Russia’s
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov remarked on
this end-of-era development. He
told
Russian media this week: “Our special
military operation aims to put an end to the
unfettered expansions and unfettered course
towards total domination of the U.S. and
other Western states under it on the
international arena.”
It
is worth reflecting on his reasoning of why
the duplicity and hypocrisy of Western
powers had become intolerable, and why such
unipolar arrogance was, and is, destroying
the international order.
Lavrov commented with irony: “It is possible
to recognize the independence of Kosovo
without a referendum, but it is impossible
to recognize the independence of Crimea,
declared after a referendum, observed by
hundreds of objective foreign
representatives. The U.S. imagined a threat
to their national security thousands of
kilometers away in Iraq, but, when they
bombed it and found no threat there, they
didn’t even apologize. And when neo-Nazis
and ultra-radicals are being grown right on
our borders, tens of biological laboratories
are being created under the Pentagon’s
supervision, carrying out some experiments
that aim first and foremost to develop
biological weapons – the discovered
documents leave no room for doubt – then we
are not allowed to react to this threat,
right at our borders, not beyond the ocean.”
What Russia has done by its military
operation in Ukraine on its own
independently assessed terms is to signal
that the presumed dominance of the United
States and its Western allies is over.
The post-Soviet
era of the last 30 years is over. Russia is
no longer interested in integrating with a
Western-centric global order, as Fyodor
Lukyanov
writes this
week in an article for Russia in Global
Affairs. Russia is now choosing
“another road”.
That road means
fully embracing a multipolar world as
heralded by Eurasian economic integration,
and strategic partnership with China, India,
and others. Russia’s vast natural resources,
primarily in the sphere of energy, will be
directed towards Eurasian development and in
doing so find ample reward. It is the
Western economies that need Russia more than
it needs them, as
noted this
week by Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The
transition to a new global order will take
time and will involve temporary
dislocations. It will take time to build the
necessary infrastructure of gas and oil
pipelines for example. But the overall
trajectory is viable and sound, and it is
already well underway.
The profound
historical importance of the global tectonic
shifts is evident from the views of Russian
economist Sergey Glazyev, as featured in
this erudite
interview
with Pepe Escobar. Glazyev has been working
for years in an official capacity on the
Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU). He details
the evolution and implementation of a new
financial global order that supersedes the
U.S. dollar-based system. The new order is
being developed by Russia, China, and others
with the explicit purpose of becoming
independent from the dominance of U.S. and
Western debt and currency imperialism.
What is happening in Ukraine is truly
era-ending and epoch-making. War and
suffering are abominable. But the
Western-dominated system left Russia with no
choice but to use physical force in order to
defend its vital interests. Now that the
rupture has happened, there is a sense that
the Rubicon has been crossed. There’s no
going back. The Western response has been
self-defeating. Its hybrid war against
Russia has catalyzed the demise of U.S. and
Western global dominance. Their politicized
abuse of the dollar system has fatally
damaged that system and presaged the
hastening of a better, more globally
democratic alternative.
Arguably, the timescale of this global
process goes back further than the three
post-Soviet decades or the post-Gold
Standard era that ended in 1971 when the
U.S. killed that off for the sake of dollar
supremacy. It goes back even beyond the
eight decades since World War Two. We are
looking at the past 500 years of Western
Europe and its colonial powers, latterly
fronted by the United States’ hegemony and
its criminal warmongering wanderlust.
There’s no guarantee of the outcome. But
suffice to say that the old U.S.-led order
has to go, and it will go precisely because
it is no longer sustainable as far as the
rest of humanity is concerned.