The US and its allies are sustaining the very
war they now cite as grounds for disqualifying
Kyiv from Nato membership
By Jonathan Cook
July 16, 2023:
Information Clearing House
-- "MEE"
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The
Nato summit in Lithuania this week served
only to underscore the utter hypocrisy of
western leaders in
pursuing their proxy
war in Ukraine to “weaken”
Russia and oust its president, Vladimir
Putin.
Both the
US and Germany had made clear before the
summit that they would
block Ukraine’s admission to Nato while it
was in the midst of a war with Russia. That
message was formally
announced by Nato Secretary General Jens
Stoltenberg on Tuesday.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky
fumed that Nato had reached an “absurd”
decision and was demonstrating “weakness”.
British Defence Secretary Ben Wallace lost no
time in
rebuking him for a lack of “gratitude”.
The concern is that, if Kyiv joins the
military alliance at this stage, Nato members
will be required to leap to Ukraine’s defence
and fight Russia directly. Most western states
balk at the notion of a face-to-face
confrontation with a nuclear-armed Russia -
rather than the current proxy one, paid for
exclusively in Ukrainian blood.
But there is a more duplicitous subtext being
obscured: the fact that Nato is responsible
for sustaining the war it now cites as grounds
for disqualifying Ukraine from joining the
military alliance. Nato got Kyiv into its
current, bloody mess - but isn’t ready to help
it find a way out.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And Non-Stop Propaganda?
It was Nato, after all, that chose to flirt
openly with Ukraine from 2008 onwards, promising
it eventual membership - with the undisguised
hope that one day, the
alliance would be able to flex its military
muscles menacingly on Russia’s doorstep.
It was the
UK that intervened weeks after Russia’s
invasion in February 2022, and presumably on
Washington’s orders, to
scupper negotiations between Kyiv and Moscow
-
talks that could have ended the war at an
early stage, before Russia began seizing
territories in eastern Ukraine.
A deal then would have been much simpler than
one now. Most likely, it would have required
Kyiv to commit to neutrality, rather than
pursuing covert
integration into Nato. Moscow would have
demanded, too, an end to the Ukrainian
government’s
political,
legal and
military attacks on its Russian-speaking
populations in the east.
Now the chief sticking point to an agreement
will be persuading the Kremlin to trust the West
and reverse its
annexation of eastern Ukraine, assuming Nato
ever allows Kyiv to re-engage in talks with
Russia.
And finally, it is Nato members, especially
the US, that have been shipping out vast
quantities of military hardware to prolong the
fighting in Ukraine - keeping the
death toll mounting on both sides.
Damp squib
In short, Nato is now using the very war it
has done everything to fuel as a pretext to stop
Ukraine from joining the alliance.
Seen another way, the message Nato has sent
Moscow is that Russia made exactly the right
decision to invade - if the goal, as Putin has
always maintained, is to ensure Kyiv remains
neutral.
It is the war that has prevented Ukraine from
being completely enfolded in the western
military alliance. It is the war that has
stopped Ukraine’s transformation into a Nato
forward base, one where the West could station
nuclear-tipped
missiles minutes from Moscow.
Had Russia not invaded, Kyiv would have been
free to accelerate what it was already doing
secretly: integrating into Nato. So what is
Zelensky supposed to conclude from his exclusion
from Nato, after he committed his country to an
ongoing war rather than negotiations and
neutrality?
So far, Ukraine’s much-vaunted “spring
counter-offensive” has turned into a damp squib,
despite western media spin about “slow
progress”. Moscow is holding on to the Ukrainian
territories it annexed.
So long as Kyiv can’t “win the war” - and it
seems it can’t, unless Nato is willing to fight
Russia directly and risk a nuclear confrontation
- it will be precluded from the military
alliance. Catch-22.
Do not expect this conundrum to be
highlighted by a western establishment media
that seems incapable of doing anything other
than regurgitating Nato press releases and
cheering on bigger profits for the West’s war
industries.
War crimes
Another such conundrum is the Biden
administration’s decision last week to supply
Ukraine with
cluster munitions - small bomblets that,
when they fail to explode, lie concealed like
mini-landmines, killing and maiming civilians
for decades. In some cases, as many as a third
are “duds”, detonating weeks, months or years
later.
Washington’s move follows Britain recently
supplying Ukraine with
depleted uranium shells, which contaminate
surrounding areas with a radioactive dust during
and after fighting. Evidence from areas such as
Iraq, where the US and Britain fired large
numbers of these shells, suggests the
fallout can include a decades-long spike in
cancer and birth defects.
The White House was all too ready to denounce
the use of cluster bombs as a war crime
last year - when it was Russia that stood
accused of using them. Now it is Washington
enabling Kyiv to commit those very same war
crimes.
More than 110 states - not including the US,
of course - have ratified a 2008 international
convention outlawing cluster munitions. Many
are in Nato.
Given the high “dud” rate of US cluster
bombs, President Joe Biden appears to be
breaking US law in shipping stocks to Ukraine.
The White House can invoke an exemption only if
exporting such weapons satisfies a “vital US
national security interest”. Apparently, Biden
believes “weakening” Russia - and turning parts
of Ukraine into a death zone for civilians for
decades to come - qualifies as just such a vital
interest.
Desperate stop gap
While the official story is that this latest
escalatory move by the US will help Kyiv “win
the war”, the truth is rather different. Biden
has not shied away from admitting that Ukraine -
and Nato - are running out of conventional arms
to fight Russia. This is a desperate stop-gap
measure.
While most Nato members might be signatories
to the convention on banning cluster munitions,
they appear more than willing to turn a blind
eye to Washington’s decision. Germany’s
president, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, who signed
the convention in his earlier role as foreign
minister, said this week that Berlin should not
block the US shipment
because to do so “would be the end of
Ukraine”.
In other words, the resort to cluster
munitions is an admission that it is Kyiv and
its Nato partners - not Moscow - that have been
weakened militarily by the war.
Once again, a supposedly “humanitarian war”
by the West - remember Afghanistan, Iraq,
Libya and
Syria - is becoming the opposite. Like every
previous weapon delivered to Ukraine, the
cluster bombs are being supplied to postpone the
inevitable: the need for Kyiv to engage in talks
with Moscow to end the fighting.
And every day such talks are delayed, Ukraine
loses more of its fighting men, and potentially
more of its territory.
Horrors of cluster bombs
It is not as though Washington or the rest of
Nato are unaware of the effects of using cluster
bombs. The US is
estimated to have dropped 270 million of
them on Laos during its “secret war” on that
country more than half a century ago. Up to
80 million of them did not detonate.
Since the bombing ended in 1973, at least
25,000 people - 40 percent of them children -
are reported to have been killed or injured by
these small
landmines littered across Laos’s territory.
More recently, the US used cluster munitions
in its invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq.
Hun Sen, the prime minister of Cambodia,
which was bombed alongside Laos by the US during
the Vietnam War, reminded the world this week of
the horrors in store. He noted that, half a
century on, Cambodia had still not found a way
to destroy all the explosives: “The real victims
will be Ukrainians,”
he said.
But that warning is likely to fall on deaf
ears in Ukraine. Zelensky, a leader who has been
all but beatified by the western media, is no
stranger to the use of cluster bombs. Though
journalists prefer to mention their use by
Russia only,
human rights groups have documented Kyiv’s
firing of
cluster munitions on its own population in
eastern Ukraine since 2014.
The need to protect Russian-speaking
communities in eastern Ukraine from their own
government - and from Ukrainian
ultra-nationalists in the Ukrainian military -
was one of the main reasons given by Moscow for
launching its invasion. The New York Times
reported Kyiv
using cluster bombs last year on a small
Ukrainian village in the country’s east.
According to an investigation by Human Rights
Watch, Ukrainian forces also fired cluster
munitions on the Ukrainian town of Izium last
year,
killing at least eight civilians and
wounding 15 others.
Given this history, Washington would be
foolish to take at face value reassurances from
the Zelensky government that US supplies of
cluster bombs will be fired only on Russian
troops. All the evidence indicates that they
will likely be used on civilian areas in eastern
Ukraine too.
Double standard
Publicly, European leaders are trying to
salve their consciences by implying that there
are exceptional justifications for providing
cluster munitions to Kyiv. The bomblets are
supposedly essential if Ukraine is to defend its
territory against Russian aggression and
occupation.
But if that is really Nato’s yardstick, then
there is another exceptional, oppressed state in
no less need of such munitions:
Palestine.
Like Ukraine, the Palestinians have had their
territory seized by an implacable foe. And like
Ukraine, the Palestinians face continuous
military attacks by an
occupying army.
Occupation forces always end up committing
war crimes, as Russia’s have. The United Nations
accuses the Russian army of rapes, killings
and torture, and attacks on civilian
infrastructure.
The commission of war crimes is inherent in
the task of invading another people's sovereign
territory and subduing the local population, as
the US and UK proved in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Undoubtedly, both Israel and Russia’s actions
are causing untold suffering. But where there
are differences, they reflect worse on Israel
than Russia.
Israel’s occupation has lasted many decades
longer than Russia’s, and it has throughout
those years continued to commit war crimes,
including creating hundreds of illegal, armed
settlements exclusively for Jews on Palestinian
land.
Further, there was an existing civil war in
Ukraine that had
killed more than 14,000 Ukrainians before
Russia invaded. At least a proportion of
Ukrainians – largely its ethnic Russian
population in the east – welcomed Moscow’s
intervention, at least initially. It would be
hard to find a Palestinian who wants Israel or
its settlers occupying their land.
Is anyone in Nato considering supplying
cluster munitions to the Palestinians to defend
themselves? Would Nato endorse Palestinians
firing cluster bombs at Israeli military bases
or at militarised settlements in the occupied
West Bank?
And would Nato accept Palestinian
reassurances that such munitions would not be
fired into Israel, just as it has accepted
Ukrainian assurances that they won’t be fired
into Russia?
These questions answer themselves. In the
case of the Palestinians, western states don’t
just apply a double standard. They even echo
Israel in condemning Palestinian conventional
attacks on Israeli forces.
Dangerous delusions
But the hypocrisies do not end there.
Annalena Baerbock, Germany’s hawkish foreign
minister,
wrote in the Guardian last week that her
country had made a mistake in pursuing a policy
of what she called “chequebook diplomacy”.
Berlin, she added, had naively believed that
political and economic interaction with the West
would “sway the Russian regime toward
democracy”. Instead, she concluded that “Putin’s
Russia will remain a threat to peace and
security on our continent and that we have to
organise our security against Putin’s Russia,
not with it.”
Europe’s path forward, Baerbock suggests, is
limited to either a forever war against Russia
or imposing regime change on the Kremlin. All of
this is dangerous nonsense. The fact that
self-serving, delusional analysis of this kind
is
echoed so uncritically by western media
should be a stain on its reputation.
Baerbock implies that it was Moscow that
rebuffed “our efforts to construct a European
security architecture with Russia”. But Russia
was never offered a meaningful place within
Europe’s security umbrella after the collapse of
the Soviet Union.
That contrasts strongly with West Germany’s
treatment after the Second World War. With the
Nazi regime barely gone, Germany received
massive US aid via the
Marshall Plan to rebuild its economy and
infrastructure, and it was soon embraced by Nato
as a bulwark against the Soviet Union.
The collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 was
handled very differently. It was not viewed as
an opportunity to bring Russia into the fold.
Instead, the US and its western allies denied
Russia both a proper aid plan and the
cancellation of Soviet-era debts. The West
preferred to prop up a weak president, Boris
Yeltsin,
insisting he commit to “shock therapy”
privatisation that left the Russian economy open
to asset-stripping by a new class of oligarchs.
Nefarious ambitions
While Russia was being hollowed out
economically, Washington hurried to isolate its
historic rival militarily and
bring former Soviet states into the US
“sphere of influence” via Nato. Successive US
administrations developed and zealously pursued
a hubristic foreign policy known as
“full-spectrum global dominance”
against its main great-power rivals, Russia
and
China.
Putin’s popularity among Russians grew the
more he posed - often only rhetorically - as the
strongman who would stop Nato’s expansion to
Russia’s borders.
Contrary to Baerbock’s suggestions, Moscow
wasn’t wooed by a Nato “chequebook”. It was
gradually and systematically cornered. It was
turned, bit by bit, into a pariah.
This isn’t the assessment simply of “Putin
apologists”. Nato’s strategy was understood and
warned against in real time by some of the
biggest figures in US foreign policy-making -
from George Kennan, the father of US Cold War
policy, to William
Burns, the current CIA director.
In 2007, as US ambassador to Moscow, Burns
wrote a diplomatic cable - later revealed by
Wikileaks - arguing that “Nato enlargement
and U.S. missile defense deployments in Europe
play to the classic Russian fear of
encirclement”. Months later, Burns
warned that offering Ukraine Nato membership
would place Moscow in an “unthinkable”
predicament.
Washington simply ignored these endless
warnings from its own officials, because
maintaining peace and stability in Europe was
not its goal. Permanently isolating and
“weakening” Russia was.
The Biden administration understands it is
playing with fire. Last year, in a remark most
likely unscripted, the president himself invoked
the danger of Russia, faced with a defeat in
Ukraine it viewed in existential terms,
unleashing a nuclear “Armageddon”.
Tragically, Nato’s malevolence, deceit and
betrayal means that the only alternative to
Armageddon may be Ukraine’s downfall - and with
it, the crushing of Washington’s nefarious
ambitions to advance full-spectrum global
dominance.
Jonathan Cook is the author of three books
on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and a
winner of the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for
Journalism. His website and blog can be found at
www.jonathan-cook.net
Views expressed in this article are
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