September 05/6, 2023 -
Information Clearing House -
Kiev was offered a peace deal long ago,
but chose war instead, egged on by its
Western backers. Now its fate is sealed
September 2 marked the 78th anniversary
of the World War Two surrender ceremony
onboard the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay.
This moment formalized Japan’s
unconditional capitulation to the United
States, and its allies, and marked the
end of the conflict. From the Japanese
perspective, it had been ongoing since
the Marco Polo bridge incident of July
7, 1937, which started the Sino-Japanese
War.
There was no negotiation, only a
simple surrender ceremony in which
Japanese officials signed documents,
without conditions.
Because that is what defeat looks
like.
History is meant to be studied in a
manner that seeks to draw out lessons
from the past that might have relevance
in the present. As George Santayana, the
American philosopher, noted, “Those
who cannot remember the past are
condemned to repeat it.” The
Ukrainian government in Kiev would do
well to reflect on both the historical
precedent set by Japan’s unconditional
surrender, and Santayana’s advice, when
considering its current conflict with
Russia.
First and foremost, Ukraine must
reflect honestly about the causes of
this conflict, and which side bears the
burden of responsibility for the
fighting. ‘Denazification’ is a term
that the Russian government has used in
describing one of its stated goals and
objectives. President Vladimir Putin has
made numerous references to the odious
legacy of Stepan Bandera, the notorious
mass murderer and associate of Nazi
Germany who is feted by modern-day
Ukrainian nationalists as a hero and all
but a founding father of their nation.
That present-day Ukraine would see
fit to elevate a man such as Bandera to
such a level speaks volumes about the
rotten foundation of Kiev’s cause, and
the dearth of moral fiber in the nation
today. The role played by the modern-day
adherents of the Nazi
collaborator's hateful nationalist
ideology in promulgating the key events
that led to the initiation of the
military operation by Russia can neither
be ignored nor minimized. It was the
Banderists, with their long relationship
with the CIA and other foreign
intelligence services hostile to Moscow,
who used violence to oust the former
president of Ukraine, Viktor Yanukovich,
from office in February 2014.
From the act of illicit politicized
violence came the mainstreaming of the
forces of ethnic and cultural genocide,
manifested in the form of the
present-day Banderists, who initiated
acts of violence and oppression in
eastern Ukraine. This, in turn,
triggered the Russian response in Crimea
and the actions of the citizens of
Donbass, who organized to resist the
rampage of the Bandera-affiliated
Ukrainian nationalists. The Minsk
Accords, and the subsequent betrayal by
Kiev and its Western partners of the
potential path for peace that these
represented, followed.
Ukraine cannot disassociate itself
from the role played by the modern-day
Banderists in shaping the present
reality. In this, Kiev mirrors the
militarists of Imperial Japan, whose
blind allegiance to the precepts of
Bushido, the traditional ‘way of the
warrior’ dating back to the Samurai of
17th century Japan, helped push the
country into global conflict. Part of
Japan’s obligations upon surrender was
to purge its society of the influence of
the militarists, and to enact a
constitution that deplatformed them by
making wars of aggression – and the
military forces needed to wage them –
unconstitutional.
Banderism, in all its manifestations,
must be eradicated from Ukrainian
society in the same manner that
Bushido-inspired militarism was removed
from Japan, to include the creation of a
new constitution that enshrines this
purge as law. Any failure to do so only
allows the cancer of Banderism to
survive, festering inside the defeated
body of post-conflict Ukraine until some
future time when it can metastasize once
again to bring harm.
This is precisely the message that
was being sent by Putin when, during the
Saint Petersburg International Economic
Forum this past July, he showed a video
where the crimes of the Banderists
during the Second World War were put on
public display. “How can you not
fight it?” Putin said. “And if
this is not neo-Nazism in its current
manifestation, then what is it?” he
asked. “We have every right,”
the Russian president declared, “to
believe that the task of the
denazification of Ukraine set by us is
one of the key ones.”
As the Western establishment media
begins to come to grips with the scope
and scale of Ukraine’s eventual military
defeat (and, by extension, the reality
of a decisive Russian military victory),
their political overseers in the US,
NATO, and the European Union struggle to
define what the endgame will be. Having
articulated the Russian-Ukrainian
conflict as an existential struggle
where the very survival of NATO is on
the line, these Western politicians now
have the task of shaping public
perception in a manner that mitigates
any meaningful, sustained political
blowback from constituents who have been
deceived into tolerating the transfer of
billions of dollars from their
respective national treasuries, and
billions more dollars’ worth of weapons
from their respective arsenals, into a
lost and disgraced cause.
A key aspect of this perception
management is the notion of a negotiated
settlement, a process which implies that
Ukraine has a voice as to the timing and
nature of conflict termination. The fact
is, however, that Kiev lost this voice
when it walked away from a peace deal
brokered between its negotiators and
their Russian counterparts last spring,
at the behest of its NATO masters as
communicated through then-UK Prime
Minister Boris Johnson. The decision to
prolong the conflict was predicated on
the provision to Kiev of tens of
billions of dollars in military
equipment and assistance. The
authorities duly staged a mass
mobilization, meaning that Ukrainian
troops vastly outnumbered their Russian
counterparts.
Kiev's new NATO-trained and equipped
force achieved impressive territorial
gains during a fall offensive. The
Russian reaction was to stabilize the
front and carry out a partial
mobilization of its reserves to
accumulate enough manpower to accomplish
the mission assigned from the outset of
the operation – denazification and
demilitarization. Denazification is a
political problem. Demilitarization is
not. In the case of Ukraine, it means to
effectively destroy Ukraine’s ability to
wage armed conflict on a meaningful
scale against Russia. This objective
also presumably entails the need to
remove all NATO military infrastructure,
inclusive of equipment and material,
from Ukraine.
Russia has been undertaking the
successful demilitarization of Ukraine’s
armed forces since the initiation of
partial mobilization. The equipment
Ukraine is provided by the West is
similarly being destroyed by Russia at a
rate that makes replacement
unsustainable. Meanwhile, Russia’s own
defense industry has kicked into full
gear, supplying a range of modern
weapons and ammunition that is more than
sufficient.
The harsh reality is that neither
Ukraine nor its Western allies can
sustain the operational losses in
manpower and equipment that the conflict
with Russia is inflicting. Russia, on
the other hand, is not only able to
absorb its losses, but increase its
strength over time, given the
large number of volunteers that are
being recruited into the military and
the high rate of armament production. At
some point in the not-so-distant future,
the balance of power between Russia and
Ukraine in the theater of operations
will reach a point in which Kiev is
unable to maintain adequate coverage
along the line of contact, allowing gaps
to open up in the defensive line which
Russia, able to employ fresh reserves,
will exploit. This will lead to the
collapse of cohesion among Ukrainian
troops, more than likely resulting in a
precipitous withdrawal to more defensive
positions that could be established west
of the Dnieper River.
Ukraine, through its actions in 2014,
lost Crimea. Ukraine, and through its
choices in 2022, lost the Donbass,
Zaporozhye, and Kherson. And if
Kiev persists in extending this conflict
until it is physically unable to defend
itself, it runs the risk of losing even
more territory, including Odessa and
Kharkov.
Russia did not enter the conflict
with the intent of seizing Ukrainian
territory. But in March 2022, Kiev
rejected a draft peace agreement (which
it had preliminarily approved at first),
and this decision to eschew peace in
favor of war led to Russia absorbing
Donbass, Zaporozhye, and Kherson.
As one of its conditions to even
begin negotiating for peace with Moscow,
Kiev demanded the return of all former
Ukrainian territories currently under
Russian control – including Crimea. To
achieve such an outcome, however,
Ukraine would have to be able to compel
compliance by defeating Russia
militarily and/or politically. As things
stand, this is an impossibility.
What Ukraine and its Western partners
do not yet seem to have come to grips
with is the fact that Russia’s
leadership is in no mood for
negotiations for negotiations’ sake.
Putin has listed its goals and
objectives when it comes to the conflict
– denazification, demilitarization, and
no NATO membership for Ukraine.
This is the reality of the present
situation. Russia is working to achieve
its stated goals and objectives. As
things stand, there is little Ukraine or
its partners in the US, NATO, and the EU
(the so-called ‘collective West’) can do
to prevent it from accomplishing these
aims. The timeline is not
calendar-driven, but rather determined
by results. The longer Kiev – and its
Western partners – drag out this
conflict, the greater the harm that will
accrue for Ukraine.
It is time for Ukraine and its
Western partners to move to the path of
peace and reconstruction. But this can
only happen when Ukraine surrenders and
accepts reality.
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