OCTOBER 26, 2018
Photo Source Official U.S. Navy Page
| CC BY 2.0
Britain’s Daily Mail is a
strident rag that is bought daily by over a million people who agree with its
stance that most foreigners are inferior to Brits. Two years ago the European
Commission against Racism and Intolerance reported that the Mail and some other papers
indulged in “offensive, discriminatory and provocative terminology”, and the
Commission’s chairman observed that “the Brexit referendum seems to have led to
a further rise in ‘anti-foreigner’ sentiment”.
The highly-respected Economist noted that “unsurprisingly, the Daily Mail spreads
more EU-linked lies than anyone else” and that its website “garners 225 million
visitors each month”, which is amazing and disturbing, given its campaigns of
bigotry and intolerance.
The Mail knows its readers
and tells them what they want to hear, and one of its targets is Russia, which
it regularly maligns and berates.
On October 23 a main story noted approvingly that on October 25 “some
50,000 troops will kick off NATO’s biggest military exercises since the Cold
War in Norway, a massive show of force that has already rankled neighboring
Russia. Trident Juncture 18, which runs until November 7, is aimed at
training the Alliance to mobilize quickly to defend an ally under attack.” The
US 6th Fleet stated that among other major deployments for the
maneuvers, the aircraft carrier Harry S Truman and guided missile destroyers of
the Eighth Carrier Strike Group moved in to dominate the Norwegian Sea for the
first time since 1991.
According to US Air Forces Europe, Trident Juncture is
partially funded by the European Deterrence Initiative, and US F-16 strike aircraft and KC-135 Stratotankers
have deployed to operate from an air base in neutral, non-NATO Sweden.
This all fits in with the British
government’s line that Russia is a threat to the United Kingdom, which is a
farcical contention, but serves to whip up patriotic fervor, which wins votes
and sells newspapers.
In June 2018 London’s Sun newspaper carried the headline “Britain will send RAF Typhoon fighter jets to
Iceland in bid to tackle Russian aggression” and since then the UK’s defense
minister, Gavin Williamson, has maintained that “the Kremlin continues to challenge us in
every domain.” (Williamson is the man who declared in March 2018 that “Frankly Russia should go
away — it should shut up,” which was one of the most juvenile public utterances
of recent years.)
It was reported on September 29 that Williamson was concerned
about “growing Russian aggression ‘in our back yard’,” and that the Government
was drawing up a “defense Arctic strategy” with 800 commandos being deployed to
a new base in Norway. In an interview “Mr Williamson highlighted Russia’s re-opening
of Soviet-era bases and ‘increased tempo’ of submarine activity as evidence
that Britain needed to ‘demonstrate we’re there’ and ‘protect our interests’.”
Mr Williamson has not indicated what
“interests” the United Kingdom could have in the Arctic region, where it has no
territory.
The eight countries with territory
north of the Arctic Circle are Canada, Denmark,
Finland, Iceland, Norway, Russia, Sweden and the
United States. They have legitimate interests in the region which is twice the area of the US and Canada combined. But
Britain has not one single claim to the Arctic. Not even a tenuous one like
Iceland’s, which is based on the fact that the Arctic Circle passes through Grimsey Island,
about 25 kilometers north of Iceland’s north coast. Britain’s
Shetland Islands, its northernmost land, are 713 kilometers (443 miles) south
of the Arctic Circle.
So why does the UK declare that it
has “interests” in the Arctic and that the region is “in our back
yard”? How can it possibly feel threatened?
The Arctic Institute observed in February 2018 that Russia’s “newer
Arctic strategy papers focus on preventing smuggling, terrorism, and illegal
immigration instead of balancing military power with NATO. These priorities suggest
that Russia’s security aims in the Arctic have to do with safeguarding the
Arctic as a strategic resource base . . . In general, the government-approved
documents seem to have moved from an assertive tone that highlights Russia’s
rivalry with NATO to a less abrasive tone based on securing economic
development.”
And economic development is what it’s
all about. On September 28 it was reported that “a Danish-flagged cargo ship successfully passed
through the Russian Arctic in a trial voyage showing that melting sea ice could
potentially open a new trade route from Europe to east Asia.” It is
obviously in the best economic interests of the European Union and Russia that
the route be developed for commercial transit. To do this requires avoidance of
conflict in the region.
So what’s your problem, Defence
Minister Williamson?
In January China described its Arctic strategy, “pledging to work more
closely with Moscow in particular to create an Arctic maritime counterpart — a
‘Polar Silk Road’ — to its ‘one belt, one road’ overland trade route to Europe.
Both the Kremlin and Beijing have repeatedly stated that their ambitions are
primarily commercial and environmental, not military.” It couldn’t
be plainer that Russia and China want the Arctic to be a profitable mercantile
trade route, while continuing exploration for oil, gas and mineral deposits.
As pointed out by Sabena Siddiqi in the Asian Times, “Having
a major stake in the Yamal liquefied natural gas project in Russia, which would
supply nearly four million tonnes of LNG per annum, development of these
regions makes sense for China as well, and its interests converge with
Russia’s. Once the Arctic route is fully operational, the Yamal project can
double Russia’s share of the global LNG market. The Arctic thawing has also
given Russia greater access to minerals and other valuable resources in this
region.”
Guess who doesn’t want Russia and
China to prosper?
To develop the Arctic requires peace
and stability. It would be impossible to reap the benefits of the
new sea-route and potentially enormous energy and mineral riches if there were
to be conflict. It is obviously in the best interests of Russia and China that
there be tranquility rather than military confrontation.
But Britain’s Defence Minister insists there must be a military build-up by the UK in
the Arctic “If we want to be protecting our interests in what is effectively
our own back yard.” He is backed by the Parliament’s Defence Committee which
states that “NATO’s renewed focus on the North Atlantic is welcome and the
Government should be congratulated on the leadership the UK has shown on this
issue.”
NATO is always on the lookout for excuses
to indulge in military action (such as its nine–month aerial blitz that destroyed Libya), and its Arctic-focused Trident Juncture is
yet another confrontational military fandango designed to ramp up tension.
The US-NATO military alliance
is preparing for war in the Arctic, and is deliberately provoking
Russia by conducting massive hi-tech maneuvers ever-closer to its borders. But
the Pentagon and its sub-office in Brussels had better be very careful.
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