22.12.2019 Author: Seth Ferris
All Those Missiles Pointed at Russia: Who Are They
Trying to Hit?
Column: Politics
Region: Europe
As the Serbs never tire of pointing out, international
diplomacy is often driven by irrational prejudice. Whenever Serbs try and
create a country of their own, which includes all the predominantly Serb
population areas, the rest of the world thinks this is a bad thing and does
everything it can to prevent it. When asked why it is so bad, no one seems to
know – the usual excuse is “protection of minorities”, though this never
applies to the
protection of
Serb minorities in the rest of former Yugoslavia.
The same applies to the Russian Federation. Its
neighbours have longstanding grievances against it, dating from pre-Soviet
times, and do not want to live under its shadow any more. Therefore they claim
they need want protection from somebody else, and the West is happy to provide
it for its own, not necessarily honourable, reasons.
This mind-set is a very common element of Post-Empire
Syndrome. One reason the Orthodox Church has gained a lasting presence in
Uganda and Kenya is that it is not associated with the old colonial power (the
UK). However in parts of the post-Soviet realm, such as Lithuania, Orthodoxy is
regarded as a relic of Soviet domination, despite the millions of Russians and
others martyred by the Soviets for refusing to give it up.
But does this mean that Russia needs to be surrounded
by bases armed with missiles pointed at it? It is true that modern Russia wants
a loosely recognised “sphere of influence” that comes close to corresponding to
the old Soviet republics – the very ones that fought long and hard to be rid of
the Soviet. So bases in these countries might reassure their inhabitant, at
least that is the story line that some might want us to think!
But if Russia is really that much of a threat, will
missiles pointed at it do any good? Does the West really want to destroy the
whole planet, as it will have to do to destroy 150 million Russians?
If Russia did move into one of the former Soviet
republics with hostile intentions, would the West actually use those missiles to
protect that country? Did it in Hungary in 1956, Czechoslovakia in 1968, or in
any of the local revolts the West always said it supported?
Little kids made big by spending cuts
The West does not have a track record of protecting
anti-Soviets, including anti-Soviet Russians. It has consistently betrayed them
by leaving them where they were when they cried out for help.
Western economic sanctions did not destroy the Soviet
Union. It collapsed due to the inherent structural weakness of Communism
itself, corruption, and because those who actually ran it didn’t believe in it
anymore. Japan got the atom bomb dropped on it at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but
the Cold War West, knowing it would have to resort to the nuclear option first
in any future war with the Soviet Union, did everything it could to prevent
this.
Yet still it is assumed without question that pointing
missiles at Russia is the right thing to do. It costs a lot and achieves
little, but in an era of “austerity” and every country paying its own
way, this is still the unquestioned policy of Western governments.
These are the same governments who rejoice that the
Iron Curtain has long since been torn down, and therefore imply they have
achieved a world where such missiles are no longer necessary. So what is really
going on?
Missiles won’t stop the allegations of Russians
interfering in elections through cyber trickery, or building oil and gas
pipelines. But this is because the missiles are actually aimed at Western
allies, not Russia.
The West has not surrounded Russia with missiles
because it won the Cold War, but because it lost it. Those bright shiny
missiles, designed to never be used, are just big enough for Western
governments to hide behind, and that is what pointing missiles at Russia is
actually about.
Copyright infringements on a vast scale
Surrounding Russia with missiles is yet more proof
that the Soviet Union won the Cold War by turning the US into the same type of
state. The US may have survived at the Soviet Union’s expense, but it is no
longer the US the world once knew.
There was a time, within living memory, when the US
self-image was largely justified. It really did go round the world trying to
improve human rights and rule of law. The Soviet Union really was the bad guy,
imposing a corrupt and unworkable system on people who usually wanted something
closer to the US model.
When the Cold War ended the US had no need to continue
supporting regimes like that of Equatorial Guinea, where US Embassy staff
regularly hear the screams of people being tortured in the prison down the
road. There was no Communist bloc to protect these countries from any more, so the Peace Corps model, which
encouraged the introduction of the superior and desired Western system, should
have become the standard.
But as we have all observed, the opposite has
happened. The sorts of government which used to be considered unfortunate
necessities have been imposed over and over although the necessity is no longer
there. Even when they are called democracies, most US client states have governments imposed or selected by the US as an extension of
a defence agreement, who serve the advancement of a US agenda, not their own
people.
If the US actually believed in the principles it
enunciates, it would want to introduce them everywhere to demonstrate its own
superiority, as well as benefit the countries concerned. It would go out of its
way to create a free association of genuinely sovereign, democratic, publicly
accountable, law abiding, humanitarian states, which would then have every
reason to love and support the US, the natural leader of such an association.
But the US only held these ideals in Cold War times to
present itself as the opposite of its opponent. Having won the battle, it is
doing all it can to become everything it accused the Soviet Union of being.
What was the US actually fighting against? It wasn’t what the Soviet Union was,
but the fact that it was there.
As long as missiles are still pointed at the Russian
Federation, its successor state, the US can continue to claim that it is on the
right side of any argument regardless, as it was in the old days. But it can
only do this now by pointing missiles, because it is no longer able claim
superiority in any other way. Even then, it is not the ostensible enemy those
missiles are there to control.
Friend in better deed
The terms “West” and “US” are no longer synonymous.
Despite the UK’s increasingly bizarre attempts to leave it, the European Union
has consistently gained in strength since its foundation, and consequently
developed a mind of its own, with the resources to back it up. However,
although the EU knows it has its own mind, it has great trouble knowing what
that mind is.
The rush of Eastern European applications for EU
membership after the fall of Communism was not an endorsement of US policy.
These countries saw Europe as the progressive future, not the US – they did not
seek the sort of “Special Relationship” which existed between the US and UK
before the latter joined the EU—or the client relationship which the US has
imposed on countries it has entered through force of arms.
Part of that progressive future is being contrary to
Russia for the sake of it. Understandably, after decades (or even centuries) of
what they saw as Russian domination, liberated states felt that the future was
to be on a contrary side. Even in non-political areas such as rugby, they
sought to work with each other but not Russia, simply because they had had
enough of the Soviet-era Russians.
One manifestation of this change of allegiance was to
allow NATO to establish military bases in their countries, because Russia wasn’t
a member. In the absence of a separate EU defence force, this was the nearest
they could get. But those bases are doing more to harm to the EU than they are
to Russia, and the EU is increasingly trying to segment the various aspects of
its work in order to counter this.
The argument made by both the Eastern European
arrivistes and the EU itself is something like this: “if you have NATO bases in
your country, armed with missiles pointed at Russia, you are part of “the
West”. But in the eyes of these former Soviet or Communist states, that means
everything they do can be described as Western. They don’t have to submit to
Western definitions of what a Western country is supposed to be: as long as
they have these bases, they already are one.
Western capitalism is supposed to bring these
countries jobs and markets. Western liberalism and openness allow this. But
Eastern EU members are increasingly going in the opposite direction internally,
becoming highly
protectionist in
employment and nationalistic in policy – behaviour seen as cronyist and
inherently corrupt in liberal Western Europe.
Joining the EU club no longer means you have to play
by the agreed rules, which is one reason the EU is even more determined to
impose those rules on aspirant countries such as Ukraine and Georgia. This is
why distinctions are now being made between “political” and “economic”
commitments within the EU, when once each automatically reflected the other.
The EU has to grin and bear the Visegrad Group, an
alliance of four Central European States ostensibly designed to help them integrate with the EU, but actually there to change the terms
of that integration in their favour. Visegrad Group members seek protection
within and freedom without, so their nationals can live off the fat of other EU
member states but not have their jobs and housing in their native lands
threatened, however, ironic that is.
This may sound like having your cake and eating it
too, but what else would these countries be expected to do? The original EU
members joined because they had a history of mutual conflict and destruction,
and could only prevent a recurrence by working together. The Eastern Bloc did
work together, and suffered as a result.
Former Communist realms joined the EU to get away from
that enforced collaboration, and knowing what they have suffered, they are not
going to be told that the future means doing the same again. EU members are
seen as much more independent and established countries, which CHOOSE to
associate for their own betterment rather than having it imposed upon them by a
foreign system.
As long as countries bordering Russia have NATO bases,
they have a self-declared sovereignty and self-declared Western orientation.
Therefore they can act like independent states, and do and think what they
want.
The EU can’t take those bases away because it doesn’t
have any of its own. So their missiles are aimed as much at Brussels as at
Moscow, but present a greater threat to the former.
It is a lot easier to destroy an organisation from
within than without, as the Soviet Union found. Faced with a choice between
firing missiles at Russia and trying to manage its mutually incompatible
internal cross-currents, the EU would rather do the latter, even though both
will inevitably have bad consequences.
Big Brother still watching you
So does the US care whether it can even use the
missiles it has pointed at Russia? After all, the ultimate aim is not to use
them, but to achieve political ends. By placing them in Eastern Europe, like
the Soviet Union did, it does that.
The EU was founded so that previously conflicting
nations would integrate their economies, preventing any one of them dominating
the rest or being able to wage war with them. However, although these nations
couldn’t then owe each other anything, they all owed significant debts
to the US, which bailed them out after World War Two.
In economic and political terms, the EU has succeeded
better than the US hoped for. It can stand on its own feet as a trading bloc,
and also exert a lot of political influence if it can get its act together.
Its members no longer have to take direction from the
US, but can develop their own values and fund the promotion of them, regardless
of US interests. Furthermore, while US policy can change from one
administration to the next, the EU has largely
retained the
same values throughout its existence – the same ones the US used to have, but
now ignores.
The US doesn’t want the EU deviating too much, even
though it is the US which is changing the rules and relationship. NATO is its
lever, and the threat to stop funding it.
Ultimately, the EU still depends on the US for its
defence, no matter how many troops of its own it contributes. The US employs
military presence in exactly the same way the Soviet Union did: if the locals
step too far out of line, Washington will move in, and there will be nothing
national governments can do about it because Washington controls their military
resources and decision making.
Keep in mind that the EU can’t be too independent of
the US due to its own inherent contradictions and lack of a single purpose. So
the US occupies it with its troops, and imposes foreign values that much of
Europe thinks are as alien as was Communism.
So are we to believe that the only way the EU can
maintain the independence it has gained is to let the US point missiles at
Russia from its territory, even though that weakens the EU and put its
territory under threat? This makes EU contradictions worse. But it also gets
the US off the hook, and that is why these missiles and bases are going to be
there unless Russia itself joins the EU, and everyone gangs up on the Muslim
world instead.
Seth Ferris, investigative journalist and political
scientist, expert on Middle Eastern affairs, exclusively for the online
magazine “New Eastern
Outlook”.
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