The Art of War
Ukraine, it
was all written
in the Rand
Corp plan
Manlio Dinucci
The strategic
plan of the United States against Russia was elaborated three years ago by the
Rand Corporation (the manifesto, Rand Corp: how to bring down Russia,
May 21, 2019). The Rand Corporation, headquartered in Washington, DC, is
"a global research organization developing solutions to policy challenges":
it has an army of 1,800 researchers and other specialists recruited from 50
countries, speaking 75 languages, spread across offices and other locations in
North America, Europe, Australia, and the Persian Gulf. Rand's U.S. personnel
live and work in more than 25 countries.
The Rand
Corporation, which describes itself as a "nonprofit, nonpartisan
organization," is officially funded by the Pentagon, the U.S. Army and Air
Force, national security agencies (CIA and others), agencies in other
countries, and powerful non-governmental organizations.
The Rand Corp.
prides itself on having helped devise the strategy that enabled the United
States to emerge victorious from the Cold War, forcing the Soviet Union to
consume its resources in a grueling military confrontation. This model has
inspired the new plan elaborated in 2019: "Overextending and Unbalancing
Russia", i.e. forcing the adversary to overextend itself in order to
unbalance and knock it down.
These are the
main lines of attack outlined in the Rand plan, on which the United States has
actually moved in recent years.
First of all -
the plan establishes - Russia must be attacked on the most vulnerable side,
that of its economy strongly dependent on gas and oil exports: for this purpose
commercial and financial sanctions must be used and, at the same time, Europe
must be made to decrease the importation of Russian natural gas, replacing it
with US liquefied natural gas.
In the
ideological and informational field, it is necessary to encourage internal
protests and at the same time undermine the image of Russia outside.
In the
military field, it is necessary to operate so that European NATO countries
increase their forces in an anti-Russian function. The US can have high
probability of success and high benefits with moderate risks by investing more
in strategic bombers and long-range attack missiles directed against Russia.
Deploying new intermediate-range nuclear missiles in Europe aimed at Russia
assures them a high probability of success, but also carries high risks.
By calibrating
each option to obtain the desired effect - Rand concludes - Russia will end up
paying the highest price in the confrontation with the US, but the latter and
their allies will have to invest large resources to divert them from other
purposes.
As part of
that strategy - the Rand Corporation's 2019 plan predicted - "providing
lethal aid to Ukraine would exploit Russia's greatest point of external
vulnerability, but any increase in U.S.-provided weapons and military advice to
Ukraine would have to be carefully calibrated to increase costs to Russia
without provoking a much larger conflict in which Russia, because of proximity,
would have significant advantages."
It is
precisely here - at what the Rand Corporation called "Russia's greatest
external vulnerability point," exploitable by arming Ukraine in a manner
"calibrated to increase costs to Russia without provoking a much larger
conflict" - that the rupture occurred. Caught in the political, economic
and military stranglehold that the US and NATO increasingly tightened, ignoring
Moscow's repeated warnings and proposals for negotiation, Russia reacted with
the military operation that destroyed more than 2,000 military facilities in
Ukraine that were actually built and controlled not by Kiev's rulers but by
US-NATO commands.
The article
that three years ago reported the Rand Corporation's plan ended with these
words: "The options in the plan are really only variants of the same war
strategy, the price of which in terms of sacrifices and risks is paid by all of
us". We European people are paying it now, and we will pay it more and
more dearly, if we continue to be expendable pawns in the US-NATO strategy.
(il manifesto, March 8, 2022)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.