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A Disaster of Our Own Making: How We're About to Lose a Lot More Than the Friendship of Ukraine
Townhall.com ^ | February 26, 2022 | Nicholas Waddy

Posted on 02/26/2022 5:15:07 AM PST by Kaslin

Let's begin with the obvious: Ukraine is toast. There is little or no chance that the country will be able to endure, given Russian military superiority. Thus, the Western “strategy,” such as it was, to tempt Ukraine progressively closer to NATO and the EU, all while shielding Ukraine against potential Russian aggression with (mostly idle) threats of “severe economic sanctions,” has failed, and spectacularly so!

The key question now is: what penalty will Russia pay for its impertinence, as the West sees it? And how long will it pay? Will sanctions be mild or severe? Will they last weeks, months, years, decades?

The U.S. and the West hesitated initially to place sanctions on Vladimir Putin personally. Moreover, Russia's access to the SWIFT banking system has not been curtailed. To me, though, the really important question is whether there will be any significant disruption to Russian oil and gas sales to the West. If there isn't – and early signs indicate that Russian sales of oil and natural gas will continue unabated – then Russia is likely to weather this storm just fine.

This (lily-livered) approach will minimize economic pain in the West, of course, by keeping energy costs down, but it will simultaneously send a clear message to Russia (and China) that the West's bark is worse than its bite. Simply put, we may pity those poor struggling Ukrainians, but we won't sacrifice our own material comforts to ease their plight. Not a chance.

It all makes you wonder what precisely we'd be willing to do if Putin marched into Warsaw or Riga (the capitals of NATO members Poland and Latvia, respectively)... The answer could well be: not much of anything! A sobering thought.

The fate of Ukraine, however, or even Poland or the Baltic states, is not, and never has been, of paramount importance to the U.S. and its key Western European allies. In the midst of the carnage in Ukraine, we should at least try to see the forest for the trees. Small, weak, impoverished nations are but playthings in the hands of the great powers. What's far more important than events in Kiev, therefore, is the long-term arc of relations between the U.S., Russia, and China – the world's three biggest powers, by far.

What we appear to be witnessing on that score is the rejuvenation of Cold War tensions between Russia and NATO, on the one hand, and increasing signs of an alliance between Russia and China, on the other – and both of these developments are highly troubling and hugely consequential.

Russia's intense jealousy of Western dominance has been evident at least since Vladimir Putin took the helm of state. China, though, seems recently to be no less aggrieved by U.S. and Western hegemony, as its peevish communiques about U.S. policy and even domestic affairs prove.

It's important to recognize, though, that Russia's estrangement from the West, and its marriage of convenience to Red China, are the result of a long series of high-handed and harebrained moves on the part of a succession of U.S. and European leaders. Even after the fall of the Soviet Union, we treated Russia like a pariah and like a threat. During the Trump presidency, the Left went as far as to make Russophobia a fashionable trend, and it became de rigueur among the woke.

Russia, over many years, got the message: it would never be respected by the West or welcomed into NATO, the EU, or the global establishment. Simultaneously, Russia got clear signals from both the Trump and Biden administrations that, while the U.S. applauded Ukraine's shift towards the West, we would under no circumstances actively commit ourselves to the country's defense. The Western shield over Ukraine, in other words, was 80% rhetorical, 15% economic, and maybe 5% military – consisting of desultory shipments of armaments and supplies that would never come close to altering the balance of forces in the region.

The predictable consequence? Russia has seen these Western protestations and “guarantees” for what they are: a farce. It has thus invaded Ukraine, and, in the long run, it will reorient its economy and its military away from the West and towards a pact of some kind with communist China.

And China may, as some have suggested, learn a thing or two from this crisis about the rewards for military aggression, especially strategic and reputational, and about the pusillanimity of the West, that will make the world going forward a far more dangerous place. After all, if the West's response to a Russian invasion of “sovereign” Ukraine is this timid, how much more feeble would be our collective opposition to a Chinese invasion of Taiwan, which virtually the entire world recognizes as the rightful territory of the PRC?

All in all, it is hard to escape the conclusion that the events of the last days and weeks are highly injurious to U.S. national security and to the strategic posture of the West -- and that is doubly unfortunate, because almost everything that has happened in and around Ukraine, and between the swooning lovers Russia and China, is the result of U.S. and Western blunders.

There is, in the end, a strong argument to be made that, despite Russia's proprietorial attitude to its “near abroad,” the West and Russia ought not to be enemies at all. On the contrary, we are natural allies, based on our cultural and historic ties, against China, which promises to be the single greatest threat to the current, Western-dominated global order. Instead of circling our wagons and preparing to meet this unprecedented challenge, the West is reprising the essentially tribal rivalries and bloodletting that beset us, and our Russian cousins, during two world wars, and throughout the Cold War. A more congenial environment for the rise of communist China as a nascent superpower would be difficult to imagine!

A tantalizing opportunity has thus been lost – or, more accurately, squandered. Now, we and the Russians face a grim, uncertain future.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bidenadmin; nicholaswaddy; russia; trumpadmin; ukraine; ukrainecrisis; vladimirputin
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To: Kaslin

Some would say this is intentional treason - on par with marxist control that started in the summer of love of 2020...


21 posted on 02/26/2022 5:44:53 AM PST by Skywise
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To: ARW
Oh, the part that was left out - the deliberate starvation of a million or so Ukrainians by the Soviet government just prior to the Nazi invasion. Made the Ukrainians just a little bit less likely to resist the Nazis. Also note that the map includes Crimea as part of the Soviet Union and not the Ukraine.

Apparently, we have more than enough Russian bots on FreeRepublic to form a full-throated cheering section for the Russians.

22 posted on 02/26/2022 5:46:14 AM PST by Chainmail (Frater magnus te spectat)
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To: Kinzua

Exactly. So Ukraine will fall and Russia will be knocking right on NATOs door.

The partition of Uklraine at the Dneiper River makes sense. NATO needs to shape things to this end, but nosign of it so far.A no fly zone over Western Uklraine would work. No troops on the ground.


23 posted on 02/26/2022 5:47:12 AM PST by Candor7 (ObamaFascism:https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2009/05/barack_obama_the_quintessentia_1.html)
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To: Kaslin

Have you read “Regathering of the Russian Peoples” written by Putin in July 2021?

Nothing in there about Poland, Finland, Latvia, Germany, or France.

It appears to be blocked (censored) this morning (you know, like the USSR would have done), but see if you can get a copy.


24 posted on 02/26/2022 5:48:43 AM PST by Jim Noble (Who saves the nation breaks no law)
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To: Chainmail

We also have enough neocons on this site who would are eager to volunteer Ukraine to endure hundreds of thousands of civilian casualties. Both sides need to stop the cheerleading.


25 posted on 02/26/2022 5:51:30 AM PST by ARW
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To: Kinzua
"Blood and treasure" has been the only thing that has kept us safe so far from most of the world's threats. Or do you think that German and Japan and North Korea and the Soviets and the militant Islamists have all been kept where they are and not here by our winning smiles?

We have been and so far are, the world's preeminent power - and we maintain that position by the "blood and treasure" of our few courageous young people against aggressive enemies abroad.

We get too many bed-wetters here siding with our enemies, and it's all over - capiche?

26 posted on 02/26/2022 5:52:24 AM PST by Chainmail (Frater magnus te spectat)
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To: ARW

Well, you first.


27 posted on 02/26/2022 5:53:02 AM PST by Chainmail (Frater magnus te spectat)
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To: Kaslin

Were there enough private weapons in Ukraine to arm the whole willing populace?


28 posted on 02/26/2022 5:55:12 AM PST by Uncle Miltie (Confirm Janice Rogers Brown!)
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To: Travis McGee
--- "You might not agree with an adversary, but you are a fool to dismiss his concerns."

Thanks for again posting the map graphics. History never begins with someone's birth, but occurs over a long arch of time.

The article mentions, "...despite Russia's proprietorial attitude to its 'near abroad,' the West and Russia ought not to be enemies at all."

Our 'near abroad' shows itself from the Cuban missile crisis under Kennedy forward. With the two-bit idiocy of Canada's recent incursion into a politically constructed "emergency," we see just how "near abroad" things really are. And with the discovery of millions of dollars worth of fentynal coming across the Mexican border, that 'near abroad' disturbs many of us.

Alas Democrats and their assistants see all this as politically and probably financially profitable to their top dogs. And ten percent for the big guy....

29 posted on 02/26/2022 5:55:39 AM PST by Worldtraveler once upon a time
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To: Chainmail

That’s it? Sigh. Lol.


30 posted on 02/26/2022 5:57:06 AM PST by ARW
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To: Chainmail

Our enemies are in and control our own house. We need courage right here at home. An all out effort. This is a distraction. I am a true patriot. Your adventurist propaganda is wasted on me. We have political prisoners in the USA right now!!


31 posted on 02/26/2022 5:58:39 AM PST by Kinzua (What have we allowed to happen?)
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To: Candor7

“NATO is an Imperialist organization”

Interesting “thought”, after Russia invades a sovereign country. Putin has proven that one thing can unite NATO, imperialist Russia.


32 posted on 02/26/2022 6:00:31 AM PST by rbmillerjr (Defeating China is impossible without understanding that Russia is our enemy)
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To: rbmillerjr

And how many nations has the US invaded in the last 25 years?


33 posted on 02/26/2022 6:02:14 AM PST by frankis4liberty
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To: Candor7
--- ">B>The NATO of old is dead. And it died in Libya."

We were in Germany at that time, and our German friends asked how not only the US under "peace prize" Obama but NATO could act as we -- yes, sadly we -- did in an hugely offensive war campaign. I had no answer except to try to convince them that Obama was an absolute liar and one among many profiteers.

You are so correct to write, "the NATO of old is dead." And it died under Obama's watch.

Moreover the migration of Muslims into Europe was hugely increased by the "war" against Libya. Under NATO and Obama.

Fast forward, we've a Biden-appointed DoD head who did the revolving door "thing" from the war industry to the war department, as once the DoD was called.

34 posted on 02/26/2022 6:02:20 AM PST by Worldtraveler once upon a time
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To: Kinzua

Well said.


35 posted on 02/26/2022 6:04:48 AM PST by Worldtraveler once upon a time
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To: Candor7

What we did to Qadaffi was sinful.


36 posted on 02/26/2022 6:07:26 AM PST by SE Mom (Screaming Eagle Mom)
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To: frankis4liberty

“And how many nations has the US invaded in the last 25 years?”

How many did we attempt to annex?

None. Take your Putinist propaganda elsewhere.


37 posted on 02/26/2022 6:07:33 AM PST by rbmillerjr (Defeating China is impossible without understanding that Russia is our enemy)
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To: Candor7

thanks for the post ... but I don’t quite get the connection between Libya and NATO.


38 posted on 02/26/2022 6:09:01 AM PST by bankwalker (Repeal the 19th ...)
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To: Kaslin

I do not believe “Ukraine is toast.”

I believe it likely the Russians will find the only way to conquer Ukraine is to occupy it and endure a painful insurgency (the good kind) that will kill their forces and make their occupation too costly to endure.

Neither Putin nor Russia is prepared to occupy a land in resistance. And I don’t believe the Ukrainian people will roll over.


39 posted on 02/26/2022 6:09:29 AM PST by Arlis
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To: rbmillerjr

What has Russia “annexed” besides Crimea? Your neocon nuttery is laughable


40 posted on 02/26/2022 6:10:07 AM PST by frankis4liberty
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