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The Madness of Russophobia
Chronicles ^ | Feb. 2022 | Srdja Trifkovic

Posted on 02/28/2022 4:05:49 PM PST by oblomov

“Rule One, on page one of the book of war, is: ‘Do not march on Moscow,’” Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery told the House of Lords in 1962. “Various people have tried it, Napoleon and Hitler, and it is no good.”

The victor of El Alamein made an understatement. Napoleon’s invasion in June 1812 took him to Moscow but ended in a total rout of his Grande Armée. By the end of the year, 95 percent of its 600,000 men were dead or taken prisoner. Hitler’s repeat attempt in 1941 cost him the war, with over 80 percent of German military losses—close to 6 million men—occuring on the Eastern Front. “No good” indeed.

A student of history may add that the Polish-Lithuanian invasion during Russia’s “times of troubles” went well at first, with Moscow falling to King Sigismund’s forces in the fall of 1610. The venture ended in disaster two years later, however, with the besieged Polish garrison in the Kremlin resorting to cannibalism before surrendering to the Cossacks.

A century later, in 1708, Charles XII of Sweden invaded Russia, aiming to seize Moscow and install a puppet on the throne. He was decisively beaten by Tsar Peter I the following year, resulting in Sweden’s permanent collapse as a major power.

No natural barriers divide Russia from the rest of Europe. Its defence against all four invasions from the West over four centuries was, therefore, vitally dependent on its ability to trade space for time and to exploit enormous distances—as well as brutal climate—to wear down attackers. Having a solid buffer zone along the country’s western frontiers is still perceived by Russian leaders as strategically imperative.

This is the context in which the latest crisis over Ukraine must be seen. It is noteworthy that today’s Ukraine was the main battlefield in Peter’s war against the Swedes, including the final battle at Poltava, a thousand miles from Stockholm and five hundred from Moscow as the crow flies. It was also in Ukraine that Hitler arguably lost his only chance to reach Moscow before winter by deciding in August 1941 to weaken the thrust of Army Group Center by diverting two of its panzer groups south to capture Kiev.

Following the collapse of the USSR, Russia’s western borders were fixed well to the east from where they stood at the end of Peter’s reign, 300 years ago. In Moscow this was not seen as hugely problematic as long as the former Soviet republics remained neutral, and specifically for as long as they stayed outside the U.S.-led military and political structure embodied in NATO.

Everything changed with the decision of successive administrations in Washington—starting with Bill Clinton’s in the 1990’s—to expand NATO eastward and to turn it into a tool of its global strategy of full-spectrum dominance, as exemplified by the attack on Serbia in March 1999. That event was the turning point in Moscow’s assessment of American strategic intentions and a formative experience for Russia’s soon-to-be president, Vladimir Putin. Years later, when asked if the decline of Russo-American relations was due to Crimea or Syria, Putin replied, “You are mistaken. Think about Yugoslavia. This is when it started.”

NATO’s seemingly insatiable urge to expand eastward is the context of the latest crisis over Ukraine. In 2014, after a Western-instigated coup brought to power hard-line nationalists in Kiev, Putin was not ready for an all-out confrontation. Annexing Crimea was a forced, essentially defensive move, and the low-intensity conflict in the Donbas has been effectively frozen for years.

In recent months, however, the renewed prospect of Ukraine joining NATO and having Western missiles deployed along Russia’s southwestern border has created a new dynamic. Moscow has decided that a second Ukraine crisis in one year is one too many. Last December Putin frankly told a gathering of military officials that Russia had “no room to retreat.” He also deployed troops near the border while denying any plans to invade. It is still an even bet that Putin’s objective was not to attack and occupy Ukraine—a risky venture—but to draw the attention of the Biden administration to his demand for a binding set of security guarantees from the West.

Putin wants a pledge that there would be no further eastward expansion of NATO and that offensive missile systems would be removed from Russia’s borders. Their deployment would reduce the warning time on incoming missiles to Moscow to a mere 5 to 7 minutes. Russia would be certain to respond by stationing its new hypersonic missiles on ships just outside the U.S. territorial waters, thereby reducing to the same 5 to 7 minutes the time to Washington, D.C.

This is a mirror image of the Cuban missile crisis, almost six decades ago. Back then, however, it was the Soviet leader, Nikita Sergeyevich Khrushchev, who instigated the crisis. Today it is the Biden administration that is making equally destabilizing and geopolitically senseless moves.

The Russian plans for a neutral Ukraine suggest a plus-sum game: nobody should threaten anybody, and if one party feels threatened, a serious effort should be made in good faith to find a solution. If this is rejected, of course Russia will likely introduce countermeasures, thus making everyone less secure.

In the weeks to come, the situation will likely develop in one of two ways. The less likely scenario is that Washington does not take the Russian concerns seriously yet seeks to snag Putin in a new round of extended but pointless talks. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is said to hope that fresh talks may eventually lead to de-escalation, but without any meaningful concessions being made to Moscow. This would be fatal to Putin’s credibility at home and abroad. There are some Russian officials, especially in the diplomatic service and in financial institutions, who might be willing to throw in the towel and hope for business as usual, but they are weaker now than at any time since Boris Yeltsin’s flawed attempt to forge a partnership with the West, 30 years ago.

A consensus now exists in Moscow that if Putin does not get solid commitments about a NATO rollback but retreats, he will have only made Russia’s situation worse. This would invite more encroachment, almost ensuring that sooner or later either Russia runs up the white flag or, when the clash comes, it turns out to be far worse than what probably may happen now.

More likely, the U.S. and NATO will try to engage the Russians in a new round of talks without addressing their key concerns, and hope that they are bluffing, but that does not wash—this time the Russians may take real action. In stark contrast to the indecisive response to the Maidan crisis in 2013-2014, this time Putin has precisely weighed his options before spelling out his terms. Russia’s response could even include deployment of medium-range nuclear missiles in the Kaliningrad enclave, putting most European NATO countries within easy range.

A diplomatic game-changer would be the signing of a defensive alliance with China, possibly accompanied by a joint naval demonstration in the Caribbean. The termination of oil and gas contracts with all countries which join current or proposed future sanctions against Moscow would be a parallel demonstration of economic power. Last but not least, the Russians may be the ones to indefinitely suspend the Nord Stream 2 pipeline project rather than allow Germany’s aggressive new foreign minister to use it as a political trump card.

Russian countermeasures might allow some adults in Washington to reassert themselves. One of them is CIA Director William Burns, who served in Moscow as an ambassador and is reputedly skeptical of the administration’s current hard line. At the moment, however, the Beltway is dominated by hawkish ignoramuses. Worse still, there is the lunatic fringe, embodied by former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense Evelyn Farkas, who wrote on Jan. 11 that the United States must ready itself for a war with Russia over Ukraine. There are also the GOP hawks, notably Sen. Ted Cruz, whose histrionics about “stopping Putin's aggression" are primarily meant to score a few political points by accusing the administration of being insufficiently firm in its dealings with Moscow.

It is therefore fortunate that America's NATO allies in Europe are proving notably reluctant to condone further escalation. On Jan. 22, Germany ruled out arms deliveries to Ukraine “for the time being.” More significantly, French President Emmanuel Macron called on the European Union to draw up a new security plan to help ease tensions with Russia, adding that there was “a vital need for Europe to affirm its sovereignty.” Such manifestations of European caution may at last prompt key U.S. policy makers to step back from the brink.

For more than 300 hundred years preceding the disintegration of the Soviet Union, the territory of today’s Ukraine had been an integral part of the Russian Empire and, after 1917, a constituent republic of the USSR. Her status did not make the slightest difference to the national security of the Unites States in its infancy or in any subsequent period, including the Cold War.

The tragedy of U.S.-Russian relations is that the two powers do not have incompatible interests of the kind that made war virtually inevitable between Athens and Sparta, Rome and Carthage, Ottomans and Greeks, or the Bourbons and the Habsburgs. From the neoconservative-neoliberal point of view, however, there is no better way to ensure lasting U.S. dominance in Europe than subverting the Russo-German rapprochement, which should be logical and can be mutually advantageous. Both the neolibs and neocons hate Russia as such, for reasons which are arguably more ideological than geopolitical. Both resentfully recognize Russia as the last major bulwark against the tide of cultural and moral self-immolation which has gripped America and much of the West.

By extending her protectorate deep inside Eastern Europe, America is wantonly diminishing, rather than enhancing, her security. This calls to mind previous Western experiments with security guarantees in the region—the carve-up of Czechoslovakia in the fall of 1938, or Poland’s destruction in September 1939. History teaches such guarantees that are not based on the provider’s complete resolve to fight a fullblown war to fulfill them are worse than no guarantees at all.

Washington’s urge to challenge and confront Russia is rationally inexplicable. The two can and should be natural allies in a true Northern Alliance extending from Juneau to Vladivostok. The current madness is contrary to the American people’s interests, and it has the potential to destroy the remnant of the common European civilization on both shores of the Atlantic. Such an outcome would please only the enemies of the West.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Philosophy; Russia
KEYWORDS: bidensbuttboys; billburns; evelynfarkas; putinpropagandist; russia; tedcruz; ukraine; williamburns
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To: hardspunned

Welcome totge Democrat party.


41 posted on 02/28/2022 5:05:47 PM PST by Codeflier (Please stop calling these violent totalitarian collectivist Democrats, liberals)
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To: oblomov

Bkmk


42 posted on 02/28/2022 5:07:10 PM PST by sauropod (Whom the gods would destroy they first make mad.)
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To: MNJohnnie

Um…i think you need to check what the Democrats are saying about this. You seem like a good corporatist stooge to me. You got rid of Trump and got your man Biden, but you still aren’t happy. Typical of a Democrat, even though they get what they want, they still aren’t satisfied.


43 posted on 02/28/2022 5:08:04 PM PST by Codeflier (Please stop calling these violent totalitarian collectivist Democrats, liberals)
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To: MNJohnnie

No, I am simply an independent thinker. Get back to your Democrat party and off of FR. You need to help them with creating even more genders. Get to work Dem.


44 posted on 02/28/2022 5:10:37 PM PST by Codeflier (Please stop calling these violent totalitarian collectivist Democrats, liberals)
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To: MNJohnnie

You’re no fun to debate with, since you just argue against a strawman “Putinista” rather than discuss history, state facts, and respond to the actual points made.

You treat your interlocutor as the embodiment (or at least the handmaiden) of evil rather than assume good intentions.

This is how leftist adolescents argue on Twitter, and it’s not why I come to FR.


45 posted on 02/28/2022 5:18:08 PM PST by oblomov
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To: oblomov

It fine that you love Russia and Putin.

At least have the basic decdeny to not try to make excuses for the inexcusiable. There is no moral, legal or intellectual justification for Putin’s thuggish actions against Ukraine.

Don’t waste your time trying manufacure some twisted rationailzation to deny that painful reality.


46 posted on 02/28/2022 5:23:01 PM PST by MNJohnnie (They would have abandon leftism to achieve sanity. Freeper Olog-hai)
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To: MNJohnnie

Wrong on all accounts. I suggest to study Russian History going back 500 years or more. Then you might figure it out.


47 posted on 02/28/2022 5:26:20 PM PST by Captain Peter Blood (https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/3804407/posts?)
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To: MNJohnnie

QED


48 posted on 02/28/2022 5:30:04 PM PST by oblomov
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To: Captain Peter Blood
Using your logic, Britain can invade the US anytime they disagree with us because at one time we belonged to them

That Ukraine was conquered by Russia in the 1600s in no way gives them any moral, legal or rational justification to invade them in the 21st century.

The argument you are making is completely idiotic. Ukraine is no longer part of Russia. It is a recognized independent nation. Putin has no legal, moral or intellectual right to claim oversite over their Goverment's polices

49 posted on 02/28/2022 5:44:59 PM PST by MNJohnnie (They would have abandon leftism to achieve sanity. Freeper Olog-hai)
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To: Captain Peter Blood; oblomov
Let me paint the idiocy of your argument in starker colors Large parts of Poland as well all of Finland belonged to Russia until 1918

Using your “logic” Putin is justified in invading Finland and Poland if their Government do anything that upsets him

Now do you finally see the utter absurdity of Putin's argument for invading Ukraine?

50 posted on 02/28/2022 6:01:07 PM PST by MNJohnnie (They would have abandon leftism to achieve sanity. Freeper Olog-hai)
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To: MNJohnnie

You have no idea what my position is, and you aren’t worth my time.


51 posted on 02/28/2022 6:06:31 PM PST by oblomov
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To: hardspunned
Putin or any Russian strongman to come will fight NATO, if necessary, to keep NATO out of Ukraine. Any unbiased eye can see that.

Truth!   Nobody has to like Putin to see that he has a reason for this action.

52 posted on 02/28/2022 6:07:12 PM PST by higgmeister ( In the Shadow of The Big Chicken)
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To: rellic

Moscow wasn’t the political center of Russia during the Mongol invasion and it was seized with ease.

But how the Mongols did what they did is they were an army that lived in the field as they lived at home. Constantly mobile and able to forage off the land with ease.

Their military genius was unparalleled for the time.


53 posted on 02/28/2022 6:07:46 PM PST by Rebelbase
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To: oblomov
"NATO’s seemingly insatiable urge to expand eastward is the context of the latest crisis over Ukraine"

What prevaricating propaganda is this? NATO exists due to the threat of expansionist Soviet power, which Putin is pushing to regard some glory he lusts for.

1939: World War II begins, and, in accord with a pact between Stalin and Adolf Hitler, Russian invades Poland, Romania, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Finland.

When you must build a wall to keep people in do not be surprised if neighbors guard against you. On August 13, 1961, the Communist government of the German Democratic Republic (GDR, or East Germany) began to build a barbed wire and concrete “Antifascistischer Schutzwall,” or “antifascist bulwark,” between East and West Berlin. All the Ways People Escaped Across the Berlin Wall


54 posted on 02/28/2022 6:26:03 PM PST by daniel1212 (Turn to the Lord Jesus as a damned+destitute sinner, trust Him to save U + be baptized + follow Him!)
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To: dfwgator

Same here, and I might note it doesn’t seem like it’s universally
accepted that the Ukraine is an enemy of Russia.

It’s looking like more and Russians think Putin is.


55 posted on 02/28/2022 6:26:38 PM PST by DoughtyOne (I pledge allegiance to the flag of the U S of A, and to the REPUBLIC for which it stands.)
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To: MNJohnnie
It 1938 and you all are siding with Hitler. Stop being this stupid.

So, does that mean you are ready to nuke Putin right now?   Tell us what you want to do?   I, and others like me, want to stay out of this quagmire.   Saber rattlers seem to want President Putin skewered on a spit.

I believe you have been played.

56 posted on 02/28/2022 6:28:34 PM PST by higgmeister ( In the Shadow of The Big Chicken)
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To: higgmeister
Were does this idiocy come from?

Ukraine is an independent nation state. Putin has no moral, legal or intellectual justification to invade because he dislikes their foreign policy.

Take for example Cuba. Cuba has been a Russian client state 90 miles from the US coast since the 1960s. Despite not liking the situation the US has no legal, moral or intellectual grounds to invade Cuba

As for the idiocy "what about the Cuban missile crisis". That was about offensive nuclear missiles being placed in Cuba. That posed a direct offense threat to the USA. That was resolved, after a show of force by the US brought the Russian to negotiate, by diplomacy.

The US removed their missiles from Turkey in exchanged for Russia removing their from Cuba

57 posted on 02/28/2022 6:30:19 PM PST by MNJohnnie (They would have abandon leftism to achieve sanity. Freeper Olog-hai)
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To: oblomov
"Washington’s urge to challenge and confront Russia is rational ly inexplicable ."

Fixed.

"The two can and should be natural allies in a true Northern Alliance"

This Northern Alliance (Canada)?

The Northern Alliance is a far right, white supremacist organization based in London, Ontario, Canada. The group started in 1997, and has been involved in a number of public controversies. The group's leading members include Jason Ouwendyk, Tyler Chilcott, Dave Ruud, and Tomas Szymanski. The number of members in the group is not known. - https://www.liquisearch.com/northern_alliance_canada

58 posted on 02/28/2022 6:33:55 PM PST by daniel1212 (Turn to the Lord Jesus as a damned+destitute sinner, trust Him to save U + be baptized + follow Him!)
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To: MNJohnnie
" Were does this idiocy come from?"

Indeed. I suppose the Cold War was just a big misunderstanding, and or Putin just wants peace, vs. at least some (back to the) USSR former glory.

Timeline of Soviet takeover of Eastern Europe

CountryYearMethods used
Albania1945A communist government took power at the end of World War Two.
Bulgaria1946In 1946 the Bulgarian monarchy was abolished and later that year a communist government was elected and gradually eradicated its opponents.
East Germany1945East Germany was part of the Soviet zone of occupation agreed at the Yalta Conference and in 1945 the Soviets set up a communist regime.
Romania1945In the 1945 elections, a communist-led coalition (made up of more than one political party) government was elected. The Communists gradually removed their coalition partners and abolished the Romanian monarchy.
Poland1947Fearing that a non-communist government would be elected in 1947, Stalin invited 16 non-communist politicians to Moscow, where they were arrested. With their political opponents removed, the Polish communists won the election.
Hungary1948Although non-communists won the 1945 election, a communist politician, Rakosi, took control of the secret police and used it to arrest and execute his political opponents. By 1948 the Communist Party was in complete control of the country.
Czechoslovakia1948Czechoslovakia was the last country in Eastern Europe to fully fall to communism in 1948. At elections that year only communists were allowed to stand and a communist government was duly elected.

-https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/guides/zt8ncwx/revision/7

59 posted on 02/28/2022 6:53:03 PM PST by daniel1212 (Turn to the Lord Jesus as a damned+destitute sinner, trust Him to save U + be baptized + follow Him!)
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To: oblomov
"Yes, being against the foreign policy idiocy of Hillary Clinton, Victoria “cookie lady” Nuland, John McCain, and Adam Kinzinger makes one a Putin supporter. /s"

While as seen in my posts above, I see NATO as warranted due Putin's unwarranted aggressiveness, however, as I have said before, after the fall of the Soviet Union the West naively believed that democracy itself is the answer, which it is not, as only insomuch as the voters are wise Godly will they elect the same, while the Russian mafia much filled the void of Soviet corruption. And the morally decaying West failed to really rehabilitate and develop Russia and seemed to disrespect it in the Kosovo intervention.

And this sympathetic piece relates to it.

The Russian military was a mess. Instead of seizing the opportunity to create a new European order that included Russia, President Bill Clinton and his foreign-policy team squandered it by deciding to expand NATO threateningly toward that country’s borders. Such a misbegotten policy guaranteed that Europe would once again be divided, even as Washington created a new order that excluded and progressively alienated post-Soviet Russia.
From 1993, when discussions about it began in earnest, there was no one of significance to oppose them. Worse yet, the president, a savvy politician, sensed that the project might even help him attract voters in the 1996 presidential election, especially in the Midwest, home to millions of Americans with eastern and central European roots..
The alliance’s defenders now claim that Russia accepted it by signing the 1997 NATO-Russia Founding Act. But Moscow really had no choice, being dependent then on billions of dollars in International Monetary Fund loans (possible only with the approval of the United States, that organization’s most influential member). So, it made a virtue of necessity. That document, it’s true, does highlight democracy and respect for the territorial integrity of European countries, principles Putin has done anything but uphold.
- https://www.thenation.com/article/world/nato-clinton-ukraine-russia/
60 posted on 02/28/2022 6:56:46 PM PST by daniel1212 (Turn to the Lord Jesus as a damned+destitute sinner, trust Him to save U + be baptized + follow Him!)
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