The U.S. government’s plan to conquer Russia is based upon a
belief in, and the fundamental plan to establish, “Nuclear Primacy”
against Russia — an American ability to win a nuclear war against, and
so conquer, Russia.
This concept became respectable in U.S. academic and governmental
policymaking circles when virtually simultaneously in 2006 a short-form
and a long-form version of an article endorsing the concept, which the
article’s two co-authors there named “nuclear primacy,” were published
respectively in the world’s two most influential journals of
international affairs, Foreign Affairs from the Council on Foreign Relations, and International Security from Harvard. (CFR got the more popular short version, titled “The Rise of U.S. Nuclear Primacy”, and Harvard got the more scholarly long version, which was titled “The End of MAD?”.)
This article claimed that the central geostrategic concept during the
Cold War with the Soviet Union, Mutually Assured Destruction or “MAD” —
in which there is no such thing as the U.S. or the U.S.S.R. conquering
the other, because the first of the two to attack will itself also be
destroyed by the surviving nuclear forces of the one responding to that
attack — will soon be merely past history (like the Soviet Union itself
already is); and, so, as the short form of the article said, “nuclear
primacy remains a goal of the United States”; and, as the long form
said, “the United States now stands on the cusp of nuclear primacy.” In
other words: arms-control or no, the U.S. should, and soon will, be able
to grab Russia (the largest land-mass of any country, and also the one
richest in natural resources).
Neither version of this article mentioned the key reason why nuclear
victory is exceedingly dangerous even under the most favorable
conditions, which reason is the concept (and the likely reality in the
event of nuclear war between the two superpowers) “nuclear winter” —
the scientific studies showing that a resulting sudden sharp cooling of
the atmosphere after all those enormous explosions would produce a
global die-off.
America’s aristocracy and its vassal-aristocracies controlling the
U.S.-allied nations (billionaires, centi-millionaires, and their top
agents in both the public and private sectors) are buying and building deep-underground nuclear shelters for
themselves, but they wouldn’t be able to stay underground and survive
on stored feedstuffs forever. (As for everybody else, those other people
are not involved in geostrategic decisionmaking, and so are being
ignored.) However, many of America’s (and associated) elite are paying
those bomb-shelter expenses, but none of the West’s elite are condemning
the path toward nuclear war that their governments are on. So: buying
or building nuclear-war shelters is more acceptable to them than is
stopping America’s planned conquest of Russia. The higher priority is to
conquer Russia.
A far less influential scholarly journal, China Policy,
published later in 2006 a critical article arguing against nuclear
supremacy, but that article has had no impact upon policymaking. Its
title was “The Fallacy of Nuclear Primacy” and
it argued that, “American nuclear supremacy removes the root source of
stability from the nuclear equation: mutual vulnerability.” It presented
a moral argument: “U.S. leaders might try to exploit its nuclear
superiority … by actually launching a cold-blooded nuclear attack
against its nuclear rival in the midst of an intense crisis. The
professors discount significantly the power of the nuclear taboo to
restrain U.S. leaders from crossing the fateful threshold. If crisis
circumstances grow dire enough, the temptation to try to disarm
their nuclear adversaries through a nuclear first-strike may be too
strong to resist, they argue.” The concept of “nuclear winter” wasn’t
even so much as just mentioned (much less dealt with) in this article, just as it was ignored in the two that it was arguing against.
The co-authors of (both versions of) the article that had proposed
and endorsed nuclear primacy, then published in 2007 (this one also in International Security), a response to that critical article. This reply’s title was “U.S. Nuclear Primacy and the Future of the Chinese Deterrent”. But it had no more impact than did the obscure article it was arguing against.
Thus, nuclear primacy has become U.S. policy, and MAD no longer is U.S.
policy (though it remains Russian policy). The U.S. government is
planning to take over Russia (basically, to install a puppet-regime
there). That’s the reality.
Central to the nuclear-primacy concept is that of what’s variously
called a “Ballistic Missile Defense” (BMD) or “Anti Ballistic Missile”
(ABM) system: a system to disable or knock out Russia’s retaliatory
nuclear weapons so that a U.S. blitz nuclear attack won’t be able to be
met by any nuclear counter-attack.
As “The End of MAD?” put it: “Russia has approximately 3,500
strategic nuclear warheads today, but if the United States struck before
Russian forces were alerted, Russia would be lucky if a half-dozen
warheads survived.”
In other words: America’s aristocracy aren’t necessarily hoping to protect all of
the U.S. population from a counter-attack, but are willing to sacrifice
perhaps a few million Americans here and there, in order to achieve the
intended result: conquest of Russia.
That article then says that a BMD-ABM system wouldn’t necessarily
indicate America’s determination to pursue nuclear primacy against
Russia, because it could instead be intended purely and authentically
defensively, to protect against nuclear attack from Iran, North Korea or
some other country. However: “Other U.S. nuclear programs are hard to
explain with any mission other than a nuclear first strike on a major
power adversary. For example, the decision to upgrade the fuse of many
SLBM warheads (the W76s) to permit ground bursts makes sense only if the
mission is destroying hundreds of hardened silos. One might argue that
ground bursts could be useful for a variety of other missions, such as
destroying North Korean WMD bunkers or remote cave complexes housing
terrorist leaders. The United States, however, already has a large
number of highly accurate, similar-yield warheads that would be ideal
for these purposes.”
The article even notes that: “Other analysts have noted that the
current U.S. nuclear force looks surprisingly like an arsenal designed
for a nuclear first strike against Russia or China.” And, “A group of
RAND analysts agrees: ‘What the planned force appears best suited to
provide beyond the needs of traditional deterrence is a preemptive
counterforce capability against Russia and China. Otherwise, the numbers
and the operating procedures simply do not add up.’” So: the co-authors
here are claiming to be merely giving a name, “nuclear primacy,” to America’s existing strategic
military policy — not to be inventing or creating it. They are, above
all, saying that this is the reality now in U.S. policy-making circles;
that MAD no longer is.
And their article has, indeed, described the guiding
strategic-planning objective not only of the George W. Bush
Administration, but also of Barack Obama’s — as will now be documented.
U.S. President Obama has always been saying that the reason why
America is installing anti-ballistic missiles (“ABM”s, otherwise known
as ballistic-missile defense or “BMD”) in Romania, Poland, and other
nations that border (or are near to) Russia, is in order to protect
Europe against Iranian missiles that might be aimed against Europe. He
says that this is purely defensive, not aggressive, and that what it’s
defending from is Iran, not Russia — so, Russia has no reason for complaint about it.
But then, Obama reached his nuclear deal with Iran; and this deal
ended, for at least ten years, any realistic possibility that Iran would
develop any nuclear-weapons capability — Obama himself emphasized that
this was the case; he wasn’t denying it.
So: Obama’s claimed reason for installing ABMs in Europe was now, quite simply, gone. (Not that it had been credible anyway, since Iran didn’t have any nuclear weapons. It was merely a pretext, not honestly a reason.)
Here is how Russia’s President, Vladimir Putin, stated the matter, at that time, during the meeting of the Valdai International Discussion Club, on 22 October 2015:
The use of the threat of a nuclear missile attack from
Iran as an excuse, as we know, has destroyed the fundamental basis of
modern international security – the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. The
United States has unilaterally seceded from the treaty.
Incidentally, today we have resolved the Iranian issue and there is no
threat from Iran and never has been, just as we said.
The thing that seemed to have led our American partners to build an
anti-missile defence system is gone. It would be reasonable to expect
work to develop the US anti-missile defence system to come to an end as
well. [But] What is actually happening? Nothing of the kind, or actually
the opposite – everything continues.
Recently the United States conducted the first test of the
anti-missile defence system in Europe. What does this mean? It means we
were right when we argued with our American partners. They were
simply trying yet again to mislead us and the whole world. To put
it plainly, they were lying. It was not about the hypothetical Iranian
threat, which never existed. It was about an attempt to destroy the
strategic balance, to change the balance of forces in their favour not
only to dominate, but to have the opportunity to dictate their will to
all: to their geopolitical competition and, I believe, to their
allies as well. This is a very dangerous scenario, harmful to all,
including, in my opinion, to the United States.
The nuclear deterrent lost its value. Some probably even had the
illusion that victory of one party in a world conflict was again
possible – without irreversible, unacceptable, as experts say,
consequences for the winner, if there ever is one
He called Obama there a “liar,” and that’s a blatantly truthful
characterization of the situation. But Putin missed there saying what’s
even more basic for an understanding of what Obama was doing in this
matter — and which makes that “lie” from Obama particularly heinous:
Putin missed saying that an anti-missile system can be at least as
important as an aggressive weapon as it is as a defensive one, because
if a first-strike attacker wants to eliminate the defender’s ability to
strike back from the attacker’s first-strike attack, then an
anti-missile system is the weapon to do that, by eliminating the
defender’s missiles before those strike-back missiles can reach their
targets.
It nullifies the other side’s defense — and to do this is enormously
aggressive; it strips the victim’s retaliation. The whole distinction
between offensive and defensive can thus be pure propaganda, nothing
having to do actually with aggressive and defensive. Whether
the use will be defensive, or instead offensive, won’t be known until
the system is in actual battlefield use. Only the propaganda is clear;
the weapon’s use is not.
So, Putin understated the heinousness, and the danger to Russians,
that was actually involved in Obama’s tricks. All that Putin did was to
vaguely suggest an aggressive possibility: “It was about an attempt to
destroy the strategic balance, to change the balance of forces in their
favour not only to dominate, but to have the opportunity to dictate
their will to all.” Most people don’t relate to such abstractions as
“strategic balance.”
Obama and other agents of the U.S. aristocracy know that their public
have been trained for decades, to hate, fear, and despise, Russians,
and especially the Russian government, as if it were the Soviet Union,
and as if its Warsaw Pact and communism still existed and Russia hadn’t
ended its hostility to the U.S. in 1991 (though the U.S. continued its hostility to Russia — that rump remaining country from the former communist empire — and during Obama’s second term the hostility soared).
So, for example, at the conservative website Breitbart, when that
statement quoted here from Putin was posted as part of an honestly
written and presented article titled “Vladimir Putin: U.S. Missile Defense System Threatens Russia”,
almost none of the reader-comments indicated any ability or inclination
of the readers to sympathize with the plight for Russians that Putin
had just expressed. Instead, to the extent that the comments there were
relevant, they were generally hostile, such as:
“Russian President Vladimir Putin said Thursday he has concerns that the U.S. ballistic missile defense system threatens Russia’s nuclear capability.”
Vlad, it's supposed to, it's called defense. The only way it could harm
your nukes is if they were shot down…………… after you launched them!
and
How can a defense system threaten anything? Like Obama would attack Russia. That is laughable.
Most people’s minds are straightjacketed in bigotries of various
sorts, preconceptions such as that a “missile defense” system, and a
“Defense” Department, can’t be aggressive — even extremely aggressive and war-mongering. The first thought that comes to mind about anything that’s ‘defensive’ is that something else must be ‘aggressive’ or ‘offensive’, and that whatever is ‘defensive’ (such as an ABM) is therefore good and even necessary.
That’s thinking, and receiving the term “defense,” like thinking just
one move ahead in a chess-game, but this is the mental limit for most
people, and every propagandist (such as the people who professionally
design propaganda or PR slogans and campaigns) do precisely what Obama
and the rest of the aristocracy and their agents do in order to deceive
their gulls: they phrase things for one-move-ahead-limit thinkers, like
that. The cardinal rule in the deception-professions is therefore,
first, to find people with the desired prejudices, and then to play them
as that, with one-move-ahead-limit sales-pitches, which are directed to
precisely those prejudices. This report at the Breitbart site was instead presenting
a high-quality news-report, to a low-quality audience, and so the
reader-comments it generated were few, and generally hostile.
Obama is a master at deception. Another good example of this was 26 March 2012, during Obama’s campaign for re-election, when he confidentially told Dmitry Medvedev, “On
all these issues, but particularly missile defense, this can be solved,
but it’s important for him [the incoming President Putin] to give me
space. … This is my last election. After my election, I have
more flexibility.” Obama was privately communicating to Putin (through
Medvedev) that Obama was pushing the ABM installations only so as not to
be politically vulnerable to charges from the knee-jerk Russia-haters,
Republicans, and that Obama’s fakery regarding the supposed ABM-target’s
being Iran was only in order to appeal to yet another Republican
bigotry (against Iran), and so Obama was intending to back away from
supporting the ABM system during his second term.
But actually, Obama had had Russia in his gunsights even prior to his
coming into office. Two specific objects in focus were Moscow-friendly
leaders of nations: Assad of Syria, and Yanukovych of Ukraine. America’s
strategy, ever since 24 February 1990,
has been to strip Russia of allies and friends — to leave Russia
increasingly isolated and surrounded by enemies. When Obama entered the
White House on 20 January 2009, there already
was a plea in the pipeline from the Syrian government for urgently
needed food-aid to address the all-time-record drought there, which had
decimated Syrian agriculture. Obama’s Administration never even
answered it. Well before the Arab Spring demonstrations in 2011, Obama
was hoping for turmoil in Syria and the overthrow of Assad — lots of
starving Syrians would be just the thing.
Moreover, the planning for the February 2014 coup to
overthrow the Moscow-friendly democratically elected President of
Ukraine, Viktor Yanukovych, started in the U.S. State Department by no later than 2011.
So: when Obama told Medvedev and Putin, on 26 March 2012, not to
worry about Obama’s intentions toward Russia, he was lying. He wanted
his intended victim to be off-guard, unprepared for what was soon to
come.
On Obama’s way out the door, he did two things that significantly advanced America’s ABM-BMD threat against Russia.
On 10 December 2016, ‘Defense’ Secretary Ashton Carter stated, burying it in a speech he
gave in Bahrain — site of a major U.S. military base — “just this week,
we reached an agreement for Qatar to purchase a 5,000-kilometer
early-warning radar to enhance its missile defenses,” and he said
nothing more about it, as if this announcement weren’t the bombshell it
actually was. Alex Gorka headlined about that at Strategic Culture, “US-Qatar Deal Threatens Russia: Reading News Between the Lines” and
he explained that this system “is designed to be used as an early
warning system against strategic offensive assets – something Iran does
not possess.” Near the start of Carter’s speech, Carter had said that he
would be talking about “checking Iranian aggression and malign
influence, and helping defend our friends and allies,” including
Bahrain, Qatar, UAE, and Saudi Arabia. Gorka noted, “The announced range
of 5,000km (3,100mi) by far exceeds the requirement to counter a
missile threat coming from Iran,” and, “There is no other reasonable
explanation for the choice, except the fact that the AN/FPS-132 can
monitor large chunks of Russian territory,” the objective being “to
surround the Russian Federation with BMD sites and neutralize its
capability to deliver a retaliatory strike if attacked.”
One of Obama’s last actions as the U.S. President was to sign into
law a bill that had been quietly passed in Congress, which included a
key change in U.S. law that would enable the government to spend
unlimited funds on realizing former President Ronald Reagan’s dream of a
space-based ABM system, “Star Wars.” On December 22nd, David Willman of
the Los Angeles Times, headlined “Congress scrapped this one word from the law, opening the door to a space arms race”,
and he reported that the eliminated word was “limited.” Willman
explained that, “The nation’s homeland missile defense system is
designed to thwart a small-scale, or ‘limited,’ attack by the likes of
North Korea or Iran. As for the threat of a large-scale strike by China
or Russia, the prospect of massive U.S. retaliation is supposed to deter
both from ever launching missiles.” He noted: “The bill awaits action
by President Obama. The White House has not said what he will do.”
Willman also noted that on an earlier occasion, “the Obama
administration criticized the changes in the Senate bill, saying it
‘strongly objects’ to removing ‘limited’ and to placing anti-missile
weaponry in space. The statement stopped short of threatening a veto.”
But then, the next day, on December 23rd, Willman bannered, “President Obama signs defense bill that could spur new space-based arms race”.
Whereas Obama’s public rhetoric portrayed himself as being the type of
person who had deserved to win the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize, almost all of
his actual decisions in office were the exact opposite — and here was a superb example of that.
Whether Obama’s successor, Donald Trump, will continue with that longstanding (ever since 24 February 1990)
plan to conquer Russia, or instead finally end the Cold War on the U.S.
side (as it already had ended in 1991 on the U.S.S.R.’s), isn’t yet clear.
This is
what happens when what President Eisenhower called “the
military-industrial complex” takes over the country, and everything
(including the ‘news’ media) serves it, rather than the
military-industrial complex’s serving the public.
It fits in with the massive data which indicates that the U.S. government is run by an aristocracy or “oligarchy”, instead of run by people who represent the public — a “democracy.” Obama as President fit right in.
Source: Global Research
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