“Russia is an inalienable and
organic part of Greater Europe
and European civilization. Our
citizens think of themselves as
Europeans…That’s why Russia
proposes moving towards the
creation of a common economic
space from the Atlantic to the
Pacific Ocean, a community
referred to by Russian experts
as ‘the Union of Europe’ which
will strengthen Russia’s
potential in its economic pivot
toward the ‘new Asia.’”
— Russian President Vladimir
Putin, “Russia
and the changing world”,
February 2012
The relentless demonization of
Vladimir Putin is just one part of
Washington’s multi-pronged strategy
to roll-back Russian power in
Central Asia and extinguish Putin’s
dream of a “Greater Europe”. Along
with the attempt to smear the
Russian president as a “KGB thug”
and “dictator”, the media has also
alleged that Moscow intervened in
the US presidential elections and
that Russia is a serial aggressor
that poses a growing threat to
European and US national security.
The media onslaught, which has
greatly intensified since the
election of Donald Trump in November
2016, has been accompanied by harsh
economic sanctions, asymmetrical
attacks on Russia’s markets and
currency, the arming and training of
Russian adversaries in Ukraine and
Syria, the calculated suppression of
oil prices,
and a heavy-handed effort to
sabotage Russia’s business relations
in Europe. In short, Washington is
doing everything in its power to
prevent Russia and Europe from
merging into the world’s
biggest free trade zone that will be
the center of global growth and
prosperity for the next century.
This is why the US State Department
joined with the CIA to topple the
elected government of Ukraine in
2014. Washington hoped that by
annexing a vital landbridge between
the EU and Asia, US powerbrokers
could control critical pipeline
corridors that are drawing the two
continents closer together into an
alliance that will exclude the
United States. The prospect of
Russia meeting more of the EU’s
growing energy needs, while China’s
high-speed railway system delivers
more low-cost manufactured goods,
suggests that the world’s center of
economic gravity is shifting fast
increasing the probability that
the US will continue on its path of
irreversible decline. And when
the US dollar
is inevitably jettisoned as the
primary means of exchange between
trade partners in the emerging
Asia-EU free trade zone, then the
recycling of wealth into US debt
will drop off precipitously sending
US markets plunging while the
economy slips into a deep slump.
Preventing Putin from “creating a
harmonious community of economies
from Lisbon to Vladivostok” is no
minor hurtle for the United States.
It’s a matter of life and death.
Remember the Wolfowitz Doctrine:
“Our first objective is to
prevent the re-emergence of a
new rival, either on the
territory of the former Soviet
Union or elsewhere, that poses a
threat on the order of that
posed formerly by the Soviet
Union. This is a dominant
consideration underlying the new
regional defense strategy and
requires that we endeavor to
prevent any hostile power from
dominating a region whose
resources would, under
consolidated control, be
sufficient to generate global
power.”
Washington’s relations with Russia
will always be fractious
because Russia poses a perennial
threat to US ambitions to rule the
world. Geography is fate, and
Russia’s geography contains massive
oil and gas reserves that Europe
needs to heat its homes and fuel its
businesses. The symbiotic
relationship between supplier and
end-user will eventually lead to the
lifting of trade barriers, the
lowering of tariffs, and the smooth
melding together of national
economies into a region-wide common
market. This may be Washington’s
biggest nightmare, but it’s also
Putin’s top strategic priority.
Here’s what he said:
“We must consider more extensive
cooperation in the energy
sphere, up to and including the
formation of a common European
energy complex. The Nord Stream
gas pipeline under the Baltic
Sea and the South Stream
pipeline under the Black Sea are
important steps in that
direction. These projects have
the support of many governments
and involve major European
energy companies. Once the
pipelines start operating at
full capacity, Europe will have
a reliable and flexible
gas-supply system that does not
depend on the political whims of
any nation. This will strengthen
the continent’s energy security
not only in form but in
substance. This is particularly
relevant in the light of the
decision of some European states
to reduce or renounce nuclear
energy.”
If Europe wants a reliable partner
that can meet its energy needs,
then Russia fits the
bill. Unfortunately, the US
has repeatedly tried to sabotage
both pipelines in order to undermine
EU-Russia relations. Washington
would prefer that Europe either
dramatically curtail its use of
natural gas or find other more
expensive alternatives that don’t
involve Russia. In other words,
Europe’s material needs are
being sacrificed for Washington’s
geopolitical objectives, the primary
goal of which is to prevent the
forming of Greater Europe.
Washington’s war against Russia is
becoming increasingly militarized.
Recently the Pentagon deployed more
combat troops to Syria and Kuwait
suggesting that US warplanners
intend to shift from the current
strategy of arming jihadist militias
(to topple the government of Syrian
President Bashar al Assad), to a
more direct use of martial force to
seize-and-hold territory in East
Syria. There are signs of an uptick
in the violence in Ukraine too,
as President Trump appears
only-too-eager to use a more
iron-fisted approach in settling
regional disputes than his
predecessor, Barack Obama.
Also, NATO has deployed troops and
weaponry to Russia’s
western flank while the US has
spread its military bases across
Central Asia. NATO has continued to
push eastward ever since the Berlin
Wall fell in November 1989. The
steady buildup of hostile armies on
Russia’s western perimeter has been
a source of growing concern in
Moscow and for good reason. Russians
know their history.
At the same time the US is building
a ground-based missile defense
system in Romania (Star Wars) that
integrates the US nuclear arsenal at
a site that is just 900 miles from
Moscow. The US missile system which
was “certified for operation” in May
2016, cancels-out Russia’s nuclear
deterrents and destroys the
strategic balance of power in
Europe. Putin has responded
by ordering appropriate
countermeasures. Here are Putin’s
comments on the subject:
“It seems that NATO countries,
and especially the United
States, have developed a
peculiar understanding of
security which is fundamentally
different from our own. The
Americans are obsessed with the
idea of ‘absolute
invulnerability’ for themselves…
But absolute invulnerability for
one nation means absolute
vulnerability for everybody
else. We cannot agree to this.”
In the last week, the Trump
administration announced that it
will deploy the Terminal High
Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system
to South Korea citing a need to
respond to provocations by North
Korea. In truth, Washington is using
the North as a pretext for its plan
to hem in Russia and China at “axial
ends” of the Eurasian heartland as a
means of containing the vast
landmass that Sir Halford Mackinder
called the “pivot area… stretching
from the Persian Gulf to China’s
Yangtze River.”
Washington hopes that by controlling
critical sea lanes, encircling the
region with military bases, and
aggressively inserting itself where
necessary, it can prevent the
emergence of an economic colossus
that will diminish the United States
role as global superpower.
America’s future rests on its
ability to derail economic
integration at the center of the
world and prevail in the Great Game
where others have failed. Here’s an
excerpt from an article by Alfred W.
McCoy titled The Geopolitics of
American Global Decline” which helps
to shed light on the struggle that
is now taking place for control over
the so called “world island”:
Following World War II the US
became “the first power in
history to control the strategic
axial points “at both ends of
Eurasia” … With fears of Chinese
and Russian expansion serving as
the “catalyst for
collaboration,” the U.S. won
imperial bastions in both
Western Europe and Japan. With
these axial points as anchors,
Washington then built an arc of
military bases that followed
Britain’s maritime template and
were visibly meant to encircle
the world island….
“Having seized the axial ends of
the world island from Nazi
Germany and Imperial Japan in
1945, for the next 70 years the
United States relied on
ever-thickening layers of
military power to contain China
and Russia inside that Eurasian
heartland. Stripped of its
ideological foliage,
Washington’s grand strategy of
Cold War-era anticommunist
“containment” was little more
than a process of imperial
succession. …
By the Cold War’s end in 1990,
the encirclement of communist
China and Russia required 700
overseas bases, an air force of
1,763 jet fighters, a vast
nuclear arsenal, more than 1,000
ballistic missiles, and a navy
of 600 ships, including 15
nuclear carrier battle groups —
all linked by the world’s only
global system of communications
satellites….(“The Geopolitics of
Global Decline”, Alfred W.
McCoy)
For the last 70 years the imperial
strategy has worked without a hitch,
but now Russia’s resurgence and
China’s explosive growth are
threatening to break free
from Washington’s stranglehold. The
Asian allies have begun
to crisscross Central Asia and
Europe with pipelines and high-speed
rail that will gather together
the far-flung statelets scattered
across the steppe, draw them into a
Eurasian Economic Union, and link
them to an expansive and thriving
superstate, the epicenter of global
commerce and industry. Grand
Chessboard brain-trust Zbigniew
Brzezinski summed up the importance
of Central Asia in his 1997 classic
stating:
“Eurasia is the globe’s largest
continent and is geopolitically
axial. A power that dominates
Eurasia would control two of the
world’s three most advanced and
economically productive regions.
….About 75 per cent of the
world’s people live in Eurasia,
and most of the world’s physical
wealth is there as well, both in
its enterprises and underneath
its soil. Eurasia accounts for
60 per cent of the world’s GNP
and about three-fourths of the
world’s known energy resources.”
(The Grand Chessboard: American
Primacy And Its Geostrategic
Imperatives, Zbigniew
Brzezinski, p.31)
A new global empire is
gradually emerging in Central Asia,
and while the transformative impact
of economic integration has not yet
been realized, US efforts to block
the embryonic alliance are getting
weaker and more desperate all the
time. The
hyperbolic propaganda about
the alleged “Russia hacking” of the
presidential election is just one
example of this, while the arming of
Nazi militants in Kiev is another.
The bottom line is that both Russia
and China are using markets,
development and raw ingenuity to
beat Washington, while Washington
relies almost exclusively on
deception, covert activity and hard
power. In other words, the former
communists are beating the
capitalists at their own game.
Here’s more from McCoy:
“China is reaching deep within
the world island in an attempt
to thoroughly reshape the
geopolitical fundamentals of
global power. It is using a
subtle strategy that has so far
eluded Washington’s power
elites….
The initial step has involved a
breathtaking project to put in
place an infrastructure for the
continent’s economic
integration. By laying down an
elaborate and enormously
expensive network of high-speed,
high-volume railroads as well as
oil and natural gas pipelines
across the vast breadth of
Eurasia, China may realize
Mackinder’s vision in a new
way. For the first time in
history, the rapid
transcontinental movement of
critical cargo — oil, minerals,
and manufactured goods — will be
possible on a massive scale,
thereby potentially unifying
that vast landmass into a single
economic zone stretching 6,500
miles from Shanghai to Madrid.
In this way, the leadership in
Beijing hopes to shift the locus
of geopolitical power away from
the maritime periphery and deep
into the continent’s
heartland….” (Tomgram: Alfred
McCoy, Washington’s Great Game
and Why It’s Failing”,
TomDispatch)
Washington is not going to let the
Russo-China plan go forward without
a fight. If economic sanctions,
covert activity and financial
sabotage don’t work, then US
powerbrokers will implement
more lethal strategies. The recent
deployment of troops to the Middle
East suggests that policymakers
believe that a direct military
confrontation might be the best
available option, after all, a
shooting war with Russia in Syria or
Ukraine would not necessarily
escalate into a full-blown nuclear
conflagration. No one wants that.
But if the fighting can be contained
within Syria’s borders,
then it would be a practical way to
rally the EU allies, torpedo
Russia’s “economic integration”
plan, and draw Moscow into a long,
resource-draining quagmire. Is that
what US war-planners have in mind?
It’s a risky plan, but one that
Washington would eagerly pursue if
it helped to reinforce America’s
global supremacy.
Source: ICH
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