The geopolitics of targeting Russia
THE escalation of tensions between the United States, Britain and France, on the one hand, and Russia, on the other, should not surprise anyone.
In the last few years, the US leadership and mainstream British media have presented Russia as a major threat to global peace and the international order. Russian president Vladimir Putin in particular has been demonised as a “war-monger”, an “aggressor”, an “unscrupulous politician” hell-bent on restoring Russia’s past glory at whatever cost.
This projection of Russia as a threat to world peace has intensified in recent days partly because of Putin’s unveiling of Russia’s cutting edge military technologies on March 1.
They include advanced generation missiles with unlimited range and capability that can evade US or Nato anti-missile defences.
The Russian defence industry has also developed a low-flying stealth missile capable of carrying a nuclear warhead with the ability to bypass interception boundaries that is “invincible against all existing and prospective missile defence and counter-air defence systems.”
Putin revealed that his country has invented “unmanned submersible vehicles that can move at great depths intercontinentally at a speed multiple times higher than the speed of submarines, torpedoes and all kinds of surface vessels... ”
He drew attention to the development of Avangard, a hypersonic missile whose gliding cruise bloc engages in intensive lateral and vertical manoeuvring and is therefore “absolutely invulnerable to any air or missile defence system.”
With these military technologies, Russia has effectively brought to an end the US reign as the world’s sole military superpower. If Putin had made this his goal, it is not because of any obsession with military supremacy. As he explained, the strengthening of Russia’s military prowess was his country’s response to the unilateral US withdrawal from the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in 2002.
As a consequence of the withdrawal, the United States and Nato began deploying missile systems to encircle Russia, as observed by veteran analyst William Engdahl.
Countries that were once part of the demised Soviet Union and the dismantled Warsaw Pact in Eastern Europe were drawn into the US-Nato orbit. Anti-ballistic missile bases were built in Romania and Poland. The US global missile defence system now includes destroyers and cruisers deployed “in close proximity to Russia’s borders.”
It is against this backdrop that one should view another major episode that is responsible for the current tension between the West and Russia. It is true that the Russian annexation of Crimea, then part of Ukraine, in early 2014 had incensed the US and European elites and led to the imposition of
crippling sanctions against Russia.
While the annexation itself in strict legal terms was a violation of international law, an honest analysis of the episode cannot afford to ignore the larger geopolitical concerns that prompted Moscow to act the way it did. By organising a coup against Ukraine’s democratically-elected president in February 2014, the United States and its local surrogates demonstrated clearly that they intended to tighten their grip over a land that was not only part of the Soviet Union but also integral to Russian history and culture.
Crimea with its strategic port was what the United States and Nato coveted. It was all interwoven into the US-Nato agenda of expanding eastwards and emasculating Russia.
That the overwhelming majority of the citizens of Crimea endorsed in a referendum conducted on March 16, 2014 what they viewed as the restoration of Crimea to its Russian fatherland testifies to the actual feelings of the people – feelings informed by a notion of identity and a sense of justice.
There is yet another recent development that has also contributed towards the exacerbation of tensions between the two sides. It is obvious that the rebels and terrorists in Syria fighting the Assad government backed by the centres of power in the West and supported by their allies in the region have been defeated.
The concerted drive to crush the Hezbollah-Syria-Iran triumvirate opposed to Israeli occupation and US hegemony in West Asia has been thwarted. Since Russia played a significant role in the defeat of the United States and Israel and their partners, the antagonism towards Putin among the elites in Washington and Tel Aviv in particular has heightened.
Providing support to some of the rebels and terrorists holed up in Eastern Ghouta, one of their last few footholds in Syria is a desperate attempt by Washington to ensure it remains relevant to the emerging postwar political scenario.
Highlighting the alleged use of chemical agents by the Syrian army and the killing of children in government aerial bombardments are tools of propaganda that the Western media have exploited to the hilt in the Syrian war in spite of the effective demolition of some of these lies and halftruths in the past by independent Western journalists themselves reporting and analysing from actual zones of conflict in the country.
For Western elites and their media it is not the death of children – after all many children have been killed in Yemen – that is their real concern. It is how Russia has anchored and buttressed its position in Syria and the region as a whole and has challenged American-Israeli hegemony that causes great distress.
The latest manifestation of the incessant manipulation of issues pertaining to Russia is of course the alleged use of a nerve agent, Novichok, to attempt to murder a Russian double agent, Sergei Skripal, and his daughter in Salisbury, Britain. British authorities have offered no concrete proof that the attempted murder was the work of the Russian state. The Russian government has vehemently denied the allegation.
One should ask, what would the Russian government and Putin gain from killing Skripal a week before the Russian presiden- tial election and in the midst of US sanctions? This is the question that American columnist, Eric Margolis, poses.
A former British diplomat, Craig Murray, also doubts that the Russian government had the motivation to kill a double agent who was part of a spy swap some years ago. He suggests the assassination bid may be linked to an outfit known as “Orbis Intelligence” or to the Israeli Mossad. In Murray’s words, Israel has a clear motivation for damaging the Russian reputation so grievously.
Russian action in Syria has undermined the Israeli position in Syria and Lebanon in a fundamental way, and Israel has every motive for damaging Russia’s international position by an attack aiming to leave the blame on Russia.
If Israel’s hand is behind the Skripal episode, the truth will never be known. Neither Britain nor any of the other Western powers, not even the United Nations, would want to conduct an honest, independent investigation. All that Washington and its allies want to do is to increase and expand the economic and financial sanctions against Russia – using Skripal as the excuse.
The aim is clear. It is to compel Moscow to submit to the hegemonic power of the Washington elite. Anyone who has a rudimentary understanding of Russian history knows that this will not happen. Russia will continue to resist. And Russian resistance may well hold the key to a different future for humankind.