Business Day (Nigeria)

As the world lurches towards armageddon …

- By Femi Olugbile 2OXGEIOE iv a Zriwer ang SV\ CHIATRIST. SYNTHESIZ@GMAIL. CRP

IT would be a shame if the world as we know it were to come to a screeching halt in a haze of post-nuclear detritus over a battle to see who blinks first, between a comedian just lately come into politics, and a dour, macho former spy and practising bully who has a vice-like grip on his nation. It would be an even worse tragedy to know that neither of the two men is telling ‘the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth’ as they stand at the arrowhead of destructiv­e forces such as the world has never seen.

One man directly commands the largest nuclear arsenal in the history of mankind, with power to extirpate almost all human life. The other, wringing the emotions of the Western world artfully with a show of righteousn­ess and an exclusive ownership of ‘just cause,’ has the arsenals of Europe and America ranged on his side, and maintains his grip on their conscience by continuall­y reminding the world of his victimhood. So well has he succeeded so far that it is virtually impossible to have a reasoned debate in the public space without the dissenter being howled down by a passionate mob of well-meaning Ukrainian supporters.

There is already a lowlevel ‘World War’ out there. A creaky Russian convention­al military machine has been confrontin­g a Ukrainian army that has given as good as it got, or even better, in several months. Ukrainians, with an army of two hundred thousand, have proved a doughty fighting force, worsting their more numerous foes with courage and tactical brilliance on the field. Their successes, such as they are, are not only down to courage and brilliance. They are also due to the hi-tech weapons and high value intelligen­ce they get from their backers in Europe and America. Ukraine has morphed from a local conflict into a proxy war between East and West.

The public rhetoric may be sanctimoni­ous, especially on the part of the Ukrainian Zelensky and his cohorts.

But some of the symbolism used by those in the know is highly instructiv­e and reveals the flaw in the highminded pretension­s of some of the most fervent supporters of the Ukrainian cause. The head of the M16, the Intelligen­ce agency of the United Kingdom, is reputed to have once said on his Twitter acthe count that, that war with the Russians was over ‘LGBTQ rights.’

For his part, the Russian strongman has been heard to say that the conflict would sound the final death knell to a ‘Unipolar World.’ In the context of such symbolism, the territoria­l assaults over which the Ukrainians have been whipping people all over the world into righteous indignatio­n seem almost to fade into insignific­ance.

There are some inconvenie­nt truths surroundin­g the conflict. Armageddon is in evolution, as two nuclear forces – which do not include Ukraine, by the way, begin to square off. The closest parallel to the scenario remains Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962, when a tough, hard knuckled Communist Leonid Brezhnev, at the head of the mighty Soviet Union, faced off against a young, inexperien­ced President John Kennedy of the USA. The issue was the Soviet Union’s decision, ostensibly at the behest of Fidel Castro’s government, to install missiles in Cuba. The prospect of having Russian missiles on its doorsteps was totally unacceptab­le to the USA, of course.

Resolution came, after some days of high tension. Both men blinked. Nobody lost face. The world was saved. The USSR took back its missiles. America took down some missiles it had installed in Italy and other places. Brezhnev might have been a godless Communist, but fresh-faced John Kennedy, symbolisin­g an America that invaded Cuba, killed Lumumba and authorised countless assassinat­ions across the world, was no saint or knight in shining armour, either.

To some, Putin is the reincarnat­ion of Brezhnev, at the head of ‘un-democratic’ Russia. These days powerful 24-hours-a-day news media which penetrate to all corners of the globe are selling the narrative that he is the devil incarnate, craving death and destructio­n. In that atmosphere, it is hard for any voice of reason to say – ‘Wait a minute. Where did this come from? What does Putin want? What does Zelensky want? What was the story of Ukraine before the invasion? Most important of all, what is the way out of this dangerous passage?’

Rather frightenin­gly, all the talk is about ‘teaching Russia a lesson.’ There is economic warfare, with ‘sanctions’ which seem to be more detrimenta­l to the sanctioner than the sanctioned. Zelensky is in everybody’s face, urging them to boycott everybody who supports or arms Russia. It is an unbalanced narrative, because nobody is talking about ‘sanctionin­g’ those who support and arm Ukraine.

There was already a long-running civil war in Ukraine before Russia invaded. A significan­t number of Ukrainians do not want to be part of Ukraine. These are some of the uncomforta­ble truths that have been drowned out in the popular din. The politics of Ukraine before Zelensky, with armed insurrecti­on on the streets to overthrow an elected government, was not taken out of the culture of Westminste­r. And Ukrainians talk, alarmingly, of ‘defeating’ Russia.

If John Kennedy did not want Russian missiles in his backyard, why should Putin not feel the same about a NATO presence in his neighbourh­ood? These do not justify Russia’s territoria­l ambitions, but they provide context for a necessary effort at resolution.

The CNNS of the world present a picture of universal support for Ukraine and the ‘Western’ position. However, the ‘BRICS’ nations, the Saudis, and several others who oppose, or at most are tepid in their support, command an aggregated larger pool of population and economic might than Europe and America.

Realpoliti­k can be very painful, but it is what it is.

Who will save the world by beginning the negotiatio­ns to end this back-water war before it is too late for everybody?

If John Kennedy d id not want Russian missiles in his backyard, why should Putin not feel the same about a NATO presence in his neighbourh­ood? These do not justify Russia’s territoria­l ambitions, but they provide context for a necessary effort at resolution

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