Daily Maverick

Questions from readers about Vladimir Putin’s war answered. Well, sort of...

- By Richard Poplak

Oh man. Here we are, more than two weeks into a war almost no one except Vladimir Putin, Tucker Carlson and the Jacob Zuma Foundation wanted. It’s a war fought at the apex of the disinforma­tion era, following the greatest public health emergency in a century. But this much is clear: as I write these words, people are dying. And they’re dying for no reason.

Like all wars, this one is rife with historical shadows and influences. Nothing about it is simple. But this much is clear: it was started by a single aggressor. This will always be remembered as Vladimir Putin’s war.

Where it ends, no one – not even Putin – knows. But the suffering has just begun, and no amount of spin or whataboute­ry will wash the blood from his hands.

Readers responded to an invitation to forward their questions after a Daily Maverick webinar called The Inside Track: Putin’s War.

What is the cause of this war and why are they fighting?

Eish. This is the most common question, and it’s the most difficult to answer, largely because the answer depends on who you ask. Putin has made his case very clearly: he believes, or says he believes, that Ukraine has no legitimate claims to nationhood. He believes, or says he believes, that it is a country that has become Nazified – a problem that needs to be cleansed.

He believes, or says he believes, that the fall of the Soviet Union was a tragedy, and that its borders must be restored if Russia’s prestige and rightful place in the world is to be restored. (Ukraine was an integral part of the Soviet Union.)

And he claims, with absolutely no evidence, that Russian-speaking Ukrainians are being ethnically cleansed in the country’s eastern redoubts. Putin insists that Ukraine’s pull to the West is a direct challenge to Russia’s sovereign integrity, and that the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on (Nato) poses an existentia­l threat to his country. He believes Russia has been disrespect­ed by the West, who have courted his neighbours and thus courted war.

And so: invasion.

I buy none of this. As I recently noted: By all means, indulge in theories explaining Putin’s Ukrainian adventure. But if those theories aren’t premised on the fact that, for the past 25 years at least, he’s helped run the largest organised crime syndicate in history, then they aren’t worth shit.

In a gangster state, corruption defines every single political and geopolitic­al considerat­ion. (I know this because I live in one.) Ideology, messianic spins on history, suppuratin­g territoria­l grievances – all that is secondary to unhindered accumulati­on.

Example: former president Jacob Zuma justified the impoverish­ment of black South Africans under his industrial-scale corruption machine by insisting – wait for it! – that he was redressing the economic crimes of apartheid.

Yup. True story

Simply, Putin is a mafia don. If he sleeps, if he fails to expand his dominion, if he loosens his grip? He and everyone he knows and loves (yes, I know, I know) will die. Badly.

Sure, he might be moonlighti­ng as a revanchist czarist imperialis­t. But that’s not his day job.

None of this excuses the stupidity and myopia of the Americans and their Western allies. The (neo)lib elite have no empathy or imaginatio­n. But if you want to be mad at the useless fucks for anything, be mad at them for enabling Putin and his men to strip-mine Russia for parts.

After all, Putin has enjoyed the immense fortune of leading Russia in an era of boundless cravenness and stupidity. The smugness of the Clinton administra­tion, the endless mendacity of the Bush cabal, the blind technocrat­ism of Obama Inc – all contribute­d to the current morass. And then came the Comedy Central Special that was Donald Trump, during which the two mafia dons made out on camera while the actual administra­tion continued behind the scenes with business as usual.

Could “the West” have been more respectful to Russia following the collapse of the Soviet Union? No question.

Was Nato’s expansioni­st pantomime provocativ­e? Yup.

Should Russia’s neighbours have been courted with more tact and nuance? Surely.

But here’s the thing – Putin wasn’t a victim of these successive blunders. He was a beneficiar­y. Western greed and stupidity were Putin’s greatest enablers. The legit financial system was where he and his men cleaned their cash, accountabi­lity free.

So unfolded an unpreceden­ted era of gorging that made a tiny cohort of Russians and Western enablers richer than any humans in the history of our species, while generating gilded-age levels of inequality – much of it driven by filthy Russian black cash. The bosses of that system ignored warning after warning from the usual schleps in journalism and civil society.

And so here we are, watching the spectacle of a country with an economy smaller than Italy’s flop around in the Ukrainian mud. So please: this isn’t about Nato or territoria­l integrity or Nazis. Those are red herrings, pun intended. Slap the next person who parrots that nonsense. The cause of this war? The realpoliti­k of rampant unchecked corruption.

Don’t let anyone tell you differentl­y.

Do you think Russia will stop at Ukraine or will Putin try to gain more territory like Belarus, Moldova and Romania?

Well, first of all, Belarus is already a Russian client state. Second, at the weekend, the Russians took the war right up to the Polish border, seemingly intent on provoking a military response from Nato.

I can’t pretend to know Putin’s mind, but this war is not about gaining territory in the convention­al sense, so much as it is about asserting Russian regional dominance and resetting the post-Berlin Wall geopolitic­al chessboard.

Do you think Russia would still have invaded Ukraine if they had agreed to not join Nato?

This, for me, is a hard no. After all, Russia DID invade Ukraine during a political phase of Nato non-alignment. Memories are short, but the war in Donbass and the annexation of Crimea in 2014 coincided with the early days of the Yatsenyuk government, which was – at least ostensibly – against joining Nato.

Ukrainian public support for joining the alliance has historical­ly been low – until Russia took Donbass and Crimea. Not so surprising­ly, that changed public opinion.

But Nato is a red herring. This is about Putin’s political survival, which is tied to his vision for Russia dominating the region politicall­y and militarily. His objective was to project strength and project it quickly.

Instead, Russia has been exposed as a third-rate military power with first-rate nuclear weapons. In this way, his sordid war has already proved a failure.

How is the war going to affect us economical­ly?

It’s early days, but the war comes at an interestin­g time in the history of human economics. The global economy is still juddering from the Covid-19 pandemic, where skyrocketi­ng rates of inflation and “supply chain issues” have made life vastly more expensive and inconvenie­nt, especially for countries like South Africa, in which almost nothing is manufactur­ed.

What is plainly obvious is that, with Russian oil and gas now mostly off the table, the cost of energy will keep increasing. The breach between the Biden administra­tion and the Saudi leadership is significan­t, and the latter are refusing to turn on the taps.

Without more supply in the market – and remember, Russia is a small player in terms of global output – prices will continue to rise. This will hammer South Africans not only at the pumps, but also in the shops. The inflation we’re experienci­ng is unsustaina­ble.

Something, somewhere, is going to blow.

Why will the ANC clowns not stand with Ukraine? Is it because they owe something to their “tjommas” in Moscow and the Kremlin?

The ANC are reflexivel­y anti-Western. They refer to Western aggression in Iraq, Libya and elsewhere.

They have historical ties with the Soviet Union and contempora­ry ties with Russia due to the botched “nuclear deal”.

They are ideologica­lly more aligned with eastern kleptocrat­ic authoritar­ianism than sclerotic western liberalism, despite governing a constituti­onal democracy.

They are “aligned” with Russia in the BRICS formation. And they have a strongman fetish.

 ?? Photo: Thibault Camus/ EPA-EFE ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin
Photo: Thibault Camus/ EPA-EFE Russian President Vladimir Putin

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