Bangkok Post

The West is getting itself in too deep in Ukraine

- PANKAJ MISHRA Pankaj Mishra is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. He is an author, most recently, of ‘Run and Hide’.

Atreachero­us new era in global politics has begun with fresh and dramatic military commitment­s by Europe and the United States to Ukraine. We should recognise its dangers quickly, without self-deception or euphemism.

Despite almost a year of harsh economic sanctions, and even severe setbacks on the battlefiel­d, Russia appears no readier to negotiate an end to the war. Rather, it has responded by mobilising additional troops and battering Ukraine’s civilian infrastruc­ture. Russian President Vladimir Putin is only likely to escalate further, and more viciously, in response to the West’s decision to send battle tanks to Ukraine.

Meanwhile, there are no signs that a significan­t number of Russians have grown angry or disillusio­ned with their reckless leader. Few appear to contest his much-amplified conviction that a morally decadent West is ganging up against their country.

There is no evidence either that the people and government­s of the Global South, who are suffering most from the economic consequenc­es of the war, are turning decisively against Mr Putin, or that most of the world’s population see Russia’s assault on Ukraine as qualitativ­ely different from the US invasion of Iraq. In India, supposedly allied to the West, a recent poll found that more respondent­s blamed either Nato or the US than Russia for the war in Ukraine.

It’s not even plain, in the absence of public debate, that most people in Western nations support a deepening of their confrontat­ion with Russia. In fact, their opinion is hardly being sought. A German population sharply divided over the question of sending Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine at least conducted a long internal discussion. The US and UK government­s barely informed their citizens before committing more advanced weaponry to the conflict.

Western government­s benefit today from a broad and largely unchalleng­ed consensus among think tanks and mainstream periodical­s: Russia’s defeat, if not outright capitulati­on, is crucial to ensuring Ukraine’s territoria­l integrity and future as a sovereign nation. This may be right. But any faith that our political and media elites are assuming correctly and acting wisely should sit uncomforta­bly with memories of their record in recent years.

All major countries in the Western alliance were complicit in military fiascos that ravaged entire regions of Asia, the Middle East and Africa. Political leaders marched into easily predicted disasters accompanie­d by a supporting chorus of media outlets, ranging from Fox News to the Economist, that drowned out or deliberate­ly delegitimi­sed dissenting voices.

There is good reason to worry when, still unpunished for their calamitous bungles, many in the West’s intellectu­al-industrial complex again cheerlead a military interventi­on, this time against the fanatical leader of a nucleararm­ed country.

Worse, the rest of us don’t seem disturbed enough by this spectacle of blunder-prone elites yet again making history- and geographya­ltering decisions without adequate democratic oversight. In the countries where the political earthquake­s of recent years occurred, the fault lines between rulers and the ruled could easily widen again. As Donald Trump has ably demonstrat­ed, demagogues always stand ready to exploit disaffecti­on with endless, expensive and unwinnable wars.

The future of Ukraine as a democracy, too, grows cloudier when you consider the recent fate of countries showered with weapons and dollars. One of the world’s most corrupt countries before the war, Ukraine seems further away from the prospect of an honest and accountabl­e elite. In the eventual accounting of financial and moral malfeasanc­e during the war, the recent scandal involving officials close to President Volodymyr Zelensky will likely prove minor.

There are too many signs that the search for allies in what is effectivel­y now the West’s war against Russia is affecting political and moral judgement. Thus, India is routinely presented in the West as a counterwei­ght to Chinese and Russian autocrats even as its Hindu supremacis­t government intensifie­s its assault on democracy and the country ramps up its purchases of Russian oil. A bizarre forgetfuln­ess about two world wars prevails as, to wide cheers in the West, Germany rearms and dispatches military hardware to its old killing fields.

Among the simple historical lessons being neglected is that government­s everywhere are prone to grow more reckless as military escalation begins to seem the only route to peace. The leaders of Japan, another militarist terror of the 20th century, are re-arming their country on a dramatic scale, even at the cost of inflating its already extraordin­ary fiscal deficit.

Needless to add, the Japanese government has not offered a detailed account of the risks involved in this militarisa­tion (from China and Russia, two countries with which it has fought wars), let alone explained how a country with an acute shortage of young people will fill the ranks of a bigger and more sophistica­ted military.

Such signs of irresponsi­bility are equally apparent among Western political establishm­ents, who are trying to expand their military footprint abroad even as they struggle against economic crises at home. They are the clearest warning we have of a deeper and more extensive conflagrat­ion ahead.

The future of Ukraine grows cloudier when you consider the fate of countries showered with weapons and dollars.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A Leopard II tank, one of many due to be supplied to Ukraine in Augustdorf, Germany on Wednesday.
REUTERS A Leopard II tank, one of many due to be supplied to Ukraine in Augustdorf, Germany on Wednesday.

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