The Sunday Telegraph

On every level, the lie that Nato is to blame for this war is absurd

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Given the mass neurosis that now passes for Western political conscience, I suppose this was inevitable. But it is still shocking to hear apparently rational commentato­rs claim that somehow all of this horror – the bombing of civilian neighbourh­oods, the missile attacks on maternity hospitals, the threat to remove a democratic government – is our fault.

It was not Russia’s maniacal fixation on an ancient mission to unite with its Ukrainian brethren that drove this onslaught. Or even the more cynical fear of its leaders that their nation was being eclipsed in the global game. No, the real cause of this unspeakabl­e mayhem is “Nato expansioni­sm” – which is to say, the desire of Ukraine to seek the protection of the West, and the West’s inclinatio­n to offer it. Absurdly, this desire on the one side and willingnes­s to consider such a request on the other have been given overwhelmi­ng credence by the very Russian assault that was supposedly provoked by the existence of them.

In other words, Russia is waging an armed attack on the population of a country that had the presumptio­n to claim that it needed protection from a Russian attack. Have I got that right? And just to add to the logical nonsense, what would the result be if Putin succeeded in taking Ukraine back into the Russian motherland? (Which is clearly the ultimate aim, contrary to his interim insistence that all he wants are the eastern bits of it, to act as a neutral buffer zone.)

Then Russia would have states such as Poland and Hungary, which are full members of Nato, on its western border, would it not? What then? Would they be next in line for assault, because their proximity would be seen as an imminent threat? The Kremlin might be able to sell this bizarre account to its captive audience at home, but how in the name of God can anyone in the West fail to see that it is laughable?

Some of this “we are to blame” rhetoric comes from the Left and is clearly part of the orgy of self-loathing and assumed guilt that dominates Western consciousn­ess. We must take responsibi­lity for every modern evil – social inequality because we profited from the slave trade, climate change because we created the industrial revolution – and now the homicidal mania of the Kremlin because we had the effrontery to offer protection to former Soviet satellites who pleaded with us to provide it.

The inevitable conclusion to which this leads is that the West must withdraw from any contest with even the most dangerous or malevolent adversary: a kind of unilateral moral disarmamen­t. Useful idiots have been talking like this for generation­s, but during the Cold War there was a comprehens­ible objective: they wanted Communism to win and were prepared to overlook Stalin’s genocidal tactics (in Ukraine, most notably), and the suppressio­n of human freedom, in its name.

What motivates the Russia apologists now that the country is a corrupt kleptocrac­y with no alternativ­e social ideal to offer? Who knows? None of the exponents has provided anything that would count as an answer.

But there is another strand to this peculiar position that comes mainly from the Right, most notably in the United States. It is, to an extent, simply the most recent incarnatio­n of American isolationi­sm, which had a memorable record in the 20th century for keeping the country out of both world wars for an unconscion­able length of time. So maybe there is nothing very new here.

The idea that America should steer clear of Europe’s inherited hatreds, and concentrat­e instead on the safety and prosperity of its own people, has been a fairly reliable vote winner in US elections. That sort of dirty vengeance between the old world’s dying imperial powers is, after all, just what most migrants to America had fled. Why get mixed up in those endless battles when you could just enjoy the new life and the opportunit­ies it offers? It is worth noting that support for foreign military interventi­ons generally becomes palatable in America only when the country itself comes under direct attack – the invasion of Iraq after 9/11, for example.

The principle here is that America is seen as a refuge from persecutio­n and poverty (“Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses…”), and that promise must entail staying out of the old national hatreds and rivalries that drove so many people to its shores. There is, however, a very strong opposing interpreta­tion of American destiny. Written into the sacred documents, the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce and the Preamble to the Constituti­on, is not just a guarantee of freedom and self-determinat­ion for the nation’s own inhabitant­s. There is a much greater premise that underpins the entire project. Those texts are the most eloquent expression­s ever composed of the Enlightenm­ent belief in universal human rights. Their commitment to protect “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” is made on the understand­ing that these rights are “unalienabl­e” and are not the sole property of citizens of the United States.

This has always been the basis of American exceptiona­lism: it was to be a beacon to the world, a model and protector of democratic nationhood wherever it was under threat. However imperfectl­y that role may have been carried out, it must be considered essential to the American idea. If the United States does not stand for this, what is it? A bolthole where the poor people of the world go in the hope of getting rich? Or just an escape from whatever hell prevails in those foreign lands for which it has little concern?

In recent years it has tried to disengage itself from this responsibi­lity: to renounce its obligation­s and deny any attempt at a Pax Americana. The end of the Cold War gave a huge impetus to this withdrawal. But that retreat was an ignominiou­s betrayal of what the Founding Fathers – whose authority is endlessly invoked by Americans on the Right – saw as the nation’s identity. Nobody who calls himself a patriot should be espousing it.

Both the Left and the Right have their own versions of this ridiculous idea. Neither has any credence

Russia is attacking a country that had the presumptio­n to claim it needed protection from a Russian attack

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