A month
into the war in Ukraine, former Russian president and Putin ally Dmitry
Medvedev said
that Russian nuclear deterrence doctrine “clearly indicates the grounds on
which the Russian Federation is entitled to use nuclear weapons." He named four
of them. The first two involve nuclear
attack on Russia or its allies. The third is any endangerment of Russia’s
nuclear capability. “And the fourth case is when an act of aggression is
committed against Russia and its allies, which jeopardised the existence of the
country itself, even without the use of nuclear weapons, that is, with the use
of conventional weapons.”
That same
day, March 26th, Biden ended his speech
in Warsaw with the famous ad lib, “for God’s sake, this man cannot remain
in power.”
One month
after that, during an originally-secret visit to Ukraine by the US Secretaries
of State and Defense, Anthony Blinken and Lloyd Austin, Austin
said, ““We want to see Russia weakened to the degree that it can’t do the
kinds of things that it has done in invading Ukraine. It had already lost a lot of
military capability and a lot of its troops, quite frankly, and we want to see
them not have the capability to very quickly reproduce that capability.”
The top
officials in the U.S. government have directly jeopardized the existence of the
Putin government of Russia, which is the same as the existence of their Russia. I can’t tell if they’re keeping Russia’s nuclear
option alive through intent--which can't be ruled out--or blundering stupidity. But the result is the
same: Putin and his government thinking the West’s response to the Ukraine
invasion is an existential threat to them.
The U.S. response to that has been further displays of contempt.
It’s contempt
without a plan for de-escalation.
On his April 28th episode of Background Briefing, Ian
Masters spoke with a frequent guest, Robert Baer, the former CIA agent and
author who’s best known for the material that led to the film Syriana,
about brutal US policy in the Middle East.
Around 15’45”, an alarmed Masters starts to push Baer to produce a concrete answer
about how Putin can stop from escalating in Ukraine and beyond it.
Masters: But his army’s a paper tiger. You were saying that earlier. So
how the hell is he going beyond where he is right now?
Baer: He simply has to produce artillery shells. And run them through
his artillery pieces. Until Ukraine simply no longer exists. And as of today that’s
where he’s going.
Masters: And what can Biden do? Biden today announced a 33-billion-dollar
package. They’ve been very slow getting stuff to the Ukrainian military, but
what’s the 33 billion dollars going to do if this is the ultimate plan? Is
there any way to stop Putin?
Baer: The 33 billion dollars is a down payment on World War III.
Masters: meaning what?
Baer: Meaning an attack on a NATO country. The Baltics. Go in, take them. He’s got to continue
this war on the West and War on NATO. He cannot let it go at this- a piece of
the Donbas. There’s so much he’s lost, he’s got to keep going. …. He can’t turn
to the Russians and say hey, it was a mistake, we got a bigger piece of the
Donbas, let’s declare victory and leave. People have been watching him for years—that’s
not what he’s going to do. …We don’t really know what he’s going to do. He’s
been listening to these mystics, you know, Russian superiority and the Russian
soul and it’s the clash of civilisations. He believes this. We don’t know what
he’s going to do.
Masters: Let’s just go back to the idea that he fires a nuke at Odessa. That’s
a huge game-changer. What’s the West going to do then?
Baer: I have no idea. And I don’t think anyone in Washington does. They
don’t know what’s going on. They never took him seriously. When he went into Crimea in 2014 and all this
blabbering on about how he’s going to take on NATO and take on the West—nobody believed
it. And now all of the sudden you have to figure out what this guy’s going to
do next. You can’t tell from pictures, but I’m beginning to wonder whether he’s
completely lost his mind. And that means you can’t predict what he’s going to
do. You can’t predict whether the Russian command and control will follow
orders to launch nukes. That’s unknowable.
We don’t know.
Masters: Assuming he does fire a tactical nuclear weapon as a way to
break the will of the Ukrainians and destroy Odessa—as much as there are
international sanctions now, he’d become an international pariah, nobody would
want to deal with him, not even the Chinese, would they?
Baer: Ian, right now it’s the Sampson option for him. He has to die and
take down the temple.
Masters: right but is there any way that you can let him have some kind
of victory that he can dress up as a victory?
Baer: there’s nobody to give him that victory. I Zelensky turns to the Ukrainian military
and says, “hey, we’re going to give up the Donbas to stop this,” Zelensky will
be gone the same day.
Masters: so both sides are fighting to the death.
Bear: Yep. …they’re determined. They’re going for broke.
Masters: well they have every reason.
They’re being invaded, right?
Baer: yep, they’re being murdered. It’s genocide. What do you do when
you’re up against genocide? You fight back.
And surrender does nothing for you, because they’ll keep going. All these things, it doesn’t really matter
what the plans are. It’s what people believe.
Masters: well you’ve given us a lot to think about, Bob Baer, and I
thank you very much for joining us here today.
Baer: yeah, well none of it is optimistic.
Masters: that’s an understatement. 20’15”
Two big things are happening here. The first is that a tactical nuclear strike is being discussed as a realistic possibility.
Second, Baer dismisses the two current standard "solutions." Arms flows to Ukraine won't stop the destruction of Ukraine. And the other, a diplomatic solution, is no longer possibly psychologically.
We can state the diplomatic solution's starting points: Russia keeps
Crimea, Ukraine keeps the Donbas with formal rights for ethnic Russians there, Ukraine pledges neutrality and permanent
withdrawal of any bid to join NATO. Something like this was proposed yet again on
the same day as the Masters-Baer exchange by the Quincy Institute's Anatol Lieven. But, as Baer would expect, this framework didn't survive even to the end of the show: Lieven later said that Russia needs all of the
Donbas to justify its losses, but left out the next sentence as provided by Baer—that the
Ukranian military, their country invaded and half destroyed, their existence denied by Putin, will fight to the death to prevent this.
Lievan also said,
Lloyd Austin’s comments, and those
of the British government, as well, imply a war that will go on essentially
forever, you know, an endless war against Russia. You know, we have to ask what
that will do to Ukraine, what it will do to the world economy, and what it will
do to Europe.
We actually don't need to ask because we already know: if the war isn't forever, it's
nuclear.
Checkmate. See this war for what it is, in order to think past it.