Forever Wars

by G. Murphy Donovan

      “When fanatics are on top, there are no limits to oppression”
– H.L. Mencken

The war in Ukraine will be a year old on 24 February.

When Joe Biden was asked recently how long the conflict might go on, the president replied: “As long as it takes.” Unfortunately, nobody seems to know what “it” is. In short; no talks, no diplomacy, no strategic goals, and apparently still no exit ramps for the next two – or six years. Clearly, President Biden believes he can ride the Ukraine war horse into another term in 2024.

Biden may be correct. Another “forever” small war seems to have overwhelming bipartisan support in the US Congress.

Concurrently, whilst POTUS was fielding soft balls from Judy Woodruff on PBS, Jan Stoltenberg at the NATO summit in Brussels was raising troubling questions in Europe. Stoltenberg, Secretary General of NATO, claims that the Ukraine army is using artillery shells faster than NATO, including the US, can produce the required ammunition for the war, or replenish NATO stocks.

No reports of ammo shortages on the Russian side, however.

Recall then, that America alone has already provided $100 billion to Kiev and the Zelensky oligarchs to cope with Putin’s “special military operation.” As the first anniversary of the Ukraine cage match draws nigh, Vladimir Putin has abandoned euphemism and now calls the Ukraine conflict a “war.”

The difference between an operation and war is a little like the difference between a tremor and an earthquake. Still, at least Washington and Moscow are on the same page now on at least one issue

Putin seems to have accepted the fact that Russia and America are at war now; albeit for the moment, a hybrid, proxy, or surrogate war. NATO and the EU will continue to identify as catamites, playing follow the American leader. All sides also seem to agree that Ukraine will continue to serve best as cannon fodder; that is, if Ukraine and Russia don’t run out of fodder in the next two to six years.

Proximity to Russia, ethnic affiliation, and considerable sentiment makes Ukraine a strategic interest for the Kremlin. For cold warriors in the West, Ukraine is just another opportunity to bait the bear, a confirmation of the Russophobia that seems to work so well in American domestic politics.

Seems the genuine historical meme playing out on the Russian frontier is a 21st Century edition of the Great Game where American/EU/NATO imperialism could be substituted for British Empire. Russians may have replaced “WOGs” or “Orientals” in the vernacular, but race still trumps ideology. The ugly Soviet man is now the ugly Russian, a Slavic demon. General Clapper, former DNI, you may recall, claimed that Russians were “genetically” driven.

Race is the weapon of choice in all political arguments today. As the American left likes to say; “it’s only white people killing whites” in Ukraine. So what’s the problem? America views itself, the world, and war today through melanin colored glasses.

Recall too, that even Volodymyr Zelensky knows how to play the race card. When challenged about his neo-Nazi associates, Zelensky claimed to have Jewish ancestors.

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Recall too that Afghanistan was also another proxy small war circa 1979-89, where American clandestine forces engaged the Red Army at Russia’s back door. America tried to ally itself with the mujhadeen jihad in Afghanistan and that strategic error became a 30 year case study of blowback, punctuated by 9/11, the rise of global Muslim terror, and America’s ultimate 2020 humiliation in Kabul.

As for leadership today, behind Biden and Putin, with Ukraine’s Zelensky; we have a beatified pawn – and a veritable foreign aid ATM, again withdrawing $100 billion to date from the US alone.  Still, Zelensky is both a tool and a fool, maybe even a “useful idiot.” NATO and Washington are willing to fight Russia right down to the last Ukrainian. All wars are absurd, but Ukraine is unique for its corruption and mushroom cloud potential.

The indiscriminate fiscal fire hose that corrupted Saigon, Baghdad, and Kabul is likely to do the same in Kiev.

And yes, forsaken by the EU, Moscow seems to be tilting east, but Russia is at its core a European nation. The Kremlin knows that Lenin’s, or Russian Marxism, is just history now. Moscow also knows that religious fascism and those jihads in the Ummah are not the future either. The Chinese political model today is the best cautionary, if not toxic, hybrid; a bizarre and untested strain of totalitarian Communist capitalism.

The state is the culture in China these days.

Beijing also owns $980.8 billion or $1.8 trillion dollars of US debt, depending on who you ask. America is the world’s biggest debtor nation. Russia doesn’t even make the top 20 global debtors. Some argue also that China has already purchased the Biden family. As they used to say back in the Nixon era; if you want know who is screwing whom, “follow the money.”

The so-called sanctions or economic war against Russia is another self-inflicted, counterproductive charlie foxtrot.

What’s the point of sanctions that hurt potential allies or bystanders, in the Third World especially? Even German left-wing economic seers like Sara Wagenknecht believe that sanctions are doing more damage to Europe and the US than Russia. Some analysts believe that the economic tit-for-tat could precipitate a global recession.

Who wins that war?

When you boycott a creative, industrious, entrepreneurial state, take Israel for example; the populace becomes tougher, more resilient, more productive, and ultimately, more successful.

National character is forged with fire. No pain, no gain.

And observe Mister Putin too; putative villain, former Chekist, and former Communist. He restored traditional religion, rehabilitated the Czars, and until recently was a pretty good business man, indeed a capitalist. If Putin were running for office in a globalist resort like Davos tomorrow, he might run as a progressive.

Surely, Vladimir Putin is not the perfect autocrat, but compared to whom?

Speaking of Davos, that crowd is correct about a great “reset,” but not the global corporatism that George Soros and Klaus Schwab talk about. The real reset in Europe was the fall of the Soviet bloc and the demise of Russian Communism. The entire left/right political paradigm in Europe and America was turned on its head at the turn of the 21st Century.

The global left, especially the English speaking British Commonwealth and America, is more Marxist today than Moscow. Remember when, the American Democratic Party and British, Canadian, Australian, and New Zealand left used to be the anti-war, peace parties? Former refusenik parties in the West are now underwriting another “forever war” in Ukraine.

“Democratic” socialism, a Marxist mutation, is trending toxically in the Commonwealth and America. Indeed, the global left, taking some cues from China, is nostalgic for the Orwellian Internationale a world led by a Davos /WEF (or better still WTF) elite, a kind of global oligarchic nomenclatura – if not Animal Farm.

Globalism and imperial “democraticization,” in places like the erstwhile Yugoslavia in now viral. NATO’s dismantling of Yugoslavia was the trigger that stimulated Vladimir Putin to draw a line in the sands of Ukraine. Indeed, those incursions into Georgia and Ukraine were Mister Putin’s way of saying “enough is enough.”

We are still feeling the blowback from Yugoslavia. Bosnia and Kosovo, the two new Muslim majority states carved out of Tito’s old coalition in Eastern Europe, now provide the majority of ISIS jihadists to the Levant.

Global jihad now has two recruiting depots and two jihadist sanctuaries in the heart of Europe.

Blowback is the failure to consider the consequences of political, if not arrogant imperial stupidity. When the Berlin Wall fell, the Warsaw Pact collapsed, and nuclear weapons were cleared from Ukraine: neither Brussels nor Washington could take yes for an answer from the Kremlin. And consider Libya too, once the most prosperous nation in North Africa; after the American blitz, now just another refugee slum, embarkation pier for most of the European Union’s illegal immigrants.

The Clinton legacy was not just Monica Lewinsky.

So here we are. Progressive doesn’t mean progress any more.

In the smaller universe of common sense, what used to be traditional conservative political parties, some say nationalists, are now the champions of democracy, the working man, the lumpenprolitariat, personal freedom, and free speech. Pragmatic utilitarian, nationalism might be trending again, according to Yoram Hazony in Israel.

When we think about Russia, Europe, and America, we need to assess history, culture and people; not just the puerile politics of the day. For the moment, Europe and Russia are like feuding neighbors, agitated and hopeful, yet very wary of public conversations or commitments. Recall, if you will, that it was Britannia and Rodina who sacrificed the most to defeat Nazis and fascists in the last century.

Yet, as a part of a nervous manage a trios with Uncle Sam, the Big Three managed to prevail.

So there’s relevant history to contemplate and more than a little hope for better days.

In the long run, the logic of shared culture, tradition, and common sense will overcome the venality of expedient politics. Europe, writ large, without Great Britain and Russia as cultural and geopolitical bookends is a house of cards.

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Murphy Donovan is a former USAF Intelligence officer, Director of Research and Russian (nee Soviet) Studies under James Clapper at USAF Intelligence. He now writes about the politics of culture and national security,

 

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9 Responses

  1. I agree with the idea that Russia is a secondary [to China] but important strategic rival to the US and the West, with the legacy capability [greater than China] to nuke the world if we’re not careful and some interesting [arguably equal to China now, no longer better] cyber and intelligence capabilities as force multipliers. They are not an existential threat they way they used to be, weaker and poorer and facing a richer and larger Europe.
    I have no problem with proxy wars as a means to wage these contests. Such is the world.
    I do worry that the US is not [arguably never was, but is worse now] able to manage such proxy wars at all carefully and is liable to let them get out of control.
    I also worry that the US establishment is too Russia-focused and not enough China-focused.
    I lastly worry that the US can seem to do nothing, let alone behave like a great power, without crafting an all encompassing ideological narrative and making every conflict seem like the decisive battle for the fate of the world. And then ginning up the home audience with all that.
    I am merely mystified that the US establishment not only hates Russia so much, but Russians. I know Americans and Russians did in fact exchange fire in Korea and Vietnam, but still. Marginal stuff. America fought Germany twice in a generation in full scale wars with hundreds of thousands of American casualties and did not hate the Germans this much 30 years later, if at all. Still less the Japanese, by the 1970s. Why all the Russophobia just because Russia invaded a neighbour? Americans as such don’t have those kinds of grievances against Russia.
    And of course I am amused that the vision of the world progressive and neocon Americans and Europeans alike have for the future isn’t and was never my hope for a world in which liberal democratic sovereign nations of the West happen to work together. It’s much more than that, and less. So happy to see it go down the drain.

  2. If I were Ukraine I would be fearful of Joe Biden and the Pentagon.

    Putin has no limit on the number of Russian soldiers killed to achieve his purposes. Joe Biden has no limit on the number of Ukrainians killed to get rid of Putin.

    The Pentagon is now fully Cultural Marxist or Woke if you like. They can blow up pipelines of Allies but I wouldn’t want them on my side. They are totally in the hands of the Democrats and the Democrats hate America. Period.

    The author is ex military and in Intelligence. That’s nice. So was I. He served under James Clapper it states. Clapper is a liar, a moron and a fool.

    1. John,

      Agreed. Without endorsing Putin personally or the Russian political system in its current form, which I would not care to live under, when one is confronted with the prospect of adopting contemporary Western, especially American, values wholesale one must at least stifle the gag reflex.

  3. OK – last one I promise:

    Either endorse Transgender in the US Military or your career is over.

    https://www.realcleardefense.com/articles/2023/02/18/biden_pentagon_quietly_expands_woke_transgender_policies_in_the_military_882518.html

    The US Military is being transformed into a force that will be the Democrats Waffen SS. The soldiers will not hesitate to shoot American citizens when ordered in a few years. Think I am wrong about this? Talk to some mid level officers who have quit recently and find out for yourself.

  4. John, I think you give Clapper too much credit. If anything he was bitch to Comey and Brennan. And Elon, on the Pentagon, is a right as rain on a hot afternoon.

  5. Graham,

    If Vietnam, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Libya, Kurdistan, and Afghanistan are probative precedents, I’m not optimistic.

    1. Agreed- not a single one of those cases well conceived or well-handled, even allowing that a situation can be both those and still end badly.

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