Andrei Martyanov
UNZ REVIEW
ANDREI MARTYANOV • SEPTEMBER 4, 2018
EDITOR'S NOTE
In this post, originally run on Sept. 4, 2018, A. Martyanov, a renowned Russian military/strategic analyst, replies to Dr. Paul Craig Roberts' frequent articles questioning Moscow's apparent passivity in the face of clear (and increasing) US/UK provocations and many other acts of malign nature, i.e., mass Russian diplomats expulsion by Washington, London, etc. under false pretenses; psyops to isolate Russia in the world community (Skripals, MH17, etc.); NATO border military maneuvers and trespasses, and even outright coups to install Western puppet regimes on Russia's doorstep (Ukraine, Belarus, etc.). Obviously, these are not slight offences, and some could even argue they constitute serious casus bellis. It should be noted that Dr Roberts' impatience, which he beefs up with the argument that bullies need to be stopped or else they will only get bolder and more dangerous, is widely shared (including by this writer, albeit not 100%, and precisely for the reasons calmly outlined by Martyanov) even in Russia, where Putin has a growing number of critics downright unhappy with what they see as Moscow's flaccid reactions to Western adventurism. Fact is, under 'normal" circumstances, that is, in a world without nuclear weapons, the logic of swift and harsh retaliation for the enumerated affronts, makes perfect sense. But, that's the problem: we do not inhabit a non-nuclear world, but one brimming with ever more powerful nuclear weapons, whose use, in the case of superpowers such as America and Russia, would simply spell the end of the world, as we know it. In short, the conflict between the stubborn and at times ostensibly insane hegemon and the emergent multilateralist powers can't be resolved by direct war, as that would imply general suicide. Russia knows this, China knows this, but the question when it comes to America is whether the displayed madness is real or a mere tactical gambit. Responsible leaders do not take chances with the life of the planet. Putin's and Xi's advisors are quite aware that a desperate ruling class populated by delusional and arrogant idiots is an extremely dangerous creature, especially in a nation where massive ignorance, the myth of exceptionalism, and rabid media jingoism go hand in hand. After all, in modern history it is only the US hegemon that has used and threatened to use nuclear weapons on another nation. And it is the American hegemon, too, that has constantly worked to attain first-strike nuclear capability, in itself an unthinkable war crime, with the clear object of decapitating its rivals, even at the cost of hundreds of millions of casualties—just in the first phase of such nuclear exchange. All of this is a matter of record, an ugly and disgusting record for sure, no matter how hard Washington's army of apologists try to disguise it. So here's Andrei Martyanov's considered reasons for the Russian posture so far. As he describes it, it would seem not only a much safer course for humanity, but also, despite the sheer unpleasantness of this phase, a winning strategy.—PG
THIS IS A REPOST DUE TO TOPICAL IMPORTANCE
Before I proceed to address some issues that Paul Craig Roberts raised in his article, partially addressed to me and Andrei Raevsky (aka Saker), I want to express my profound admiration for Dr. Roberts and his courageous civic position and his real, not for show, American patriotism. It is an honor and a privilege to be engaged in conversation with such an esteemed person, even when I disagree with him in some aspects of geopolitical reality when related to, the now official, Cold War 2.0 between the United States and Russia, and Russia’s posture in this conflict. Dr Roberts writes:
As I have made the same points, I can only applaud Martyanov and The Saker. Where we might differ is in recognizing that endlessly accepting insults and provocations encourages their increase until the only alternative is surrender or war. So, the questions for Andrei Martyanov, The Saker, and for Putin and the Russian government is: How long does turning your other cheek work? Do you turn your other cheek so long as to allow your opponent to neutralize your advantage in a confrontation? Do you turn your other cheek so long that you lose the support of the patriotic population for your failure to defend the country’s honor? Do you turn your other cheek so long that you are eventually forced into war or submission? Do you turn your other cheek so long that the result is nuclear war?
Here is where I and Paul Craig Roberts differ dramatically on the issue of Russia’s strategy. Yes, I agree with Dr. Roberts that, quoting William Fulbright, “words are deeds and style is substance insofar as they influence men’s mind and behavior”. But while insults and provocations are unpleasant and in some cases do influence mind and behavior of some, with modern day Russia it is different. I already laid out some basics of Russia’s strategy here at Unz Review, I will expand a bit more in answering Dr. Roberts’ undeniably valid question.
The 19th Century classic Russian fable writer Ivan Andreevich Krylov, among many outstanding fables, which Russian children are subjected to in their Russian Literature course and carry them into their adulthood since the early 20th century, has one which describes current geopolitical reality perfectly. The fable is The Cat and The Cook in which the Cook, after having had it with his day and escaping to the tavern, leaves his cat to guard the food (chicken) against mice. As the fable goes, upon his return from tavern he sees all the results of the cat “guarding” his chicken–the cat finishing eating it. The cook breaks into shaming the cat–most of the fable is the cook’s monologue about the cat (Vas’ka) being bad, arrogant, irresponsible and evil. The closing lines of the fable sum the situation succinctly:
But, while he kept talking,
The cat ate up the whole chicken.
А я бы повару иному
Велел на стенке зарубить:
Now, I would tell this kind of cook,
And would ask him to write this on the wall…
Чтоб там речей не тратить по-пустому,
Где нужно власть употребить.
To make your speech less a waste,
You’ve got to use your power.
And here is the point–the United States cannot use its power against Russia without being annihilated itself, while Russia, as this proverbial cat Vas’ka continues to eat, against the background of loud talk and nothing more. This reality, in a very both desperate and powerless manner, finally dawned on many in Washington. As Graham Alison notes:
This is some progress in 2017, finally, when “esteemed” members of American geopolitical “academia” begin to grasp at least some limitations of their, grossly inflated to start with, power. This IS progress, once we recall where the world was even in 2013. Despite wiping the floor with the globalists’ stooges from Georgia in 2008, Russia still wasn’t taken too seriously by the globalist cabal in Washington. As late as 2014 all kinds of US military “experts” described a bulk of scenarios in which victorious US and NATO Armed Forces smash conventionally the Russian Army in Ukraine. It was self-medicating against the background of Russia’s lightning speed operation in Crimea which forestalled US actions in turning Crimea into a NATO base. The Russian counter-stroke caught everyone off-guard. How fast many forget today what was accomplished then–this can hardly be described as turning the other cheek. If nothing else it was a massive blow to an existing world order when Russia threw down the gauntlet. That is how honor is defended–by actions, not petty name-calling. Massive defeats of US “trained” Ukrainian Armed Forces followed in Donbass.
I wrote in January 2015:
Today, almost four years later, we live in an unrecognizable world and no-one in the US, unless they write for tabloids and don’t care about reputation, describes scenarios with a Russian defeat. It is a world in transition to not just genuine multipolarity (we are already living in multi-polar reality, but to a world where the United States is effectively checked in its attempts to project power into Eurasia. A world where it is reduced to merely calling names, hurling insults, and doing provocations–because it cannot do anything else. Somehow people ignore this fact of a dramatic, incredibly fast in historic terms, decline of American power. American post-WW II prosperity and influence, rested primarily on the myth and bluff of American military power, which was supposed to make everyone toe the party line and tremble in horror in the face of a “punishment” for digressions. Russia called this bluff.
Today, America’s actions represent increasingly pronounced symptoms of a declining power, one which cannot face reality without going mad. And she is going mad, domestically, as well as internationally, and the only force which is capable of keeping this increasingly irrational and dangerous power from committing suicide while taking everyone else with her is the threat of a massive military defeat. Russia has this force to do so, and so far it works. But I do have my own question: do orderlies in the asylum get offended when overpowering the violent patient and restraining it to the bed, by the patient’s insults and resistance? I don’t think so–one does not get offended by a violent mental patient. Nor, do orderlies defend their honor while restraining a patient. There could be no interactions involving honor between an orderly and a violent mental patient. America is not a treaty-worthy party; it hasn’t been since the early 1990s, thus there are no interactions involving honor in Russian-American relations on the American side.
So, I ask then, is it legitimate to assess the situation by comparing two states of the world in 2014 and 2018? The answer is not only that it is legitimate but that it is the only way to do so. Clausewitz’ dictum still stands today: “It is legitimate to judge an event by its outcome, for it is the soundest criterion”. With all American provocations, insults and Russia’s alleged turning the other cheek, one MUST ask the question–is Russia winning? Once one looks at the larger picture–the answer is an unequivocal yes. It manifests itself in many things, from the economy, to military to geopolitics. So:
The zionist neoconsevatives who rule in Washington are capable of the same mistake that Napoleon and Hitler made. They believe in “the end of history,” that the Soviet collapse means history has chosen America as the model for the future. Their hubris actually exceeds that of Napoleon and Hitler.
Neither Napoleon, nor Hitler dealt with the issues of nuclear deterrents, nor did they live in the world of an instant propagation of information. Judging by the hysterical reaction of these very same neocons and their military “experts”, be it in 2015 to the events in Syria, or Putin’s March 1, 2018 speech to Federal Assembly–the message was heard. Hysteria is a first sign of weakness. Those neocons might be irrational, at least some of them, but even those understand that there is a price to be paid and there are reasons, to be discussed separately, to believe that there is an understanding of the severe limitations of America’s power. After all, Napoleon and Hitler marched into Russia after putting Europe to its knees. Both the Grande Armee and the Wehrmacht had highly deserved reputations [as effective military machines]. [But] the United States has not been able to win a single war against [even] a subpar opponent since 1950, once one discounts the turkey shoot against Saddam’s grossly inferior army.
Per Semyon Bagdasarov. He is a good man and a Russian patriot, he is a former political officer, but I don’t take his suggestion “to sink” a US Aircraft Carrier seriously. Patriotism is not an excuse for irrationality–the loss of a single carrier in case of a limited TLAM strike* on some targets in Syria will create in the US a political crisis of such proportions that the world will stand on the very brink of nuclear war. The US was and is inherently biased towards a nuclear response, with some short break in 1990s, when it saw itself as the self-proclaimed greatest military in the world in the wake of the Soviet collapse. Not doing stupid things but the ones which are necessary is what defined Russia’s responses in the last several years. This is the only correct strategy.
And here is my conclusion: being a former military I give full recognition to the fact that I am merely a writer who, as well as Bagdasarov, or any other “analyst” have no access to daily top secret briefings by the Chief of General Staff and Russia’s intelligence to Vladimir Putin. Patriotism or, even, some residual professionalism is not a substitute to having a full situational awareness provided to the Supreme Commander by thousands upon thousands of people who even risk their lives to provide key information for making the one and only right decision to prevent the world from annihilation. Russia knows where the Unites States is today and, when looking back at the last 5 years in world’s history, I see Russia as that proverbial cat finishing off the chicken, while those who are supposed to use force cannot do so and speak loud and carry no stick. This chicken is Pax Americana. Russia will continue to do what she does, because it works, and because she knows how to fight wars, she knows how to defend herself and because we all live in a different world today, the way Russia, not the US, sees it. In this case, hurling insults and even launching another useless volley of TLAMs in Syria, or “training” its Ukrainian stooges for military provocations is the limit for the United States and there is nothing honorable in that.
* TLAMS are Tomahawk Land Attack Missiles.
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