How Ukraine could destroy NATO
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — If Russian President Vladimir Putin doesn’t order the invasion of
Ukraine by Wednesday, February 16, as American intelligence in consultation with
the Pentagon suggested he would (and as U.S. President Joe Biden repeated in a
call to NATO allies), then, hey, he may just do it the next day. Or next week.
Or next month. Or next decade. Well, you never really know, right? With Russian
soldiers moving around within their own country for various exercises —
sometimes close to their own border — one can never be too careful. One also
cannot dare be too conservative in predicting exactly how much defense spending
will be required from American taxpayers to funnel into the pockets of private
defense contractors (particularly ones that house cronies) in preparation of a
potential eventual Russian attack. If not in Ukraine, then maybe somewhere else.
So best make sure those coffers are always overflowing.
And by “attack”, if you think that means just bombings or a full-scale invasion,
then you’ve been reading too many fantasy novels written by former NATO generals
about Russian invasions. (Seriously, that’s how some of them actually occupy
themselves post-retirement.) The real Russian attack may exist only in
cyberspace, don’t you know, and be largely invisible. In fact, the war on
Ukraine may already have begun, “involving cyberattacks, economic disruption and
a new tactic: hundreds of fake bomb threats.” That is, if you believe the
unnamed “Ukrainian officials” cited by the Wall Street Journal. So after warning
of potential future Russian warfare that hasn’t materialized, we’re now being
told that it could very well be underway – but that we just haven’t noticed.
(Insert new funding appeal here.)
If the mere threat of a bomb now amounts to a declaration of war, then the
transatlantic alliance may have to start leveling high schools and colleges
during exam season all across the western world. To secure safety and zero risk
to our way of life, of course.
If cyber shenanigans and propaganda are now considered war, then why does NATO
get to have all the fun? We’ve been hearing scare propaganda virtually nonstop
for weeks in what increasingly seems like an attempt to pressure Russia or
Ukraine into making the kind of mistake that would enable NATO to say, “Told you
so!”
So far, neither of the two principally concerned parties — Russia or Ukraine —
are taking the bait. On the contrary, some are apparently even finding yuks amid
the drama — like the actual president of Ukraine.
Comedian turned Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky requested proof from the
U.S. of this rumored pending attack on his country, something about which you’d
think Washington might have informed him in detail at least before the average
dude sitting in Traverse City, Michigan, or Bozeman, Montana, caught it on the
news over their morning coffee. Zelensky was then apparently so concerned about
this information that he returned to his comic roots and joked about it.
"February 16 will be the day of the attack,” Zelensky said, before one of his
advisers, Mykhailo Podoliak, was forced to clarify that the comment was meant to
be ironic rather than literal.
Zelensky has called for “invasion day” to be one of national unity, with a
decree to boost troop pay (which seems like a valid use of all the dough rolling
into Ukraine from western nation-states looking to “help,” though the help seems
more like bribery practiced at the nation-state level) and to create an
information system to keep citizens informed of their own security. Presumably
so they can get the “ironic” pending invasion jokes directly from the Ukrainian
administration without having to rely on the hysterical nonsense and innuendo
relayed by the western media that effectively serves to justify U.S.-led NATO’s
flimsy existence in the post-Cold War era.
It’s hard to recall how many seasons we’re currently into with this drama, but
at least one person may have noticed that it’s on the verge of jumping the
shark. And that someone is Ukraine’s own ambassador to Britain, Vadym Prystaiko,
who suggested to the BBC last Sunday that withdrawing NATO ambitions in exchange
for averting war be on the table. Although Zelensky has since walked backed
Prystaiko’s statement, he also acknowledged that NATO integration is more of a
“dream”. So then why bother sacrificing the geopolitical existential reality –
and potential huge economic benefits – of being sandwiched between Russia and
Europe by playing war footsie with NATO: Washington’s power extension apparatus?
Continuing to play host to Washington’s military fantasies in providing it with
the ring to shadowbox with Moscow up against the Russian border ultimately
hinders trans-European economic rapprochement and the emergence of a global
powerhouse that stretches from Western Europe all the way to Vladivostok and
could ultimately compete with the U.S. globally.
If Ukraine’s NATO ambitions are taken off the table in favor of normalization of
relations with its neighbors — meaning both Europe and Russia — then the
alliance has to find another cause to justify its increasingly strained
existence that continues to serve primarily as a front for defense spending to
the benefit of special interests.
COPYRIGHT 2022 RACHEL MARSDEN