The US and France are playing good cop, bad cop with Ukraine’s attacks on Russia
By: Rachel Marsden
Washington maintains it doesn’t “support or enable” Kiev’s deep strikes, while Paris argues they’re legitimate
“It’s our policy from Day One, when it comes to Ukraine, to do everything we
can to help Ukraine defend itself against Russian aggression. At the same time,
we have neither supported nor enabled strikes by Ukraine outside of its
territory,” US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said while standing beside his
French counterpart in Paris a few days ago, in the wake of Ukraine’s drone
attack on the Nizhnekamsk oil refinery in Tatarstan, responsible for over 6% of
Russia’s oil output.
“Ukraine is acting within the framework of legitimate defense. We consider
Russia to be the aggressor. Based on this, there can be no other comments,” said
the French foreign affairs minister, Stephane Sejourne, of the incident,
chalking it up to the refinery being a military target, even though its oil
output as one of the country’s five largest such facilities sounds pretty
important for civilians.
The United Nations generally condemned “all attacks on civilian infrastructure”
without getting caught up in the debate of whether this particular target was
legitimately military or civilian. That’s for international law to decide years
from now, if ever. France could have said something like that, but decided
instead to go all-in on its support for this new escalation involving attacks
deeper inside Russian territory – even when the target isn’t overtly and
unambiguously military, or at least in the absence of any evidence from Paris
for why it was qualifying it as such.
Why is France so keen to encourage strikes inside Russia while standing right
beside Blinken, if the US truly condemns them? The answer is that maybe the US
actually doesn’t. Just ask the Ukrainians. “The flights are determined in
advance with our allies, and the aircraft follow the flight plan to enable us to
strike targets with meters of precision,” an unnamed Ukrainian source told CNN
for a report referencing the drone attack on Nizhnekamsk and Russia’s massive
Rosneft Ryazan refinery, both hundreds of kilometers away from the Ukraine
conflict front line.
Of course there’s always the possibility that the CNN report isn’t talking
specifically about the US – just its Western allies – and the Pentagon has
absolutely nothing to do with this targeting, and its hands are squeaky clean.
Except that Ukrainian sources bragged to the press again in February 2023, in a
“my daddy lets me play with these cool rockets” kind of way, telling the
Washington Post that they were getting the coordinates for US-made HIMARS rocket
attacks from Washington and its allies. A US official even confirmed it. “One
senior Ukrainian official said Ukrainian forces almost never launch the advanced
weapons without specific coordinates provided by US military personnel from a
base elsewhere in Europe,” according to the Post. Is that any different now? Or
is Washington just hoping to create a smokescreen using its allies and corporate
lingo to deflect responsibility?
The Post quotes a “senior US official” who underscored that the role is strictly
“advisory.” Sounds kind of like when Blinken says that the US neither “supports
nor enables” strikes. If Washington happens to leave the HIMARS or drone
coordinates lying around where you can see them, don’t go using them to blow
stuff up, okay?
Some people’s parents don’t “support or enable” them doing drugs or alcohol,
either, but then tell their kids that if they absolutely must, and are going to
do it anyway, then just do it in the garage where it can be supervised. Nice
parental supervision the US and its allies are doing here with Kiev. An audio
recording, intercepted by Russian intelligence, just leaked back in February of
German Air Force brass plotting to help Ukrainians target the Crimean Bridge
with drones, which unlike refineries is an indisputably civilian target. A
highlight of their musings was how they might go about doing it without leaving
any German fingerprints. Of course, Washington would never entertain such
thoughts.
We keep hearing how Washington doesn’t want Russian refineries to be hit because
it risks driving up the global oil price, particularly if Russia retaliates
proportionally. Yeah, that sounds totally legit in light of all the US-driven
energy market deregulation that’s taken place so far as a result of the Ukraine
conflict, including the mysterious explosion of the Nord Stream gas pipeline
from Russia to Europe. Washington seems really broken up about that – and about
the EU now having an overdependence on US liquified natural gas instead. How
absolutely horrible would it be if oil prices spiked because of Ukrainian drone
shenanigans at a time when headlines abound of US oil exports hitting record
highs as it becomes the top global oil producer?
This latest performance in Paris by Blinken and Sejourne is on par with
French President Emmanuel Macron’s recent Napoleonic musings about sending
French troops to fight Russia while he posed up a storm for glamor shots with a
punching bag. If there’s one country whose recent rhetoric makes the US look
almost pacifist by comparison right now, it’s France. It’s like someone with a
mild drinking problem hanging out with a raging alcoholic and looking reasonable
by comparison.
Blinken flying over for this press conference in Paris had the vibe of an actor
traveling to be on location for filming. Maybe they can record this new buddy
movie and submit it to next year’s Oscars, where they can have fellow actor,
Vladimir Zelensky, present it. Throw in some more footage of Macron preparing to
fight Vladimir Putin with the help of Coach Photoshop, and Blinken holding the
punching bag talking about how Macron’s such a maniac for wanting to go over to
Russia and kick down doors against Blinken’s advice.
Something definitely seems to be up with these two. Since when does Paris stand
there right in front of Washington like Sejourne just did with Blinken, and
imply that Ukraine can risk escalation inside Russia now? Unless, of course,
Washington is in fact totally cool with it. It would be nice to know what the US
is offering France in exchange for playing the bad cop role, or if France is
just dumb enough to be doing it for free.
COPYRIGHT 2024 RACHEL MARSDEN