You Want War? Russia is Ready for War
Pepe
Escobar, Sputnik
Nobody needs to read Zbigniew “Grand Chessboard” Brzezinski’s 1997 opus to know US foreign policy revolves around one single overarching theme: prevent – by all means necessary – the emergence of a power, or powers, capable of constraining Washington’s unilateral swagger, not only in Eurasia but across the world.
Syria
is leading all these assumptions to collapse like a house
of cards. So no wonder in a Beltway under no visible
chain of command – the Obama administration barely qualifies
as lame duck – angst is the norm.
The
Pentagon is now engaged in a Vietnam-style escalation of boots
on the ground across “Syraq”. 50 commandos are already
in northern Syria “advising” the YPG Syrian Kurds as well
as a few “moderate” Sunnis. Translation: telling them what
Washington wants them to do. The official White House spin is
that these commandos “support local forces” (Obama’s words)
in cutting off supply lines leading to the fake
“Caliphate” capital, Raqqa.
Another
200 Special Forces sent to Iraq will soon follow, allegedly to
“engage in direct combat” against the leadership
of ISIS/ISIL/Daesh, which is now ensconced in Mosul.
These
developments, billed as “efforts” to “partially re-engage
in Iraq and Syria” are leading US Think Tankland to pen
hilarious reports in search of “the perfect balance
between wide-scale invasion and complete disengagement” –
when everyone knows Washington will never disengage from the
Middle East’s strategic oil wealth.
All
these American boots on the ground in theory should be
coordinating, soon, with a new, spectacularly surrealist
34-country “Islamic” coalition (Iran was not invited), set up to
fight ISIS/ISIL/Daesh by no less than the ideological
matrix of all strands of Salafi-jihadism: Wahhabi Saudi
Arabia.
Syria
is now Coalition Central. There are at least four; the “4+1”
(Russia, Syria, Iran, Iraq plus Hezbollah), which is actually
fighting Daesh; the US-led coalition, a sort of mini NATO-GCC
combo, but with the GCC doing nothing; the Russia-France direct
military collaboration; and the new Saudi-led “Islamic” charade.
They are pitted against an astonishing number of Salafi-jhadi
coalitions and alliances of convenience that last from a
few months to a few hours.
And
then there’s Turkey, which under Sultan Erdogan plays a
vicious double game.
Sarajevo
All Over Again?
“Tense”
does not even begin to describe the current Russia-Turkey
geopolitical tension, which shows no sign of abating. The Empire
of Chaos lavishly profits from it as a privileged
spectator; as long as the tension lasts, prospects
of Eurasia integration are hampered.
Russian
intel has certainly played all possible scenarios involving a
NATO Turkish army on the Turkish-Syrian border as well
as the possibility of Ankara closing the Bosphorus and the
Dardanelles for the Russian “Syria Express”. Erdogan may not
be foolish enough to offer Russia yet another casus belli. But
Moscow is taking no chances.
Russia
has placed ships and submarines capable of launching nuclear
missiles in case Turkey under the cover of NATO
decides to strike out against the Russian position.
President Putin has been clear; Russia will use nuclear weapons if
necessary if conventional forces are threatened.
If
Ankara opts for a suicide mission of knocking out yet
another Su-24, or Su-34, Russia will simply clear the airspace all
across the border via the S-400s. If Ankara under the
cover of NATO responds by launching the Turkish Army
on Russian positions, Russia will use nuclear missiles, drawing
NATO into war not only in Syria but potentially also
in Europe. And this would include using nuclear missiles to keep
Russian strategic use of the Bosphorus open.
That’s
how we can draw a parallel of Syria today as the equivalent
of Sarajevo 1914.
Since
mid-2014 the Pentagon has run all manner of war games – as
many as 16 times, under different scenarios – pitting
NATO against Russia. All scenarios were favorable to NATO.
All simulations yielded the same victor: Russia.
And
that’s why Erdogan’s erratic behavior actually terrifies quite a
few real players from Washington to Brussels.
Let
Me Take You on a Missile Cruise
The
Pentagon is very much aware of the tremendous heavy metal Russia
may unleash if provoked to the limit by someone
like Erdogan. Let's roll out an abridged list.
Russia
can use the mighty SS-18 – which NATO codenames “Satan”; each
“Satan” carries 10 warheads, with a yield of 750
to 1000 kilotons each, enough to destroy an area the size
of New York state.
The
Topol M ICBM is the world's fastest missile at 21 Mach (16,000
miles an hour); against it, there’s no defense. Launched
from Moscow, it hits New York City in 18 minutes, and L.A.
in 22.8 minutes.
Russian
submarines – as well as Chinese submarines – are able
to launch offshore the US, striking coastal targets within a
minute. Chinese submarines have surfaced next to US aircraft
carriers undetected, and Russian submarines can do the same.
The
S-500 anti-missile system is capable of sealing Russia off from
ICBMs and cruise missiles. (Moscow will only admit on the record
that the S-500s will be rolled out in 2016; but the fact
the S-400s will soon be delivered to China implies the S-500s
may be already operational.)
The
S-500 makes the Patriot missile look like a V-2 from WWII.
Here,
a former adviser to the US Chief of Naval Operations
essentially goes on the record saying the whole US missile
defense apparatus is worthless.
Russia
has a supersonic bomber fleet of Tupolev Tu-160s; they can take
off from airbases deep in the heart of Russia, fly
over the North Pole, launch nuclear-tipped cruise missiles
from safe distances over the Atlantic, and return home
to watch the whole thing on TV.
Russia
can cripple virtually every forward NATO base with tactical –
or battlefield – small-yield nuclear weapons. It’s not
by accident that Russia over the past few months
tested NATO response times in multiple occasions.
The
Iskander missile travels at seven times the speed of sound
with a range of 400 km. It’s deadly to airfields,
logistics points and other stationary infrastructure along a
broad war theatre, for instance in southern Turkey.
NATO
would need to knock out all these Iskanders. But then they
would need to face the S-400s – or, worse, S-500s —
which Russia can layer in defense zones in nearly every
conceivable theater of war. Positioning the S-400s
in Kaliningrad, for instance, would cripple all NATO air
operations deep inside Europe.
And
presiding over military decisions, Russia privileges the use
of Reflexive Control (RC). This is a tactic that aims to convey
selected information to the enemy that forces him into making
self-defeating decisions; a sort of virus influencing and
controlling his decision-making process. Russia uses RC tactically,
strategically and geopolitically. A young Vladimir Putin learned all
there is to know about RC at the 401st KGB School and
further on in his career as a KGB/FSB officer.
All
right, Erdogan and NATO; do you still wanna go to war?
The
views expressed in this article are solely those of the
author and do not necessarily reflect the official position
of Sputnik.
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