The
Obama Administration Has Just Recklessly Escalated Its Military
Confrontation With Russia
The
Pentagon’s announcement that it will quadruple US-NATO military
forces in countries on or near Russia’s borders pushes the new Cold
War toward actual war, possibly even a nuclear one.
By
Stephen F. Cohen
3
February, 2016
Nation
contributing editor Stephen F. Cohen and John Batchelor continue
their weekly discussions of the new US-Russian Cold war. This
installment focuses on the Pentagon’s announcement that it will
quickly quadruple the positioning of US-NATO heavy military weapons
and troops near Russia’s eastern borders. The result, Cohen argues,
will further militarize the new Cold War, making it more
confrontational and likely to lead to actual war with Russia. The
move is unprecedented in modern times. Except during Nazi Germany’s
invasion of the Soviet Union, Western military power has never been
positioned so close to Russia, making the new Cold War even more
dangerous than was the preceding one. Russia will certainly react,
probably by moving more of its own heavy weapons, including new
missiles, to its Western borders, possibly along with a large number
of its tactical nuclear weapons. The latter reminds us, Cohen points
out, that a new and more dangerous US-Russian nuclear arms race has
been under way for several years, which the Obama Administration’s
decision can only intensify. The decision will also have other woeful
consequences, undermining ongoing negotiations by Secretary of State
Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov for cooperation on the
Ukrainian and Syrian crises and further dividing Europe itself, which
is far from united on Washington’s increasingly hawkish approach to
Moscow.
Cohen
ends by expressing despair that these ongoing developments have been
barely reported in the US media and publicly debated not at all, not
even by current presidential candidates and the moderators of their
“debates.” Never before has such a dire international situation
been so ignored in an American presidential campaign. The reason may
be, Cohen adds, that everything that has happened since the Ukrainian
crisis erupted in November 2013 has been blamed solely on the
“aggression” of Russian President Putin—a highly questionable
assertion and media-policy narrative
Hear
the audio interview HERE
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