Obama Slams Door in Putin’s
Face: Says if Putin doesn’t
want Russia’s retaliatory
forces eliminated, he’ll need
to be the one to press the
nuclear button first
by Eric
Zuesse
5
June, 2016
Actions
speak louder than mere words, and U.S. President Barack Obama has now
acted, not only spoken. His action is to refuse to discuss with
Russian President Vladimir Putin, Russia’s biggest worry about
recent changes in America’s nuclear strategy — particularly a
stunning change that is terrifying Putin.
On
Sunday June 5th, Reuters headlined “Russia
Says U.S. Refuses Talks on Missile Defence System”,
and reported that, “The United States has refused Russian offers
to discuss Washington’s missile defence programme, Russian
Deputy Defence Minister Anatoly Antonov was quoted as saying on
Sunday, calling the initiative ‘very dangerous’.”
Russia’s
concern is that, if the “Ballistic Missile Defense” or “Anti
Ballistic Missile” system, that the United States is now just
starting to install on and near Russia’s borders, works, then the
United States will be able to launch a surprise nuclear attack
against Russia, and this system, which has been in development for
decades and is technically called the “Aegis
Ashore Missile Defense System”, will
annihilate the missiles that Russia launches in retaliation, which
will then leave the Russian population with no retaliation at all,
except for the nuclear contamination of the entire northern
hemisphere, and global nuclear winter, the blowback from America’s
onslaught against Russia, which blowback some strategists in the West
say would be manageable probems for the U.S. and might be worth the
cost of eliminating Russia.
That
theory, of a winnable nuclear war (which
in the U.S. seems to be replacing the prior theory, called “M.A.D.”
for Mutually Assured Destruction)
was first prominently put forth in 2006 in the prestigious U.S.
journal Foreign
Affairs,
headlining “The
Rise of Nuclear Primacy” and
which advocated for a much bolder U.S. strategic policy against
Russia, based upon what it argued was America’s technological
superiority against Russia’s weaponry and a possibly limited
time-window in which to take advantage of it before Russia catches up
and the opportunity to do so is gone.
Paul
Craig Roberts was the first reporter in the West to write in a
supportive way about Russia’s concerns that Barack Obama might be a
follower of that theory. One of Roberts’s early articles on this
was issued on 17 June 2014 and headlined “Washington
Is Beating The War Drums”, where
he observed that “US war doctrine has been changed. US nuclear
weapons are no longer restricted to a retaliatory force, but have
been elevated to the role of preemptive nuclear attack.”
Russia’s
President Vladimir Putin has tried many times to raise this issue
with President Obama, the most recent such instance being via a
public statement of his concern, made on May 27th. Apparently,
the public statement by Antonov on June 5th is following up on that
latest Putin effort, by Antonov’s announcement there that Obama now
explicitly refuses to discuss Putin’s concerns about the matter.
The
fact that these efforts on the part of the Russian government are via
public media instead of via private conversations (such as had been
the means used during the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962, when the shoe
was on the other foot and the U.S. President was concerned about the
Soviet President’s installation of nuclear missiles 90 miles from
the U.S. border) suggests that Mr. Obama, unlike U.S. President John
Fitzgerald Kennedy in 1962, refuses to communicate with Russia, now
that the U.S. is potentially in the position of the aggressor.
Russia is
making its preparations,
just in case it will (because of the Aegis Ashore system) need to be
the first to attack. However, some
knowledgeable people on the subject say that Russia will never strike
first.
Perhaps U.S. President Obama is proceeding on the basis of a similar
assumption, and this is the reason why he is refusing to discuss the
matter with his Russian counterpart. However, if Mr. Obama wishes to
avoid a nuclear confrontation, then refusing even to discuss the
opponent’s concerns would not be the way to go about doing that.
Obama is therefore sending signals to the contrary — that he is
preparing a nuclear attack against Russia — simply by his refusal
to discuss the matter. In this case, his action of refusal is,
itself, an answer to Putin’s question, like slamming the door in
Putin’s face would be. It’s a behavioral answer, instead of a
merely verbal one.
Investigative
historian Eric Zuesse is the author, most recently, of They’re
Not Even Close: The Democratic vs. Republican Economic Records,
1910-2010,
and of CHRIST’S
VENTRILOQUISTS: The Event that Created Christianity.
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