By
The Saker
January
01, 2018 "Information
Clearing House" -
If
the first months of 2017 were a time of great hopes following the
historical defeat of Hillary Clinton, the year is ending in a sombre,
almost menacing manner. Not only has the swamp easily, quickly and
totally drowned Trump, but the AngloZionist Empire is reeling from
its humiliating defeat in Syria and the Neocons are now treating our
entire planet to a never ending barrage of threats. Furthermore, the
Trump Administration now has released a National
Security Strategy which clearly show that the Empire is in
“full
paranoid” mode. It is plainly obvious that the Neocons are now
back in total control of the White House, Congress and the US
corporate media. Okay, maybe things are still not quite as bad as if
Hillary had been elected, but they are bad enough to ask whether a
major war is now inevitable next year.
- Afghanistan (massive surge already promised)
- Syria (threats of a US-Israeli-KSA attack; attack on Iranian and Hezbollah forces in Syria)
- Russia (disconnecting from SWIFT; stealing Russian assets in the US; attack on Russian forces in Syria)
- Iran (renege on nuclear deal, attack Iranian forces in Syria)
- The Donbass (support for a full scale Ukronazi attack against Novorussia)
- DPRK (direct and overt military aggression; aerial and naval blockade)
- Venezuela (military intervention “in defense of democracy, human rights, freedom and civilization”)
There
are, of course, many more countries currently threatened by the US to
various degrees, but the seven above are all good candidates for US
aggression.
Let
me immediately say here that listing pragmatic arguments against such
aggression is, at this point in time, probably futile. If anything,
the recent disaster triggered by the US recognition of Jerusalem
clearly proves that the US is run by people as least as stupid and
ignorant as they are evil and arrogant, possibly even more so. The
sad reality we now live in is one where a nuclear superpower lack the
minimal intelligence needed to act in defense of its own national
security interests, and that is really frightening.
Last
week I took a look at the mindset of what I called the “ideological
drone“. If we now look at the mindset of the US national
security establishment we will immediately notice that it is almost
exactly the same as that of the ideological drone. The biggest
difference between them might be that the ideological drone assumes
that his/her leaders are sane and mostly honest people, whereas those
in the elites not only know that they are total hypocrites and liars,
but they actually see this as a sign superiority: the drones believes
in his/her ideology, but his rulers believe in absolutely nothing.
- Daesh/ISIS/al-Nusra/etc is their creation and they tried everything to save these terrorists.
- The joint Russian-Iranian-Hezbollah effort defeated Daesh/ISIS/al-Nusra/etc in-spite of AngloZionist support and attacks on Syrian forces.
- The AngloZionist forces are in Syria completely illegally.
Yet
none of that prevents them from claiming
that they, not Russia, defeated Daesh/ISIS/al-Nusra/etc. This is
absolutely amazing, think of it – the entire planet knows full well
what really took place in Syria, but Uncle Sam decrees that black is
white, water is dry and what is true is false. And the most amazing
thing is that
they know that everybody knows, yet
they don’t care one bit. Why? Because they profoundly believe in
four fundamental things:
- We can buy anybody
- Those we cannot buy, we bully
- Those we cannot bully we kill
- Nothing can happen to us, we live in total impunity not matter what we do
Besides
people with intelligence there is another type of person who has
completely disappeared from the US national security establishment:
someone with honor/courage/integrity. Let’s take a perfect example:
Tillerson.
There
is no way we can make the argument that Tillerson is an idiot. The
man has proven many times over that he is intelligent and quite
talented. And yet, he is Nikki Haley’s doormat. Nikki Haley –
there is the real imbecile! But not Tillerson. Yet Tillerson lacks
the basic honor/courage/integrity to demand that this terminal
imbecile be immediately fired or, if that does not happen, to leave
and slam the door really loud. Nope, the man just sits there and
takes humiliation after humiliation. Oh sure, he will probably resign
soon, but when his resignation comes it will have no value, it will
be a non-event, just the sad and pathetic conclusion to a completely
failed stint as Secretary of State.
The
same goes for the US military: not one single officer has found in
himself/herself to resign to protest the fact that the US is deeply
in bed with those who are responsible, at least according to the
official conspiracy theory, for 9/11. Nope, in fact US special forces
are working with al-Qaeda types day in and day out and not a single
one of these “patriots” has the honor/courage/integrity to go
public about it.
Imbeciles
and cowards. I also happen to think that they are traitors to their
country and their people. Patriots they are not.
Delusional
imbeciles giving orders and dishonorable cowards mindlessly executing
them.
That is the setup we are dealing with. As Trump would tweet “not
good”.
And
yet, somewhere, to some degree, these guys must know that the odds
are not in their favor. For one thing, an endless stream of military
defeats and political embarrassments ought to strongly suggest to
them that inaction is generally preferable to action, especially for
clueless people. Furthermore, one simple way to look at risks is to
say that risks are a factor of probability times consequences: R = P
x C.
I
don’t think that US decision-makers actually formally think that
way, but on a gut level this is rather straightforward, even for
ideological drone types. If we assume that this is the case, we can
now revisit our 7 countries listed above as
seen by Neocon decision makers (not
me! I already outlined how I saw the risks of attacking these
countries in this
article written this summer):
|
Possible/likely
consequences |
Probability |
Risk |
Afghanistan
(surge) |
more
body bags |
high |
low |
Syria
(military intervention & attack on Iranian and Hezbollah
forces in Syria) |
Iranian
& Hezbollah counter-attacks |
high |
high |
Russia
1 (economic attack: SWIFT & theft of assets)Russia 2 (shooting
of Russian aircraft in Syria) |
non-military
responsemilitary response |
highmedium |
unknownfor
memedium |
Iran
(renege on nuclear deal) |
non-military
response |
high |
low |
Donbass
(US backed attack on Novorussia) |
Russian
intervention |
medium |
low |
DPRK
(attack; blockade) |
Nuclear
war in Asia |
unknown |
unknown |
Venezuela
(direct military intervention) |
quagmire |
high |
high |
Afghanistan:
is rather straightforward and least controversial: there will be a
surge in Afghanistan, it will result in more body bags, it will
achieve nothing, cost a shitload and nobody cares.
Syria:
very tempting, but the big risk is this: that US forces will find
themselves face to face with Iranian and Hezbollah forces who have
been dreaming about this day for decades and who will make maximal
political use of the US forces they will capture or kill. Frankly, to
engage either the Iranians or Hezbollah is a very scary option. Ask
the Israelis
Russia
option 1:
rumors that the US would disconnect Russia from SWIFT or steal (that
is politely called “freeze”) Russian assets and funds in the US
have been going in for a long time already. And the Russians have
been making all sorts of menacing noises about this, but all of them
very vague which tells me that Russia might not have any good
retaliatory options and that this time around the hot air is blowing
from Moscow. Of course, Putin is a unpredictable master strategist
and the folks around him are very, very smart. They might hold
something up their sleeve which I am not aware of but I strongly
suspect that, unlike me, the US intelligence community must be fully
aware of what this might be. I am not an economist and there is much
I don’t know here, I therefore assessed the risk as “unknown”
for me.
Russia
option 2:
the reaction of Russia to the shooting down by Turkey of a SU-24 in
2015 might well have given the US politicians and commanders a
feeling that they could do the same and get away with it. In truth,
they might be right. But they might also be wrong. The big difference
with the case of the SU-24 is that Russia has formidable air-defenses
deployed in Syria which present a major threat for US forces.
Furthermore, if a Russian aircraft is under attack and the Russians
reply by firing a volley of ground-to-air missiles, what would the US
do – attack a Russian S-400 battery? The US is also in a tricky
situation in an air-to-air confrontation. While the F-22 is an
excellent air superiority fighter it has one huge weakness: it is
designed to engage its adversaries from a long range and to shoot
first, before it is detected (I mention only the F-22 here because it
is the only US aircraft capable of challenging the Su-30SM/Su-35).
But if the rules of engagement say that before firing at a Russian
aircraft the F-22 has to issue a clear warning or if the engagement
happens at medium to short range distances, then the F-22 is at a big
disadvantage, especially against a Su-30SM or Su-35.
Another major
weakness of the F-22 is that, unlike the Su-30/Su-35, it does not
have a real electronic warfare suite (the F-22’s INEWS does not
really qualify). In plain English this means that the F-22 was
designed to maximize its low radar cross section but at a cost of all
other aspects of aerial warfare (radar power, hypermaneuverability,
electronic warfare, passive engagement, etc.). This all gets very
technical and complicated very fast, but I think that we can agree
that the Neocons are unlikely to be very impressed by the risks posed
by Russian forces in Syria and that they will likely feel that they
can punch the russkies in the nose and that these russkies will have
to take it. Local US commanders might feel otherwise, but that is
also entirely irrelevant. Still, I place the risk here at ‘medium’
even if, potentially, this could lead to a catastrophic thermonuclear
war because I don’t think that the Neocons believe that the
Russians will escalate too much (who starts WWIII over one shot down
aircraft anyway, right?!). Think of it: if you were the commander of
the Russian task force in Syria, what would you do if the US shot
down on of your aircraft (remember, you assume that you are a
responsible and intelligent commander, not a flag-waving delusional
maniac)?
What
will not stop is the full-spectrum demonization of Russia, thus the
relationship between the two countries will further deteriorate.
Putin’s Russia is a kind of Mordor which
represents all evil and stands behind all evil. Denouncing and openly
hating Russia has now become a form of virtue-signaling. Since the
entire US political elites have endorsed this phobia, it is
exceedingly unlikely to change in the foreseeable future.
Iran:
Trump has announced that he wants out of the deal and while
technically and legally he cannot do that, it’s not like he will
care one bit. The US has long given up any pretense at respecting any
kind of law, including international law. Also, since Trump is
clearly Israel’s shabbos-goy I
think that we can safely assume that this will happen.
Donbass:
will the Ukronazis finally attack? Well, they have been for many
months already! Not only did they never stop shelling the Donbass,
but they have this new “frog-jump” (pseudo) strategy which
consists of moving in military forces in the neutral zone, seize an
undefended town and then declare a major victory against Russia. They
have also been re-arming, re-organizing, re-grouping and otherwise
bolstering their forces in the East. As a result, the Urkonazis have
at least 3:1 advantage against the Novorussians. However, we should
not look at this from the Ukronazi or Novorussian point of view.
Instead we should look at it from the Neocon point of view:
Possible
outcomes |
US
reactions |
Option
one: Ukronazis win |
Russia
is defeated, US proves its power |
Option
two: Novorussians win |
Russia
is accused of invading the Ukraine |
Option
three: Novorussians lose and Russia openly intervenes |
A
Neocon dream come true: the NATO has a purpose again:decades of
Cold War v2 in Europe. |
The
way I see it, in all three cases the AngloZionist prevail though
clearly option #2 is the worst possible outcome and option #3 is the
best one. In truth, the AngloZionists have very little to lose in a
Ukronazi attack on Novorussia. Not so the Ukrainian people, of
course. Right now the US and several European countries are shipping
various types of weapons to the Ukronazis. That is really a non-news
since they have been doing that for years already. Furthermore,
western made weapons won’t make any difference, at least from a
military point of view, if only because it will always be much easier
for Russia to send more weapons in any category. The real difference
is a political one: shipping “lethal weapons” (as if some weapons
were not lethal!) is simply a green light to go on the attack. Let’s
hope that the Urkonazis will be busy fighting each other and that
their previous humiliating defeat will deter them from trying again,
but I consider a full-scale Urkonazi attack on the Donbass as quite
likely.
DPRK:
that is the big unknown here. With some opponents, you know for an
absolute fact that their people will fight down to the very last man
if needed (Iranians, Russians, Hezbollah). But authoritarian regimes
tend to have a pretty low breaking point unless, of course, they
convince their own people that they are not fighting for a specific
political regime, but for their country. I think that nobody knows
for sure what the North Koreans will do if attacked, but I see no
sign to simply assume that the North Koreans won’t fight. From what
I hear, the memories of the ruthless attacks against North Koreans by
US forces during the previous war on the Korean Peninsula are still
very very real. Here is what an intelligence officer in the region
wrote to me recently:
The
Trump Administration’s bluster is pathetic. If this were a movie,
and not real life, it would be funny (it’s still funny, but being
in *******, I don’t fully appreciate it). The sad thing is that
central casting couldn’t create a better foil for NK propaganda: in
every way, including physically, he fits their caricature of the
evil, imperial arch-capitalist Yankee businessman. It’d be like if
Hitler came back to life and off-handedly threatened to destroy the
US every other day (and had the capability to do so).
If
this specialist is correct, and I have no reason to believe that he
is not, then it is quite reasonable to assume that the possible
dislike the North Korean people might have for their ruling elites is
dwarfed by their hatred for the United States.
[Sidebar:
he also had some interesting comments about my own assessment of the
consequences of a war on the Korean Peninsula. Here is what he wrote
to me:
Japan
is a major target, for a number of reasons. The biggest is that there
are a lot of US bases there that would be used to bring-in additional
US troops/direct the war, but there’s also the fact that North
Korea (and most South Koreans, actually), straight-up hates Japan. I
won’t go into a history lesson (which you probably already know),
but there is no love lost. Even if the war was confined to the
Peninsula, which it won’t be, the global economy would take a major
hit, because a ridiculous amount of global supply chain runs through
South Korea (which on its own, bounces between the 15th and 10th
largest economy in the world). Off the top of my head, I think
Incheon (just west of Seoul) is the busiest airport in at least the
region – it’s a major international hub, and Busan and Incheon
are some of the busiest ports in the world – I want to say Busan is
top 5, even busier than the Japanese ports. All the Chinese goods
that go to America flow through the Sea of Japan – those will have
to be re-routed. And a lot of the components that go in fancy
electronics are actually made in SK, prior to final assembly in China
– so that will be an issue. So even if we’re the only ones to go
down, it’ll be bad news for the global economy. Your assessment of
the artillery and special forces threat mirrors mine. One of the
things I always thought was funny was how people disparage “World
War 2 artillery.” As a whole, “World War 2 artillery” has
probably killed more people than any weapon system in modern history
(unless you say something really general like “knife” or “gun”).
It’s not like you’ll be any less dead if your house is hit with a
152 as opposed to a J-DAM.]
And
here is the deal, if you attack a small and defenseless country you
can basically ignore the consequences of making the wrong guess, but
when dealing with a country like the DPRK this is a miscalculation
which no sane politician or military commander would ever take the
risk of making. But delusional imbeciles giving and dishonorable
cowards – would either one of them show the kind of caution needed
when dealing with such a major threat?! I frankly don’t think so.
In fact, I see no reason to believe that at all. Remember the
“cakewalk in Iraq”? This term, coined by one of my former
teachers at SAIS, Ken Adelman, is a wonderful illustration of the
Neocon mindest: pure ideology and to hell with caution. We all know
that this “cakewalk” ended up costing the Iraqi and American
people: well
over one million deaths for the former, well over five
trillion dollars for the latter. Some cakewalk indeed… The
truth is that at this point nobody knows
what the outcome of a US attack on the DPRK might be, not even the
North Koreans. Will that be enough to deter the delusional imbeciles
giving and dishonorable cowards currently at the helm of the Empire?
You tell me!
Venezuela:
as much hatred as there is for Venezuela in the US elites, this
country is not a lucrative target or, let me rephrase that, it is a
great target to subvert but probably not a good one to intervene in.
Violence in Venezuela is directly in the US interests but a direct
military intervention is probably not. My contacts tell me that the
Venezuelan military is an unholy (and rather corrupt) mess, but they
also tell me that the popular will to resist the “Yankees” is so
strong that a any military intervention will immediately trigger an
ugly guerrilla war (not to mention a political backlash in the rest
of Latin America). The truth is the US probably has the means to
militarily intervene in Venezuela, but they also have much better
options.
- Escalate the war in Afghanistan
- Renege on the nuclear deal with Iran
- Back an Ukronazi attack on Novorussia
- Shoot down a Russian aircraft over Syria
- Invade Syria
- Invade Venezuela
- Disconnect Russia from SWIFT or seize Russian assets
- Attack the DPRK
Frankly,
I am not very confident about this attempt as analyzing the possible
developments in 2018. All my education has always been based on a
crucial central assumption: the other guy is rational. That is a huge
assumption to make, but one which was fundamentally true during the
Cold War. Today I find myself inclined to think that psychologists
are probably better suited to make predictions about the actions of
the rulers of the AngloZionist Empire than military analysts.
Furthermore, history shows us that the combination of delusional
imbeciles and dishonorable cowards is what typically brings down
empires, we saw a very good example of that with the collapse of the
Soviet Empire.
With
the latest Trump fiasco I have personally given up any hope of ever
seeing a US President capable of making a positive contribution to
the welfare of the people of the US or the rest of the planet. The
burden now is clearly on Russia and China to do everything they can
to try to stop the US from launching even more catastrophic and
deeply immoral wars. That is a very, very difficult task and I
frankly don’t know if they can do it. I hope so. That is the best I
can say.
This
article was originally published by Unz Review -
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