Making
sense of Russian political ambiguities
17
May, 2018
[This
article was written for
the Unz Review]
Introduction:
the world is not Hollywood
The
past couple of weeks saw a number of truly tectonic events taking
place simultaneously in the USA, in Russia, in Israel, in Syria, in
Iran and in the EU. I think that it would also be reasonable to say
that most of those who opposed the AngloZionist Empire have felt
feelings ranging from mild disappointment to total dismay. I sure did
not hear many people rejoicing, but if somebody was, they were in the
minority (uncharacteristically,
Mikhail Khazin, for example). These reactions are normal, we all form expectations which can be, and often are, disappointed. Still, even when the news is clearly bad it is helpful to keep a number of things in mind.
Mikhail Khazin, for example). These reactions are normal, we all form expectations which can be, and often are, disappointed. Still, even when the news is clearly bad it is helpful to keep a number of things in mind.
First,
people, countries and events are not frozen in time. They are
processes. Processes, by definition, are subject to change, evolution
and (even radical) changes in direction.
Second,
each process carries within itself the seeds of its own
contradiction. This is what makes processes dynamic.
Third,
people are imperfect. Even good people make mistakes, sometimes with
tragic consequences. Yet it would be wrong to separate them all into
either “infallible hero” or “abject villain and loser”. In
fact, I would argue that any kind of mistake, especially a serious
one, carries within itself its own contradiction which, in turn, can
end up “energizing” the original process by creating a different
set of circumstances.
All
this is to say that the real world is not like Hollywood when the
outcome of the story is only 90 minutes or so away. The real world is
at war with the Empire and in this war, like in any other wars, there
are mistakes and losses on both sides Both sides make mistakes and
the results of these mistakes affect the future course of the war.
I
would argue that in the past couple of weeks Russia suffered not one,
but several PR disasters. I would also argue that the Zionists have
had some tremendous PR successes. I will list them further below, but
I want to suggest to you that PR disasters and successes are not
quite the same as real-world, tangible victories. Furthermore, PR
disasters and successes can sometimes be useful, as they reveal to
the world previously overlooked, or underestimated, weaknesses.
Finally, PR disasters and successes, while existing mostly in the
realm of perceptions, can have a real-world effect, sometimes a
dramatic one.
The
usual chorus of Putin-haters who immediately declared final victory
is completely mistaken and their reaction is the reflection of an
infantile understanding of the complex world we live in. In the real
world, a person like Putin can, and usually does, commit mistakes (PR
and real-world mistakes) and the enemy can mount very effective
counter-attacks. But the outcome of the war is not decided on a
single battle. Furthermore, in politics, like in regular warfare,
tactical mistakes and successes do not at all imply operational or,
even less so, strategic successes. During WWII the German military
usually performed better than the Soviet one on the tactical level,
but the Soviets were superior on the operational and strategic
levels. We all know how that war ended. If you want to read a good
analysis and debunking of the “Putin caved in” nonsense, I
recommend the article ”RussiaBetrayed Syria”: Geopolitics through the eyes of a fearful“pro-Russia” Westerner”
by Ollie Richardson.
The
other extreme is to deny, against all evidence, that there is a
problem or that mistakes have been made. That kind of stubborn
flag-waving is actually unhelpful as mistakes are inevitable, and the
first step towards mitigating them is to recognize them. The extreme
version of that kind of flag-waving (pseudo-)patriotism is to
denounce a person brining up problems as a traitor or a defeatist.
It
is with all this in mind that I would like to revisit what has taken
place and try to gauge what the real-world consequences of these PR
events might be.
Part
one: Putin disappoints
Quick
summary: Putin re-appointed Medvedev, appointed Alexei Kudrin as
Chairman of the Accounts Chamber of Russia and Vitalii Mutko as
Deputy Prime Minister in charge of construction, he then hosted Bibi
Netanyahu in the Kremlin while the latter bombed Syria right before,
during and after Netanyahu’s visit. Finally, there is the
disgraceful zig-zag about the S-300 for Syria: first, yes
we will do it,
then, no
we won’t.
All these events can, and should, be carefully analyzed and
explained, but I don’t think that it makes sense to deny that most
people feel a sense of disappointment over it all (except, of course,
the bright geniuses who will claim that they knew all along that
Putin was “fake”, but this is precisely the “Hollywood-thinking”
types on whom any real analysis would be lost in the first place).
I
would argue that even those who think that this is no big deal and
that nothing terrible happened will not, if they are honest, deny
that Putin must have known, without any doubt, that his decisions
would be unpopular with the Russian public and that, very
uncharacteristically for him, he deliberately chose to ignore his
only public opinion and favor other considerations. That is something
very new and, I think, something important.
There
are roughly two camps vying for power inside the Kremlin: I call them
the Atlantic Integrationists and the Eurasian Sovereignists. The
former group is a pure product of the 1990s. We can think of them as
“liberals”, IMF/Washington Consensus/WTO/WB types; folks who came
to power thanks to the regime of oligarchs which ran Russia from
about 1990 to 2000 and which was both deeply pro-American and which
had extremely close ties to Israel and the various political Jewish
and Zionist organizations in the West. The latter group is primarily
a product of the armed forces and the security services. The “bridge”
between the two is, by the way, the Russian military industrial
complex in which both groups are represented. Unsurprisingly, most
Russian “elites” (defined simply as people who made their fortune
or, at least, a good living in the 1990s and after) support the
Atlantic Integrationists, while most “regular” Russian people
overwhelmingly support the Eurasian Sovereignists. This is why Putin
is so popular and Medvedev never was. What is interesting is to look
into how these groups relate to Israel and Zionism.
In
a past article, I have already looked at the complex
and multi-layered relationship between Israel and Russia. At this point
we need to look a little deeper and see how each of these groups
relates to Israel and Zionism.
Atlantic
Integrationists: unsurprisingly, they are pro-Israeli to the hilt.
For them, Israel is a totally normal country, even to be admired, as
they all have personal/family and business ties to Israelis in Israel
and in the USA. While there is no official version of AIPAC in
Russia, let’s just say that the ADL would give the Atlantic
Integrationists a perfect score for loyalty and service.
Eurasian
Sovereignists: here, things are much more complicated. Some Eurasian
Sovereignists are profoundly anti-Zionist ideologically, while others
don’t really care. But even for those who have no love for Israel,
or who are deeply opposed to the Zionist influence in Russia in the
1990s or even today (especially in the Russian media), do not
necessarily find it useful to say much about it. Why? Primarily
because they think, and I would say correctly so, that being
pro-Russian (in the sense of patriotic and wanting a truly sovereign
Russia) does not have to entail being anti-Zionist, anti-Israeli or
anti-Jewish. Furthermore, there are, and have always been, patriotic
Russian Jews who have been an integral part of the Russian culture
and history. Just like I often write that for Russians, Muslims are
not “aliens” in the way many westerners perceive them, and Jews
are not “aliens” for Russians either. This is why you can often
meet the following Russian type: they will bitch and complain about
all the Jewish “crooks and politicians”, but have “good” Jews
as their closest and best friends. This is not blindness at all, this
is the expression of the fact that to loathe an ideology is one
thing, but to collectively feel hostility towards a group of people
you know very well is a completely different proposition. I will
never cease to repeat it: Russia is, has always been, and still
remains a multi-ethnic and multi-religious society in which the
presence of “others” simply is a fact of life.
Then
there is the WWII factor, which the Israelis and Russians Zionists
have been extremely skilled at exploiting to the max: Russians and
Jew are united in a common memory of the horrors the Nazis inflicted
upon them and they also often sense that West Europeans and US
Americans are, well, maybe not quite as sincerely sympathetic to
their plight even if political correctness forces them to pretend to
be. As a result, you will find that most anti-Zionist Russians, while
surely not “ADL compatible” in their views, hate the Nazis and
everything western racism stands for no less than Jews would. If
fact, when faced with the modern wave of rabid russophobia, many
Russians say “we are the new Jews”, meaning that everything evil
on the planet is blamed on them regardless of fact or logic. Like it
or not, but that common memory does bind Russians and Jews in a
profound way.
I
can already imagine the rage and disgust my words above will trigger
in western Jew-haters for whom the world is split into two groups:
Jew-haters (good) and all those who “sold out” to “the Jews”
(as if there was such monad as “the Jews”). All I can tell them
is this: don’t project your reductionist world view on others,
especially not on Russia. If you do, you will never “get” Russia
and you will be stuck with the kind of proverbial nonsense like “a
riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma”.
Part
two: The Empire Strikes back
The
past couple of years have been terrible for the Zionists, both in the
USA and in the rest of the world. First, there was the crushing
defeat of their candidate in the USA and the election of a candidate
they rabidly hated. Then there was the Russian military intervention
in Syria which prevented them from overthrowing the last secular
“resistance” regime in the Arab world. In Russia, “their”
Atlantic Integrationists were slowly but surely losing power and all
in all, the western sanctions turned out to be a blessing for Russia.
Putin’s popularity was soaring to new heights and the the global
“Zionist house” was on fire. In the USA, the Zionists
counter-attacked with lightening speed and with a devastating
effectiveness, breaking
Trump in about 30 days (as
shown by Trump’s betrayal of Flynn and later Bannon). After that,
Trump made appeasing
AIPAC his full-time job.
But
that left another problem: while the US was re-taken under control,
Russia, in the meantime, had succeeded in developing the capabilities
to completely negate the entire US ABM system, to make much of the
surface fleet obsolete and severely to impair the ability of US
airpower to operate in airspace contested by modern Russian air
defenses. In other words, in purely military terms, this was “game,
set, match for Russia”.
[Sidebar:
to those shocked by this statement and who would dismiss this as
“Russian propaganda” I will submit the following: US military
power is predicated on the following:
- The ability to deploy a carrier strike group anywhere on the planet.
- The ability to protect that carrier strike group from any major counter-attack.
- The ability to strike any country in the world with enough missile and airstrikes to break its will to continue to fight.
- The complete and total control of the skies (air supremacy). US forces simply never train for a combat scenario where they don’t control the skies or, even less so, when their enemy does.
- The very strong belief that no enemy would dare attack major overseas US bases.
- The very strong, quasi religious, belief that US military technology is superior.
- The absolute certitude that the US mainland would never be hit in a counter-attack.
None
of the previous beliefs are based in reality anymore and, in fact,
their opposite is true. This is why when dealing with a near-peer or
peer enemy the US armed forces are more or less useless. The only
very notable exception is the US nuclear triad and the US submarine
fleet. The current situation in Syria (and by implication, Iran and
Russia) is finally gradually bringing this new reality to the
awareness of US decision-makers and military commanders.]
This
is why Russia, albeit with only a tiny contingent, succeeded in
turning the tide of the war in Syria and even now presents the
AngloZionists with a frustrating challenge: a (comparatively) tiny
contingent of Russian forces completely derailed the Empire’s plans
for the entire Middle-East: not only is there a real change of peace
breaking out in Syria, but the situation is far from having the
Takfiris and Shia killing each other in Syria and Lebanon (a key part
of the Israeli plan for the region). Hezbollah, Iran and the Syrians
are now in a victorious coalition on the ground with the “Axis of
Kindness” forces roundly defeated.
So
the Israelis decided on a simple, very effective and very dangerous
counter offensive plan: 1) start a war between the USA and Iran by
creating an acute crisis as a result of the US reneging on its legal
obligations and 2) bait Iran into a counter-attack in response to
Israel air operations against Iranian and pro-Iranian forces in
Syria. But for that plan to succeed, Russia needed to stay out.
So
far, at least, it looks like the Israelis have convinced the Russians
to stay out. But is that perception really well founded?
Part
three: factors inhibiting Russia
First
and foremost, as I
have already explained in great detail in the past, Russia has absolutely no legal or moral obligation to support,
protect, arm, train or otherwise assist anybody in the Middle-East.
None. Russia has already done more for Syria than the entire
Arab/Muslim world combined with the notable exception of Iran and
Hezbollah. As for the Arab/Muslim world, it has never done anything
for Russia and still is doing nothing. So those who like to whine
about Russia not doing enough simply have no case whatsoever.
Second,
the Russian air defense and air forces in Syria have only one
mission: to protect the Russian task force in Syria. Whoever got the
idea that Russia is supposed to shoot down Israeli aircraft or
missiles over Syria has not been paying attention to public Russian
statements about this. The notion that the Russian task force in
Syria is there to engage US/NATO/CENTCOM forces is just as
ridiculous.
Third,
and contrary to a frequently held misconception, the Syrian
government, Iran, Hezbollah and Iran have different agendas in the
Middle-East. Yes, they are de-facto allies. They also have the same
enemies, they often work together, but they all think of their own
interests first. In fact, at least in the case of Iran and Russia,
there are clear signs that there are several ‘camps’ inside the
Russian and Iranian government and the ruling elites which have
different agendas (I highly recommend Thierry Meyssan’s recent
articles on this topic here and here). To think that any or all of
them will instantly come to the defense of any one of them is
supremely naĂŻve, especially when the aggressor (Israel) is backed by
the full power of an already warmongering Empire run amok.
Fourth,
the sad reality is that Russia, unlike Iran, never took a principled
position concerning the nature and behavior of the state of Israel. I
very much deplore that, and I consider it a shame, but I hasten to
add that this shame is shared by every single country on the planet
except Iran, Bolivia and, maybe, to some extent Turkey. Not to excuse
anything, but only to explain, there is very little awareness amongst
Russians about the true nature and behavior of the Israelis, and most
of what makes it to the media is hopelessly pro-Israeli (hence the
almost constant presence of the likes of Iakov Kedmi, Avigdor Eskin,
Evgenii Satanovskii and other Israeli agents – they don’t even
really bother to deny it – on Russian TV). The Russian media,
especially the TV stations, could easily get a “ADL seal of
approval”. Simply put: the vast majority of Russians don’t feel
that the plight of the Palestinians or the constant Israeli attacks
on neighboring countries is their problem.
[Sidebar:
such a view can appear very self-centered until you recall the kind
of “gratitude” Russia got in the past from her former
interventions. There are countries out there who exist only because
Russia decided that they should exist and which today are members of
NATO. I won’t even go into the “Slavic brotherhood” or, for
that matter, “Orthodox brotherhood” nonsense. The only people
with whom Russia truly has a strong bond are the Serbs. The rest of
them were more than happy to backstab Russia as soon as convenient.
Thus history has taught Russia a painful lesson: give up on any naĂŻve
notions of gratitude or brotherhood. Very sad, but true. Today, even
countries like Kazakhstan, Armenia or Georgia are showing a very
ambivalent (and even ambiguous) attitude towards Russia. As a result
the idea that Russia owes some form of protection to anybody out
there has almost no support in Russia.]
Fifth,
even the Eurasian Sovereignist’s analysts and media in Russia have
this absolutely amazing “blind spot” about Israel and the Zionist
ideology: I think of analysts whom I sincerely admire and respect
(like Sergei Mikheev or Ruslan Ostashko) and whose analysis is superb
on pretty much everything and who simply never mention the power and
influence of what is clearly a powerful pro-Israeli lobby inside
Russia, especially in the Russian media (even when they mention the
power of the Israel lobby in the USA). Considering how different the
tone of much of the Russian Internet is, the only explanation I have
for this situation is that any public anti-Israeli or anti-Zionist
statements are career-terminators in Russia (we also clearly see the
same phenomenon at work with RT and Sputnik). You can completely
forget about any Russian religious figures speaking up, and that goes
both for the Orthodox and Muslims: they all take their orders from
the Kremlin and have no personal opinion on anything (I am only
talking about the “official” senior religious leaders – the
rank and file faithful do not display this type of behavior).
Sixth,
there are plenty of people in Russia who fully realize two simple
things: first, a war between Iran and the Empire would be disastrous
for the Empire (and therefore great for Russia) and, second, the
Iranians are also “problematic” allies at best who have their own
version of “Atlanticists” (remember the “Gucci Revolution”?)
and “Sovereignists”, which means that tensions, or warfare,
between Iran and the USA would be greatly advantageous for the
anti-US camp inside Iran (just like the rabid russophobia of western
politicians did more to re-elect Putin than any of his own campaign
rhetoric). To put it crudely, if the Israelis are dumb enough to
attack the Iranians, and if the US Americans are subservient enough
to Israel to join into the fight – why should Russia take great
risks and openly stand in the way? Finally, any conflict with Iran
(which will most likely also involve the KSA) will have oil prices
skyrocket. What do you think this will do to the Russian economy?
Seventh,
the war which Israel is currently waging against Iran and pro-Iranian
forces in Syria is entirely a symbolic war. Even the Pantsir which
was recently destroyed by the Israelis (with the usual pro-Israeli PR
campaign) was not even on combat alert: the unit was not even
camouflaged and its crew was standing around and smoking. The
Israelis are masters at making this look all very impressive and
heroic, but in military terms, this is nonsense: they clearly hit a
unit which was not even part of the action (whatever that “action”
was).
The
basic rule of warfare still remains valid today: unless you can put
boots on the ground, your efforts will never have a decisive military
effect. And thank God for the fact that nobody in the “Axis of
Kindness” has any credible ground forces; not the Israelis
(remember 2006?); not the Saudis (look at Yemen); and most definitely
not the USA (when is the last time they beat somebody capable of
resisting?). That is why the AngloZionist Empire always tries to use
proxies like the Kurds or the “good terrorists” to fight on its
behalf. Thus the Russian military specialists fully understand that
even if the Israelis bombed Syria for the next several months, they
would not be able to change the fundamental correlation of forces on
the ground. Hence, the Israeli strikes are mostly about PR.
Still,
for all these reasons, and more, we all have to come to terms with
the fact that Russia is what I would call a “limited actor” in
the Middle-East. I have been saying from day 1 – when some were
having visions of Russian airborne divisions (supported by MiG-31s!)
landing near Damascus – that “the Russians are not coming” (see here, here, here, here and here). Furthermore, I tried to explain
that the Russians are under no obligation whatsoever to protect or
save anyone anywhere, including in the Middle-East (see here).
Finally, I tried to explain that the Russian-Israeli relationship is
a multi-layered and complex one (see here) and that Putin is facing
some tremendous internal opposition which he has failed to
successfully tackle (see here). But trying to describe a complex
reality is often a futile task in a world in which simple, black and
white, binary-kind of representations are the rule and where every
complex argument is immediately turned into a long list of straw-man
misrepresentations. This is still very much the case with the latest
developments.
Those
who say that “Putin sold out” are wrong, but so are those who
think that “the Russians are coming” to save anybody. It is just
not going to happen. Russia will not fight a war against Israel
(unless she is attacked first) and Russia will only support Iranian
operations and policies insofar as the Iranians negotiate a deal with
the Russian and coordinate their efforts. As soon as Iran, or
Hezbollah, make a move without prior consultations with Moscow, they
will be on their own to deal with the consequences.
Part
four: is Russia caving in to Western and Israeli pressure?
Setting
aside the issue of the Russian role in the Middle-East, there remains
the issue of why Putin failed to deliver on what was clearly a
mandate of the Russian people to get rid of at least of the most
hated personalities in the Russian government. Most folks in the West
know how toxic Kudrin is, but the promotion of Mutko is nothing short
of amazing too. This is the man who is most to blame for the gross
mismanagement of the entire “Russia doping scandal” operation and
who is absolutely despised for his incompetence. Now he is in charge
of construction. There is even a good joke about this: Putin put
Mutko in charge of the construction industry because the Russian
construction market badly needs some doping. Funny, sure, but only so
far. When I see Rogozin removed for his “poor management” (now
put in charge of the Russian rocket and space industry)
and Mutko promoted, I wonder if they have all gone crazy in the
Kremlin.
We
can all argue ad nauseam why exactly this has happened, but let’s
first agree on one simple fact: Putin has failed to purge the
Atlantic Integrationists. The big expectation of him getting a strong
personal mandate from the people and then finally kicking them out of
the Kremlin has, alas, been proven completely unfounded. There are a
couple of interesting explanations out there such as:
Objectively,
the Medvedev government has done a very decent, if not good job, with
the economy. True, some/many believe that mistakes were made, that
there were better economic policies available, but it would be hard
to argue that the government completely failed. In fact, there are
some pretty strong arguments which indicate that the Medvedev
government (see this
article discussing
this in detail and it’s machine
translation here and this
article and
its machine
translation here)
Putin’s
very ambitious internal economic growth program needs the support of
the interests represented by the Atlantic Integrationists. In fact,
internal development and economic growth are the core of his very
ambitious political program. Possibly not the best time to purge the
Kremlin from those who represent the interests of Russian big
business.
The
Medvedev “clan” has been weakened (see here for details) and now
that it has been put on a much shorter “technocratic” leash, it
is far less dangerous. In fact, it has been been subdued by Putin and
his allies. Lavrov
and Shoigu are both staying,
by the way.
Trump’s
reckless behavior is deeply alienating the Europeans to whom Putin is
now presenting negotiation partners which they would trust (imagine
Merkel and Rogozin in the same room – that would not go well!).
Check out this excellent article by Frank Sellers in The Duran
looking at the immense potential for Russia-EU cooperation.
Meh.
I am personally unconvinced. How can Putin say that he wants serious
reforms while keeping the exact same type of people in command? If
indeed the Medvedev government did such a great job, then we is there
any need for such major reforms? If Putin’s power base is indeed,
as I believe it to be, in the people, then why is he trying to
appease the financial elites by catering to their interests and
agenda? Most crucially, how can Russia free herself from the
financial and economic grip of the Empire when the Empire’s 5th
column agents are (re-)appointed to key positions? And in all of
Russia was there really nobody more qualified than Mutko or Kudrin to
appoint to these positions?
Of
course, there always this “Putin knows something you don’t” but
I have always had a problem with that kind of logic which is
essentially an open-ended universal cop-out. I hope that I am wrong,
but to me this does strongly suggest that Putin is on the retreat,
that he has made a major mistake and that the Empire has scored a
major victory. And I will gladly admit that I have yet to hear an
explanation which would explain this, never mind offer one of my own.
On
the external front, has Russia caved in to Israeli pressure? Ruslan
Ostashko offers a very good analysis of why this is hardly the case:
(I don’t necessarily agree with his every conclusion, but he does
make a very good case:
Yes,
Netanyahu *did* with his repeated strikes on Syria, thumb his nose at
Putin (that famous Israeli chutzpah at work for you!), and yes, Putin
wining and dining Netanyahu was a painful sight and a PR-disaster.
But on substance, did Israel get Russia to “betray Iran”? No, and
not because the Russians are so heroically principled, but because
Israel really has nothing to offer Russia. All Israel has is a
powerful pro-Isreal lobby inside Russia, that is true. But the more
they use that lobby the more visible it becomes, the more questions
at least Eurasian Sovereignists will ask.
The
Israelis sure don’t want to give the impression that the run Russia
the way they run the USA, and Netanyahu’s reception in the Kremlin
recently has already raised a lot of eyebrows and the impression that
Putin caved in to the demands of this arrogant bastard are not
helping Putin, to put it mildly. A lot of Russian analysts (Viktor
Baranets, Maksim Shevchenko, Leonid Ivashov) wonder what kind of
arguments Netanyahu used with Putin, and the list of possibilities is
an outright uninspiring one.
Part
five – another truism: there is a difference between excellent,
good, average, bad and terrible
Even
if the situation in Russia has changed for the worse, this is hardly
a reason to engage in the usual “Putin sold out” hysteria or to
declare that “Russia caved in”. Even when things are bad, there
is still a huge difference between bad and worse. As of right now,
Putin is not only the best possible person to be the President of
Russia, Russia also continues to be the objective leader of the
resistance to the Empire. Again, the black-and-white “Hollywood”
type of mindset entirely misses the dynamic nature of what is going
on. For example, it is quite clear to me that a new type of Russian
opposition is slowly forming. Well, it always existed, really – I
am talking about people who supported Putin and the Russian foreign
policy and who disliked Medvedev and the Russian internal policies.
Now the voice of those who say that Putin is way too soft in his
stance towards the Empire will only get stronger. As will the voices
of those who speak of a truly toxic degree of nepotism and patronage
in the Kremlin (again, Mutko being the perfect example). When such
accusations came from rabid pro-western liberals, they had very
little traction, but when they come from patriotic and even
nationalist politicians (Nikolai Starikov for example) they start
taking on a different dimension. For example, while the court jester
Zhirinovskii and his LDPR party loyally supported Medvedev, the
Communist and the Just Russia parties did not. Unless the political
tension around figures like Kudrin and Medvedev is somehow resolved
(maybe a timely scandal?), we might witness the growth of a real
opposition movement in Russia, and not one run by the Empire. It will
be interesting to see if Putin’s personal ratings will begin to go
down and what he will have to do in order to react to the emergence
of such a real opposition.
Much
will depend on how the Russian economy will perform. If, courtesy of
Trump’s megalomaniacal policies towards Iran and the EU, Russia’s
economy receives a massive injection of funds (via high energy
prices), then things will probably stabilize. But if the European
leaders meekly cave in and join the sanctions against Iran and if the
US succeeds in imposing even further sanctions on Russia, then the
Medvedev government will face a serious crisis and the revival of the
Russian economy promised by Putin will end up in an embarrassing
failure and things could also go from bad to even worse. As for right
now, our always courageous Europeans are busy handing the latest Eurovision
prize to an Israeli (Eurovision
prizes are always given to countries the EU leaders want to support)
while the self-same Israelis “celebrate” the new US Embassy in
Jerusalem by murdering
55 Palestinians(and promised
to kill many more). So let’s just say
that I am not very hopeful that the Europeans will grow a spine, some
balls, a brain or, least of all, acquire some moral fiber anytime
soon. But maybe they will be greedy enough to reject some of the most
outrageous US demands? Maybe. Hopefully. After all, the European
supine subservience to the USA has to the EU billions of dollars
already…
Part
six: dealing with the S-300 fiasco
The
entire S-300 business for Syria has been an ugly mess but, again,
more in the PR realm than in the real world. The constant “we will
deliver, no we won’t, yes we will, no we won’t” creates a
terrible impression. The explanations for this zig-zag make things
only worse. Let’s take a look at what those who do not disapprove
of this zig zag are saying. Their arguments go more or less as
follows.
- The S-300s would place the Israeli Air Force at risk not only over Syria, but also over Lebanon and even Israel. This is overkill because Russia never moved into Syria to fight a war against Israel. So the entire idea of delivering S-300s to Syria was a bad idea in the first place.
- Syria does not really need S-300s. Lavrov and others mention the S-300s as a threat (because the Israelis really fear these systems), but in reality what Syria needs are Buk-M2E ((see analysis in Russian and it’s machine translation here).).
- The Russians made a deal with Israel and in exchange for the non-delivery of the S-300s (see analysis in Russian here and the machine translation here)) they are getting something very tangible: Israel will stop supporting the “good terrorists” in Syria thereby making it much easier for Damascus to finish them off.
I
don’t like these arguments very much except for the 2nd one. First,
I do agree that the Buk-M2E is a very modern and capable system with
some advantages over the S-300 in the Syrian context, but I would
still add that the infamous sentence “Syria has got all it needs”
is an absolutely terrible and ridiculous statement (read Marko
Marjanović devastating critique of it in his article “Israel Took
out a Syrian Pantsir Air Defense Unit, S-200 Radars. Russia: ‘No
S-300 Transfer, Syria Has All It Needs’” for Russia Insider). I
think that this “Syria has all it needs” is yet another of these
self-inflicted PR disasters and an absolutely ridiculous statement
until you take it one step deeper.
So,
if by “Syria has all it needs” you mean “Syria has no need for
any other help” or “the Syrian air defenses can deal with any
Israeli or US attack” – then this is total nonsense. Agreed. But
if you just rephrase it and say “Syria has all the types of weapons
it needs”, then I think that this is basically true. By far the
single most important air defense system for the Syrians is the
Pantsir-S1, not the S-300 or any other system.
As
early as June of last year I wrote a column for the Unz Review
entitled “Russia vs. America in Syria” in which I had a section
entitled “Forget the S-300/S-400, think Pantsir”. I wrote that at
a time when most observers were paying no attention to the Pantsir at
all, and the entire world seemed obsessed with the S-300 and S-400s.
I still believe that the Pantsir is the key to the outcome of the
struggle for the Syrian airspace. But Syria, and Iran, need many more
of them. Basically, the ideal situation is numerous Russian, Iranian
and Syrian Pantsirs all over Syria, all of them integrated with
already existing Russian long radar capabilities and supported by
modern electronic warfare. With enough Pantsirs deployed and on full
alert (not like the one the Israelis recently destroyed) and fully
integrated into a single air defense network, the Syrians would be
able to mount a very robust air defense capability, at a relatively
cheap cost, without offering the Israelis any high value and
lucrative targets.
Pantsirs
can deal with most of the US and Israeli threats even if, unlike
their S-300/S-400 counterparts, they cannot engage aircraft at long
distance (hence the suggestion to deploy some Buk-M2E’s to
approximate that capability). The truth is that S-300’s were never
designed to operate more or less autonomously or to intercept cruise
missiles or bombs. Yes, they *can* do that, but they were designed to
deal with long range high value targets and within a multi-layered
system which included many other systems, such as the Buks, Tors,
Pantsirs and even Iglas and Verbas MANPADs. That multi-layered air
defense system is currently abscent in Syria and would take a lot of
time and money to deploy. In contrast the Pantsirs can function
completely autonomously, can detect any target up to 50km away, track
and engage it 20km away, protect itself and others with its 30mm guns
up to 3km away. Pantsirs can even do that while moving up to 30km/h
on rough terrain. This makes it an extraordinarily effective and
survivable air defense system, which is relatively easy to hide,
deploy and engage with no warning for the enemy. By the way, the
Pantsir can also use both its 30mm canons and its missiles against
ground targets, including tanks. No current air defense system can
boast such a combination of capabilities.
Russia
needs to deliver as many of those Pantsir-S1 systems to Syria as
physically possible. A large number of Pantsir’s in Syria would
present Israel and the USA with a far bigger headache than a few
S-300s. Currently there is something in the range of 40-60 of such
Pantsir’s in Syria. This is far from enough considering the
magnitude of the threat and the capabilities of the threat. That
number needs to be at least doubled.
However,
and regardless of the real-world technical and military aspects of
the issue, the Russian zig-zags gave the world a terrible impression:
the Israelis attack a Russian ally, then the Russian promise to do
something about it, then Netanyahu goes to Russia, and Putin meekly
caves in. This is all a massive self-inflicted political faceplant
and yet another major mistake by Putin and other Russian leaders.
Frankly,
the main Russian mistake here was to *ever* mention S-300s deliveries
to the Syrians.
Part
Seven: the lessons from the Divine Victory of 2006 – survival is
victory
In
2006 Hezbollah inflicted a massive and most humiliating defeat upon
Israel. And yet, there is some pretty good evidence that it all began
by a mistake. Not by Israel, by Hezbollah. Check out this now often
forgotten statement made by Hezbollah Secretary General Hassan
Nasrallah:
“We
did not think, even one per cent, that the capture would lead to a
war at this time and of this magnitude. You ask me, if I had known on
July 11 … that the operation would lead to such a war, would I do
it? I say no, absolutely not”
Amazing,
no? Hassan Nasrallah spoke these words after Hezbollah’s superb
victory against the “invincible Tsahal”. The truth is that
Hezbollah had underestimated the violence and magnitude of the
Israeli attack. Not only that, but Israel did not lose a single inch
of its territory while all of Lebanon, not just the south, was
viciously bombed and scores of civilians died. Hezbollah did destroy
a few “indestructible” Merkava tanks and almost sank the Israeli
Navy’s flagship. But compared to the damage and pain inflicted by
the Israelis, this was nothing. Even Hezbollah’s missiles had a
comparatively small effect on the Israeli population (mostly just the
typical Israeli panic). And yet, even if politicians did not want to
admit it, it was as clear as can be for both sides: Hezbollah had won
a “Divine Victory” while the Israelis had suffered the worst
defeat in their history.
Why? For a very simple reason: Hezbollah survived.
Why? For a very simple reason: Hezbollah survived.
That’s
it and that’s crucial. Olmert and his goons had set out to destroy
Hezbollah (or, at least, disarm it). This is what Trump will probably
try to do to the Islamic Republic of Iran, and this is what the
AngloZionist Empire is trying to do to Russia: eliminate it.
Once
the goals are thus defined, then the definition of victory is also
obvious: surviving. That’s it.
For
Hezbollah, Iran or Russia to defeat Israel, the USA or the entire
Empire, there is no need to plant a flag on the enemy’s main
symbolic building like what Soviet soldiers did in Germany. All they
need to do to win is simply to survive because the other’s sides
survival is predicated upon their elimination, it’s really that
simple. Israel cannot claim victory as long as Hezbollah exists, the
USA cannot claim world Hegemony if Iran openly defies it, and the
AngloZionist Empire cannot clain world hegemony over the our planet
as long as the Russian civilizational realm openly challenges it. So
while all the talk about the Iranians wanting to “wipe Israel off
the map” is just a typical ziomedia invention, it is true that by
their very existence Hezbollah, Iran and Russia do represent an
existential threat to Israel, the USA and the Empire.
This
is the biggest and the fatal weakness of the AngloZionist Empire: its
survival depends on the colonization or destruction of every other
country out there. Every independent country, whether big and
powerful, or small and weak, represents an unacceptable challenge to
the hegemony of the “indispensable nation” and the “chosen
people”, which now try to rule over us all. This might well be the
ultimate example of Hegelian dialectics at work in geopolitics: an
Empire whose power generates it’s own demise. Many empires have
come and gone in history, but the globalized world we live in, this
dialectical contradiction is tremendously potentialized by the finite
conditions in which empires have to operate.
Conclusion
one: support for Putin and Russia must only be conditional
Over
the past few years, Putin and Russia haters were predicting doom and
gloom and all sorts of betrayals (or Novorussia, Syria, Iran, etc.)
by Putin and Russia. Then time passed and all their predictions
proved false. Instead of just talking, the Russians took action which
proved the nay-sayers wrong. This time however, the Russians said and
did a number of things which gave *a lot* of fuel to the Putin-haters
and the only way to undo that is to take real action to prove them
wrong. Right now as a result of these self-inflicted PR-disasters
Russia looks very bad, even inside Russia were many Putin supporters
are confused, worried and disappointed.
Externally,
the Syrian and, especially, the Iranians need to come to terms with
the fact that Russia is an imperfect ally, one which sometimes can
help, but one which will always place its personal interests above
any other consideration. In a personal email to me Eric Zuesse wrote
“I think that Putin and Netanyahu are negotiating how far Israel
can go and what Russia can accept — and what cooperation each will
provide to the other — drawing the red lines of acceptability, for
each side”. I think that he is spot on, but I also think that Putin
is wrong in trying to make a deal with Israel, especially if a deal
is at the expense of Iran. Ostashko is right. Objectively Israel has
very little to offer Russia. But if this kind of collaboration
between Russia and Israel continues, especially if Iran is attacked,
then we will know that the Israel lobby inside Russia is behind these
policies which go counter to the Russian national interest. We will
soon find out.
In
the meantime, Lavrov can’t try to get a deal going with Israel and,
at the same time, whine about the “US
Plan on Arab Troops Deployment in Syria ‘Sovereignty Violation’ How about the
never-ending violation by Israel of Syria’s sovereignty? How it is
less repugnant than the one being perpetrated by the USA? Are such
statements not fundamentally hypocritical?
We
can observe a paradox here: Putin has criticized the evil immorality
of the western society and imperial policies many times (most
famously in Munich and at the UN). But Putin has never said anything
about the evil immorality of the state of Israel. And yet Israel is
the center of gravity, the nexus, of the entire AngloZionist Empire,
especially since the Neocons turned Trump into their subservient
lackey. In this, and in so many other areas, Russia needs to follow
the example of Iran whose leaders have shown far more morality and
principled policies in spite of Iran being much smaller and
comparatively weaker than Russia.
In
2006 a thousand men or so of Hezbollah dared to defy the entire
AngloZionist Empire (the US was, as always, backing Israel to the
hilt) and they prevailed. Russian soldiers have shown time and again,
including recently in Syria, they they have the same type of courage.
But Russian politicians really seem to be of a much more tepid and
corruptible type, and there is always the risk that Putin might
gradually become less of an officer and more of a politician. And
this, in turn, means that those of us who oppose the Empire and
support Putin and Russia must imperatively make that support
conditional upon a clearly stated set of moral and spiritual
principles, not on a “my country right or wrong” kind of loyalty
or, even less so, on a “the enemy of my enemy is my friend” kind
of fallacy. Should Putin continue in his apparent attempts to appease
the Israelis a new type of internal opposition to his rule might gain
power inside Russia and new internal tensions might be added to the
already existing exernal ones.
Right
now Putin still has a lot of “credibility capital” left in spite
of his recent mistakes. However, Putin recent decisions have raised a
lot of unpleasant questions which must be answered and will so in
time. In the meantime, as they say in the USA, “hope for the best,
prepare for the worst, and settle for anything in the middle”. The
Scripture also warns us not to make idols of leaders: “Trust not in
princes, nor in the children of men, in whom there is no safety”
(Ps 145:3 LXX). The worldly evil we are fighting, today in the shape
of the AngloZionist Empire, is but a manifestation of a much deeper,
spiritual evil: “For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but
against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the
darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places”
(Eph. 6:12). The young men and women from the Shia movement Amal got
it right when they chose the name “Party of God” for their
movement when they created Hezbollah in 1985. And Iran was right when
it became an Islamic Republic: if we want to defeat the Empire we
need to always let spiritual matters and moral crieria remain above
any of our “pragmatic” worldly political considerations or
national/ethnic loyalties: that is how we can defeat those who place
a dollar value on absolutely everything they see in their narrow
materialistic worldview.
Conclusion two: the quest for “Russian values”
Russian
political ambiguities are the direct result of the fact that Russia,
as whole, has yet to define what “Russian values” really are. The
historical Russia was founded on Patristic Christianity and the Roman
civilizational model and the Soviet Union on Marxism-Leninism. The
1990s marked the total triumph of materialism run amok. But unlike
Hezbollah or Iran, the “New Russia” (as I like to call it) is not
based on anything other than a Constitution written mostly by US
advisors and their proxies and a general opposition to the western
civilizational model (especially since 2014). Being against something
is not an inspiring, or even tenable, political or moral stance (as
the White Guards discovered during the Russian civil war).
Furthermore, in her confrontation with an AngloZionist Empire which
stands for absolutely nothing besides base instincts, Russia needs to
stand *for* something, not just against something else. As long as
Russia will not firmly define and proclaim a set of spiritual/moral
values she stands for, the current zigs-zags will continue and
Russian policies will prove to be inconsistent, at best.
[Sidebar:
here I want to contrast the Russian society at large with the Russian
armed forces who, besides having a lot of good equipment, have a very
strong and clear ethos and a rock solid understanding and clarity
about what they stand for. This is why Russian soldiers have
consistently and spontaneously been willing to sacrifice their lives.
The Russian civilian society still lacks that kind of clarity, and
Russian politicians, who are no better in Russia than elsewhere,
often make use of that. The Russian armed forces are also the one
institution with the strongest historical memory and the deepest
roots in Russian history. I would argue that they are the only
institution in modern Russia whose roots truly go back to before the
1917 Revolution and even much further back than that. As descendant
of “White Russians” myself I have always found it uncanny and,
frankly, amazing how much closer I have felt to Russian military
officers than to Russian civilians. To me it often feels as if there
were two types of Russians simultaneously coexisting: the “new
Russian” type (still in the process of being defined) and the
military officer corps (Soviet or post-Soviet). That latter type
almost instinctively made sense to me and often felt like family.
This is hardly a scientific observation, but this has been my
consistent personal experience].
There
is a very high likelihood that Israel will succeed in triggering a US
attack on Iran. If/when that happens, this will trigger a political
crisis inside Russia because the space for the current political
ambiguities will be dramatically reduced. On moral and on pragmatic
grounds, Russia will have to decide whether she can afford to be a
bystander or not. This will not be an easy choice as their shall be
no consensus on what to do inside the ruling elites. But the stakes
will be too high and the consequences of inaction prohibitive. My
hope is that a major military conflict will result in a sharp
increase of the power and influence of the military “lobby”
inside the Kremlin. Eventually and inevitably, the issue of Israel
and Zionism will have to be revisited and the pro-Israeli lobby
inside Russia dealt with, lest Russia follow the same path to
self-destruction as the USA. For this reason the concept of “true
sovereignization” is the one patriotic slogan/goal that Eurasian
Sovereignists must continue to promote (regardless of the actual
terminology used) because it points towards the real problems in
Russian internal and foreign policies which must be addressed and
resolved. This will be a long and difficult process, with victories
and setbacks. We better get used to the idea that what happened in
the past couple of weeks will happen again in the future.
The
Saker
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