Submitted by: Donald Hank
Chris
Martenson, Cofounder, Peak Prosperity
Ukraine is back in the news cycle and for good reason. The cease-fire
has broken, fighting is intensifying, and the Western-supported and
installed leadership in Kiev is losing the campaign. At this point, the
West’s choice is to either double down and bet even more on a badly
failing set of policies, or admit it has lost this round and seek to
deescalate the situation.Meanwhile, Europe has finally woken up to the risks and seems to be ready to carve out a different path than the US. A lot hinges on the high-level talks that are currently underway between Russia and Europe’s leaders.
As President Hollande of France put it on February 7, “If we don’t find not just a compromise but a lasting peace agreement, we know perfectly well what the scenario will be. It has a name, it’s called war.”
He’s not simply referring to an escalation of the factions fighting within Ukraine. He’s warning about the real deal: a wider conflict that could easily spread into Europe, and possibly, embroil powers across the world.
A
Recipe for Unrest
As I’ve written previously, the West, especially the
US, was instrumental in toppling the democratically elected president of
Ukraine back in February 2014. US officials were caught on tape plotting
the coup, and then immediately supported the hastily installed and
extremist officials that now occupy the Kiev leadership positions.In short, the crisis in Ukraine was not the result of Russia’s actions, but the West’s. Had the prior president, Yanukovych, not been overthrown, it’s highly unlikely that Ukraine would be embroiled in a nasty civil war. Relations between Russia and the West would be in far better repair.
Russia, quite predictably and understandably, became alarmed at the rise of fascism and Nazi-sympathetic powers on its border. Remember the repeated statements by Kiev officials recommending extermination of the Russian speakers who make up the majority living in eastern Ukraine? Were a parallel situation happening in Canada, for example, I would fully expect the US to be similarly and seriously interested and involved in the outcome.
The only people seemingly surprised by this predictable Russian reaction toward protecting its people and border interests are the neocons at the US State Department who instigated the conflict in the first place. In my experience, these are dangerous people principally because they seem to lack perspective and humility.
Ukraine’s
Civil War: Going Poorly for the Regime
Looking at the state of things, it’s not going well militarily for the
Kiev regime. Huge losses and persistent reports of low morale among
Ukrainian troops tell the tale: Kiev is losing badly.Let’s begin with the reports of the fighting in Ukraine, which have recently intensified:
Feb. 11, 2015
Kiev (AFP) – Intense fighting in Ukraine,
including a devastating rocket strike on Kiev’s military
headquarters in the east, killed at least 37 people on Tuesday,
the eve of a four-way peace summit.
Ukrainian President Petro
Poroshenko said rockets for the first time hit the military’s command
centre in Kramatorsk, the government’s administrative capital in
the region, well behind the frontlines and far from rebel
positions.
The latest fighting also saw rebels
seek to encircle railway hub Debaltseve and Ukrainian forces
launch a counter-offensive around the strategic port of Mariupol.
The rebels have encircled and ruined a number of Kiev forces over the
past several months in what are called “cauldrons,” where the encircled
forces are slowly ground down and destroyed. This appears to have finally happened in Debatlseve, which
would be just another in a long string of heavy losses for Kiev.The losses in prior cauldrons have been staggeringly high, with many analysts concluding that Kiev has been underreporting losses by as much as 90%.
I cannot vouch for all of these sources. But the following is a typical example of reporting coming from the front lines of the Ukraine conflict, which directly contradicts the official Kiev war reports:
Jan. 25, 2015
Artyomovsk, Ukraine – An
ashen-faced man in a loose-fitting military uniform shuffles past a
blood-soaked stretcher propped against the wall. Slowly stirring a cup of
tea, he watches Ukrainian military officials announce the day’s
casualties—one killed and 20 wounded.
“Don’t believe what they tell
you,” he says, checking the door is closed before continuing.
“There are many, many more. At
least 280 were injured in just one day last week and 30 or 40 killed.
There were many more killed this week, Debaltseve and Konstantinovka are
the worst cities now. I take 18 wounded to Kharkiv myself every
day.”
The man, who didn’t want to be named, is a
medic in Ukraine’s overstretched, under-resourced army. Clearly
traumatized, he speaks quietly and hesitantly, barely audible over the low
rumble of artillery fire from the outskirts of town.
His words confirm Ukraine’s
worst-kept secret—that the Ukrainian army is drastically understating its
casualties. But only now is the scale of that understatement
starting to become clear.
On Jan. 22, the director of Kostiantynivka
hospital told Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe monitors
that in the last two weeks that the number of soldiers admitted has
“increased dramatically, with figures comparable to those in
August and September 2014.”
Between Aug. 10 and Sept. 3, when Russian
troops first entered Ukraine in support of a beleaguered rebel force on
the brink of defeat, the Kyiv Post estimates at least 200
servicemen were killed.
Many of the recent casualties are
coming from areas around the besieged town of Debaltseve, a strategic rail
junction between Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts, where thousands of
Ukrainian soldiers are struggling to prevent being surrounded and cut off
from Ukrainian lines.
The town’s defenders—and its civilian
population—have faced an incessant artillery bombardment from three sides
since Russian-backed rebels launched a massive offensive all along the
front line last week.
I have read enough firsthand reports to suspect that this article is
pretty close to the truth. The contradicting numbers in the statements
from the Kiev regime about losses are very hard to believe.Part of what plagues Kiev’s forces is the age-old problem of fielding an unmotivated force. Not everybody is excited to be fighting against people from within their own country. Moreover, training is poor, equipment and ammunition are in poor shape and supply, and pay is often late in coming, if it comes at all. This is a very usual litany of problems that have plagued struggling armies through the centuries.
On the other side of the battle lines, you have people fighting for their homes, their families, and their ethnic community, which the Kiev regime has promised to exterminate if and when it’s given the chance.
Dubious
Reporting
It’s interesting to contrast foreign reporting with US reporting on the
conflict:
Jan. 20, 2015
Moscow – Intensifying battles,
mounting death tolls and new accusations of Russian interference in
eastern Ukraine have marked some of the worst fighting between
government troops and pro-Russian separatists since last summer, rendering
a months-old cease-fire agreement effectively defunct.
The two sides have been trading
heavy fire at the Donetsk airport, a prize that, though more
symbolic than strategic, has been at the center of punishing recent
attacks that have reduced much of the facility to rubble. Each
side has claimed control of the airport at various points, and
militia and army fighters there continued to launch strikes against each
other over the past several days.
The U.S. ambassador to Ukraine,
Geoffrey R. Pyatt, bolstered Ukraine’s accusations Tuesday, saying the
United States was alarmed by what he called a Russian-provoked military
escalation, coupled with the arrival of large quantities of weaponry from
Russian territory, according to the Russian Interfax news
service.
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Pavlo Klimkin
told reporters Tuesday that pro-Russian separatists were “taking
advantage” of the military’s compliance to seize “very substantial
territory—more than 500 square kilometers.”
Let’s decode this piece of writing from the Washington Post
and provide some essential context that is, regrettably, missing far too
often from US media sources when reporting on the Ukraine conflict.To begin, there’s the assertion once again that Russia has been supplying “large quantities” of weapons to the separatists. While this may or may not be true, not one shred of satellite or other imagery or any other evidence has been provided by the US to support that charge.
In this day and age, it is literally not possible to move large amounts of heavy weaponry across open land without satellites and/or drones taking pictures of them.
Furthermore, in this case the charges are being levied by one Geoffrey Pyatt, the infamous US ambassador to Ukraine who was caught on tape discussing the imminent coup of then-President Yanukovych. He also famously tweeted out a crudely doctored photo purporting to show that the missile attack on MH-17 came from the separatists—evidence that was quickly defrauded by the intelligence community.
Why the Washington Post would report anything from Pyatt as worthy of our serious consideration given his blighted track record so far is a complete mystery to me. It would be like recommending your friend to a doctor you knew had committed gross malpractice multiple times.
Next, the separatists are not “taking advantage” of a one-sided lull in the fighting to claim territory. They have been winning battle after battle. What they have taken advantage of is the poor training and lackluster military strategy undertaken by Kiev’s forces.
It should also be noted that the above article presents the status of the conflict an even match. There’s no indication that one side is winning or losing.
This is par for the course with US media reports these days, and it’s really a disturbing indication that the shoddy journalistic ethics on display during the horrendously misreported weapons of mass destructions lies that led to the most recent US attack on Iraq are still with us today.
It’s quite sad, really. Because when it comes to an issue as important as a potential conflict with Russia, the US owes it to itself to get the facts right. The stakes are worthy of that.
A final point about the shortcomings of the Washington Post piece above concerns the heavily contested Donetsk airport. Five days prior to the above article’s publication, the airport had been clearly reported by other outlets to have already been lost by Kiev forces:
Jan. 15, 2015
Russian-backed separatists
announced that they have captured the shattered remains of the Donetsk
airport terminal in eastern Ukraine and plan to claw back more
territory, further dashing hopes for a lasting peace agreement.
The airport, on the fringes of the rebel
stronghold of Donetsk, has been at the centre of bitter battles since May.
Control over it was split between the separatists and Ukrainian forces,
who had held onto the main civilian terminal. Reduced to little more than
a shell-strewn wreck, the building is of limited strategic importance but
has great symbolic value.
An AP reporter saw a rebel flag
hoisted over that building Thursday, although fighting still appeared to
be ongoing. Ukraine insisted government troops were holding their
positions at the airport.
Instead of the airport being up for grabs as the WaPo article
implies, it has had the rebel flag flying over it as of five days ago.
It’s clearly in the hands of one side, the separatists. That’s a huge
difference, and is just one more example of heavily slanted writing that
passes for news in the US these days.But leaving the shoddy reporting aside, the main summary here is that the intense fighting in Ukraine has resulted in mounting losses for Kiev.
All of which provides the context for this week’s hurriedly brokered “peace summit” that will involve France, Germany, Russia, and Ukraine.
Splitting
Away
Europe has begun the process of splitting away from the US on the
matter of Russia and Ukraine.What’s interesting is that an emergency meeting is being convened amongst several of the top leaders in the world, but look who’s suspiciously absent from the talks:
Feb. 5, 2015
The leaders of Germany and France abruptly
announced a summit with the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, in Moscow
on Friday in response to overtures from the Kremlin, raising hopes of a
breakthrough in the year-old Ukraine conflict.
The sudden and unusual decision by the
chancellor, Angela Merkel, and the president, François Hollande, to travel
to Moscow, with the French leader talking of decisions of war and peace,
increased the stakes in the crisis while also raising suspicions that the
Kremlin was seeking to split Europe and the US. Putin was said to have
made “initiatives” to the European leaders in recent days.
Merkel and Hollande met the Ukrainian
president, Petro Poroshenko, in Kiev on Thursday evening but left without
making any comment.
EU diplomats and officials said that
growing US talk of arming Ukraine was pushing the Russians and Europeans
towards a diplomatic deal, with both sides keen to avoid weapons
deliveries but also to keep the US on the sidelines of the diplomacy.
Note the progression of what transpired, which we can piece together
from this and other articles. US Secretary of State John Kerry
was in Kiev meeting with the president and prime minister of
Ukraine, but did not attend similar meetings with Hollande and Merkel held
on the same day.Then Hollande and Merkel jet straight off to Moscow for high-level talks.
Missing in action from the Germany-France-Ukraine-Russia talks is John Kerry, President Obama, or any other ranking US official. This speaks volumes about where we are in this narrative.
When the US started down this path of confrontation with Russia, which remains a complete strategic mystery to nearly all thoughtful observers, there were two large possible outcomes: isolating Russia and fracturing its growing ties with Europe; or accidentally fracturing the strong ties between the US and Europe.
Oops. Looks like we’ve opened Door #2.
I didn’t know how serious it was until I read this:
Feb. 8, 2015
Munich – Secretary of State John
Kerry on Sunday denied any divisions between the U.S. and
Europe over how to handle Russia, as Germany announced another
high-level summit aimed at stemming the crisis in Ukraine.
Kerry told a security conference in Munich
that he wanted to“assure everybody there is no division, there is
no split” between Washington and its European allies amid the
crisis in Ukraine.
“We are united, we are working
closely together,” he told the conference following meetings with
his French and German counterparts. “We all agree that this challenge will
not end through military force. We are united in our
diplomacy.”
It’s not terribly hard to read through that diplomatic double-speak
here. The US is “united in our diplomacy” with Europe, even though the US
was apparently not invited to be part of the biggest gathering of heads of
state on what could be the flash point for a major regional war.Nice try, John.
There’s a saying that news is never official until it’s denied. Well, I guess that makes it official: there’s an emerging split between the US and Europe over the matter of Russia and Ukraine. And it’s about time.
The key issue, apparently, is that the US, true to form, is ready to send in military arms to the Ukraine regime, and Europe thinks that’s a bad idea for multiple reasons. I could not agree more.
After all, when has the US arming one side of a regional conflict led to regional peace and a good outcome for the citizens of any particular area? If you can’t think of any recent examples, neither can I. The track record of late is nothing short of being a complete disaster for the people of the various countries involved. Iraq, Syria, Egypt, Yemen, and Nicaragua come to mind.
But the people of Ukraine have to be kicking themselves right about now. Not only did they fall for the rosy promises of change and hope peddled by the West, they also believed the West would be a better partner for them than Russia. Worse, instead of finding a way to have both as partners, they adopted the West’s idea that it had to be one or the other. And now their country is being torn apart.
Chris Martenson, PhD (Duke), MBA (Cornell) is an economic researcher and futurist specializing in energy and resource depletion. As one of the early econobloggers who forecasted the housing market collapse and stock market correction years in advance, Chris rose to prominence with the launch of his seminal video seminar, The Crash Course, which has also been published in book form (Wiley, March 2011). It’s a popular and extremely well-regarded distillation of the interconnected forces in the Economy, Energy, and the Environment (the “Three Es,” as Chris calls them) that are shaping the future, one that will be defined by increasing challe nges to growth as we have known it. In addition to the analysis and commentary he writes for his site Peak Prosperity, Chris’ insights are in high demand by the media as well as academic, civic, and private organizations around the world, including institutions such as the UN, the UK House of Commons, and US State Congresses.
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