Empires over-expand,
over-reach and fail. Their ineptitude is gargantuan because their
organization is an umbrella over diffuse and contradictory interests and
forces. Those at the top don’t know what goes on beneath them, cannot obtain
good information, can’t control those below them, can’t formulate clear
goals, can’t measure whether they are attaining those goals, are subject to
biased advice, act on their own biases, and govern with the weaknesses and
limitations endemic to all human beings.
The relations between the
U.S. government and NATO are a case in point. Just as the colonial and
imperial projects of past empires typically cost more than their gains,
proving to be albatrosses, so is keeping NATO alive when it should have been
killed in 1989.
For the U.S., NATO
involves many costs now and many obligations that can prove to be costly in
the future, with the burdens falling upon Americans. Eastern Europe,
specifically Serbia and Poland, was the locus of frictions that brought about
two world wars in which the Americans should not have been involved. Ukraine
now is a potential third such locus. NATO is building it up as such a flash
point, but the presence of other eastern European nations in NATO all also
involve U.S. commitments.
Everyone knows that NATO cannot commit forces in a significant way without
U.S. participation and approval. Still, NATO’s every statement, threat and
action about Ukraine create uncertainty about U.S. intentions until the U.S.
clarifies its position. NATO, while not fully independent, still has the
capability of influencing the situation and its members. This creates another
level of uncertainty, when the tail wags the dog.
There now exists a dangerous set of relations in which a U.S. general,
supposedly under the command of the U.S. president, is under the command of
an unelected NATO body. He speaks out on his own about a dangerous situation
that could create a major war and confrontation between the U.S. and Russia.
He is asked to make and does make military plans that could involve U.S.
forces. The Russians then have to act without knowing precisely what the U.S.
intends or how important NATO’s actions are. It must clarify this by
communicating with the U.S., and that always creates its own uncertainty.
Obama already has ruled out war over Ukraine. So we have
an insubordinate general working for another organization (NATO) that
pretends to be a government, and he makes statements that defy what his
Commander-in-Chief has already said. We can only hope that Obama means what
he says and does not turn 180 degrees as other presidents in similar
circumstances have been known to do, such as Woodrow Wilson.
NATO’s threats enhance the odds of a Russian incursion into Ukraine
because of its implication that Ukraine is or should be in NATO. However,
such an invasion and war are really not in Russia’s interest. A fourth generation
war fought by Ukrainians against Russia would cost Russia dearly as would the
onus and consequences of invading Ukraine.
Either the U.S. prefers to play the game of power politics in this dual
way through a NATO proxy or it has unintentionally created a setup involving
NATO that has created a loose cannon. The leaders of the U.S. government
themselves don’t know. They don’t know the whole of the costs of having NATO
around and they don’t know how to liquidate it at this point. No matter what,
the interests of the Europeans involved and the interests of NATO itself come
into play. Those interests are not those of the U.S. government, as Obama’s
no-war statement has made clear; and they are certainly not those of most
Americans who cannot find Ukraine on a map.
The very idea of mobilizing U.S. troops or any forces to defend Ukraine is
absurd because the only way to back up this action is to be prepared to
engage in a major war in Ukraine. The costs would be enormous. The
implementation of it would be hugely costly and quite possibly militarily
ineffective. Ukraine and Ukrainians would be destroyed. It would mean
conventional war with Russia that could escalate to nuclear war. It would
have large unpredictable consequences. All of this is inconceivable. How absurd
is it to fight Russia over a land that Russia is not attacking when such a
war was avoided for decades of the Cold War? How does that benefit Americans?
But there is absolutely no reason for such a war. Why not? Mainly because
Russia has floated a number of proposals that involve resolving the status of
Ukraine. Furthermore, Ukraine’s position as a state is far from clear. What
exactly would be defended and why? There is ample scope to settle Ukraine’s
political status peacefully.
NATO Plans for U.S. Troop Mobilization
NATO’s chief issued a fresh threat to Russia:
“Russia must pull back its troops from the Ukrainian border as a first step
to start dialogue over the crisis there, NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh
Rasmussen said on Thursday.”
In
addition, “In an interview with the Associated Press, US Air Force Gen.
Philip Breedlove said that forthcoming plans intended to ensure stability in
Europe for the NATO partners in the area could involve the mobilizing of
American troops.”
Breedlove has been hawkish on the Ukraine-Russia situation for several
weeks, as has been Rasmussen. Breedlove is the USAF commander in charge of
NATO’s military.
“Breedlove told the newswire that he has every intention of unveiling his
proposal ahead of next Tuesday’s deadline, and that he wouldn’t ‘write off
involvement by any nation, to include the United States.’”
There is no public indication at this time that these threats, proposals
and plans issued by NATO that could involve U.S. round forces have been
coordinated or approved by the U.S. government.
NATO continues to be a dangerous and aggressive organization that is
acting as if it were an independent state with its own relations with
existing states. Its officials have inserted it into the Ukraine-Russian
situation.