The
Saker Examines PCR’s “One Day Tomorrow Won’t Arrive”
The
Saker Examines PCR’s “One Day Tomorrow Won’t Arrive”
Do
you think his assessment is accurate?
“Do
you think his assessment is accurate?” was the subject line of an email I got
from a good friend recently. The email referred to the article by Paul Craig
Roberts “One
Day Tomorrow Won’t Arrive” which claimed that “the US military is now
second class compared to the Russian military“. The article then went
on to list a number of Russian weapons systems which were clearly superior to
their US counterparts (when those even existed). My reply was short “Basically
yes. The USA definitely has the quantitative advantage, but in terms of quality
and training, Russia is way ahead. It all depends on on specific
scenarios, but yes, PCR is basically spot on“. This email exchange
took place after an interesting meeting I had with a very well informed
American friend who, in total contrast to PCR, insisted that the USA had total
military supremacy over any other country and that the only thing keeping the
USA from using this overwhelming military might was that US leaders did not
believe in the “brutal, unconstrained, use of force”. So what is going on
here? Why do otherwise very well informed people have such totally
contradictory views?
First,
a disclaimer. To speak with any authority on this topic I would have to
have access to a lot of classified data both on the US armed forces and on the
Russian ones. Alas, I don’t. So what follows is entirely based on
open/public sources, conversations with some personal contacts mixed in with
some, shall we say, educated guesswork. Still, I am confident that what
follows is factually correct and logically analyzed.
To
sum up the current state of affairs I would say that the fact that the US armed
forces are in a grave state of decay is not as amazing by itself as is the fact
that this almost impossible to hide fact is almost universally ignored.
So let’s separate the two into “what happened” and “why nobody seems to be
aware of it”.
What
happened
Let’s
begin at the beginning: the US armed forces were never the invincible military
force the US propaganda (including Hollywood) would have you believe they have
been. I looked into the topic of the role of the western Allies in my “Letter to my
American friend” and I won’t repeat it all here. Let’s just say that
the biggest advantage the USA had over everybody else during WWII is a
completely untouched industrial base which made it possible to produce
fantastic numbers of weapon systems and equipment in close to ideal
conditions. Some, shall we kindly say, “patriotic” US Americans have
interpreted that as a sign of the “vigor” and “superiority” of the Capitalist
economic organization while, in reality, this simply was a direct result of the
fact that the USA was protected by two huge oceans (the Soviets, in contrast,
had to move their entire industrial base to the Urals and beyond, as for the
Germans, they had to produce under a relentless bombing campaign). The
bottom line was this: US forces were better equipped (quantitatively and,
sometimes, even qualitatively) than the others and they could muster firepower
in amounts difficult to achieve for their enemies. And, yes, this did
give a strong advantage to US forces, but hardly made them in any way “better”
by themselves.
After
WWII the USA was the only major industrialized country on the planet whose
industry had not been blown to smithereens and for the next couple of decades
the USA enjoyed a situation to quasi total monopoly. That, again, hugely
benefited the US armed forces but it soon became clear that in Korea and
Vietnam that advantage, while real, did not necessarily result in any US
victory. Following Vietnam, US politicians basically limited their
aggression to much smaller countries who had no chance at all to meaningfully
resist, nevermind prevail. If we look at the list of US military aggressions
after Vietnam (see here or here)
we can clearly see that the US military specialized in attacking defenseless
countries.
Then
came the collapse of the Soviet Union, the first Gulf War and the Global War on
Terror when US politicians clearly believed in their own propaganda about being
the “sole superpower” or a “hyperpower” and they engaged in potentially much
more complex military attacks including the full-scale invasion of Afghanistan
and Iraq. These wars will go down in history as case studies of what
happens when politicians believe their own propaganda. While Dubya
declared victory as soon as the invasion was completed, it soon became clear to
everybody that this war was a disaster from which the USA has proved completely
unable to extricate themselves (even the Soviets connected the dots and
withdrew from Afghanistan faster than the US Americans!). So what does
all this tell us about the US armed forces: (in no special order)
- They
are big, way bigger than any other
- They
have unmatched (worldwide) power projection (mobility) capabilities
- They
are high-tech heavy which gives them a big advantage in some type of
conflicts
- They
have the means (nukes) to wipe-off any country off the face of the earth
- They
control the oceans and strategic chokepoints
Is
that enough to win a war?
Actually,
no, it is not. All it takes to nullify these advantages is an enemy who
is aware of them and who refuses to fight what I call the “American type of
war” (on this concept, see here).
The recent wars in Lebanon, Kosovo, Afghanistan and Iraq have clearly shown
that well-adapted tactics mostly deny the US armed forces the advantages listed
above or, at the very least, make them irrelevant.
If
we accept Clausewitz’s thesis that “war is the continuation of politics by
other means” then it becomes clear that the US has not won a real war in a long
long time and that the list of countries willing to openly defy Uncle Sam is
steadily growing (and now includes not only Iran and the DPRK, but also
Afghanistan, Iraq, Yemen, Syria, Venezuela and even Russia and China).
This means that there is an emerging consensus amongst the countries which the
USA tries to threaten and bully into submission that for all the threats and
propaganda the USA is not nearly as formidable enemy as some would have you
believe.
Why
nobody seems to be aware of it
The
paradoxical thing is that while this is clearly well understood in the
countries which the USA is currently trying to threaten and bully into
submission, this is also completely ignored and overlooked inside the United
States themselves. Most Americans, including very well informed
ones, sincerelybelieve that their armed forces are “second to none”
and that the USA could crush any enemy which would dare disobey or otherwise
defy the AngloZionist Empire. Typically, when presented with evidence
that the USAF, USN and NATO could not even defeat the Serbian Army Corps in
Kosovo or that in Afghanistan the US military performance is very
substantially inferior to what the 40th Soviet Army achieved (with
mostly conscripts!), my interlocutors always reply the same thing: “yeah,
maybe, but if we wanted we could nuke them!“. This is both true and
false. Potential nuclear target countries for the USA can be subdivided
into three categories:
- Countries
who, if nuked themselves, could wipe the USA off the face of the earth
completely (Russia) or, at least, inflict immense damage upon the USA
(China).
- Those
countries which the USA could nuke without fearing retaliation in kind,
but which still could inflict huge conventional and asymmetric damage on
the USA and its allies (Iran, DPRK).
- Those
countries which the USA could nuke with relative impunity but which the
USA could also crush with conventional forces making the use of nukes
pointless (Venezuela, Cuba).
And,
of course, in all these cases the first use of nukes by the USA would result in
a fantastic political backlash with completely unpredictable and potentially
catastrophic consequences. For example, I personally believe that using
nukes on Iran would mark the end of NATO in Europe as such an action would
irreparably damage EU-US relations. Likewise, using nukes on the DPRK
would result in a huge crisis in Asia with, potentially, the closure of US
bases in Korea and Japan. Others would, no doubt, disagree :-)
The
bottom line: US nukes are only useful as a deterrent against other nuclear
powers; for all other roles they are basically useless. And since neither
Russia or China would ever contemplate a first-strike against the USA, you
could say that they are almost totally useless (I say almost, because in the
real world the USA cannot simply rely on the mental sanity and goodwill of
other nations; so, in reality, the US nuclear arsenal is truly a vital
component of US national security).
Which
leaves the Navy and the Army. The USN still controls the high seas and
strategic choke points, but this is becoming increasingly irrelevant,
especially in the context of local wars. Besides, the USN is still
stubbornly carrier-centric, which just goes to show that strategic vision comes
a distant second behind bureaucratic and institutional inertia. As for
the US Army, it has long become a kind of support force for Special Operations
and Marines, something which makes sense in tiny wars (Panama, maybe Venezuela)
but which is completely inadequate for medium to large wars.
What
about the fact that the USA spends more of “defense” (read “wars of
aggression”) than the rest of the planet combined? Surely that counts for
something?
Actually,
no, it does not. First, because most of that money is spent on greasing
the pockets of an entire class of MIC-parasites which make billions of dollars
in the free for all “bonanza” provided by that ridiculously bloated “defense”
budget. The never mentioned reality is that compared to the USA, even the
Ukrainian military establishment looks as only “moderately corrupt”!
[Sidebar:
you think I am exaggerating? Ask yourself a simple question: why does the
USA need 17
intelligence agencies while the rest of the world usually need from 2
to 5? Do you really, sincerely, believe that this has
anything to do with national security? If you do, please email me, I got
a few bridges to sell to you at great prices! Seriously, just the fact
that the USA has about 5 times more “intelligence” agencies than the rest of
the planet is a clear symptom of the the truly astronomical level of corruption
of the US “national security state”]
Weapons
system after weapons system we see cases in which the overriding number one
priority is to spend as much money as possible as opposed to deliver a weapon
system soldiers could actually fight with. When these systems are
engaged, they are typically engaged against adversaries which are two to three
generations behind the USA, and that makes them look formidable. Not only
that, but in each case the US has a huge numerical advantage (hence the choice
of small country to attack). But I assure you that for real military
specialists the case for the superiority of US weapons systems in a joke.
For example, French systems (such as the Rafale or the Leclerc MBT) are often
both better and cheaper than there US equivalents, hence the need for major
bribes and major “offset
agreements“.
The
Russian military budget is tiny, at least compared to the US one. But,
as William
Engdal, Dmitrii
Orlov and others have observed, the Russians get a much bigger bang
for the buck. Not only are Russian weapon systems designed by soldiers
for soldiers (as opposed to by engineers for bureaucrats), but the Russian
military is far less corrupt than the US one, at least when mega-bucks sums are
concerned (for petty sums of money the Russians are still much worse than the
Americans). At the end of the day, you get the kind of F-35 vs SU-35/T-50
or, even more relevantly, the kind of mean time between failure or man-hours to
flight hour ratios we have seen from the US and Russian forces over Syria
recently. Suffice to say that the Americans could not even begin to
contemplate to execute the number of sorties the tiny Russian Aerospace task
force in Syria achieved. Still, the fact remains that if the US
Americans wanted it they could keep hundred of aircraft in the skies above
Syria whereas the tiny Russian Russian Aerospace task never had more than 35
combat aircraft at any one time: the current state of the Russian military
industry simply does not allow for the production of the number of systems
Russia would need (but things are slowly getting better).
So
here we have it: the Americans are hands down the leaders in quantitative
terms; but in qualitative terms they are already behind the Russians and
falling back faster and faster with each passing day.
Do
the US military commanders know that?
Of
course they do.
But
remember what happened to Trump when he mentioned serious problems in the US
military? The Clinton propaganda machine instantly attacked him for being
non-patriotic, for “not supporting the troops”, for not repeating the
politically obligatory mantra about “we’re number one, second to none” and all
the infantile nonsense the US propaganda machine feeds those who still own a TV
at home. To bluntly and honestly speak about the very real problems of
the US armed forces is much more likely to be a career-ending exercise than a
way to reform a hopelessly corrupt system.
There
is one more thing. Not to further dwell on my thesis that most US
Americans are not educated enough to understand basic Marxist theory, but the
fact is that most of them know nothing about Hegelian dialectics. They,
therefore, view things in a static way, not as processes. For example,
when they compliment themselves on having “the most powerful and capable
military in the history of mankind” (they love that kind of language), they
don’t even realize that this alleged superiority will inevitably generate its
own contradiction and that this strength would therefore also produce its own
weakness. Well-read US American officers, and there are plenty of those,
do understand that, but their influence is almost negligible when compared to
the multi-billion dollar and massively corrupt superstructure they are immersed
in. Furthermore, I am absolutely convinced that this state of affairs is
unsustainable and that sooner or later there will appear a military or
political leader which will have the courage to address these problems
frontally and try to reform a currently petrified system. But the
prerequisite for that will probably have to be a massive and immensely
embarrassing military defeat for the USA. I can easily imagine that
happening in case of a US attack on Iran or the DPRK. I can guarantee it
if the US leadership grows delusional enough to try to strike at Russia or
China.
But
for the time being its all gonna be “red, white and blue” and Paul Craig
Roberts will remain a lone voice crying in the desert. He will be
ignored, yes. But that does not change the fact that he is right.
The
Saker
PS:
As for myself, I want to dedicate this
song by Vladimir Vysotskii to Paul Craig Roberts and to all the other
“Cassandras” who have the ability to see the future and the courage to warn us
about it. They usually end up paying a high price for their honesty and
courage.
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