A Fateful Moment of History Is
Upon Us
A Fateful Moment of History Is Upon Us
Paul Craig Roberts
Dear Readers,
I have explained to
you that there has been no Russian defeat in Ukraine and will not be a Russian
defeat. I informed you that Putin and the Kremlin are committed to one
important thing that differentiates Russia from the US and that is that Russia
follows international law and the US does not. This is why there has
been no “Russian invasion of Ukraine” as proclaimed by Western propagandists. Kiev,
the functioning of the Ukraine government, and the cities and infrastructure of
western Ukraine have not been attacked. The Kremlin has limited its military
operations to the areas in Ukraine where the majority Russian population was
being shelled, occupied, and murdered by Ukrainian forces and which faced last
February an invasion of a large Western-trained Ukrainian army and neo-Nazi
militias intended to overthrow the two independent Donbass republics recognized
by the Russian government. The republics requested Russia’s
intervention, which made the “limited military operation” legal under
international law.
As my readers know, I regard the
limited operation a mistake as it has drawn out the conflict and allowed the
West to get deeply involved, thus promising a wider war that would likely turn
nuclear. I thought and still do that Russia was emphasizing legality
at the risk of nuclear war.
The Kremlin has now acted to
remove the constraint of international law with the referendums in the four
areas whether the inhabitants wish reunification with Russia. It is
clear that the vote will be yes, and that the Duma and the Kremlin will proceed
rapidly to reincorporate the former Russian territory back into Russia.
At that point Ukraine’s
continuation of the war involves direct Ukrainian aggression against Russia
herself. This frees the Kremlin’s hands as the war becomes Russia’s
response to Ukrainian aggression. At this point it will be clear to
all involved that Kiev, the Ukraine government, and the cities and
infrastructure of western Ukraine no longer have immunity. In other
words it becomes a real war with devastating consequences for Ukraine and possibly
as well for all Western suppliers of weapons and intelligence.
Americans are not prepared for
this, because all they have heard about the conflict is Russophobic propaganda
and false reporting of the reality.
Larry Johnson, an honest and
competent commentator, repeats this account and adds that the West lacks the
capacity to produce weapons and ammunition on the scale demanded by
a full war and that the European economies are facing shutdowns as the
consequent of US sanctions against Russia. The message is that the
US/NATO have no means of preventing a rapid Russian conquest of Ukraine except
by resort to nuclear war, in which case the Western World will cease to exist.
That we could be in this
extremely dangerous position is due to the total absence in the West of an
honest and independent media and of honest and competent Russian experts. Essentially,
there is no intelligence in the West among those making decisions and no
accurate information getting through to the Western populations.
I and a few others have made huge
efforts, but we are called “conspiracy theorists,” “Russian agents/dupes,” and
other names used to discredit those who actually understand the reality of the
situation. The growing restraints on what can be said, or if
said paid attention to, has created massive ignorance as we come to a possible
fateful moment in history.
Here is Larry Johnson:
MORE ON THE REFERENDUM GAME
CHANGER
https://sonar21.com/more-on-the-referendum-game-changer/
26 September 2022 by Larry Johnson 58 Comments
Remember three weeks ago when
Putin and the Russian military were on the ropes and the Ukrainian army was
steamrolling through Kharkov? That was then and Urkaine’s promised victory
failed to materialize. With the benefit of hindsight, it appears that Russia
abandoned the strategically meaningless territory in the Kharkov Oblast of
Ukraine and re-deployed forces to the Donbas, Zaporhyzhia and Kherson. Why? To
be in position for the referendum–i.e., to defend the Ukraine oblasts that
would be given the chance to vote whether or not to reunite with mother Russia.
Putin’s subsequent announcement of the referenda, which began last Friday, was
not a Hail Mary pass nor an act of desperation. The planning for this had been
in the works for at least a month, maybe longer.
While Ukraine continued to throw
its troops against the Russian lines and launched artillery strikes on civilian
targets, it paid a terrible price in terms of human casualties and destroyed
tanks and combat vehicles, and failed completely to disrupt the vote. There
have been international observers monitoring the vote throughout the four
oblasts. I wish at least one reporter would ask these observers when they were
first contacted and asked to come to the Russian controlled territory and do
the monitoring. That detail would provide some insight into the extent of the
pre-planning for the referenda.
It appears that the vote to
reunite with Russia will be overwhelming in favor of becoming Russian
republics. Once the results are certified the Russian Duma will act to accept
the decision and Putin will put the cherry on the sundae and make it official.
At that point–this Friday–the special military operation in Ukraine will end
and Russia will be in position to defend its new territory.
I expect Putin to speak
commemorating the event and will put Ukraine, NATO and the United States on
notice that any further attacks on Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporhyzhia and Kherson
will be an attack on Russia. Ukraine and the west will be on notice. The ball
will be in their court.
This will create an opportunity
for what is left of Ukraine to seek peace. I doubt that Ukraine and the west
will accept this chance. The attacks on the new Russian population will
continue and Russia will act. In contrast to the restraint demonstrated during
the course of the last six plus months, Russia is likely to respond with more
aggressive tactics that may include turning off the power in Ukraine and
attacking command centers, including Zelensky’s headquarters in Kiev. This will
lead to a significant escalation in the combat, but Ukraine and NATO will have
a limited capacity to respond. Why?
The west no longer has the
industrial base to match Russia’s production of war material. This weakness is
compounded by the double whammy of inflation and economic collapse that is
savaging Europe and starting to hurt the United States. The Royal United Services
Institute (RUSI), the world’s oldest and the UK’s leading defence and security
think tank, recently published an important essay detailing this decline:
The war in Ukraine has proven
that the age of industrial warfare is still here. The massive consumption of
equipment, vehicles and ammunition requires a large-scale industrial base for
resupply – quantity still has a quality of its own. The mass scale combat has
pitted 250,000 Ukrainian soldiers, together with 450,000 recently mobilised
citizen soldiers against about 200,000 Russian and
separatist troops. The effort to arm, feed and supply these armies is a monumental task.
Ammunition resupply is particularly onerous. For Ukraine, compounding this task
are Russian deep fires capabilities, which target Ukrainian military industry
and transportation networks throughout the depth of the country. The Russian
army has also suffered from Ukrainian cross-border attacks and acts of sabotage, but at a smaller scale. The rate of ammunition and
equipment consumption in Ukraine can only be sustained by a large-scale
industrial base.
This reality should be a concrete
warning to Western countries, who have scaled down military industrial capacity
and sacrificed scale and effectiveness for efficiency. This strategy relies on
flawed assumptions about the future of war, and has been influenced by both the
bureaucratic culture in Western governments and the legacy of low-intensity
conflicts. Currently, the West may not have the industrial capacity to fight
a large-scale war. If the US government is planning to once again
become the arsenal of democracy, then the existing capabilities of the US
military-industrial base and the core assumptions that have driven its
development need to be re-examined.
https://www.rusi.org/explore-our-research/publications/commentary/return-industrial-warfare
This is the work of Lt Col (Retd)
Alex Vershinin, a US citizen. He spells out in detail the challenge the United
States and its NATO allies face if they dare to engage Russia in a tit-for-tat
battle:
Presently, the US is decreasing
its artillery ammunition stockpiles. In 2020, artillery ammunition purchases
decreased by 36% to $425 million. In 2022, the plan is to reduce expenditure on 155mm artillery rounds to $174
million. This is equivalent to 75,357 M795 basic ‘dumb’ rounds for regular
artillery, 1,400 XM1113 rounds for the M777, and 1,046 XM1113 rounds for
Extended Round Artillery Cannons. Finally, there are $75 million dedicated for
Excalibur precision-guided munitions that costs $176K per round, thus totaling
426 rounds. In short, US annual artillery production would at best only last
for 10 days to two weeks of combat in Ukraine. If the initial estimate of Russian
shells fired is over by 50%, it would only extend the artillery supplied for
three weeks.
The US is not the only country
facing this challenge. In a recent war game involving US, UK and French
forces, UK forces exhausted national
stockpiles of critical ammunition after eight days.
https://www.rusi.org/explore-our-research/publications/commentary/return-industrial-warfare
Russia, by contrast, enjoys the
luxury of defense plants that are operating 24-7 and producing ammunition,
vehicles, tanks, drones, missiles and rockets. The west still labors under the
delusion that Russia’s economy is barely tottering along. Russia has the
minerals, material and qualified personnel required to produce what the Russian
military needs to sustain operations; especially intense combat operations.
I do not know if this was the
Russian plan from the outset–i.e., conduct operations that would create a de facto
disarmament of the United States and Europe–or if this is pure serendipity.
Regardless, the west has no viable options, short of nuclear war, of defeating
Russia in Ukraine.
The coming weeks will expose
fractures in the NATO alliance. Britain, for example, woke up this morning to
learn that the once mighty pound Sterling, which once had twice the value of
the US dollar, is now worth less than the dollar. That means that the Brits
will be paying more for products they import from the United States. Although
the United States only accounts for 12% of the UK imports, the price increase will further inflame the
inflationary spiral in the UK. Newly minted British Prime Minister Liz Truss
already is facing push back from the Tories about her proposed economic plan.
The death of Queen Elizabeth put the political problems on a back burner for a
couple of weeks. That honeymoon is over and the pressure of domestic politics
in the UK will make continued support for Ukraine less certain.
The collapsing economies in
France, Germany and Italy also will compel those countries to spend more time
trying to quiet growing domestic unrest. When you factor in the energy crisis
and Ukrainian military setbacks as winter sets in, the foundation of NATO unity
vis-a-vis Ukraine, is likely to crack.
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