The controversy over alleged Russian āaggressionā in Ukraine is already raining on the Kremlin parade with which Russia will mark the 70th anniversary of the Alliesā victory over Adolf Hitler and the Nazis on May 9.Ā U.S. President Barack Obama set the tone by turning down the Kremlinās invitation to take part in the celebration, and allies in Western Europe have been equally uncouth in saying No.
The fanfare on Red Square will be a āLast Hurrahā for most surviving World War II veterans, since few are likely to be able to be there for the 75th or 80th anniversaries. Though I was only five years old on V-E Day ā marking the victory in Europe ā I was delighted to receive an invitation to go to Russia this week for a smaller-scale celebration marking an equally important 70th anniversary ā April 25, 1945, the historic day on which U.S. and Russian troops met at the Elbe River.
On V-E Day, which came a couple of weeks later on May 9, 1945, I recall the thundering celebration as one of my most vivid early memories.Ā So I find it a particular shame that for this yearās 70th anniversary the usual thunderclaps of applause will be muted.
Tragically divided once again by hate, greed, and power-lust, Europe lies in the shadow of war, as the violence percolating in Ukraine threatens to result in wider, more open military intervention from outside. Equally sad, responsibility for the turmoil in Ukraine lies mostly at the doorstep of Washington.Ā Worse still for one who normally pretends to understand what drives foreign policy, how shall I explain to my hosts what lies behind U.S. actions in central Europe, when ā try as I may to come up with cogent explanations that make some sense ā the reasons elude me.
For those who may find my straightforward allocation of blame surprising, do not feel you must rely on me (although I have been watching what happens in Russia and Europe for half a lifetime).Ā I strongly recommend the trenchant insights of John Mearsheimer, pre-eminent political science professor at the University of Chicago, and professor Stephen F. Cohen of Princeton and New York University, a distinguished Russianist who has been a Kremlin watcher even longer than I have.
Last fall, a year into the burgeoning troubles in Ukraine, Mearsheimer stunned those who had been misled by hate-Putin propaganda when he placed an article in the Very-Establishment journal Foreign Affairs entitled āWhy the Ukraine Crisis is the Westās Fault,ā and more recently followed up with a more recent op-ed entitled āDonāt Arm Ukraine.ā
As for Professor Cohen, if you have not already done so, please take the time to read his recent āWhy We Must Return to the US-Russian Parity Principle: the Choice is Either a New DĆ©tente or a More Perilous Cold War.ā and his earlier āPatriotic Heresy vs. the New Cold War.ā
You will emerge from that reading far better educated on the realities than those malnourished on the thin gruel of the co-opted corporate media, which ā unashamedly ā are well into a redux of their familiar drum-beating to send people from our poverty draft merrily off to war.Ā And for extra credit, I highly recommend veteran journalist Patrick L. Smithās recent interview of Professor Cohen, Part 1 of which Salon has published under the title āThe New York Times Basically Rewrites Whatever the Kiev Authorities Say.ā
Some Visitors to Moscow
U.S. leaders along with its foreign āvassalsā ā as Russian President Vladimir Putin has called them ā have responded to the Kremlinās invitations to the V-E celebration with āregrets.ā Not so Chinese President Xi Jinping , whose plan to come for the anniversary observance was announced in January.Ā The President of India, Pranab Mukherjee, will also take part.Ā Signs of the times.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel has devised a compromise.Ā So as not to appear to be breaking ranks with other āvassals,ā she will shun the parade but will travel to Moscow on May 10 to lay a wreath at a war memorial.Ā The U.S. will be represented by U.S. Ambassador to Russia John Tefft.
It may be difficult for history-starved Americans to understand why it should be that most Russians react so negatively to what they regard as something more serious than a mere gratuitous snub.Ā From watching Russian media one gets the clear impression that veterans and most men/women-on-the-street view the boycott as more serious than a petulant slight ā but rather as a supreme indignity.
For example, during Putinās four-hour TV tour de force Q&A with Russian citizens on April 16, one questioner said the world leaders who boycott the celebration āinsult the memory of war veterans of the Red Army. ⦠We liberated them out of that Nazi plague, or they would still be shouting āHeil!āā
And a retired colonel, who fought in the five-month-long, pivotal World War II battle of Stalingrad as a 19-year-old battery commander, had this to say: āIn the first years of the war, the Red Army, our people, were fighting all of Europe singlehandedly. ⦠Yes, we had allies, but they opened the second front too late.ā
Putin replied with a mix of condescension and feigned understanding: āSome simply do not want to go, but some are not being allowed to go by the āWashington apparatchiks,ā who say, āNo way.āĀ And they say, āWe wonāt go,ā although many would like to come.ā
Putin then underscored what he sees as the importance of the anniversary observance:Ā āWe pay tribute to a generation of victors.Ā We do this so that the present generation, both here and abroad, never forgets about this and never allows anything like this to happen again.ā
But what about those aging Russian veterans claiming the lionās share of credit for defeating Germany?Ā Do they exaggerate?
The Facts
As journalist Martin Sieff keeps pointing out, the current crop of young Americans and Russians has grown up fairly ignorant of how crucially important the Grand Alliance of WWII was to the survival of both their great nations, but all serious Western historians recognize that the Russian people made the greatest sacrifices. The nearly 27 million total of Soviet military and civilian dead was more than twice the death toll of all Americans, Britons, Commonwealth citizens, French and even Germans killed in the war combined.
None other than British War Premier Winston Churchill publicly acknowledged, āIt was the Red Army that tore the guts out of the Wehrmacht.āĀ Over 80 percent of the German soldiers killed in World War II died fighting the Red Army.
These facts have been largely forgotten on both sides of the Atlantic, in the United States and Western Europe.Ā At next monthās anniversary observance, pity the squandering of such an excellent opportunity to remind the world that there is strength in unity.
It is altogether understandable, of course, that at the end of WWII, many Europeans looked at their liberation by the Red Army with very mixed emotions. To begin with, in central Europe, liberation was followed by decades of Soviet occupation with harsh rule by Kremlin-installed satraps. So V-E has always been regarded there with considerable ambiguity.
In his extended Q & A on April 16, Putin made an unusual allusion to that dark period in addressing āthe ugly nature of the Stalin regimeā and the reaction that persists to this day.Ā He conceded: ā[It] āmay not be very pleasant forĀ us toĀ admit. But inĀ truth, we, orĀ rather our predecessors, gave cause forĀ this. Why? Because after World War II, we tried toĀ impose our own development model onĀ many Eastern European countries, andĀ we did so byĀ force.
āThis has toĀ be admitted. There is nothing good about this andĀ we are feeling theĀ consequences now. Incidentally, this is more orĀ less what theĀ Americans are doing today, asĀ they try toĀ impose their model onĀ practically theĀ entire world, andĀ they will fail asĀ well.ā
More Recent History
The Ukraine crisis and other circumstances now clouding the May 9 celebration are perhaps the inevitable consequence of another lost opportunity, the chance for an enduring peace in Europe after the fall of the Berlin Wall. That hope was squandered by Western leaders who reneged on earlier promises to welcome a very new kind of Russia into European security arrangements, as the Soviet empire fell apart.
In sum, instead of President George H. W. Bushās 1990-91 vision of a āEurope whole and freeā from Portugal to the Ural mountains, the world got the āWolfowitz doctrineā of 1992 embodied in the draft Defense Policy Guidance drafted by then-Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Paul Wolfowitz: āOur first objective is to prevent the re-emergence of a new rival, either on the territory of the former Soviet Union or elsewhere, that poses a threat on the order of that posed formerly by the Soviet Union.ā
While George H. W. Bush softened the rhetoric, the Wolfowitz approach did become the core principle of a āWe-Won-the-Cold-Warā triumphalist policy, with which Bush the Elder, Bill Clinton and Bush the Younger went back on the elderās promise ānot to take advantageā of the fall of the USSR and not to paint Russia as the big loser.
During an interview late last year, former Russian leader Mikhail Gorbachev reminisced about what could have been: āI remember the Paris Summit in 1990. Europe offered an example of how to build ā¦Ā a new relationship.Ā The Americans ā and Bush senior, talked about it.Ā And I spoke about it. ⦠And one wonders how people can object to their own decisions.
āIt all began with the fact that the United States suddenly started talking about the creation of a ānew empire.āĀ An over-empire, a super-empire.Ā Alas, God and fate had put the task before them.Ā Yes, they thought their moment had come.ā
Despite promises by top U.S., German and NATO leaders not to move NATO to the east of a reunited Germany (which joined NATO in 1990), 12 new members ā all of them to the east ā subsequently joined, bringing total NATO membership to 28.Ā Worse still from Moscowās point of view, a NATO summit meeting in Bucharest declared on April 3, 2008:Ā āWe agreed that these countries (Ukraine and Georgia) will become members of NATO.ā
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had sternly warned U.S. Ambassador to Russia William Burns two months earlier that the Russians would say a loud NYET to that.Ā They did. Accordingly, it should have come as no surprise that the Russians decided that the U.S.-arranged coup dāĆ©tat of Feb. 22, 2014, in Kiev was one āregime changeā too many.
I have watched many government overthrows ā oops, sorry, the present term of art is āregime changeā ā but the way this coup was advertised in advance, for me, that was a first.Ā The key U.S. dramatis personae ā Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland and U.S. ambassador in Kiev Geoffrey Pyatt ā had been overheard plotting the coup more than two weeks before Feb. 22 in an intercepted telephone conversation that was posted on YouTube.Ā George Friedman, head of the well-connected STRATFOR think tank, has said, āIt truly was the most blatant coup in history.ā
Annexation of Crimea
What prompted the Kremlinās strong reaction?Ā Was it the coup dāĆ©tat on Moscowās doorstep or the prospect of Ukraine joining NATO or the risk of losing Russiaās only warm-water naval port to NATO or was it concern over U.S. plans for missile defense?Ā The correct answer, of course, is all-of-the-above; indeed, they are inextricably linked.
Putin has been very upfront about what moved him to action on Feb. 23, 2014, the day AFTER the putsch in Kiev. By the way, there is not one scintilla of evidence that either Putin or any other Russian leader planned to annex Crimea BEFORE the Feb. 22, 2014 coup.
After the Crimeans voted overwhelmingly to be rejoined to Russia, Putin permitted himself a somewhat jocular passage following a serious one, in addressing this very serious missile issue in a speech on March 18, 2014. to the Russian Duma and other officials at the Kremlin:
āLet me note too that we have already heard declarations from Kiev about Ukraine soon joining NATO. What would this have meant forĀ Crimea andĀ [the naval base at] Sevastopol inĀ theĀ future? It would have meant that NATOās navy would be right there inĀ this city ofĀ Russiaās military glory, andĀ this would create not anĀ illusory but aĀ perfectly real threat toĀ theĀ whole ofĀ southern Russia. These are things that could have become reality were it not forĀ theĀ choice theĀ Crimean people made, andĀ IĀ want toĀ say thank you toĀ them forĀ this. ā¦
āNATO remains aĀ military alliance, andĀ we are against having aĀ military alliance making itself atĀ home right inĀ our backyard orĀ inĀ our historic territory. IĀ simply cannot imagine that we would travel toĀ Sevastopol toĀ visit NATO sailors. OfĀ course, most ofĀ them are wonderful guys, but it would be better toĀ have them come andĀ visit us, be our guests, rather than theĀ other way round.ā
Putin has not disguised Moscowās motives regarding the annexing of Crimea.Ā This, for example, is what he said on April 17, 2014, during last yearās marathon Q & A on live TV:
āIāll use this opportunity to say a few words about our talks on missile defense.Ā This issue is no less, and probably even more important, than NATOās eastward expansion.Ā Incidentally, our decision on Crimea was partially prompted by this.ā (emphasis added)
Clear enough?Ā In Putinās eyes, missile defense systems in European countries near Russia and in adjacent waters would pose an existential threat to the forces upon which Russia relies as a deterrent.Ā In recent weeks, several top Russian national security officials have weighed in strongly on this issue.
This is not only a mark of their genuine strategic concern; Russian leaders also see it as increasingly difficult, in present circumstances, for the U.S. to justify a European missile defense system by using the same paper-thin rationale that such is needed to defend against missile attack from Iran.
During an interview on April 18, Putin again drew attention to George W. Bushās unilateral withdrawal from the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty of 1972 ā a key anchor for deterrence.Ā Putin listed it high on the list of serious problems with the U.S.
(On Dec. 13, 2001, President George W. Bush gave Russia notice of the U.S. withdrawal from the treaty, in accordance with the clause that required six monthsā notice before terminating the pact.Ā This was the first time in recent history that the United States has withdrawn from a major international arms treaty.)
Speaking the day before at an International Security Conference in Moscow, Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov insisted on the need for ājoint efforts based on respect for the legitimate interests of all partners,ā if peace is to be preserved.Ā He, too, focused on the U.S. missile defense programs as the primary cause of concern:
āGround-based missile defense systems will be deployed in Romania this year and in Poland by 2018. More ships with missile defense systems are being deployed.Ā We perceive all this as part of a global project that is creating risks for Russiaās strategic deterrence forces and upsetting regional security balances.
āIf the global missile defense program continues to be implemented without any adjustments, even as talks on the Iranian nuclear program are making headway, ⦠then the specific motives for establishing the European missile defense system will become obvious for everyone.ā
Lavrov was more soft-spoken than the official statement issued by his own ministry a week before on April 10.Ā That statement quoted President Obamaās public assurance in a speech in Prague in April 2009 about how the elimination of the āIranian threatā would also eliminate the main reason for the deployment of a missile defense system in Europe.
The Russian Foreign Ministry statement adds: āAgainst this background, the statements that āthe missile defense program is not directed against Russiaā look even less convincing.ā
A version of this article first appeared on Consortiumnews.com.
Ray McGovernĀ was an Army officer and CIA analyst for almost 30 year. He now serves on the Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity. Ā He is a contributor toĀ Hopeless: Barack Obama and the Politics of IllusionĀ (AK Press). He can be reached at:Ā [email protected].
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