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The frank words of
Russia’s President Vladimir Putin to the assembled participants of the
annual Munich Wehrkunde security conference have unleashed a storm of
self-righteous protest from Western media and politicians. A visitor
from another planet might have the impression that the Russian President
had abruptly decided to launch a provocative confrontation policy with
the West reminiscent of the 1943-1991 Cold War.
However, the details of
the developments in NATO and the United States military policies since
1991 are anything but ‘déjà vu all over again’, to paraphrase the
legendary New York Yankees catcher, Yogi Berra.
This time round we are
already deep in a New Cold War whose stakes are literally the future of
life on this planet. The debacle in Iraq, or the prospect of a US
tactical nuclear pre-emptive strike against Iran are ghastly enough. In
comparison to what is at play in the US global military buildup against
its most formidable remaining global rival, Russia, they loom relatively
small. The US military policies since the end of the Soviet Union and
emergence of the Republic of Russia in 1991 are in need of close
examination in this context. Only then do Putin’s frank remarks on
February 10 at the Munich Conference on Security make sense.
Because of the
misleading accounts of most of Putin’s remarks in most western media,
it’s worth reading in full in English (go to www.securityconference.de
for official English translation).
Putin spoke in general
terms of Washington’s vision of a ‘unipolar’ world, with ‘one
center of authority, one center of force, one center of decision-making,
calling it a ‘world in which there is one master, one sovereign. And
at the end of the day this is pernicious not only for all those within
this system, but also for the sovereign itself because it destroys
itself from within.’
Then the Russian
President got to the heart of the matter: ‘Today we are witnessing an
almost uncontained hyper use of force – military force – in
international relations, force that is plunging the world into an abyss
of permanent conflicts. As a result we do not have sufficient strength
to find a comprehensive solution to any one of these conflicts. Finding
a political settlement also becomes impossible.’
Putin continued, ‘We
are seeing a greater and greater disdain for the basic principles of
international law. And independent legal norms are, as a matter of fact,
coming increasingly closer to one state’s legal system. One state and,
of course, first and foremost the United States, has overstepped its
national borders in every way. This is visible in the economic,
political, cultural and educational policies it imposes on other
nations. Well, who likes this? Who is happy about this?’
These direct words
begin to touch on what Mr Putin is concerned about in US foreign and
military policy since the end of the Cold War some 16 or so years back.
But it is further in the text that he gets explicit about what military
policies he is reacting to. Here is where the speech is worth
clarification. Putin warns of the destabilizing effect of ‘space
weapons.’—‘it is impossible to sanction the appearance of new,
destabilising high-tech weapons…a new area of confrontation,
especially in outer space. Star wars is no longer a fantasy – it is a
reality…In Russia’s opinion, the militarization of outer space could
have unpredictable consequences for the international community, and
provoke nothing less than the beginning of a nuclear (arms race-f.w.e.)
era.’
He then declares,
‘Plans to expand certain elements of the anti-missile defense system
to Europe cannot help but disturb us. Who needs the next step of what
would be, in this case, an inevitable arms race?’
What does he refer to
here? Few are aware that while claiming it is doing so to protect itself
against the risk of ‘rogue state’ nuclear missile attack from the
likes of North Korea or perhaps one day Iran, the US recently announced
it is building massive anti-missile defense installations in Poland and
the Czech Republic.
Poland? Missile
defense? What’s this all about?
Missile Defense and a US Nuclear First
Strike
On January 29 US Army Brigadier General
Patrick J. O`Reilly, Deputy Director of the Pentagon`s Missile Defense
Agency, announced US plans to deploy anti-ballistic missile defense
elements in Europe by 2011, which the Pentagon claims is aimed at
protecting American and NATO installations from enemy threats coming
from the Middle East, not Russia. Following Putin’s Munich remarks,
the US State Department issued a formal comment noting that the Bush
Administration is ‘puzzled by the repeated caustic
comments about the envisaged system from Moscow.’
Oops…Better send that press release
back to the Pentagon’s Office of Deception Propaganda for rewrite. The
Iran missile threat to NATO installations in Poland somehow isn’t
quite convincing. Why not ask long-time NATO member Turkey if the US can
place its missile shield there, far closer to Iran? Or maybe Kuwait? Or
Israel?
US policy since 1999
has called for building some form of active missile defense despite the
end of the Cold War threat from Soviet ICBM or other missile launch. The
National Missile Defense Act of 1999 (Public Law 106-38) says so: ‘It
is the policy of the United States to deploy as soon as is
technologically possible an effective National Missile Defense system
capable of defending the territory of the United States against limited
ballistic missile attack (whether accidental, unauthorized, or
deliberate) with funding subject to the annual authorization of
appropriations and the annual appropriation of funds for National
Missile Defense.’
Missile defense was one of Donald Rumsfeld’s obsessions as Defense
Secretary.
Why
now?
What
is increasingly clear, at least in Moscow and Beijing, is that
Washington has a far larger grand strategy behind its seemingly
irrational and arbitrary unilateral military moves.
For
the Pentagon and the US policy establishment, regardless of political
party, the Cold War with Russia never ended. It merely continued in
disguised form. This has been the case with Presidents G.H.W. Bush,
William Clinton and with George W. Bush.
Missile
defense sounded plausible if the United States were vulnerable to attack
by a tiny band of dedicated Islamic terrorists able to commandeer a
Boeing aircraft with boxcutters. The only problem is missile defense is
not aimed at rogue terrorists like Bin Laden’s Al Qaeda, or states
like North Korea or Iran.
From
them the threat of a devastating nuclear strike on the territory of the
United States is non-existent. The US Navy and Air Force bomber fleet
today stands in full preparation to bomb, even nuke Iran back to the
stone age only over suspicions she is trying to develop independent
nuclear weapon technology. States like Iran have no capability to render
America defenseless, without risking nuclear annihilation many times
over.
Missile
defense came out of the 1980s when Ronald Reagan proposed developing a
system of satellites in space and radar bases around the globe,
listening stations and interceptor missiles, to monitor and shoot down
nuclear missiles before they hit their intended target.
It
was dubbed Star Wars by its critics, but the Pentagon officially has
spent more than $130 billion on such a system since 1983. George W. Bush
increased that significantly beginning 2002, to $11 billion a year,
double the level during the Clinton years. And another $53 billion for
the following five years has been budgeted.
Washington’s
obsession with Nuclear Primacy
What
Washington did not say, but Putin has now alluded to in Munich, is that
the US missile defense is not at all defensive. It is offensive, and
how.
The
possibility of providing a powerful state, one with the world’s most
awesome military machinery, a shield to protect it from limited attack,
is aimed directly at Russia, the only other nuclear power with anywhere
the capacity to launch a credible nuclear counterpunch.
Were
the United States able to effectively shield itself from a potential
Russian response to a US nuclear First Strike, the US would be able
simply to dictate to the entire world on its terms, not only to Russia.
That would be what military people term Nuclear Primacy. That is the
real meaning of Putin’s unusual speech. He isn’t paranoid. He’s
being starkly realistic.
Since
the end of the Cold War in 1989, it’s now clear that the US Government
has never for a moment stopped its pursuit of Nuclear Primacy. For
Washington and the US elites, the Cold War never ended. They just forgot
to tell us all.
The
quest for global control of oil and energy pipelines, the quest to
establish its military bases across Eurasia, its attempt to modernize
and upgrade its nuclear submarine fleet, its Strategic B-52 bomber
command, all make sense only when seen through the perspective of the
relentless pursuit of US Nuclear Primacy.
The
Bush Administration unilaterally abrogated the US-Russian ABM Treaty in
December 2001. It’s in a race to complete a global network of missile
defense as the key to US nuclear primacy. With even a primitive missile
defense shield, the US could attack Russian missile silos and submarine
fleets with no fear of effective retaliation, as the few remaining
Russian nuclear missiles would be unable to launch a convincing response
enough to deter a US First Strike.
The
ability of both sides—the Warsaw Pact and NATO—during the Cold War,
to mutually annihilate one another, led to a nuclear stalemate dubbed by
military strategists, MAD—mutual assured destruction. It was scary but
in a bizarre sense, more stable that what we have today with a
unilateral US pursuit of nuclear primacy. The prospect of mutual nuclear
annihilation with no decisive advantage for either side, led to a world
in which nuclear war had been ‘unthinkable.’
Now,
the US pursues the possibility of nuclear war as ‘thinkable.’
That’s really mad.
The
first nation with a nuclear missile shield would de facto have ‘first
strike ability.’ Quite correctly, Lt. Colonel Robert Bowman, Director
of the US Air Force missile defense program, recently called missile
defense, ‘the missing link to a First Strike.’
More
alarming is the fact no one outside a handful of Pentagon planners or
senior intelligence officials in Washington discusses the implications
of Washington’s pursuit of missile defense in Poland, Czech Republic
or its drive for Nuclear Primacy.
It
calls to mind ‘Rebuilding America’s Defenses,’ the September 2000
report of the hawkish Project for the New American Century, where Dick
Cheney and Don Rumsfeld were members. There they declared, ‘The United
States must develop and deploy global missile defenses to defend the
American homeland and American allies, and to
provide a secure basis for US power projection around the world.’
(author’s emphasis).
Before
becoming Bush’s Defense Secretary in January 2001, Rumsfeld headed a
Presidential Commission advocating the development of missile defense
for the United States.
So
eager was the Bush-Cheney Administration to advance its missile defense
plans, that the President and Defense Secretary ordered waiving usual
operational testing requirements essential to determining whether the
highly complex system of systems was effective.
The
Rumsfeld missile defense program is strongly opposed within the military
command. On March 26, 2004 no less than 49 US generals and admirals
signed an Open Letter to the President, appealing for missile defense
postponement.
As
they noted, ‘US technology, already deployed, can pinpoint the source
of a ballistic missile launch. It is, therefore, highly unlikely that
any state would dare to attack the US or allow a terrorist to do so from
its territory with a missile armed with a weapon of mass destruction,
thereby risking annihilation from a devastating US retaliatory
strike.’
The
49 generals and admirals, including Admiral William J. Crowe, former
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the Armed Forces, went on
to argue to the President, ‘As you have said, Mr. President,
our highest priority is to prevent terrorists from acquiring and
employing weapons of mass destruction. We agree. We therefore recommend,
as the militarily responsible course of action, that you postpone
operational deployment of the expensive and untested GMD (Ground-based
Missile Defense) system and transfer the associated funding to
accelerated programs to secure the multitude of facilities containing
nuclear weapons and materials, and to protect our ports and borders
against terrorists who may attempt to smuggle weapons of mass
destruction into the United States.’
What
the seasoned military veterans did not say was that Rumsfeld, Cheney,
Bush and company had quite another agenda than rogue terror threats.
They were after Full Spectrum Dominance, the New World Order, and the
elimination, for once and all, of Russia as a potential rival for power.
The
rush to deploy a missile defense shield is clearly not aimed at North
Korea or terror attacks. It is aimed at Russia and much less so, the far
smaller nuclear capacities of China. As the 49 generals and admirals
noted in their letter to the President in 2004, the US already had more
than sufficient nuclear warheads to hit a thousand bunkers or caves of a
potential rogue state.
Kier
Lieber and Daryl Press, two US military analysts, writing in the
influential Foreign Affairs of
the New York Council on Foreign Relations in March 2006, noted, ‘If
the United States’ nuclear modernization were really aimed at rogue
states or terrorists, the country’s nuclear force would not need the
additional thousand ground-burst warheads it will gain from the W-76
modernization program. The current and future US nuclear force, in other
words, seems designed to carry out a pre-emptive disarming strike
against Russia or China.
Referring
to the aggressive new Pentagon deployment plans for missile defense,
Lieber and Press add, ‘the sort of missile defenses that the United
States might plausibly deploy would be valuable primarily in an
offensive context, not a defensive one—as an adjunct to a US First
Strike capability, not as a stand-alone shield. If the United States
launched a nuclear attack against Russia (or China), the targeted
country would be left with a tiny surviving arsenal—if any at all. At
that point, even a relatively modest or inefficient missile defense
system might well be enough to protect against any retaliatory
strikes…’
This
is the real agenda in Washington’s Eurasian Great Game. Naturally, to
state so openly would risk tipping Washington’s hand before the noose
had been irreversibly tightened around Moscow’s metaphorical neck. So
the State Department and Defense Secretary Gates try to make jokes about
the recent Russian remarks, as though they were Putin’s paranoid
delusions.
This
entire US program of missile defense and nuclear First Strike
modernization is hair-raising enough as an idea. Under the Bush
Administration, it has been made operational and airborne, hearkening
back to the dangerous days of the Cold War with fleets of nuclear-armed
B-52 bombers and Trident nuclear missile submarines on ready alert
around the clock, a nuclear horror scenario.
Global
Strike: Pentagon Conplan 8022
The
march towards possible nuclear catastrophe by intent or by
miscalculation, as a consequence of the bold newWashington policy, took
on significant new gravity in June 2004, only weeks after the 49
generals and admirals took the highly unusual step of writing to their
President.
That
June, Defense Secretary Rumsfeld approved a Top Secret order for the
Armed Forces of the United States to implement something called Conplan
8022, ‘which provides the President a prompt, global strike
capability.’
The
term, Conplan, is Pentagon shorthand for Contingency Plan. What
‘contingencies’ are Pentagon planners preparing for? A pre-emptive
conventional strike against tiny North Korea or even Iran? Or a
full-force pre-emptive nuclear assault on the last formidable nuclear
power not under the thumb of the US’ Full Spectrum Dominance-- Russia?
The
two words, ‘global strike’, are also notable. It’s Pentagon-speak
to describe a specific pre-emptive attack which, for the first time
since the earliest Cold War days, includes a nuclear option, counter to
the traditional US military notion of nuclear weapons being only used in
defense to deter attack.
Conplan
8022, as has been noted by some, is unlike traditional Pentagon war
plans which have been essentially defensive responses to invasion or
attack.
In
concert with the aggressive pre-emptive 2002 Bush Doctrine, Bush’s new
Conplan 8022 is offensive. It could be triggered by the mere
‘perception’ of an imminent threat, and carried out by Presidential
order, without Congress.
Given
the details about false or faked ‘perceptions’ in the Pentagon and
the Office of the Vice President about Iraq’s threat of weapons of
mass destruction in 2003, the new Conplan 8022 suggests a US President
might order the missiles against any and every perceived threat or even
potential, unproven threat.
In
response to Rumsfeld’s June 2004 order, General Richard Myers, then
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, signed the order to make Conplan
8022 operational. Selected nuclear-capable bombers, ICBMs, SSBNs, and
‘information warfare’ (sic) units have been deployed against unnamed
high-value targets in ‘adversary’ countries.
Was
Iran an adversary country, even though it had never attacked the United
States? Was North Korea, even though it had never in five decades
launched a direct attack on South Korea, let alone any one else? Is
China an ‘adversary’ because it’s simply becoming economically too
influential?
Is
Russia now an adversary because she refuses to lay back and accept being
made what Brzezinski terms a ‘vassal’ state of the American Empire?
Because
there has been zero open debate inside the United States about Conplan
8022, there has been virtually no discussion of any of these potentially
nuclear-loaded questions.
What
makes the June 2004 Rumsfeld order even more unsettling to a world which
truly had hoped nuclear mushroom clouds had become a threat of the past,
is that Conplan 8022 contains a significant nuclear attack component.
It’s
true that the overall number of nuclear weapons in the US military
stockpile has been declining since the end of the Cold War. But not, it
seems, because the US is moving the world back from the brink of nuclear
war by miscalculation.
The
new missile defense expansion to Poland and Czech Republic is better
understood from the point of the remarkable expansion of NATO since
1991. As Putin noted, ‘NATO has put its frontline forces on our
borders… think it is obvious that NATO expansion does not have any
relation with the modernisation of the Alliance itself or with ensuring
security in Europe. On the contrary, it represents a serious provocation
that reduces the level of mutual trust. And we have the right to ask:
against whom is this expansion intended? And what happened to the
assurances our western partners made after the dissolution of the Warsaw
Pact?’
US
bases encircle Russia
As
Russian strategist and military expert, Yevgeny Primakov, a close
adviser to Putin, recently noted, NATO was ‘founded during the Cold
War era as a regional organization to ensure the security of US allies
in Europe.’ He adds, ‘NATO today is acting on the basis of an
entirely different philosophy and doctrine, moving outside the European
continent and conducting military operations far beyond its bounds.
NATO…is rapidly expanding in contravention to earlier accords. The
admission of new members to NATO is leading to the expansion of bases
that host the U.S. military, air defense systems, as well as ABM
components.’
Today,
NATO member states include not only the Cold War core in Western Europe,
commanded by an American. NATO also includes former Warsaw Pact or
Soviet Union states Poland, Latvia, Czech Republic, Estonia, Lithuania,
Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Slovakia and Slovenia, formerly of
Yugoslavia. Candidates to join include the Republic of Georgia, Croatia,
Albania and Macedonia. Ukraine’s President, Victor Yushchenko,
has tried aggressively to bring Ukraine into NATO. This is a clear
message to Moscow, not surprisingly, one they don’t seem to welcome
with open arms.
New NATO structures have also been formed
while old ones were abolished: The NATO Response Force (NRF) was launched at the 2002 Prague Summit. In 2003, just after the fall
of Baghdad, a major restructuring of the NATO military commands began.
The Headquarters of the Supreme Allied Commander, Atlantic was
abolished. A new command, Allied Command Transformation (ACT), was
established in Norfolk, Virginia. ACT is responsible for
driving ‘transformation’ in NATO.
By
2007 Washington had signed an agreement with Japan to co-operate on
missile defense development. She was deeply engaged in testing a missile
defense system with Israel. She has now extended her European Missile
Defense to Poland, where the Minister of Defense is a close friend and
ally of Pentagon neo-conservative war-hawks, and to the Czech Republic.
NATO has agreed to put the question of the Ukraine and Republic of
Georgia’s bids for NATO membership on a fast track. The Middle East,
despite the debacle in Iraq, is being militarized with a permanent
network of US bases from Qatar to Iraq and beyond.
On
February 15, the US House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee
approved a draft, the Orwellian-named NATO Freedom Consolidation Act of
2007 reaffirming US backing for the further enlargement of NATO,
including support for Ukraine to join along with Georgia.
From the Russian point of view, NATO's
eastward expansion since the end of the cold war has been in clear
breach of an agreement between then-Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev and US President George H.W. Bush which allowed for a peaceful unification of Germany. NATO's expansion
policy is seen as a continuation of a Cold War attempt to surround and
isolate Russia.
New bases to guard ‘democracy’?
An
almost unnoticed consequence of Washington’s policy since the bombing
of Serbia in 1999, has been establishment of an extraordinary network of
new US military bases, bases in parts of the world where it seems little
justified as a US defensive precaution, given the threat, huge taxpayer
expense, let alone other global military commitments.
In
June 1999, following the bombing of Yugoslavia, US forces began
construction of Camp Bondsteel, at the border between Kosovo and
Macedonia. It was the lynchpin in what was to be a new global network of
US bases.
Bondsteel
put US air power within easy striking distance of the oil-rich Middle
East and Caspian Sea, as well as Russia. Camp Bondsteel was at the time
the largest US military base built since the Vietnam War, with nearly
7,000 troops. The base had been built by the largest US military
construction company, Halliburton’s KBR. Halliburton’s CEO at the
time was Dick Cheney.
Before
the start of the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999, the Washington
Post matter-of-factly noted, ‘With the Middle-East increasingly
fragile, we will need bases and fly-over rights in the Balkans to
protect Caspian Sea oil.’
Camp
Bondsteel was but the first of a vast chain of US bases that have been
built during this decade. The US military went on to build military
bases in Hungary, Bosnia, Albania and Macedonia, in addition to Camp
Bondsteel in Kosovo, then still legally part of Yugoslavia.
One
of the most important and least mentioned new US bases was in Bulgaria,
a former Soviet satellite and now new NATO member. In a conflict---and
in Pentagon-speak there are only ‘conflicts,’ no longer wars, which
involved issues of asking the US Congress to declare them officially,
and provide just reason---the military would use Bezmer to ‘surge’
men and materiel toward the front lines. Where? In Russia?
The
US has been building its bases in Afghanistan. It built three major US
bases in the wake of its occupation of Afghanistan in winter of 2001, at
Bagram Air Field north of Kabul, the US’ main military logistics
center; Kandahar Air Field, in southern Afghanistan and Shindand Air
Field in the western province of Herat. Shindand, the largest US base in
Afghanistan, was built some 100 kilometers from the border with Iran.
Afghanistan
had historically been the heart of the British-Russia Great Game, the
struggle for control of Central Asia during the 19th and
early 20th Centuries. British strategy was to prevent Russia
at all costs from controlling Afghanistan and thereby gaining a warm
water port for its navy and threatening Britain’s imperial crown
jewel, India.
Afghanistan
is also seen by Pentagon planners as highly strategic. It is a platform
from which US military might could directly threaten Russia and China as
well as Iran and other oil-rich Middle East lands. Little had changed in
that respect over more than a century of wars.
Afghanistan
is in an extremely vital location, straddling South Asia, Central Asia,
and the Middle East. Afghanistan also lies along a proposed oil pipeline
route from the Caspian Sea oil fields to the Indian Ocean, where the US
oil company, Unocal, had been in negotiations, together with Cheney’s
Halliburton and with Enron, for exclusive pipeline rights to bring
natural gas from Turkmenistan across Afghanistan and Pakistan to
Enron’s huge natural gas power plant at Dabhol near Mumbai.
At
that same time, the Pentagon came to an agreement with the government of
Kyrgyzstan in Central Asia, to build a strategically important base
there, Manas Air Base at Bishkek’s international airport. Manas is not
only near to Afghanistan; it is also in easy striking distance to
Caspian Sea oil and gas, as well as to the borders of both China and
Russia.
As
part of the price of accepting him as a US ally in the War on Terror
rather than a foe,
Washington extracted an agreement from Pakistan’s military dictator,
General Pervez Musharraf, to allow the airport at Jacobabad, about 400km
north of Karachi, to be used by the US Air Force and NATO ‘to support
their campaign in Afghanistan.’ Two other US bases were built at
Dalbandin and Pasni.
This
all is merely a small part of the vast web of US-controlled military
bases Washington has been building globally since the so-called end of
the Cold War.
It’s
becoming clear to much of the rest of the world that Washington might
even itself be instigating or provoking wars or conflicts with nations
across the world, not merely to control oil, though strategic control of
global oil flows had been at the heart of the American Century since the
1920’s. That’s the real significance of what Vladimir Putin said in
Munich. He told the world what it did not want to hear: The American
‘Emperor’s New Clothes did not exist. The Emperor was clothed in
naked pursuit of global military control.
During
the early 1990s, at the end of the Cold War, the Yeltsin government had
asked Washington for a series of mutual reductions in the size of each
superpower’s nuclear missile and weapons arsenal. Russian nuclear
stockpiles were ageing and Moscow saw little further need to remain
armed to its nuclear teeth once the Cold War had ended.
Washington
clearly saw in this a golden opportunity to go for nuclear primacy, for
the first time since the 1950’s, when Russia first developed
Inter-Continental Ballistic Missile delivery capability for its growing
nuclear weapons arsenal.
Nuclear
primacy is an aggressive offensive policy. It means that one superpower,
USA, would have the possibility to launch a full nuclear First Strike at
Russia’s nuclear sites and destroy enough targets in the first blow,
that Russia would be crippled from making any effective retaliation.
With
no credible threat of retaliation, Russia had no credible nuclear
deterrent. It was at the mercy of the supreme power. Never before in
history had the prospect of such ultimate power in the hands of one
single nation seemed so near at hand.
This
stealthy move by the Pentagon for Nuclear Primacy has, up until now,
been carried out in utmost secrecy, disguised amid rhetoric of a
USA-Russia ‘Partnership for Peace.’
Rather
than take advantage of the opportunity to climb down from the brink of
nuclear annihilation following the end of the Cold War, Washington has
turned instead to upgrading its nuclear arsenal, at the same time it was
reducing its numbers.
While
the rest of the world was still in shock over the events of September
11, 2001, the Bush Administration unilaterally moved to rip up its
earlier treaty obligations with Russia to not build an anti-missile
defense.
On
December 13, 2001, President Bush announced that the United States
Government was unilaterally abandoning the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty
with Russia, and committing $8 billion for the 2002 Budget to build a
National Missile Defense system. It was pushed through Congress,
promoted as a move to protect US territory from rogue terror attacks,
from states including North Korea or Iraq.
The
rogue argument was a fraud, a plausible cover story designed to sneak
the policy reversal through without debate, in the wake of the September
11 shock.
The
repeal of the ABM Treaty was little understood outside qualified
military circles. In fact, it represented the most dangerous step by the
United States towards nuclear war since the 1950’s. Washington is
going at a fast pace to the goal of total nuclear superiority globally,
Nuclear Primacy.
Washington
has dismantled its highly lethal MX missiles by 2005. But that’s
misleading. At the same time, it significantly improved its remaining
ICBM’s by installing the MX’s high-yield nuclear warheads and
advanced re-entry vehicles on its Minuteman ICBMs. The guidance system
of the Minuteman has been upgraded to match that of the dismantled MX.
The
Pentagon began replacing ageing ballistic missiles on its submarines
with far more accurate Trident II D-5 missiles with new larger-yield
nuclear warheads.
The
Navy shifted more of its nuclear ballistic missile-launching SSBN
submarines to the Pacific to patrol the blind spot of Russia’s early
warning radar net as well as patrolling near China’s coast. The US Air
Force completed refitting its B-52 bombers with nuclear-armed cruise
missiles believed invisible to Russian air defense radar. New enhanced
avionics on its B-2 stealth bombers gave them the ability to fly at
extremely low altitudes avoiding radar detection as well.
A
vast number of stockpiled weapons is not necessary to the new global
power projection. Little-publicized new technology has enabled the US to
deploy a ‘leaner and meaner’ nuclear strike force. A case in point
is the Navy’s successful program to upgrade the fuse on the W-76
nuclear warheads sitting atop most US submarine-launched missiles, which
makes them able to hit very hard targets such as ICBM silos.
No
one has ever presented credible evidence that Al Qaeda, Hamas, Hezbollah
or any other organization on the US State Department’s Terrorist
Organization Black List possessed nuclear missiles in hardened
underground silos. Aside from the US and perhaps Israel, only Russia and
to a far smaller degree, China, have these in any number.
In
1991 at the presumed end of the Cold War, in a gesture to lower the
danger of strategic nuclear miscalculation, the US Air Force was ordered
to remove its fleet of nuclear bombers from Ready Alert status. After
2004 that too changed.
Conplan
8022 again put US Air Force long-range B-52 and other bombers on
‘Alert’ status. The Commander of the 8th Air Force stated at the
time, that his nuclear bombers were ‘essentially on alert to plan and
execute Global Strikes’ on behalf of the US Strategic Command or
STRATCOM, based in Omaha, Nebraska.
Conplan
8022 included not only long-range nuclear and conventional weapons
launched from the US, but also nuclear and other bombs deployed in
Europe, Japan and other sites. It gave the US what the Pentagon termed
Global Strike, the ability to hit any point on the earth or sky with
devastating force, nuclear as well as conventional. Since the Rumsfeld
June 2004 readiness order, the US Strategic Command has boasted it was
ready to execute an attack anywhere on earth ‘in half a day or
less,’ from the moment the President gave the order.
In
the January 24, 2006 London Financial
Times, the US Ambassador to NATO, Victoria Nuland, former adviser to
Vice President Dick Cheney and wife of a leading Washington
neo-conservative warhawk, declared that the US wanted a ‘globally
deployable military force’ that would operate everywhere – from
Africa to the Middle East and beyond.
It
would include Japan and Australia as well as the NATO nations. Nuland
added, ‘It’s a totally different animal (sic) whose ultimate role
will be subject to US desires and adventures.’ Subject to US desires
and adventures? Those were hardly calming words given the record of
Nuland’s former boss in faking intelligence to justify wars in Iraq
and elsewhere.
Now,
with the deployment of even a crude missile defense, under Conplan 8022,
the US would have what Pentagon planners called ‘escalation
dominance’—the ability to win a war at any level of violence,
including nuclear war.
As
some more sober minds argued, were Russia and China to respond to these
US moves with even minimal self-protection measures, the risks of a
global nuclear conflagration by miscalculation would climb to levels far
beyond any seen even during the Cuba Missile Crisis or the danger days
of the Cold War.
Mackinder’s
Nightmare
In
a few brief years Washington has managed to create the nightmare of
Britain’s father of geopolitics, Sir Halford Mackinder, the horror
scenario feared by Zbigniew Brzezinski, Henry Kissinger and other Cold
War veterans of US foreign policy who have studied and understood the
power calculus of Mackinder.
The
vast resources-rich and population-rich Eurasian Heartland and landmass
is building economic and military ties with one another for the first
time in history, ties whose driving force is the increasingly aggressive
Washington role in the world.
The
driver of the emerging Eurasian geopolitical cooperation is obvious.
China, with the world’s largest population and an economy expanding at
double digits, urgently needs secure alliance partners who could secure
her energy security. Russia, an energy goliath, needs secure trade
outlets independent of Washington control to develop and rebuild its
tattered economy. These complimentary needs form the seed crystal of
what Washington and US strategists define as a new Cold War, this one
over energy, over oil and natural gas above all. Military might is the
currency this time as in the earlier Cold War.
By
2006 Moscow and Beijing had clearly decided to upgrade their cooperation
with their Eurasian neighbors. They both agreed to turn to a moribund
loose organization that they had co-founded in 2001, in the wake of the
1998 Asia crisis, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization or SCO. The SCO
had highly significant members, geopolitically seen. SCO included
oil-rich Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan as well as
China and Russia. By 2006 Beijing and Moscow began to view the SCO as a
nascent counterweight to increasingly arbitrary American power politics.
The organization was discussing projects of energy cooperation and even
military mutual defense.
The
pressures of an increasingly desperate US foreign policy are forcing an
unlikely ‘coalition of the unwilling’ across Eurasia. The potentials
of such Eurasian cooperation between China, Kazakhstan, Iran are real
enough and obvious. The missing link, however, is the military security
that could make it invulnerable or nearly, to the saber-rattling from
Washington and NATO. Only one power on the face of the earth has the
nuclear and military base and know-how able to provide that—Vladimir
Putin’s Russia.
The
Russian Bear sharpens its nuclear teeth…
With
NATO troops creeping up to Russia’s borders on all sides, US nuclear
B-52s and SSBN submarines being deployed to strategic sites on
Russia’s perimeter, Washington extending its new missile shield from
Greenland to the UK, to Australia, Japan and now even Poland and the
Czech Republic, it should be no surprise that the Russian Government is
responding.
While
Washington planners may have assumed that because the once-mighty Red
Army was a shell of its former glory, that the state of Russian military
preparedness since the end of the Cold War was laughable.
But
Russia never let go of its one trump card—its strategic nuclear force.
During
the entire economic chaos of the Yeltsin years, Russia never stopped
producing state-of-the art military technology.
In
May 2003, some months after George Bush unilaterally ripped up the
bilateral Anti-Missile Defense Treaty with Moscow, invaded Afghanistan
and bombed Baghdad into subjugation, Russia’s President delivered a
new message in his annual State of the Union Address to the Russian
nation.
Putin
spoke for the first time publicly of the need to modernize Russia’s
nuclear deterrent by creating new types of weapons, ‘which will ensure
the defense capability of Russia and its allies in the long term.’
In
response to the abrogation by the Bush Administration of the ABM Treaty,
and with it Start II, Russia predictably stopped withdrawing and
destroying its SS-18 MIRVed missiles. Start II had called for full phase
out of multiple warhead or MIRVed missiles, by both sides by 2007.
At
that point Russia began to reconfigure its SS-18 MIRV missiles to extend
their service life to 2016. Fully loaded SS-18 missiles had a range of
11,000 kilometers. In addition, it redeployed mobile rail-based SS-24 M1
nuclear missiles.
In
its 2003 Budget, the Russian government made funding of its SS-27 or
Topol-M single-warhead missiles a ‘priority.’ And the Defense
Ministry resumed test launches of both SS-27 and Topol-M.
In
December 2006, Putin told Russian journalists that deployment of the new
Russian mobile Topol-M intercontinental ballistic missile system was
crucial for Russia’s national security. Without naming the obvious US
threat, he declared, ‘Maintaining a strategic balance will mean that
our strategic deterrent forces should be able to guarantee the
neutralization of any potential aggressor, no matter what modern weapons
systems he possesses.’
It
was unmistakable whom he had in mind, and it wasn’t the Al Qaeda
cave-dwellers of Tora Bora.
Russian
Defense Minister, Sergei Ivanov, announced at the same time that the
military would deploy another 69 silo-based and mobile Topol-M missile
systems over the following decade. Just after his Munich speech Putin
announced he had named his old KGB/FSB friend, Ivanov to be his First
Deputy Prime Minister overseeing the entire military industry.
The
Russian Defense Ministry reported that as of January 2006, Russia
possessed 927 nuclear delivery vehicles and 4,279 nuclear warheads
against 1,255 and 5,966 respectively for the United States. No two other
powers on the face of the earth even came close to these massive
overkill capacities. This was the ultimate reason all US foreign policy,
military and economic, since the end of the Cold War had covertly had as
endgame the complete deconstruction of Russia as a functioning state.
In
April 2006, the Russian military tested the K65M-R missile, a new
missile designed to penetrate US missile defense systems. It was part of
testing and deploying a uniform warhead for both land and sea-based
ballistic missiles. The new missile was hypersonic and capable of
changing flight path.
Four
months earlier, Russia successfully tested its Bulava ICBM, a naval
version of the Topol-M. It was launched from one of its Typhoon-class
ballistic missile submarines in the White Sea, traveling a thousand
miles before hitting a dummy target successfully on the Kamchatka
Peninsula. The Bulava missiles were to be installed on Russian Borey-class
nuclear submarines beginning 2008.
During
a personal inspection of the first regiment of Russian mobile Topol-M
intercontinental ballistic missiles in December 2006, Putin told
reporters the deployment of mobile Topol-M ICBMs were crucial for
Russia’s national security, stating, ‘This is a significant step
forward in improving our defense capabilities.’
‘Maintaining
a strategic balance,’ he continued, ’will mean that our strategic
deterrent forces should be able to guarantee the neutralization of any
potential aggressor, no matter what modern weapons systems he
possesses.’
Putin
clearly did not have France in mind when he referred to the unnamed
‘he.’ President Putin had personally given French President Chirac a
tour of one of Russia’s missile facilities that January, where Putin
explained the latest Russian missile advances. ‘He knows what I am
talking about,’ Putin told reporters afterwards, referring to
Chirac’s grasp of the weapon’s significance.
Putin
also did not have North Korea, China, Pakistan or India in mind, nor
Great Britain with its ageing nuclear capacity, not even Israel. The
only power surrounding Russia with weapons of mass destruction was its
old Cold War foe--the United States.
The
Commander of Russia’s Strategic Rocket Forces, General Nikolai
Solovtsov, was more explicit. Commenting on the successful test of the
K65M-R at Russia’s Kapustin Yar missile test site last April, he
declared that US plans for a missile defense system, ‘could upset
strategic stability. The planned scale of the United States’
deployment of a…missile defense system is so considerable that the
fear that it could have a negative effect on the parameters of
Russia’s nuclear deterrence potential is quite justified.’ Put
simply, he referred to the now open US quest for Full Spectrum
Dominance—Nuclear Primacy.
A
new Armageddon is in the making. The unilateral military agenda of
Washington has predictably provoked a major effort by Russia to defend
herself. The prospects of a global nuclear conflagration, by
miscalculation, increase by the day. At what point might an American
President, God forbid, decide to order a pre-emptive full-scale nuclear
attack on Russia to prevent Russia from rebuilding a state of mutual
deterrence?
The
new Armageddon is not exactly the Armageddon which George Bush’s
Christian fanatics pray for as they dream of their Rapture. It is an
Armageddon in which Russia and the United States would irradiate the
planet and, perhaps, end human civilization in the process.
Ironically,
oil, in the context of Washington’s bungled Iraq war and soaring world
oil prices after 2003, has enabled Russia to begin the arduous job of
rebuilding its collapsed economy and its military capacities. Putin’s
Russia is no longer a begger-thy-neighbor former Superpower. It’s
using its oil weapon and rebuilding its nuclear ones.
Bush’s
America is a hollowed-out debt-ridden economy engaged on using its last
card, its vast military power to prop up the dollar and its role as
world sole Superpower.
Putin
has obviously realized that his new-found ‘partner-in-prayer’,
George W., has a large black spot hiding the secrets of his heart. It
reminded of a popular country and western ballad from the late Tammy
Wynette, ‘Cowboys don’t shoot straight like they used to. They look
you in the eye and lie with their white hats on.’ That’s certainly
the case with the famous cowboy of Crawford, Texas in his dealings with
Vladimir Putin and the rest of the world.

© 2007 F.
William Engdahl
Editorial Archive
F.
William Engdahl
is author of the book, ‘A Century of War: Anglo-American
Oil Politics and the New World Order,’ Pluto Press Ltd. He has a
soon-to-be published book on GMO titled, ‘Seeds of Destruction: The
Hidden Political Agenda Behind GMO’. He may be contacted through his
website, www.engdahl.oilgeopolitics.net.
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