This morning David Goldman sizes up the crisis in the
Ukraine. Since his commentary proved to be exceptionally accurate on the crisis
in Egypt, we take his views with the utmost seriousness.
Admittedly, improving on what foreign policy experts have
been saying is not a great challenge, but, someone had to do it.
First, Goldman debunks their wishful thinking. He dismisses
the idea that the recent rebellion against the elected president would put the
Ukraine on the road to democracy.
For those who worry about Putin sending his army into the Ukraine,
Goldman points out that the commanders of the Ukrainian army are… Russians.
He writes:
When
Ukraine imploded, our leaders–from Victoria Nuland at
the State Department to the neo-conservatives–rather assumed that we would
reverse Ukraine’s polarity to the West, and humiliate Russia with the loss of
Crimea. Putin called our bluff, and we had no viable military options.
Putin
doesn’t need to send the Red Army into Ukraine. Every Ukrainian officer above
the rank of major came up through the ranks in the Red Army. Ukrainian
commanders won’t fight the Russians. They are the Russians. Yesterday we watched Ukrainian
paratroopers turn their armored vehicles over to Russian
separatists. Maybe John McCain can send them more weapons to hand over to
Moscow.
As always, Goldman offers us some much-needed perspective on
the reality of the Ukraine:
Never
mind that Ukraine is a basket case with a per capital income a tenth that of
the European Community, whose best young people (along with some of its worst)
have left the country, with a ruined economy and a declining population. Putin
isn’t playing by the rules printed on the inside top cover of the board game.
He’s another Hitler! Where is our Churchill? It’s a Monty Python remake of Dr. Strangelove. A few provocateurs
holding a Russian flag pass out handbills demanding that Jews in Eastern
Ukraine register with the authorities, and the whole of the media as well as
the Obama administration hyperventilates, until the affair is exposed as a
hoax.
According to Goldman, Putin will now sit back and watch the
Ukraine fall apart, waiting for the opportunity to pick up whatever pieces he
chooses:
The
threat, as the great chess theorist Aron Nimzowitsch wrote, is mightier than
the execution. Putin will let the West take ownership of the Ukrainian disaster
until it festers, and then he will pick and choose what he wants. We will huff
and puff and bloviate about Putin, the new Hitler, while Ukraine’s economy
disintegrates. Bismarck’s aphorism applies: die ganze Ukraine ist nicht die
gesunden knochen eines pommerschen Grenadiers wert.
2 comments:
I have to agree with Goldman. However, I will grant Putin the title of "genius". After our debacle in Syria, and now Ukraine, Putin has demonstrated extraordinary restraint, which can only be characterized as strategic. Either we are making repeated unforced errors, which is certainly possible, or Putin is leading us by our egos.
That said, can you imagine the American response to a Russian-backed coup in Canada or perhaps Mexico? I doubt that we would demonstrate similar restraint.
Whether it's the 20th century policies of socialists, or the emerging policies of so-called "neo-conservatives", Americans need a slightly more objective assessment of defunct regimes. My impression is that the current administration is acting to change existing regimes to better match their own interests. Then again, there is a complex dynamic in DC, which I do not fully understand.
Goldman was not that correct on Egypt. He spent 3 entire years proclaiming that Egypt had exactly $45 bucks left in its bank account, and literal starvation of the populace was just moments away. It never happened. He said "Chinese pigs will eat before Egyptian peasants" and now the Chinese are moving investment into Egypt. And he never saw the overthrow of the MB by the Egyptian army any more than anyone else did. So his analytical abilities have gone down a few pegs as far as I'm concerned. Other people make as many mistakes, but they don't have his truculence in the process.
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