Paul Goble
Staunton, May 15 – “Putin is clearly
at an impasse in Ukraine,” Gary Gasparov says; and understanding that “he can
be forgiven for anything except losing a war, the Kremlin leader has “the
resources to keep it going at least for now.: But he has only “one possible
form of success: inspiring the people with the narrative that we defeated NATO.”
Such a narrative, the émigré Russian
political leader who is now a member of the PACE platform says, means that “the
probability of a provocation or an attempt to seize certain perhaps even small
areas of NATO territory in the Baltic countries is growing with each passing
day” (pointmedia.io/story/6a071c9975d0dd3346a25cb19).
The Kremlin leader “might seize five
square kilometers of territory near Narva in Estonia or Daugavpils in Latvia …
because they are major Russian-speaking urban centers near the border” with the
Russian Federation given that it is “unlikely that Russia possesss the
resources to launch massive armies against the Baltic states.”
But seizing even small bridgeheads,
Kasparov argues, “could certainly create pockets of tension and demonstrate
that NATO is no longer functional” and even more allow Putin to spin out a
narrative that he and Russia were winners regardless of what may happen in the
case of Ukraine.
According to Kasparov, “this
scenario is highly probable, particularly given that Trump is almost certain to
block virtually all collective NATO decisions. Yet Trump’s time in office is
not infinite either—it is drawing to a close. If the Democrats gain control of
Congress [in the autumn elections], that alone would be sufficient to summon
Trump’s officials to testify under oath.”
“Consequently,
the window of opportunity for Putin to inflict a defeat upon ‘the paper tiger’ that
is NATO is rapidly narrowing. And the Europeans understand this. That is why we
now hear Estonians, Latvians, and Lithuanians openly stating that the Western
contingents currently stationed on their soil will respond directly to actions
taken by the local authorities.”
Specifically, he says, “the
Estonians are clearly signaling that the British brigade will fight alongside
Estonian forces without waiting for a directive from Brussels. I presume that
other agreements are also in place … But
the fact remains: a new bloc is taking shape—a defensive alliance designed to
respond to the specific challenges of the present day.”