Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 12 – People of decency
and good will around the world have been horrified by Vladimir Putin’s defense this
week of the 1939 Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact which made Hitler and Stalin allies,
opened the way to World War II, and allowed the Soviet Union to occupy Estonia,
Latvia, Lithuania, portions of Poland and Bessarabia for half a century.
But they should be even more
horrified by the fact that some near the Kremlin are once again thinking about
“a preventive occupation” of the Baltic countries, a step that, as Kseniya
Kirillova points out today, could trigger the collapse of the West or a third
world war (nr2.ru/blogs/Ksenija_Kirillova/Rossiya-gotovitsya-okkupirovat-strany-Baltii-96466.html).
Moreover,
and just as in 1939, they should be disturbed by Moscow’s duplicity and
cynicism about such a move, one nominally taken in the name of improving Russia’s
defense capability but in fact threatened in order to advance Russian
imperialism and to disorder and confuse the Western powers.
In
her commentary, Kirillova does two things: First, she points to a recent
article by Moscow commentator Rostislav Ishchenko calling for a “preventive”
strike against the Baltic littoral in order to block what he sees as a threat
from NATO; and second, she interviews former RISI analyst Aleksandr Sytin on
why Ishchenko’s words are more than the ravings of one man.
According
to Ishechenko, Moscow has a compelling interest in a preventive occupation of
at least portions of the Baltic countries in order to counter NATO, an interest
he says exists even if there is no such threat, because such a move would allow
for “the preservation of the line of ‘the virtual front’” (newsbalt.ru/analytics/2015/04/iskupitelnyy-vykup/).
Specifically,
he writes, “a preventive strike with the goal of liquidating the Baltic place
des armes could become necessary from a military point of view not because
someone might expect an attack from this direction but in order to preserve the
line of the front (even virtual), to extend a land corridor to the blockaded
group of forces in Kaliningrad, and to free up forces for actions in other,
more important directions.”
Not
taking such actions in a timely manner – and Ishchenko helpfully provides a map
showing just what Russian forces should seek to seize – could, he suggests,
prove “fatal in the indefinite situation” the world now finds itself in.
Indeed, he argues, “the rapid [Russian] occupation of the Baltics could become
the best choice” among those available.
Ishchenko
suggests, as Kirillova puts it, that “the main goal of this operation would be
not ‘the defense’ of [Russia’s] borders from imagined enemies but the occasion
for the beginning of a trade with Europe about the shift of borders and spheres
of influence in which of course the sovereignty of other countries and the will
of the peoples living in them are not and cannot be taken into consideration.”
As
Ishchenko puts it, “a lightning-like occupation of the Baltics would put the European
Union in a situation when the restoration of the status quo could be ach9ieved
only by means of negotiations.” That is because Paris and Berlin could not “fight”
for the Baltic countries if they no longer existed.
It
would be comforting to think that Ishchenko’s article is simply one more
example of the absurdities that often surface in countries during times of
stress, and undoubtedly many people in the EU and the US will dismiss his
notions as nothing more than that. But
to do so would be a serious mistake.
Aleksandr
Sytin, a former analyst for Russia’s SVR intelligence service and more recently
for the now infamous Russian Institute for Strategic Research, argues
that Ishchenko is speaking for more than himself and that his article is
intended simultaneously to test the waters of public opinion and expand the
limits of what people consider permissible.
He told
Kirillova that Sytin now works closely with Russia Today and other Kremlin
media outlets and that he and others so connected put out ideas Moscow wants to
see spread through the population so that the regime can act nominally in the
name of “’the will of the people’” even though the source of the ideas is the
Kremlin itself.
According to
Sytin, “Ishchenko’s declarations entirely and completely reflect the foreign
policy course of present-day Russia and in particular its striving to become a
world center of power and to restore the configuration of the world as it was
in 1945, and also to ‘save’ the peoples at a minimum of Eastern Europe and
ideally all European peoples from the ‘pernicious influence’ of the US by using
the existing contradictions between them and the EU’s weakness.”
Sytin said that,
despite proposals like Ishchenko’s, he is certain that the Kremlin does not
really want to get into a military confrontation with Europe and NATO. Instead,
it hopes for a compromise, one in which the West will make even more
concessions to Moscow in order to avoid such a conflict.
“The
more quickly the West recognizes that the era of a ‘good’ agreeable Russia is
now in the past the better,” Sytin argued, and he insisted that “the Kremlin’s current aggressiveness is
creating a danger much greater than that which came from ‘the evil empire’
operating under the name USSR.”
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