Paul Goble
Staunton,
November 17 – Since the dawn of the nuclear age, senior leaders in Moscow have
debated whether their country can fight and win a world war, Andrey Piontkovsky
says. Some like Lavrenty Beria and Georgy Malenkov did not believe Russia
could, but Nikita Khrushchev and now Vladimir Putin believe that Moscow could be
victorious in such a conflict.
Soviet
leaders since that time have defined winning as gaining an expansion of the
zone of exclusive control they received at Yalta after World War II, the
Russian analyst says. Russian leaders now define it as “a return of the Yalta
zone of control that has been lost and a demonstration of NATO’s
ineffectiveness” (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5BEF2845504AC).
Consequently, Piontkovsky argues,
when Khrushchev defeated his rivals for supreme power, he also enshrined the idea
that Moscow could fight and win a nuclear war, leading to his own adventurism
in 1962 and to the nuclear sabre rattling increasingly characteristic of
Vladimir Putin and his regime.
“Since 2014,” he writes, “Russia has
been living in a state which represents an exceptional danger for itself and
for the surrounding world.” As in the periods around the death of Stalin and at
the end of Khrushchev’s reign, “the present-day Russian leadership is convinced
of its capacity to win a worldwide nuclear war.”
And make no mistake, Piontkovsky
says. They mean a nuclear war because the men in the Kremlin are very well
aware that they don’t have sufficient forces of other kinds to win such a
conflict. They no longer buy into the ideas of mutually assured destruction,
and they aren’t playing nuclear chess: they are engaged in nuclear blackmail.
There is thus good reason to believe,
as US Secretary of Defense James Mattis recently put it, that Moscow is “an
existential threat to the US,” a conclusion he said he had reached after “some
Russians warned him personally that they would be ready to apply nuclear
weapons in the case of a conflict in the Baltic region” (news.err.ee/860764/woodward-in-baltic-war-russia-willing-to-use-nuclear-weapons-against-nato).
“At all levels – experts,
propagandists, and officials – Moscow already for four years has posed to the
West its version of Hitler’s question from the 1930s: ‘Are you ready to die for
Narva (Danzig)?’” Will you invoke Article 5 of the NATO Charter when Russia’s “little
green men” move into the Baltic countries?
Russians today certainly believe and
from Piontkovsky’s perspective with complete justification that the current US
president Donald Trump would not respond to a Russian move in the Baltics by
invoking Article 5 even though the three countries are full members of the
Western alliance.
The Russians may be right about
Trump, he says; but they are wrong about the West. After two years of the Trump
administration, “the psychological decisiveness and military readiness of NATO
and the US to defend the Baltic countries from a Russian aggressor who is threatening
to use nuclear weapons are significantly greater now than two years ago.”
“Action gives
birth to counter action,” Piontkovsky observes. “The military-political
establishment of the US is consolidated in its attitude toward the Kremlin
regime as never before.” And the Russian people, various surveys show, want not
a broader war with the West but some kind of détente.
A calm and rational Russian leader
would thus take action to soothe the West and meet his own people at least half
way; but, as Piontkovsky has written before, Putin is neither calm nor entirely
rational. He reacts emotionally and even
erratically. That makes his belief in the winnability of nuclear war so
disturbing.
If the Kremlin leader feels he has
been pushed into a corner, he may decide to go for broke, setting the stage for
disaster not just for others but for himself and his system as well. In this
situation, Piontkovsky says, there might be hope from an unexpected source -- a
convinced Putinist who agrees with Beria and Malenkov rather than Khrushchev
and Putin.
After all, the Russian commentator
says, Claus von Stauffenberg who organized the assassination attempt against
Hitler and then was executed for his role in that regard was “a convinced Nazi.”
Today, the German count is celebrated as a hero of the resistance to the German
dictator.
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