Staunton, April 14 – Vladimir Putin
believes that he can dominate the Baltic countries and destroy NATO not by a
direct invasion which the Western alliance is prepared to counter but rather by
threatening to use nuclear weapons against them and the Europeans, something that
would lead the West not to come to their aid, according to Andrey Piontkovsky.
“But the West has not fallen victim
to this blackmail,” the Russian analyst argues, “because the Baltic countries
are NATO members and if they are not provided with assistance, this would mean
the defeat not only of the NATO alliance but of the West as a whole” (gordonua.com/news/worldnews/Piontkovskiy-Putin-schitaet-chto-NATO-ispugaetsya-yadernoy-voyny-i-ne-zashchitit-Pribaltiku-ot-vtorzheniya-Rossii-75755.html).
That
difference in perception between the Kremlin and the West is so large that
Moscow’s ongoing “hybrid war” against the West in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania
that the stakes there are even higher than they have been in Ukraine and that a
full-scale war between Russia and the West is now possible, Piontkovsky
suggests.
The
arrival of American tanks in Poland and the Baltic countries has a direct
relation to “what is happening today on the Ukrainian-Russian border,” he says,
but “there is here a braoder aspect of the hybrid war which Moscow has declared
against the West. The most important element of that conflict is nuclear
blackmail” which Moscow has tried to use over the last year.
Putin
and his entourage have repeatedly spoken about reducing the Baltic countries,
Germany and France to nuclear rubble and say that “they will use nuclear arms”
if the West offers Ukraine arms. But such
threats are about far more than just Ukraine and its ability to get lethal arms
from the West.
“The
key problem is the issue of the Baltics,” Piontkovsky says. “Putin’s conception
of ‘the Russian world,’ which gives him the holy right to defend not only
Russian citizens but all who speak Russia is uncontrollably pushing him toward
the scenario of the defense of the Russians of the Baltic countries.”
“A
hybrid war against Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia is being carried out quite
intensively already,” he points out, and includes “provocations with planes,
the kidnaping of an Estonian officer, and propaganda about [Moscow’s] concern
for the complex situation of Russian speaking citizens” of those three
countries.
But
Putin has no interest in the territory of the Baltic states, just as he has no
interest in the territory of Ukraine as such. Instead, what he has done in the
case of Ukraine is to implant “a cancerous tumor within Ukraine” and what he
wants to do in the case of the Baltics is “to destroy NATO.”
What
after all is NATO? A defense alliance whose Article 5 requires that all members
come to the defense of any one of them which is attacked. “And when ‘the little
green men’ appear in Estonia and Latvia,” Piontkovsky says, “the NATO countries
and the US as its main core will be obligated to provide military assistance.”
Putin assumes that nuclear blackmail will be
enough to keep that from happening. He does not intend to fight, Piontkovsky
says; he intends to win by intimidation. And “he understands that the value of
human life in Western society is much higher than in Russia and that the West
could be frightened and not come to the aide of the Baltic countries.”
So far, NATO
hasn’t been, and the decision to put some 100 American troops in Estonia
matters, not because they constitute a defense force in and of themselves but because
of their “enormous psychological and political meaning.” Now, when Putin’s “’little green men’ appear
in Narva, American will automatically go to war with Russia.”
In short and at
least for now, Putin’s nuclear blackmail has not worked, but the thinking
behind it means that the next round of his hybrid war against the West may be
far more dangerous than earlier ones in Georgia and Ukraine.
According to
Piontkovsky, the Kremlin “has still not taken a decision about further attacks in
Ukraine, but if that happens,” he says, “then the reaction of the West will be
unambiguous: new sanctions will be imposed and Ukraine will receive arms.” That is restraining Moscow now, but it is
unclear for how long.
That is
because, the Russian analyst says, “we cannot look into the head of someone of
whom [German Chancellor Angela] Merkel said that he lives in another reality.
Nevertheless, if such a decision will be taken, it will only accelerate the
final days of the Putin regime.”
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