Perhaps you missed it: We’re at war with Russia

But nobody has explained what our vital interest is in Ukraine

Reuters

Secretary of State John Kerry has accused Russia of providing heavy arms to Ukrainian separatists, but has offered no proof.

The U.S. has been waging economic, financial, trade, and political war against Russia and even kinetic war-by-proxy in Ukraine. Worryingly, nobody in power in the U.S. or Europe really seems willing to tell us exactly why.

From the Russian point of view, everything from their plunging ruble to bitter sanctions to the falling price of oil are the fault of the U.S., either directly or indirectly. Whether that is fair or not is irrelevant; that’s the view of the Russians right now. So no surprise, it doesn’t dispose them towards goodwill negotiations with the West generally, and the U.S. specifically.

Recently the anti-Russian stance in the U.S. press has quieted down, presumably because the political leadership has moved its attention on to other things, and that means Russia is largely out of the U.S. news cycle. However, there’s plenty of serious action going on in Russia and Ukraine, as well as related activity in the U.S. that deserves our careful attention.

The U.S. (via John Kerry) and NATO have steadily accused Russia of having funneled hundreds of tanks, armored personnel carriers and other heavy equipment to the separatists in eastern Ukraine.

These assertions bring to mind the Sherlock Holmes case of the dog that did not bark where the absence of a piece of evidence leads us to a very different conclusion than the one the U.S. political establishment would like us to believe.

The sorts of weaponry that NATO and the U.S. have charged Russia with providing are virtually impossible to conceal from the air. Snapping high-resolution photos of such war machinery is child’s play for today’s military satellites, and even civilian ones too. If the assertions were true, we should have seen a flood of photographs of Russian heavy equipment every step of the way as it passed into Ukraine.

But none have been offered, not even one so far. And the simplest explanation for this is that none exist. If they did, you can be 100% certain they’d have been released and replayed over and over again on CNN until everybody and their uncle could distinguish a T-72 tank outline from that of a T-64.

What concerns me even more than these undocumented charges are two especially ill-conceived, if not overtly confrontational, pieces of legislation passed by the Congress in December.

The first is H.Res 758 passed on Dec. 4, which, among other charges, accused Russia of having invaded Ukraine again without providing or referring to any sort of evidence photographic or otherwise. Entitled “Strongly condemning the actions of the Russian Federation, under President Vladimir Putin, which has carried out a policy of aggression against neighboring countries aimed at political and economic domination” the resolution is packed with a variety of one-sided assertions and leaves no diplomatic wiggle room for the possibility that Russia has a different view of what has transpired in Ukraine.

According to Ron Paul, these sorts of resolutions are dangerous because they politically commit the U.S. political structure to rigid stances that are politically difficult to back down from and have historically been a stepping stone on the path to war.

The Ukraine Freedom Support Act of 2014, or S.2828, was passed by the Senate on Dec. 11. This goes even further than merely condemning Russia and authorizes the distribution of both lethal and non-lethal military aid to Kiev, including sniper and assault rifles, mortars and shells, stinger missiles, anti-tank missiles, night vision goggles, radar systems and a host of other hardware items.

If the tables were turned, and it were the Russian lawmakers passing a resolution condemning the U.S. for a variety of international crimes for which exactly zero proof was offered, and then were actively arming a dangerous conflict right on the U.S. border, I think we all know just how ablaze with indignity the U.S. political leadership would be. And rightly so.

So is it any surprise that Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich said in response, “Both houses of the U.S. Congress have approved the Ukraine Freedom Support Act bypassing debates and proper voting. The overtly confrontational message of the new law cannot but evoke profound regret. Once again Washington is leveling baseless sweeping accusations against Russia and threatening more sanctions.”

Despite an upsurge in recent violence, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko is optimistic that talks will lead to an end to the conflict

The really bizarre part of this story is that I cannot yet find any credible analysis or commentary explaining exactly what the U.S.’s interests are in Ukraine that are so compelling as to risk increasing confrontation with Russia. And it bothers a great many analysts that the U.S. is on an increasingly combative course with yet another country without providing any evidence in support of its accusations and actions. Again.

In response, Russia is rapidly withdrawing from additional dialog with the U.S. and Europe, while drawing ever closer to China, Turkey and India. Russians feel that they are already under siege from the U.S., and that acts of war have already been committed.

Despite being almost completely out of the U.S. news cycle, events are in and around the Ukraine situation are actually picking up pace. On Jan. 15, Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko signed a decree mobilizing 50,000 new servicemen to the front lines, and Russia just announced that Europe will have to accept gas via Turkey as the Ukraine route is being shut down.

This situation remains much more fluid and nuanced than we’re being told by the Western media, with much more to this story than a short column allows, Those interested in delving deeper can read our latest report here.

But in short, the situation is getting more strained, not less, and it has the very real chance of blossoming into something far larger and more deadly than the sparse coverage in the Western press might imply.

If it looks like a war, acts like a war and smells like a war, it may just be a war. Everyone should be very concerned by these events, but especially European readers.

Chris Martenson is an economic researcher and futurist specializing in energy and resource depletion, and co-founder of PeakProsperity.com

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
8 Comments
TE
TE
January 20, 2015 10:13 am

I guess a thinking person needs to start asking, “why?”

Why are TPTB LYING about Russia and N Korea?

Why are we firing up war all over the place?

Why?

Because we are the ones that have negated the NATO treaties, WHY are we so hot to go after Russia?

Could it be natural resources including water?
Could it be the fact the 2nd world companies have surpassed the 1st world – mainly by becoming their industrial centers?

All I know is when TPTB tell me to beware, I figure I might want to find a closer truth.

Led to slaughter, with bells and whistles and the sheep leading their own death marches.

Stucky
Stucky
January 20, 2015 11:06 am

Please limit future articles to only what is reported on Fux or CuNNt. That’s all the news that really matters. Everything else is empty chatter … like this story, which, if it was REALLY important, would have been covered by either or both of those wonderful news sources.

They will be fully covering the State Of The Union Address …. where you, Dear Admin … will discover that we are — despite your constant doomy prognostications — in Full Fucking Recovery, and the future of the USA!USA!USA! is, indeed, brighter than the brightest star in the sky. I expect a full report on that tomorrow.

underfire
underfire
January 20, 2015 11:24 am

TE says: …WHY are we so hot to go after Russia?

That’s the million dollar question. Along with,…. Is it a good idea?

“Hail Mary Pass” of an empire in decline come to mind.

Tommy
Tommy
January 20, 2015 11:34 am

Fuck me, now Martenson’s a ‘futurist’?! The weatherman, sure……Chris? Not a fuckin’ chance. Read his stuff and tell me when he actually states ‘how much, by when’. Never. Why? Because he’s smart as hell and keeps it vague and opaque on purpose. Rattles off tons of shit so later he can cherry pick and say ‘see, as I said it would be’. I remember he had one of his podcasts or whatever with Neil Howe and treated him and his 4th Turning theories/proof like a guy with a ouigie board.

Stucky
Stucky
January 20, 2015 12:42 pm

SOTU …….. grab your ankles and bend over ……….. $320 BILLION dollar tax hike a comin’

http://reason.com/archives/2015/01/19/beware-obamas-state-of-the-union-tax-hik

Billy
Billy
January 20, 2015 12:52 pm

Why are we picking a fight?

War – so long as it’s not actually in your country – has been historically good for business….

Well, certain businesses that our Oligarchs have significant interests in… “Bombs R’ Us” does well, they become wealthier…

I mean really, you think they give a shit if the debt is over 18 Trillion? If we send our best and brightest to die fighting some made-up Boogeyman in some godforsaken shithole halfway around the world? After all, it’s not their money and blood that’s being spent… it’s your money and the blood of your children…

Why should they care? War makes them rich. And gets rid of potential rabble rousers… less mouths to feed…

yahsure
yahsure
January 20, 2015 5:21 pm

It is one hell of a distraction. And so far none of our media seem’s interested in printing the truth. So lies become accepted as truth. Obama must have studied the Nazi thinking well. Just like he studied the constitution so he could get around it.
Obama’s actions to destroy the country before he leaves office seem to be steaming along. Cloward and Piven stuff of overloading the system and making it collapse. Leaving us open for? An Agenda 21 type of system. All this climate change crap helps support Agenda 21. It is a way for communist to take power. If you collapse our system then you can talk about how it doesn’t work and needs to be replaced.

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
January 20, 2015 10:50 pm

@TE & others; Here’s the answer…these neocon fucks really think a nuke war is survivable (for the 1%), and “winnable”. The fact that 90% of the population will die out within 1 year is their bonus round. Then they can claim the other 50% they don’t already own.
Doubt me? Remember 9/11. They planned & executed it.