When Ukraine Was Invaded 700 Years Ago… Another Superpower Was in Decline

Via Sovereign Man

In the autumn of 1362, on the banks of Syniukha River in eastern Europe, General Algirdas of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was about to do something that would have been unthinkable only a few decades before.

He was going to invade Ukraine and take over the Principality of Kiev.

Kiev at the time was a client state of the Mongolian Empire which had long been the world’s dominant superpower. But Mongolia was in obvious decline.

In the early 1200s under Genghis Khan, everyone in the known world was terrified of the Mongols. No one would have dared to antagonize them.

Genghis’s successors, including his grandson Kublai Khan, continued to wield this immense power into the early 1300s, a century after the empire’s formation.

But then things started to change.

Mongolians became extremely divided; they no longer had a common sense of unity, and bitter disputes broke out over who was Mongolia’s rightful leader.

Furthermore, Mongolia’s legendary tolerance began to fade. The Empire under Genghis had once been a place where all faiths, belief systems, and ideologies could flourish.

But by the early 1300s, Mongolians began choosing sides; some parts of the empire became Muslim, others Buddhist. Others adopted Chinese culture and traditions. And some factions became extremely intolerant of the others.

Mongolia also suffered other serious issues. The Bubonic Plague, which may have originated from within the Mongolian Empire before making its way to Europe, devastated trade and commerce.

Plus, inflation was raging in the eastern part of the empire, thanks to the astonishing amount of paper money that the Mongolian treasury had been printing. Inflation was so bad, in fact, that even the peasants were starting to revolt.

Mongolia’s problems compounded. And by the mid-1300s, rising powers like Lithuania were no longer intimidated.

That’s why Algirdas led a force of 25,000 men into Ukraine in 1362; he wanted to conquer Kiev, essentially stealing one of Mongolia’s vassal states.

The Mongols tried to stop him. They made threats and sent harsh warnings. They even tried to put up a small fight.

But in the end, Lithuanian forces decisively pushed into Ukraine and took Kiev. More importantly, they made the Mongols look weak.

This was an important moment in history; most people already noticed Mongolia’s decline — the infighting, the intolerance, the inflation.

But it took the Lithuanians invading Mongolia’s vassal state of Kiev — something that would have been unthinkable only a few decades prior — for the world to finally realize that the Mongolian Empire was no longer the dominant superpower.

History is full of similar watershed moments where it becomes obvious that a former superpower has declined.

The Suez Crisis in 1956 is another great example; the United Kingdom, formerly the world’s dominant superpower, invaded Egypt.

Yet almost immediately the United States (the rising superpower) threatened the UK with financial sanctions if they did not cease the operation and withdraw from Egypt.

Britain complied and pulled their forces out, marking the end of their dominance in the world… and the beginning of US dominance.

I’ve written extensively about the many, obvious signs that US dominance is waning.

Last year’s disgraceful, humiliating retreat from Afghanistan was one such sign.

Another sign is the woke fanaticism that has infected the US intelligence and defense community, where many policymakers seem to prioritize diversity and inclusion over national security.

But the most recent sign is Putin’s invasion of Ukraine last week. This would have never happened two decades ago; he would have been too afraid of America’s wrath.

Yet today, Putin feels emboldened. The Brandon Administration spent months threatening Putin, hoping to scare him into backing off.

But like the Grand Duchy of Lithuania back in the 1360s, Putin sees the decline — the infighting, the intolerance, the inflation (not to mention weak leadership) — so he’s no longer intimidated… by either the US or NATO.

It’s also notable that China is the most important voice in this conversation; Putin agreed to peace talks with Ukraine ONLY after Chinese President Xi Jinping urged Putin to do so on Friday.

In other words, the US was powerless to prevent the invasion, while China may be instrumental in ending it.

I take no pleasure in this conclusion; Putin is acting like a deranged lunatic, and it’s sad that the risk of provoking America is no longer a suitable deterrent.

But facts are facts, and it’s important to remain objective.

Future historians will undoubtedly opine about the end of America’s dominance, and precisely when it happened; they may point to the Afghanistan retreat, or the COVID-19 pandemic in which Faucist bureaucrats took over the nation.

Perhaps they’ll point to the day that the US national debt hit $30 trillion. Or Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Or they may point to some other event that hasn’t taken place yet.

But it should be obvious that the decline is happening. And that’s reason enough to have a Plan B.

Remember, a big part of having a Plan B is having the courage to use it… to look at circumstances and say, “OK, Plan B is now Plan A.”

I know people in Ukraine who were still consumed with day-to-day trivialities as late as last Tuesday, the day before the invasion. One woman I know fretted about her expiring gym membership. Now she’s stuck in Kiev with a small child.

These are not stupid people; they’re intelligent, educated individuals who assumed “There’s no way he’s going to invade.”

And let’s be honest, most people around the world thought the same, and forgot the lessons of Covid-19: everything can change overnight.

You can have the best Plan B in the world. But it won’t matter if you don’t execute.

There are almost always warning signs. With Covid, we could see western European countries imposing lockdowns. With Ukraine, we could see 100,000+ troops massed on the border. With US dominance, we can see obvious indications of decline.

We’re not talking about obscure risks; the signs are clear. It’s just a question of getting over denial and normalcy bias… because it’s better to be comfortable and early than even a second late.

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13 Comments
Doc
Doc
March 12, 2022 4:59 pm

Nice article. I am sorry to say, America is like that woman who is worried about the gym membership. Either Americans are so brainwashed by The Press and their own fantasies, or they don’t want to accept that, well, Shit Happens. Russia could OWN USA in about a week if they wanted her.

Stucky
Stucky
March 12, 2022 5:29 pm

“The Brandon Administration spent months threatening Putin, hoping to scare him into backing off.”

I suspect the opposite is true …. this is a war America wanted.

That makes sense if you consider this; —> Since the end of WWII it has been America’s goal to bankrupt and destroy Russia, and Put in (Putin, get it?? haha) a puppet ass-klown that will let the West plunder Russia’s vast assets.

What better way than to draw in (force) Russia into another European war …. a costly and bloody war (even if Russia “wins”) … a war that turns much of the world against Russia ….. a war that draws in most of Europe and maybe even makes them a battlefield for WWIII, so we can keep them American subjects forever … maybe even install another $$$Marshall Plan (there’s big money in nation re-building) … a war that leaves Russia in shambles, just ripe for picking.

Oh, yeah, baby. A big-ass war is just what a dying empire needs!

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
March 12, 2022 5:40 pm

‘Twas intolerance that brought down the Mongol Empire.

Cool narrative.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  hardscrabble farmer
March 12, 2022 7:42 pm

Mostly Internal Intolerance, of the rival faction sort.

‘In-fighting’ usually destroys a family’s/community’s/culture’s/nation’s reasons to be reasonable. If all factions are reasonable they are, together, indomitable.

I am grateful that our behemoth federal bueracracies don’t play well together, or we’d have no hope of getting Genghis Brandon off our back.

overthecliff
overthecliff
  hardscrabble farmer
March 12, 2022 10:47 pm

Diversity

Anonymous
Anonymous
  overthecliff
March 13, 2022 6:09 am

Diversity is like a pig heart in a human body, they could never tolerance each other and both will die.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  hardscrabble farmer
March 13, 2022 6:07 am

No, that was forced tolerance that brought em down.

wildhorses
wildhorses
March 12, 2022 9:29 pm

But the most recent sign is Putin’s invasion of Ukraine last week. This would have never happened two decades ago; he would have been too afraid of America’s wrath.

^His opinionated assertion does not validate his thesis statement.

For years, Putin has demonstrated he will not emulate NATO aggressions.
comment image

https://nsarchive.gwu.edu/briefing-book/russia-programs/2017-12-12/nato-expansion-what-gorbachev-heard-western-leaders-early

overthecliff
overthecliff
March 12, 2022 10:45 pm

Voila, it appears that Russia is a China surrogate. BRICs are going to be a big problem because The USA is BROKE.

Arizona Bay
Arizona Bay
  overthecliff
March 13, 2022 1:11 pm

BRICS will have no problem. They have known fUSA is a Paper Tiger for a long time and been preparing alternates. SWIFT system is alreaady replaced by China/Russia system. The New Development Bank, formerly BRICS Development Bank will replace IMF. BRICS nations are 40% of global commerce and the fastest growing economies.

fUSA is $30T in the hole and most of the EU is in worse shape. They trade paper and 1’s/0’s back and forth to give the illusion of an economy while the BRICS pick the corpse clean.

Grandpa Badfinger is only showing how irrelevant fUSA has already become.

ICE-9
ICE-9
March 12, 2022 10:47 pm

Mongols didn’t print paper money. They used velum.