February
13, 2023
The
greatest enemy of economic development is war. If the world slips further into
global conflict, our economic hopes and our very survival could go up in
flames. The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists has moved the hands of the
Doomsday Clock to a mere 90 seconds to midnight.
The
world’s biggest economic loser in 2022 was Ukraine, where the economy collapsed
by 35% according to the International Monetary Fund. The war in Ukraine could
end soon, and economic recovery could begin, but this depends on Ukraine
understanding its predicament as victim of a US-Russia proxy war that broke out
in 2014.
The
US has been heavily arming and funding Ukraine since 2014 with the goal of
expanding Nato and weakening Russia. America’s proxy wars typically rage for
years and even decades, leaving battleground countries like Ukraine in rubble.
Unless
the proxy war ends soon, Ukraine faces a dire future. Ukraine needs to learn
from the horrible experience of Afghanistan to avoid becoming a long-term
disaster. It could also look to the US proxy wars in Vietnam, Cambodia, Lao
PDR, Iraq, Syria, and Libya.
Starting
in 1979, the US armed the mujahideen (Islamist fighters) to harass the
Soviet-backed government in Afghanistan. As president Jimmy Carter’s national
security advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski later explained, the US objective was to
provoke the Soviet Union to intervene, in order to trap the Soviet Union in a
costly war. The fact that Afghanistan would be collateral damage was of no
concern to US leaders.
The
Soviet military entered Afghanistan in 1979 as the US hoped, and fought through
the 1980s. Meanwhile, the US-backed fighters established al-Qaeda in the 1980s,
and the Taliban in the early 1990s. The US “trick” on the Soviet Union had
boomeranged.
In
2001, the US invaded Afghanistan to fight al-Qaeda and the Taliban. The US war
continued for another 20 years until the US finally left in 2021. Sporadic US
military operations in Afghanistan continue.
Afghanistan
lies in ruins. While the US wasted more than $2-trillion of US military
outlays, Afghanistan is impoverished, with a 2021 GDP below $400 per person! As
a parting “gift” to Afghanistan in 2021, the US government seized Afghanistan’s
tiny foreign exchange holdings, paralysing the banking system.
The
proxy war in Ukraine began nine years ago when the US government backed the
overthrow of Ukraine’s president Viktor Yanukovych. Yanukovych’s sin from the
US viewpoint was his attempt to maintain Ukraine’s neutrality despite the US
desire to expand Nato to include Ukraine (and Georgia). America’s objective was
for Nato countries to encircle Russia in the Black Sea region. To achieve this
goal, the US has been massively arming and funding Ukraine since 2014.
The
American protagonists then and now are the same. The US government’s point
person on Ukraine in 2014 was Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland, who
today is Undersecretary of State. Back in 2014, Nuland worked closely with Jake
Sullivan, president Joe Biden’s national security adviser, who played the same
role for vice president Biden in 2014.
The
US overlooked two harsh political realities in Ukraine. The first is that
Ukraine is deeply divided ethnically and politically between Russia-hating
nationalists in western Ukraine and ethnic Russians in eastern Ukraine and
Crimea.
The
second is that Nato enlargement to Ukraine crosses a Russian redline. Russia
will fight to the end, and escalate as necessary, to prevent the US from
incorporating Ukraine into Nato.
The
US repeatedly asserts that Nato is a defensive alliance. Yet Nato bombed
Russia’s ally Serbia for 78 days in 1999 in order to break Kosovo away from
Serbia, after which the US established a giant military base in Kosovo. Nato
forces similarly toppled Russian ally Moammar Qaddafi in 2011, setting off a decade
of chaos in Libya. Russia certainly will never accept Nato in Ukraine.
At
the end of 2021, Russian president Vladimir Putin put forward three demands to
the US: Ukraine should remain neutral and out of Nato; Crimea should remain
part of Russia; and the Donbas should become autonomous in accord with the
Minsk II Agreement.
The
Biden-Sullivan-Nuland team rejected negotiations over Nato enlargement, eight
years after the same group backed Yanukovych’s overthrow. With Putin’s
negotiating demands flatly rejected by the US, Russia invaded Ukraine in
February 2022.
In
March 2022, Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky seemed to understand
Ukraine’s dire predicament as victim of a US-Russia proxy war. He declared
publicly that Ukraine would become a neutral country, and asked for security
guarantees. He also publicly recognised that Crimea and Donbas would need some
kind of special treatment.
Israel’s
prime minister at that time, Naftali Bennett, became involved as a mediator,
along with Turkey. Russia and Ukraine came close to reaching an agreement. Yet,
as Bennett has recently explained, the US “blocked” the peace process.
Since
then, the war has escalated. According to US investigative reporter Seymour
Hersh, US agents blew up the Nord Stream pipelines in September, a claim denied
by the White House. More recently, the US and its allies have committed to
sending tanks, longer-range missiles, and possibly fighter jets to Ukraine.
The
basis for peace is clear. Ukraine would be a neutral non-Nato country. Crimea
would remain home to Russia’s Black Sea naval fleet, as it has been since 1783.
A practical solution would be found for the Donbas, such as a territorial
division, autonomy, or an armistice line.
Most
importantly, the fighting would stop, Russian troops would leave Ukraine, and
Ukraine’s sovereignty would be guaranteed by the UN Security Council and other
nations. Such an agreement could have been reached in December 2021 or in March
2022.
Above
all, the government and people of Ukraine would tell Russia and the US that
Ukraine refuses any longer to be the battleground of a proxy war. In the face
of deep internal divisions, Ukrainians on both sides of the ethnic divide would
strive for peace, rather than believing that an outside power will spare them
the need to compromise.
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