Sunday 19th of May 2024

you're only good as your last job...

invasioninvasion

 

In many years of international negotiations and on-the-ground work in conflict zones I have learned that leadership is not a choice between a good option and a bad option. The choice is easy. Pick the good option.

But leadership is having the right ethical framework to choose the least bad of competing bad options, knowing that everyone will criticise you for taking a bad choice.

This is where we are today with Ukraine and Russia. Decision-makers squandered good options when the 2014 Crimea situation was appallingly handled.

 

What will play out now is one of three broad and bad possibilities. There are no good choices left.

Firstly, the Western powers can make half-hearted attempts to impose relatively light sanctions, wave impotent fingers and then head off to lunch. Bad option. It will signal a victory for Russian leader Vladimir Putin, the victory of violence and the beginning of a much more unstable world.

Secondly, the Western powers can revive the Domino Theory, and launch a full-throated military response in the hope they can constrain Russia, with the consequent risk of nuclear war. Very bad option.

Thirdly, there can be an attempt to find some sort of compromise solution where ultimately Putin gets to keep a land bridge to Crimea, a promise that Ukraine will not join NATO and, possibly, a puppet regime in Kiev. Also not a good option.

If there is a fourth option still available better than the above, I don’t see it. So which way are we heading?

Australia will follow

The sanctions being proposed thus far do not seem to deter Putin. His new ‘no limits’ friendship with China, his new trade deals with China, his membership of the Shanghai Cooperation Council, increasing gas and oil prices together with a knowledge that Germany must eventually turn on the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, means that he can quite happily ride out most of the sanction currently being proposed.

US President Joe Biden has offered ‘prayers’ much like presidents do after US school shootings. Strangely enough, those prayers don’t seem to stop the next shooting nor will they protect Ukraine.

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnston stands ‘shoulder to shoulder’ with Ukraine – so long as he doesn’t have to physically be shoulder to shoulder, nor place soldiers on the ground, shoulder to shoulder.

 

In Australia, Defence Minister Dutton and Prime Minister Scott Morrison are madly wagging the dog trying to repeat John Howard’s rise from the ashes on the back of a burning refugee boat in 2001.

There is no doubt that if the US and UK did go to war with Russia, Dutton and Morrison would do what Australian governments have always done: follow blindly.

A wider war

Thankfully there is no proposal to confront Russia in a shooting war. To do so would be madness and Putin knows it.

While Putin’s actions cannot be supported, neither can they be stopped. That is the real-politick of it all.

However, the signal that is being sent to nuclear-armed China, North Korea, India and Pakistan is clear: Forget the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. The only way to really protect yourself is to have nukes and seem unafraid to use them.

The signal being sent to China and Taiwan is clear too. China has nukes. China can ride out sanctions imposed by the West, but Western powers could not ride out China’s economic retaliation for those sanctions. Putin’s Ukraine journey has turned Taiwan into ‘when’ not ‘if’.

The West’s sanctions seem like impotent finger-waiving. The saying that ‘Russia is playing chess and the Americans are playing checkers’ seems to hold true. Putin has played a long and careful game.

A full-throated ‘Domino Theory 2’ style war is unlikely and highly undesirable. The West waving impotent fingers is probable, but undesirable.

Ukraine’s future

The question is, can some sort of face-saving fudge be found?

Ukraine will be feeling very alone today and getting ready to lose the east, confirm the loss of Crimea and lose the land bridge to Crimea, but can it stay in existence as a sovereign nation? Maybe this is the only hope to halt things before they get even worse.

If the solution is not saving face, then can an unpalatable yet tolerable solution be found? This is the challenge for policy makers now.

In Taiwan people will watch all this with trepidation.

 

READ MORE:

https://thenewdaily.com.au/news/world/europe-news/2022/02/25/russia-ukraine-west-options/

 

 

Zelensky has no choice but to surrender to save Ukraine as a sovereign nation...

 

See and read carefully:

 

https://sputniknews.com/20220225/day-2-of-russian-special-op-live-updates-donetsk-resident-wounded-by-ukrainian-shelling-dpr-says-1093353535.html

 

defending the heartland...

 

NATO and the US lit the fuse...

 

baiting the bear...

 

the stupidity of interventionism...

 


Please, ask yourself what could have been done by the West in relation to Crimea? Crimea VOTED to rejoin Russia. Sevastopol was going to be a Russian Port till 2034 anyhow. But what happened in 2014 is that the West was too busy dancing on the rooftops about having succeeded in praising Ukraine away from Russia with a "colour revolution". This revolution had been generated and financed by the West and about 14,000 (?*) people died, mostly Ethnic Russians. The ban on speaking Russian in Ukraine was like stopping people speaking Welsh in Wales. 

 

Anyway fresh from telling Putin that Nato and the West would not even consider his proposals for Ukraine not joining NATO, and with Zelensky demanding Ukraine be armed with nukes, what do you think the Russians were going to do? Piece by piece, the Russians played their moves while the Western leaders were gloating of their brilliance at telling Putin to fuck off...

 

I repeat: Zelensky has no choice but to surrender to save Ukraine as a sovereign nation...

 

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(?*) figures from some sources

swiftly not...

 

US and European officials are holding one key financial sanction against Russia in reserve, choosing not to boot Russia off SWIFT, the dominant system for global financial transactions.

The Russian invasion of Ukraine led to a barrage of new financial sanctions being placed on the country on Thursday.

While US President Joe Biden announced restrictions on exports to Russia and sanctions against Russian banks and state-controlled companies, he pointedly played down the need to block Russia from SWIFT.

LIVE UPDATES: Read our blog for the latest on Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

What is SWIFT?

SWIFT is the Belgian-headquartered consortium used by banks and other financial institutions that serves as a key communications line for commerce worldwide.

The international payments system SWIFT is used by more than 11,000 financial institutions in more than 200 countries.

 

Read more:

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-02-25/swift-us-and-europe-waiting-on-one-key-sanction-against-russia/100863286

 

At this level, if not paid for services or goods, Russia can turn off the taps: gas and oil. If you are worried about paying more than $2 at the pump for a litre of petrol, think about $10 tomorrow. As well Europe would freeze to death and Germany would become a third world country in five minutes. The West knows cutting SWIFT would hurt them more than it would hurt Russia. As we know from the USA, money can be "printed". Oil and gas cannot. 

 

 

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