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the leaders of the EU are all warmongering addicts....European militarism on steroids is not good, either U.S. security experts and leaders have been telling European NATO allies to increase their defense spending for at least a quarter century, initially as a gentle nudging, later more insistently, rising to a deafening din after Trump’s election.
The infamous White House press conference with President Volodymyr Zelensky on March 1 finally shocked Europeans out of their complacency and opened their purse-strings, according to American analysts, who seem very pleased with themselves. But this approach puts the cart of military-spending-as-share-of-GDP before the horse of a dynamic assessment of the threats European countries actually face. Going on a spending spree to reach some arbitrary share of GDP or random number of billions of euros, to buy weapons systems favored by lobbyists but of dubious relevance, is a poor replacement for a comprehensive strategy for European security. A European security strategy that deserves this name would have to include political and diplomatic efforts: war-ending diplomacy in the short term, followed by a crisis consultation mechanism that should be the beginning of a new European security architecture consisting of reciprocal regimes of arms control, confidence-building and eventual disarmament. A closer look at Europe also shows that a new bellicism has swept up the continent’s elites and gone into cataclysmic overdrive in recent weeks. Nowhere has this new martiality been more pronounced than in Germany, where political leaders and a new crop of “military experts” egg each other on. The latter have been abysmally wrong in their predictions of Ukraine’s certain victory and Russia’s imminent collapse again and again, but nevertheless dominate the country’s much-watched primetime debate shows. Last week, Germans were told that the coming summer will be the last one we will be at peace, because Russia will, under cover of war games in Belarus, invade NATO territory. German officials have been bandying about the word “Kriegstüchtigkeit” — a compound noun meaning “being good at war” — which would not sound out of place in a scratchy Wochenschau newsreel from 1940, pronounced in the gravelly, pompous diction of that era. It takes a retired brigadier general to remind Germans that this is an ominous departure from previous nomenclature, “Verteidigungsfähigkeit” – or “capacity for defense.. Current active senior officers, however, draw arrows on maps of Russia’s Kursk area, in full dress uniform, in the Bundeswehr’s in-house YouTube videos. After suspending mandatory military service in 2011, there are now widespread calls from across the political spectrum to reinstitute it and expand it to women, amid hand-wringing that German youth are too soft for war. This new European militarism is curiously lacking in strategic thinking and fact-based analysis. While even the Biden administration never expected Ukraine to win the war, European leaders seem to believe in a Ukrainian victory to this day. At last month’s Munich security conference, Danish PM Mette Frederiksen talked of Ukraine winning the war while seated on the same panel as Keith Kellogg, Trump’s Special Envoy for Russia and Ukraine. The influential Brussels think tank Bruegel argues that Russia may attack Europe in as little as three years, simply because the country has x pieces of this and that military hardware. Bizarrely, Italian PM Giorgia Meloni has suggestedthat Ukraine should not be a NATO member yet still be covered by Article 5, while Finnish President Stubb proposes NATO membership not now, but triggered the moment Russia attacks Ukraine again, after the current war has ended. The manic summitry launched by Macron and Starmer is all sound and fury: it has produced a series of unworkable proposals which, tellingly, are being proposed to the US, not Ukraine, let alone Russia. These summits also have no foundation in EU or NATO institutions. Indeed, Europe’s new militarist politics already undermines its democratic institutions and laws. In Germany, the lame-duck parliament is rushing changes to the German constitution to allow new debt for public spending, a dubious move in terms of democratic legitimation. It is also a slap in the face of the German public, who have been told for 15 years that the debt brake written into Germany's constitution is an immutable law of nature, that spending on schools, bridges, trains running on time or healthcare would drive Germany into ruin. At the March 6 European Council meeting, EU governments agreed a €150 billion loan instrument to facilitate defense spending by member states. This immediately appears to be illegal: the EU’s foundational treaty explicitly forbidsspending on anything defense and military. Another €650 billion are supposed to be raised by member states for their weapons purchases, for which they will be exempt from the EU’s strict limits on borrowing. EU citizens, who have seen their welfare states starved and their public assets plundered in the name of fiscal discipline mandated by Brussels, have every reason to feel betrayed. Meanwhile, former EU official and Quincy Institute non-resident fellow Eldar Mamedov observes, “weapons lobbyists are sprouting like mushrooms in Brussels”. Predictably, this new defense spending has come with new calls to cut social spending even further. As economist Isabella Weber has shown, these dogmatic austerity policies have been the chief reason for the rise of far-right, undemocratic parties. Rapid rearmament accompanied by austerity on steroids might lead to the unthinkable: Germany’s AfD wants conscription back, too. And German nuclear weapons. Europe’s bellicist frenzy may be induced by fear, but not of Russia actually waging war in Europe’s heartland. The suggestion that Russia will defeat and occupy all of Ukraine, then march on through Poland and soon thereafter through the Brandenburg gate flies in the face of observable military reality. Instead, European elites seem to fear losing power and status, the position of global dominance they enjoyed vicariously in the shady comfort of the American nuclear umbrella. The prospect of having to deal with other nations as equals, as they will have to in the multipolar order acknowledged by Rubio, horrifies them. Polish PM Tusk has made clear how important “winning” is, stating that “Europe is […] capable of winning any military, financial, economic confrontation with Russia — we are simply stronger”, that Europe “must winthis arms race” and that Russia “will lose like the Soviet Union 40 years ago.” Macron, in his recent address to the French public, emphasized how European capacities are strong enough to stand up to the U.S., but even more and especially so, to Russia. In this mindset, it must not be that Europe is not superior in this, and every, respect. American foreign policy thinkers have shown that the pursuit of militarist great power competition has been bad for U.S. security, democracy and domestic well-being and counseled foreign and defense policies of restraint. One — entirely appropriate — of their recommendations is to reduce U.S. military commitment to Europe. However, to therefore celebrate the recent news of €800 billion for European defense is inconsistent. Europe appears set to spend vast amounts of money without rhyme or reason, without taking into account dramatic new technological and tactical developments on the Ukrainian battlefield, let alone a consolidated assessment of threats and how those might be dealt with more effectively by a range of non-violent foreign policies. If militarism has been bad for the U.S., leading to protracted wars that bring no greater security, the depletion of American society’s well-being, the capture of its politics by arms lobbies and the erosion of its democracy, why would such militarism be good for Europe? https://responsiblestatecraft.org/europe-defense-spending/
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
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avoiding the trap....
Truce or dare? Why Putin refused to play the ceasefire game
How Russia’s President avoided a carefully laid trap
By Vitaly Ryumshin
The past week is sure to be remembered in diplomatic textbooks – perhaps in a chapter titled ‘How to Sabotage an Unwanted Ceasefire’. Every player in the conflict put on a masterclass in maneuvering, even Ukraine, whose diplomatic skills I usually doubt. But in Jeddah, desperate to escape US President Donald Trump’s iron grip on peace at all costs, they pulled a classic bait-and-switch.
The Ukrainians handed Trump a piece of paper with a meaningless ceasefire proposal. In return, they secured renewed US military aid without any real obligations – except signing a vague resource-sharing agreement. More importantly, they played to Trump’s ego, allowing him to trumpet a grand victory to the world while leading him down a dead-end path that will ultimately stall negotiations.
How did the Americans fall for this trick? Perhaps it was the eight hours of stalling by the Ukrainian delegation. Perhaps they exploited Trump’s well-known preference for flattery over details. Or maybe, as history often reveals, there were other behind-the-scenes factors that will emerge later in memoirs.
Regardless, the result is clear: The Trump administration embraced a 30-day ceasefire plan – one originally concocted by Britain and France, the loudest voices of the Western ‘war party’. These European powers, deeply skeptical of Trump, had one goal – to prevent Washington from backing out of the conflict and leaving them with the burden of propping up Kiev. Their proposed ceasefire was designed to be unacceptable to Russia, likely in the hope that Moscow would reject it outright, triggering an impulsive reaction from Trump and further entangling him in the Ukrainian quagmire.
But Moscow was not so easily outmaneuvered. The Kremlin quickly assessed the trap: A ceasefire would give Ukraine a much-needed strategic breather, allowing it to drag out negotiations indefinitely while reinforcing its position with continued Western military aid. Meanwhile, Russia would lose its battlefield momentum without any concrete concessions from Kiev or assurances of meaningful dialogue.
Putin’s response was measured and precise. He neither accepted nor rejected the proposal, instead praising Trump and offering to “work out the nuances” – all while setting his own conditions for a ceasefire: An immediate halt to US military aid and an end to mobilization in Ukraine.
Of these two conditions, the suspension of military aid is the more realistic. The Biden administration’s weapon shipments have already been delivered, and Trump was never eager to send new ones. The demand for Ukraine to halt mobilization, however, was clearly designed to put Zelensky in a difficult position. If he accepts, he weakens his war effort. If he refuses, he risks Trump’s wrath for obstructing peace. In essence, Putin returned the ‘ball’ to Kiev, along with a set of new challenges. As of this writing, Ukraine has yet to respond.
Watching the back-and-forth over a ceasefire, one might wonder: Is it really such a bad idea? Not necessarily. Despite prevailing opinions to the contrary, even for Russia, a well-structured ceasefire could be beneficial. It would provide an opportunity to achieve the objectives of the Special Military Operation through negotiations rather than prolonged bloodshed. To dismiss this option outright would be shortsighted.
But for a ceasefire to work, it cannot be as empty as the vague US-Ukrainian agreement of March 11. A rushed deal without clear commitments is open to abuse. Trump may not care about these details – his primary interest is in scoring political points to bolster his shaky poll numbers. But for Russia, which seeks a lasting settlement rather than a temporary pause, substance is far more important than optics.
A viable ceasefire must meet two essential conditions. First, as Putin has already stated, it must include ironclad guarantees that the opposing side will not exploit the truce for its own advantage. Second, it must serve as a trust-building measure, reflecting Ukraine’s genuine commitment to advancing the peace process – not just stalling for time.
In preliminary talks, Russia should demand specifics from Kiev on what happens after the ceasefire begins. A simple gesture of goodwill could be the revocation of Zelensky’s decree banning negotiations with Moscow. This should be followed by the lifting of martial law and the announcement of a date for Ukrainian presidential elections. If Trump is truly committed to his proposed three-step plan – ceasefire, elections, and peace – then persuading him of these steps should not be difficult. But Zelensky’s reaction will be telling.
The coming weeks will reveal whether, after further consultations between US and Russian officials – and potentially a direct call between Putin and Trump – the 30-day ceasefire plan evolves into something more concrete. The ideal outcome is a structured agreement that leads to lasting peace. But the reality may be very different.
For now, the diplomatic ball continues to be passed between Washington, Kiev, and Moscow. And the outcome remains uncertain.
This article was first published by the online newspaper Gazeta.ru and was translated and edited by the RT team
https://www.rt.com/russia/614322-putins-power-play-ceasefire/
THE MOST LIKELY OUTCOME:
MAKE A DEAL PRONTO BEFORE THE SHIT HITS THE FAN:
NO NATO IN "UKRAINE" (WHAT'S LEFT OF IT)
THE DONBASS REPUBLICS ARE NOW BACK IN THE RUSSIAN FOLD — AS THEY USED TO BE PRIOR 1922. THE RUSSIANS WON'T ABANDON THESE AGAIN.
THESE WILL ALSO INCLUDE ODESSA, KHERSON AND KHARKIV.....
CRIMEA IS RUSSIAN — AS IT USED TO BE PRIOR 1954
TRANSNISTRIA WILL BE PART OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION.
A MEMORANDUM OF NON-AGGRESSION BETWEEN RUSSIA AND THE USA.
EASY.
THE WEST KNOWS IT.
READ FROM TOP.
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.