Russian Red Lines

Photo: Cemetery in Mykolaiv, southern Ukraine, Bulent Kilic/AFP via Getty Images

On top of the fog of war we have the additional problem of understanding due to the fog of the media.  Again and again we have been told that the West can increase its intervention because Putin’s red lines are a bluff.

In The Irish Times, its Ukraine correspondent commented (under the headline – ‘Ukrainian long-range strikes on Russian supply lines would likely expose Putin’s escalation bluff’) – that previous delivery of F16s and invasion of the Kursk area of Russia had not ‘triggered the escalation that Moscow threatens.’  The byline also states that ‘Permission from US and Britain for Kyiv to hit targets deeper inside Russia expected to spark closer Moscow link with Iran and North Korea, not conflict with Nato.’

A second IT article states that ‘The US may in the coming days grant the UK and France permission to let Kyiv use their long-range strike weapons, which rely on American navigational data, inside Russia as requested by Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskiy, said people familiar with the discussions.’  In the event, we have been told that this decision has been postponed.

The British, in the shape of Starmer and Lammy have been to the forefront in pushing their use, with Lammy rejecting Putin’s threats because he was just “throwing dust up into the air” with “a lot of bluster.”  Some voices urging caution have been reported (see the second link above) but no explicit explanation why Putin’s ‘threats’ might be real.

The western media pretends to the truth and objectivity but this whole narrative is suffused with propaganda and illustrative of how an unwitting and unwilling public could be dragged into war.  The US and UK threaten to hit Russia with long-range missiles, but it is Putin who issues ‘threats’.  The potential for escalation can be ignored because previous Russian red lines have been crossed without consequence, even if many of these red lines have been the creations of the Western politicians and media itself, under the cover of general Russian disapproval and vitriol.

The West threatens these attacks while dismissing Russian ‘escalation’ as if the word escalation is a Russian one, which only its actions involve. It has also been suggested that Russia doesn’t really have any red lines, a view which ironically helped bring about the war in the first place. If there are three claims made about it, it is that Russia carried out a full-scale invasion in 2022 that was illegal and unprovoked.  However, only one of these is correct.

Without doubt the invasion was illegal but it was not full scale and was not unprovoked.  The head of the Ukrainian armed forces Syrskyi recently admitted that Russia invaded with around 100,000 troops, a force far smaller than the Ukrainian army. Hardly full scale in terms of numbers and therefore in objectives.  Russia had for decades made it clear that Ukrainian membership of NATO was unacceptable and represented a threat to its security.  The Russian invasion took place because this red line was crossed, and the threat of long range missiles against it is confirmation of why it took this view.

This does not mean that its position is therefore justified and should be supported.  The nature of the war is determined by the nature of the forces involved and socialists cannot support either Russia or Ukraine/NATO without ceasing to be socialist.  Many in the West have taken this course and in doing so crossed class lines – the red lines that socialists have – to become traitors and enemies of the working class.

Repeated escalation of Western involvement has been accompanied by the claim that previous Russian red lines have been crossed while at the same time stating that they don’t exist.  Russian warnings can thus be acknowledged and then ignored, bit by bit habituating workers in the West to further and further aggression and steps towards outright war.  This has been clear from before the Russian invasion through NATO expansion into Eastern Europe but still many leftists in the West pretend there is not an imperialist proxy war, a claim more and more impossible to square with each escalation.

Putin, who the media is ever so keen to quote, has stated that in order for long range missiles to strike Russia NATO personnel must be directly involved, on top of provision of intelligence and targeting assistance.  This is one reason given why Germany has rejected such action – because it involves NATO in direct conflict in a new way.  The risks of a significant step towards world war are obvious, made all the more unjustifiable by repeated acknowledgement by those championing their use that these missiles ‘would have only “a limited effect” on the war as a whole’ and Lammy’s admission that “No war is won with any one weapon.”

Putin has stated  that “direct participation” of NATO countries in the war in Ukraine “would substantially change the very essence, the nature of the conflict. This will mean that NATO countries, the USA and European states, are fighting with Russia.”  The self-censorship of the Western media means that this statement is quoted without any attempt to acknowledge its truth or even to deny it.

There is a certain amount of irrationality in such a course and a number of ideas have been propounded about it, such as that the US and Russia will have an agreement that certain targets will be off-limits if/when these attacks are carried out. In any case, it is clear that Zelensky and the most rabid Ukrainian nationalists either cannot or will not survive politically without escalation, with their justification that it will bring the end of the war closer through Russian agreeing to negotiations already being disproved.

Ukraine is losing the war, and its only hope is increased US/NATO intervention, which it may seek to achieve through provocations against Russia producing a response that could be used as justification.  Just as Ukraine is losing, so is Russia winning, which is why so many of its purported red lines have been ignored while it has continued its objectives of degrading and neutering the Ukrainian armed forces. It has no reason to seek to go beyond its existing approach.

The goal of the US is degradation of Russia, and it has no interest in ending a war that achieves this or makes a significant contribution towards it.  At the same time, it has no interest in a war with Russia although miscalculation can play a part in creating one.  Its intervention so far has been to prolong the war through military support to Ukraine, without which it could not have continued, and scuppering the potential peace deal that was being negotiated, something given additional support by a recent interview with the US apparatchik Victoria Nuland.  If the war cannot be pursued through Ukrainian collapse the US with NATO may seek to freeze it in order to lay the ground for another one at a more propitious time, as it did with the MINSK agreements.

Whatever motives and calculations are being made by the various imperialist elites we can be sure that the fog of the media will not reveal them but provide the gloss necessary for their actions to maintain the passivity and ignorance of their populations.  The pro-war left go a step beyond this to prettify these motives, calculations and actions so that they are worse than the capitalist media. They too rely on it to ensure that the real nature of the war is covered up.

See also Sticking it to the Russians

2 thoughts on “Russian Red Lines

  1. I watch and listen to Times Radio on you tube as penance for my past sins. It is specular in its stupidity. Every day we get a parade of establishment think tankers and retired generals telling us that Russia is on its knees and one more push ought to see Putin toppled. I actually think they believe their own propaganda which is really scary.

    I watch and listen to judging freedom on youtube. It is fronted by judge Napolitano who in theory is right wing but in practice is scathing on American foreign policy more so that much of the liberal left. He covers both wars with guests who take the very opposite viewpoint to the Times Radio. I am especially impressed by the thoughts of Charles Freeman a guy out of the Regan administration. He is a wise old owl when it comes to foreign relations,he has no British or Europen equivalent. Who would have thought we would have to resort to old style conservatives to find some sanity.

  2. A number of thoughts have occurred to me, over a period of time that are connected and embraced by the response to the war.

    1. I have written in the past, on my blog, about the fact that, particularly since WWII, and development of welfarism, but more specifically in recent times i.e. the last 30 years, an attitude of “somebody must” or “somebody will” do something, and so people expect to take actions without consequences. They expect someone to bail them out for their feckless or reckless behaviour. Speculated on the stock market, just before it crashed, someone will bail you out, QE; bought a house next to a river, or in a flood plane, and surprise surprise you get flooded, someone who didn’t have your otherwise pleasant location, will financially compensate you; bought a house in the middle of a forest, in an area that suffers fires in the Summer, same again; had a load of kids but no means to support them, never mind the state will provide the resources.
    2. So, its no wonder that many can imagine that a decision that may lead to the extermination of Mankind via thermonuclear war is viewed similarly. Surely someone will do something to stop those taking the decision being burned to a cinder won’t they?
    3. The media are solely driven by short-term egoism, and sensationalism. I remember 30 years ago or so, our local newspaper, in conditions where Labour had an almost monopoly control over the City Council could always be relied upon to fill its pages with various campaigns and criticism of it. Of course, given the usual uselessness of Labour councils that wasn’t hard. When the idea of elected Mayors was introduced, the paper, of course, engaged in a public crusade to get locals to support its introduction, and eventually, that crusade achieved victory. No sooner had the elected Mayor taken office, however, than the paper had to run stories on the terrible decisions that were being made, and began a crusade to dislodge him, and scrap the position itself.
    4. I suspect that all of the coverage given to Farage and for Brexit had more to do with that than any actual groundswell of ideological commitment to that project within the ranks of the media organisations. Even within the likes of the Mail, Express and so on, their ideological commitment amongst the journalists – given their middle-class nature, and benefits of being in the EU – was likely simply to reflect the bigotry of their reader base.
    5. Brexit was easy ratings, as with any war, COVID and lockdowns and so on, and to the extent that there is no real story, it has to be created by sensationalism and what Dave Gorman calls the use of redundant superlatives. Everything is always unprecedented, the biggest, smallest, hottest, coldest, driest, wettest and so on, even when it clearly isn’t, and its only in the small print that the caveats negating the headline claim becomes apparent, or often even isn’t!
    6. As Professor Woolhouse indicated in his book on lockdowns, a lot of it was driven by this media driven frenzy and moral panic, which forced on society an almost totalitarian view that COVID was an existential threat, and only total adherence to a societal lockdown was acceptable. Yet, as Woolhouse indicates – and as Vallance had indicated at the start – it was nonsense, and represented a serious threat only to a small minority, who indeed, needed to be protected (and weren’t), and that the fastest solution was not lockdowns, but a rapid natural development of herd immunity. Yet, the totally irrational decisions led to not only kids losing two years of education, not only to a 20% reduction in GDP, but to a wild printing of money tokens that led to rampant inflation. Again, decisions taken on the basis that someone else will pick up the tab, actions without consideration of consequences, whilst for he media it provided 2 years of sensationalist stories – including ludicrous claims about mass burials, cremations and so on – as well as the lurid stories about who was doing who, on the side, in breach of the ridiculous regulations, who was going to parties, and other such trivia.
    7. They are treating the war in Ukraine and their reckless campaign to step it up, to have Ukrainian soldiers lose their lives to attack Russia, and worse to fire missiles deep into Russia, where already Russian civilians in tower blocks have been killed from Ukrainian drone and missile strikes, in the same way. For them, it is the latest bit of sensation, though in recent months it has lacked any sensation for them, as the war dragged into a stalemate, with if anything Russia slowly advancing against their desired narrative. In 1982, neither Thatcher nor Galtieri actually wanted war, as opposed to using the potential for sabre rattling and rallying the people around the flag as both faced domestic opposition. But, having started the ball rolling, and with the media picking it up and running with it, they got war anyway. This time, however, it would be with a nuclear armed Russia, and given its inferiority in conventional weapons, compared to NATO, a rapid resort to those nuclear weapons is assured.
    8. Finally, I was watching a Youtube video today of LBC. The presenter again talked about if Russia takes Ukraine, or even Donbas, it would be an incentive for China to take Taiwan. First there is no reason to believe that, but second, the presenter talked about this in terms of China believes that Taiwan is part of China. But, of course, Taiwan IS part of China, and always has been. The people who live in Taiwan ARE Chinese. Taiwan was occupied by Japanese imperialism, along with other parts of China, and when the CCP were overrunning China after WWII, the US persuaded Japan to hand Taiwan/Formosa over to the butchers of Chiang Kai Shek and the KMT, so that they could establish themselves there without a fight.

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