consortiumnews.com 
<https://consortiumnews.com/2022/02/23/diana-johnstone-us-foreign-policy-is-a-cruel-sport/>
  


DIANA JOHNSTONE: US Foreign Policy Is a Cruel Sport


11-14 minutes

  _____  

Bear baiting was long ago banned as inhumane. Yet today, a version is being 
practiced every day against whole nations on a gigantic international scale. 

 NATO officials visit Ukraine, April 7, 2021. (NATO) 
<https://consortiumnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/51113088372_691377e123_k.jpg>
 

By Diana Johnstone <https://consortiumnews.com/tag/diana-johnstone/> 
in Paris 
Special to Consortium News

In the time of the first Queen Elizabeth, British royal circles enjoyed 
watching fierce dogs torment a captive bear for the fun of it.  The bear had 
done no harm to anyone, but the dogs were trained to provoke the imprisoned 
beast and goad it into fighting back.  Blood flowing from the excited animals 
delighted the spectators.

This cruel practice has long since been banned as inhumane.

And yet today, a version of bear baiting is being practiced every day against 
whole nations on a gigantic international scale.  It is called United States 
foreign policy. It has become the regular practice of the absurd international 
sports club called NATO.

United States leaders, secure in their arrogance as “the indispensable nation,” 
have no more respect for other countries than the Elizabethans had for the 
animals they tormented. The list is long of targets of U.S. bear baiting, but 
Russia stands out as prime example of constant harassment.  And this is no 
accident.  The baiting is deliberately and elaborately planned.

As evidence, I call attention to a 2019 report by the RAND corporation to the 
U.S. Army chief of staff entitled “Extending Russia.” Actually, the RAND study 
itself is fairly cautious in its recommendations and warns that many perfidious 
tricks might not work.  However, I consider the very existence of this report 
scandalous, not so much for its content as for the fact that this is what the 
Pentagon pays its top intellectuals to do: figure out ways to lure other 
nations into troubles U.S. leaders hope to exploit.

The official U.S. line is that the Kremlin threatens Europe by its aggressive 
expansionism, but when the strategists talk among themselves the story is very 
different.  Their goal is to use sanctions, propaganda and other measures to 
provokeRussia into taking the very sort of negative measures (“over-extension”) 
that the U.S. can exploit to Russia’s detriment.

The RAND study explains its goals:

“We examine a range of nonviolent measures that could exploit Russia’s actual 
vulnerabilities and anxieties as a way of stressing Russia’s military and 
economy and the regime’s political standing at home and abroad. The steps we 
examine would not have either defense or deterrence as their prime purpose, 
although they might contribute to both. Rather, these steps are conceived of as 
elements in a campaign designed to unbalance the adversary, leading Russia to 
compete in domains or regions where the United States has a competitive 
advantage, and causing Russia to overextend itself militarily or economically 
or causing the regime to lose domestic and/or international prestige and 
influence.”

Clearly, in U.S. ruling circles, this is considered “normal” behavior, just as 
teasing is normal behavior for the schoolyard bully, and sting operations are 
normal for corrupt FBI agents.

This description perfectly fits U.S. operations in Ukraine, intended to 
“exploit Russia’s vulnerabilities and anxieties” by advancing a hostile 
military alliance onto its doorstep, while describing Russia’s totally 
predictable reactions as gratuitous aggression.  Diplomacy involves 
understanding the position of the other party.  But verbal bear baiting 
requires total refusal to understand the other, and constant deliberate 
misinterpretation of whatever the other party says or does.

What is truly diabolical is that, while constantly accusing the Russian bear of 
plotting to expand, the whole policy is directed at goading it into expanding!  
Because then we can issue punishing sanctions, raise the Pentagon budget a few 
notches higher and tighten the NATO Protection Racket noose tighter around our 
precious European “allies.”

For a generation, Russian leaders have made extraordinary efforts to build a 
peaceful partnership with “the West,” institutionalized as the European Union 
and above all, NATO. They truly believed that the end of the artificial Cold 
War could produce a peace-loving European neighborhood. But arrogant United 
States leaders, despite contrary advice from their best experts, rejected 
treating Russia as the great nation it is, and preferred to treat it as the 
harassed bear in a circus.

The expansion of NATO was a form of bear-baiting, the clear way to transform a 
potential friend into an enemy. That was the way chosen by former U.S. 
President Bill Clinton and following administrations.  Moscow had accepted the 
independence of former members of the Soviet Union.  Bear-baiting involved 
constantly accusing Moscow of plotting to take them back by force.

Russia’s Borderland

Ukraine is a word meaning borderlands, essentially the borderlands between 
Russia and the territories to the West that were sometimes part of Poland, or 
Lithuania, or Habsburg lands.  As a part of the U.S.S.R., Ukraine was expanded 
to include large swaths of both.  History had created very contrasting 
identities on the two extremities, with the result that the independent nation 
of Ukraine, which came into existence only in 1991, was deeply divided from the 
start.  And from the start, Washington strategies, in cahoots with a large, 
hyperactive anti-communist anti-Russian diaspora in the U.S. and Canada, 
contrived to use the bitterness of Ukraine’s divisions to weaken first the 
U.S.S.R. and then Russia.  Billions of dollars were invested in order to 
“strengthen democracy” – meaning the pro-Western west of Ukraine against its 
semi-Russian east.

The 2014 U.S.-backed coup that overthrew President Viktor Yukanovych, solidly 
supported by the east of the country, brought to power pro-West forces 
determined to bring Ukraine into NATO, whose designation of Russia as prime 
enemy had become ever more blatant. This caused the prospect of an eventual 
NATO capture of Russia’s major naval base at Sebastopol, on the Crimean 
peninsula.  

Since the Crimean population had never wanted to be part of Ukraine, the peril 
was averted by organizing a referendum in which an overwhelming majority of 
Crimeans voted to return to Russia, from which they had been severed by an 
autocratic Khrushchev ruling in 1954.  Western propagandists relentlessly 
denounced this act of self-determination as a “Russian invasion” foreshadowing 
a program of Russian military conquest of its Western neighbors – a fantasy 
supported by neither facts nor motivation.

Appalled by the coup overthrowing the president they had voted for, by 
nationalists threatening to outlaw the Russian language they spoke, the people 
of the eastern provinces of Donetsk and Lugansk declared their independence.

March 2015: Civilians pass by as OSCE monitors the movement of heavy weaponry 
in eastern Ukraine. (OSCE, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0) 
<https://consortiumnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/16731644405_d958658309_k-1.jpg>
 

Russia did not support this move, but instead supported the Minsk agreement, 
signed in February 2015 and endorsed by a UN Security Council resolution. The 
gist of the accord was to preserve the territorial integrity of Ukraine by a 
federalization process that would return the breakaway republics in return for 
their local autonomy.

The Minsk agreement set out a few steps to end the internal Ukrainian crisis. 
First, Ukraine was supposed to immediately adopt a law granting self-government 
to eastern regions (in March 2015). Next, Kiev would negotiate with eastern 
territories over guidelines for local elections to be held that year under OSCE 
supervision.  Then Kiev would implement a constitutional reform guaranteeing 
eastern right. After the elections, Kiev would take full control of Donetsk and 
Lugansk, including border with Russia.  A general amnesty would cover soldiers 
on both sides.

However, although it signed the agreement, Kiev has never implemented any of 
these points and refuses to negotiate with the eastern rebels.  Under the 
so-called Normandy agreement, France and Germany were expected to put pressure 
on Kiev to accept this peaceful settlement, but nothing happened. Instead, the 
West has accused Russia of failing to implement the agreement, which makes no 
sense inasmuch as the obligations to implement fall on Kiev, not on Moscow.  
Kiev officials regularly reiterate their refusal to negotiate with the rebels, 
while demanding more and more weaponry from NATO powers in order to deal with 
the problem in their own way.

Meanwhile, major parties in the Russian Duma and public opinion have long 
expressed concern for the Russian-speaking population of the eastern provinces, 
suffering from privations and military attack from the central government for 
eight years. This concern is naturally interpreted in the West as a remake of 
Hitler’s drive to conquest neighboring countries.  However, as usual the 
inevitable Hitler analogy is baseless. For one thing, Russia is too large to 
need to conquer Lebensraum.

You Want an Enemy?  Now You’ve Got One

Germany has found the perfect formula for Western relations with Russia: Are 
you or are you not a “Putinversteher,” a “Putin understander?” By Putin they 
mean Russia, since the standard Western propaganda ploy is to personify the 
targeted country with the name of its president, Vladimir Putin, necessarily a 
dictatorial autocrat.   If you “understand” Putin, or Russia, then you are 
under deep suspicion of disloyalty to the West.  So, all together now, let us 
make sure that we DO NOT UNDERSTAND Russia!

Russian leaders claim to feel threatened by members of a huge hostile alliance, 
holding regular military manoeuvers on their doorstep?  They feel uneasy about 
nuclear missiles aimed at their territory from nearby NATO member states?  Why, 
that’s just paranoia, or a sign of sly, aggressive intentions.  There is 
nothing to understand.

So, the West has treated Russia like a baited bear.  And what it’s getting is a 
nuclear-armed, militarily powerful adversary nation led by people vastly more 
thoughtful and intelligent than the mediocre politicians in office in 
Washington, London and a few other places.

U.S. President Joe Biden and his Deep State never wanted a peaceful solution in 
Ukraine, because troubled Ukraine acts as a permanent barrier between Russia 
and Western Europe, ensuring U.S. control over the latter.  They have spent 
years treating Russia as an adversary, and Russia is now drawing the inevitable 
conclusion that the West will accept it only as an adversary.  The patience is 
at an end. And this is a game changer.

First reaction: the West will punish the bear with sanctions!  Germany is 
stopping certification of the Nordstream 2 natural gas pipeline.  Germany thus 
refuses to buy the Russian gas it needs in order to make sure Russia won’t be 
able to cut off the gas it needs sometime in the future.  Now that’s a clever 
trick, isn’t it!  And meanwhile, with a growing gas shortage and rising prices, 
Russia will have no trouble selling its gas somewhere else in Asia.

When “our values” include refusal to understand, there is no limit to how much 
we can fail to understand.

To be continued.

Diana Johnstone was press secretary of the Green Group in the European 
Parliament from 1989 to 1996. In her latest book, Circle in the Darkness: 
Memoirs of a World Watcher (Clarity Press, 2020), she recounts key episodes in 
the transformation of the German Green Party from a peace to a war party. Her 
other books include Fools’ Crusade: Yugoslavia, NATO and Western Delusions 
(Pluto/Monthly Review) and in co-authorship with her father, Paul H. Johnstone, 
From MAD to Madness: Inside Pentagon Nuclear War Planning (Clarity Press). She 
can be reached at [email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> 

The views expressed are solely those of the author and may or may not reflect 
those of Consortium News.

 

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