Poke the bear and find out: Here’s why the West should finally listen to Russia’s warnings

Guest Post by Tarik Cyril Amar

We have been through an intense, if muffled crisis in the ongoing political-military confrontation between Russia and the West by way of Ukraine. The essence of this crisis is simple: Kiev and its Western supporters have lost the initiative in the Ukraine proxy war and may be on the verge of defeat, as high Western officials increasingly admit.

In response to this self-inflicted quandary, several important Western players have threatened further escalation. Most prominently, Great Britain’s Foreign Secretary David Cameron publicly encouraged Kiev to use British Storm Shadow missiles to strike inside Russia. French President Emmanuel Macron continued to threaten a direct – not covert, as at present – intervention by French, that is, NATO, troops (In addition, an intriguing and much-discussed article reported that a deployment of 1,500 troops from France’s Foreign Legion had already begun. While its sources were hard to assess, its claims appeared too plausible for easy dismissal.)

Moscow, in return, issued a set of stark warnings, laying down – or highlighting – red lines. It announced drills with tactical nuclear weapons. Belarus did the same; in Minsk’s case, the weapons in question are, of course, also Russian. In addition, the British and French ambassadors received extremely straight talk about the risks their respective governments were running.

Addressing London, Moscow made clear that Kiev striking inside Russia with British missiles would expose Britain to “catastrophic consequences,” in particular, Russian retaliation against British forces anywhere. Regarding France, Moscow blasted its “belligerent” and “provocative” conduct and defied as futile French attempts to produce “strategic ambiguity.”

For now, this particular crisis seems to have abated. There are some signs that the West got the message. NATO figurehead Jens Stoltenberg, for instance, has insisted that NATO is not planning to send troops – openly, that is – into Ukraine.

Yet it would be wrong to feel too reassured. For this crisis was, at its core, a clash between, on one side, a Western problem that has by no means gone away and, on the other side, a persistent Russian policy that, it seems, all too many in the West refuse to take seriously enough.

Message to the West: What’s behind Russia’s tactical nuclear drills

The Western problem is that a defeat at Russia’s hands would be worse by orders of magnitude than the fiasco of the rout-like retreat from Afghanistan in 2021. Ironically, that is so because the West itself has charged its needless confrontation with Russia with the power to do unprecedented damage to NATO and the EU:

First, by insisting on treating Ukraine as a de facto almost-NATO-member, which means that by defeating it, Moscow will also defeat Washington’s key alliance. Second, by investing large and growing sums of money and quantities of supplies into this proxy war, which means that the West has weakened itself and, perhaps even more importantly, revealed its own weakness. Third, by trying to ruin both Russia’s economy and its international standing; the failure of both attempts has resulted in a stronger Russia across these two domains and, once again, revealed more limits of Western power. Fourth, by radically subordinating the EU to NATO and Washington, the geopolitical damage has been, as it were, leveraged.

In short, when the Ukraine crisis started in 2013/14 and then greatly escalated in 2022, Russia had vital security interests at stake; the West did not. By now, however, the West has made choices that have charged this conflict and its outcome with the capacity to do great, strategic harm to its own credibility, cohesion, and power: Overreach has consequences. That, briefly, is why the West is at an impasse and remains there after this crisis.

On the other side, we have that persistent policy of Moscow, namely its nuclear doctrine. Much Western commentary tends to overlook or downplay this factor, caricaturing Russia’s repeated warnings about nuclear weapons as “saber-rattling.” Yet, in reality, these warnings are consistent expressions of a policy that has been developed since the early 2000s, that is, for almost a quarter-century.

A key feature of this doctrine is that Russia explicitly retains the option of using nuclear weapons at a relatively early stage in a major conflict and before an adversary has had recourse to them. Many Western analysts have described the purpose of this posture as facilitating a strategy of “escalating to deescalate” (sometimes abbreviated as E2DE), here meaning specifically to end a conventional conflict on favorable terms through a limited use of nuclear weapons to deter the adversary from continuing.

The term “escalate to de-escalate” emerged in the West, not Russia, and this Western interpretation of Russian policy has played an important role in Western politics and debates and, thus, has its critics as well. In addition – but this is a separate question – some analysts point out that the idea of E2DE is less of any country’s national property than something inherent in the logic of nuclear strategy, that other nuclear powers have had similar policies, and that the whole idea, whoever adopts it, may not work.

In addition, Russia’s nuclear doctrine is, as you would expect, complex. And, while France’s President Emmanuel Macron has made a habit of strutting a constant inconstancy he calls “strategic ambiguity,” Moscow is capable of inflicting some genuine calculated uncertainty on its adversaries, with less bragging but more effectively. Thus, one side of its nuclear doctrine stresses that nuclear weapons could only be used if the existence of the Russian state was in danger, as has just been underlined again by Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov. But to misunderstand this as a promise that Moscow would only use nukes if Moscow were under siege and half of Russia’s territory or population gone already, would be foolish.

In reality, there also is room in its nuclear doctrine for treating the unconditional territorial integrity and sovereignty of Russia as critical thresholds. How do we know? From multiple Russian documents, which need not be cited here because Ryabkov has reminded us of this facet of Moscow’s policy, too. In the same statement in which he emphasized the criterion of “state existence.” Take that, Emmanuel.

A final point, it seems, needs highlighting as well: Russia has never restricted its option of using nuclear weapons, indeed any type of weapons, to the area of a specific local conflict, for instance, Ukraine. The opposite is the case. Moscow is explicitly reserving the right to strike beyond the confines of such a battlefield. That is something that President Vladimir Putin has made crystal clear in his address to Russia’s Federal Assembly in February of this year. It is exactly that message that Britain has received as well in the recent crisis.

Whichever way you parse it, official Russian nuclear doctrine has specific messages for potential adversaries. Moscow has consistently applied this doctrine throughout the Ukraine War and in its recent warnings – by drill and by diplomatic demarche – to its Western opponents.

But there is the rub: The West has a history of obstinately not hearing Russian messages. That is how we ended up in this war in the first place. Russia had warned the West repeatedly since, at the latest, President Vladimir Putin’s well-known speech at the Munich Security Conference in – wait for it – 2007. The last major warning came in late 2021, when Russia – with Sergey Ryabkov, incidentally, in the forefront – offered the West what turned out to be a last chance to abandon its unilateralism and specifically NATO expansion and, instead, negotiate a new security framework. The West brushed this offer off. With nuclear weapons in play, it is time that Western elites learn to, finally, listen when Russia sends a serious warning.

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28 Comments
foot in the forest
foot in the forest
May 12, 2024 9:18 am

NATO aka US foreign policy can’t seem to come to grips with the fact in the real world that LOSERS accept terms, they do not make them. The future is so bright I gotta wear shades.

Stop. Just Stop.
Stop. Just Stop.
May 12, 2024 9:29 am

It’s ALL a big charade.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Stop. Just Stop.
May 12, 2024 4:33 pm

At once true and false!
Good job!

Aunt Acid
Aunt Acid
  Anonymous
May 12, 2024 10:34 pm

“How many fingers, Winston?”

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
May 14, 2024 10:28 am

Nope, all true.

MyCankleHurts
MyCankleHurts
  Stop. Just Stop.
May 13, 2024 11:43 am

Charade is pretty good movie!

Yahsure
Yahsure
May 12, 2024 9:51 am

I betcha a buncha of criminals have been laughing their asses off. All the way to secret bank accounts. How many countries and companies were involved and profiting from all this stupid death? That British Cameron? dick nixed a peace deal. He should be up on charges for all the resulting deaths.

Doyle
Doyle
  Yahsure
May 12, 2024 11:33 pm

The only one that should be up on ANY charges is Putin, the rest is deflection and basic stupidity.

Anonymouse
Anonymouse
May 12, 2024 9:57 am

The Banksters in the City of London need war to save their Ponzi…we will have war.

k31
k31
  Anonymouse
May 12, 2024 6:02 pm

Nothing is of higher priority in the City of London than the genocide of Europeans, particularly Christians.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  k31
May 14, 2024 10:37 am

They don’t care if you’re Christian. Only if you’re White and viable opposition to their thousands of years old plan of global conquest. The God of Abraham is their God. The scriptures boast of a 4000 year history of genocide and the destruction of nations wherever they migrate. Prophesizing (threatening) the same on a global scale. Yet we’re supposed to believe that plan will make the world aright. I think we can do better.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymouse
May 14, 2024 10:32 am

Not to miss a trick the central banking controlled West is being handed over to a central banking controlled East that will soon show it’s Communist hand.

Ozark Grandpa
Ozark Grandpa
May 12, 2024 10:33 am

This post is from a while back when the Ukraine conflict wasgetting started, but not much has changed, so: The Folly of Misjudging the Bear – Folk Potpourri

Nitroexpress455
Nitroexpress455
May 12, 2024 11:38 am

They’re discussing humanity’s future over cocktails at their purple-clad, resplendent Reptilian BBQ. Lizard peeople, every last one of’em. Gila monster eugenics gone horribly wrong. They’ll pay, they just don’t know it yet.

well_Inever
well_Inever
May 12, 2024 1:23 pm

3 years old but I still love it. Put the headphones on and crank it up. These parasite ruling class will never defeat the Russians.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  well_Inever
May 12, 2024 11:23 pm

Nary a rainbow flag in sight.

Anonymous
Anonymous
May 12, 2024 2:26 pm

comment image

comment image

Art Simpson
Art Simpson
May 12, 2024 2:38 pm

Daniel 7:5
And behold another beast, a second, like to a bear, and it raised up itself on one side, and it had three ribs in the mouth of it between the teeth of it: and they said thus unto it, Arise, devour much flesh.

Jerry Mander
Jerry Mander
  Art Simpson
May 12, 2024 5:34 pm

And I said Behold, ancient prophecies are bullshit, let enough time pass and they resemble a hundred events.

MyCankleHurts
MyCankleHurts
  Art Simpson
May 13, 2024 11:45 am

Witness: “and it had three ribs in the mouth”

Sheriff: “so it was Black bear huh?”

Anonymous
Anonymous
May 12, 2024 4:32 pm

Sometimes they throw the war first, then run the pandemic fear porn.
Other times, they throw the pandemic firrs and then the wars.

But they always push the vex~us regardless.

zappalives
zappalives
May 12, 2024 4:47 pm

Russia can not allow the failed state of Ukraine anything but total defeat and an occupation of all the ground.
They can not allow even a toehold for us/uk democrats to spread death and destruction.
They need to put the screws to the ukie-niggers and wrap this war up just after the selections in Nov.

OutOfTime
OutOfTime
May 12, 2024 6:01 pm

If all the Russian missiles are pointed at Washington DC, one can only hope that they use them. Problem solved for everyone.

Sabina
Sabina
May 12, 2024 6:43 pm

 “The problem with you Americans is that you don’t believe in evil. A man like Saddam Hussein, for example. Saddam tells the world for years that he has a territorial claim on Kuwait. Builds up his armed forces. Develops weapons of mass destruction. Moves troops to the border. Signals everyone he’s going in. But all the boys and girls at the CIA and DIA say Saddam won’t do it. Just saber-rattling. Just flexing his muscles. Couldn’t possibly invade. Why would he? It would make no sense. It would be irrational. No arab nation has ever invaded another arab nation. Why start now? Saddam was painting us a road map, and you simply didn’t believe he’d start the car and take the trip. Saddam Hussein was not a lunatic and in that case, he wasn’t a liar. He was rational and calculating and evil. So he told the world what he was going to do – commit an act of evil, not an act of madness – and then he did it. It took a bunch of highly paid analysts with Harvard degrees to completely miss the simplicity of the moment.”
“I believe the terrorist is both capable and prone to acts of unspeakable evil, and you don’t. I’m right, and you’re wrong. It’s not because I know more than your government. I don’t. I know less. But I believe that evil forces make evil people do evil things. That’s how I anticipate what can and will happen next in life. That’s how I got to be the head of the Mossad, young man. And why I’m good at it. It’s going to be one hell of an August, and my country is going to suffer very badly because your country doesn’t believe in evil, and mine was born out of the ashes of the Holocaust” – “The Last Jihad”, by Joel C. Rosenberg

kiwi
kiwi
  Sabina
May 12, 2024 9:46 pm

you living on lies, kuwait was stolen from iraq at the end of WW1 annexed by
the british, then more holohoax dribble FO

Captain Quaalude
Captain Quaalude
  Sabina
May 13, 2024 1:54 am

Every . Single . Time .

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Sabina
May 14, 2024 10:39 am

Sadam bypassed central banking so the tribe said he had to go. Like Gaddafi or Hitler. Guilty of the sin of National self-determination = genocide in the eyes of Jewish mainstream media and pseudo academia.

Doyle
Doyle
May 12, 2024 11:32 pm

Pro Russian trash talk, how droll. Russia is toast, their demographics were beyond sad before this war and now they totally are in the crapper. The bear is toothless and all they have left is their typical puffery.