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Writer's pictureHowie Klein

The Both Sidesism New York Times Is Now Publishing Unadulterated Russian Propaganda



The NY Times frequently publishes columns by prolific right-wing propagandist Christopher Caldwell. Yesterday they ran an anti-Biden screed, blaming Biden for the war in Ukraine, a favorite right-wing frame. He describes an ugly slog of a war where both sides have incentives to wrap up at the negotiating table. “The Biden administration,” he wrote, as though he had been paid by the Kremlin, “has other plans. It is betting that by providing tanks it can improve Ukraine’s chances of winning the war… But the Biden strategy has a bad name: escalation. Beyond a certain point, the United States is no longer ‘helping’ or ‘advising’ or ‘supplying’ the Ukrainians, the way it did, say, the Afghan mujahedeen during the Cold War. It is replacing Ukraine as Russia’s main battlefield adversary. It is hard to say when that point will be reached or whether it has been already. With whom is Russia at war— Ukraine or the United States? Russia started the war between Russia and Ukraine. Who started the war between Russia and the United States?”


This is very standard right-wing clap trap and the whole Russo-Republican wing of the GOP is singing from the same hymnal as Caldwell. “In an age of smart devices,” he asserted, “robotics and remote control, the United States’ involvement in the war has always been greater than it appeared. The computer-guided rocket artillery that Ukraine has received from the United States may seem analogous to the horses and rifles that a government might have sent to back an insurgency in the old days. They look at first like traditional weapons, albeit advanced ones. But there is an important difference. Most of the new weapons’ destructive power comes from their being bound into an American information network, a package of services that keeps working independently of the warrior and will not be fully shared with the warrior. So the United States is participating in these military operations at the moment they happen. It is fighting.”


Last spring, Ukraine shocked the Russian navy by using American targeting information to sink the Moskva, a Black Sea missile cruiser. Only months into the war did Russians face up to the fact that officers using their personal cellphones were regularly getting blown up. This past New Year’s Eve, a dormitory full of fresh Russian army recruits in the city of Makiivka was hit by missiles at the crack of midnight, presumably just as the young men were calling their friends and loved ones to wish them the joys of the coming year. The attack killed 89, according to Russian authorities— more than 300, according to the British Ministry of defense, which accused Russian authorities of “deliberate lying” about the attack to minimize their losses.
After such episodes, Russia’s leaders are unlikely to feel that the resistance they are meeting comes from Ukraine. The role of the United States is considerably more active than merely responding to Ukrainian “requests” for this or that. Having itself designed the weaponry in most cases, the United States may have a better sense of which tech solutions are appropriate to local battlefield challenges.
Abrams tanks require experienced technicians for training and repair. Will these technicians be brought onto the battlefield from the United States? Then we will have a situation analogous to the introduction of “advisers” into Vietnam in the early 1960s. “This is not an offensive threat to Russia,” President Biden said of the Abrams tank shipments last month. He’s entitled to his opinion, but it is probably not shared by the Russian leadership.
President Biden’s own advisers are divided on how aggressively to pursue the war. Some even propose to chase Russia out of Crimea. That would promise a new kind of mission for NATO: the conquest, annexation and garrisoning of a population that doesn’t want it.
The Russian invasion of Ukraine has to do with a complicated set of post-Cold War historical trends (like America’s striking post-Cold War rise and its more recent relative decline) and economic accidents (like the vicissitudes of fossil fuel prices). But it is also the latest chapter of an ongoing geostrategic story in which the plot has changed little over the centuries: The largest country by area on the planet has no reliable exit into the world. The most reliable route runs through the Black Sea, where it crosses the trade routes that link the civilizations of Asia to the civilizations of Europe. There, or thereabouts, Russian forces clashed with the armies of many Turkish sultans in the 17th and 18th centuries, Lord Palmerston of Britain in the 19th and Hitler in the 20th.
Speaking last week at the 80th anniversary of the Soviet victory over Germany at the battle of Stalingrad, President Vladimir Putin of Russia described the present war as a similar effort. Russians say the war is about preventing the installation of an enemy military stronghold on the Black Sea, strong enough to close off what has for centuries been Russia’s main access to the outside world. Without Ukraine, Russia can be turned into a vassal state. That NATO intends to bring about the subjugation, breakup or even extinction of Russia may be true or false— but it will not sound implausible to a Russian.
Many Americans cannot resist describing Putin as a “barbarian” and his invasion of Ukraine as a “war of aggression.” For their part Russians say this is a war in which Russia is fighting for its survival and against the United States in an unfair global order in which the United States enjoys unearned privileges.
We should not forget that, whatever values each side may bring to it, this war is not at heart a clash of values. It is a classic interstate war over territory and power, occurring at a border between empires. In this confrontation Putin and his Russia have fewer good options for backing down than American policymakers seem to realize, and more incentives to follow the United States all the way up the ladder of escalation.


He may not be as blatant as Trump, who lauds Putin as “a genius,” or Marjorie Traitor Greene and her trumpeting of Russia’s claims that they’re fighting “Neo-Nazis” nor as quite the Putin asslicker that Tucker Carlson are, but the NY Times should no more be publishing opinion pieces on Russia by Caldwell than by Russian Defense Minster Sergei Shoigu (who refers to Ukrainians as “nonhumans”), Putin national security adviser, Nikolai Patrushev (who claims the western democracies have legalized marriage between humans and animals and that that is what Russia is fighting) or Yevgeny Prigozhin, founder of the Wagner Group and someone who has actively boasted about helping elect Republicans to office in the U.S.

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1 comentario


barrem01
09 feb 2023

It would be great if American history put a bit more distance between Caldwell's position and the truth. But there is enough. "We should not forget that, whatever values each side may bring to it, this war is not at heart a clash of values." America does not value sending troops and weapons across boarders with the intent of expanding "American soil". We haven't done anything like that since Hawaii. And its not the US that has created the conditions from which Russia cannot back down, it's Russia. We didn't make them commit war crimes. We didn't force them to crack down on dissent, and imprison protestors. We didn't turn the Russian war of aggression into a litmus test for the leader…

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