Proxy Wars

Discussion of current events
Post Reply
User avatar
Sertorio
Posts: 10351
Joined: Fri Dec 16, 2016 3:12 am

Proxy Wars

Post by Sertorio » Thu Mar 16, 2023 4:14 am

Chris Hedges: Ukraine’s Death by Proxy
By Chris Hedges / Original to ScheerPost
https://scheerpost.com/2023/03/12/chris ... -by-proxy/

There are many ways for a state to project power and weaken adversaries, but proxy wars are one of the most cynical. Proxy wars devour the countries they purport to defend. They entice nations or insurgents to fight for geopolitical goals that are ultimately not in their interest. The war in Ukraine has little to do with Ukrainian freedom and a lot to do with degrading the Russian military and weakening Vladimir Putin’s grip on power. And when Ukraine looks headed for defeat, or the war reaches a stalemate, Ukraine will be sacrificed like many other states, in what one of the founding members of the CIA, Miles Copeland Jr., referred to as the “Game of Nations” and “the amorality of power politics.”

I covered proxy wars in my two decades as a foreign correspondent, including in Central America where the U.S. armed the military regimes in El Salvador and Guatemala and Contra insurgents attempting to overthrow the Sandinista government in Nicaragua. I reported on the insurgency in the Punjab, a proxy war fomented by Pakistan. I covered the Kurds in northern Iraq, backed and then betrayed more than once by Iran and Washington. During my time in the Middle East, Iraq provided weapons and support to the Mujahedeen-e-Khalq (MEK) to destabilize Iran. Belgrade, when I was in the former Yugoslavia, thought by arming Bosnian and Croatian Serbs, it could absorb Bosnia and parts of Croatia into a greater Serbia.

Proxy wars are notoriously hard to control, especially when the aspirations of those doing the fighting and those sending the weapons diverge. They also have a bad habit of luring sponsors of proxy wars, as happened to the U.S. in Vietnam and Israel in Lebanon, directly into the conflict. Proxy armies are given weaponry with little accountability, significant amounts of which end up on the black market or in the hands of warlords or terrorists. CBS News reported last year that around 30 percent of the weapons sent to Ukraine make it to the front lines, a report it chose to partially retract under heavy pressure from Kyiv and Washington. The widespread diversion of donated military and medical equipment to the black market in Ukraine was also documented by U.S. journalist Lindsey Snell. Weapons in war zones are lucrative commodities. There were always large quantities for sale in the wars I covered.

Warlords, gangsters and thugs — Ukraine has long been considered one of the most corrupt countries in Europe — are transformed by sponsor states into heroic freedom fighters. Support for those fighting these proxy wars is a celebration of our supposed national virtue, especially seductive after two decades of military fiascos in the Middle East. Joe Biden, with dismal poll numbers, intends to run for a second term as a “wartime” president who stands with Ukraine, to which the U.S. has already committed $113 billion in military, economic and humanitarian assistance.

When Russia invaded Ukraine “[t]he whole world faced a test for the ages,” Biden said after a lightning visit to Kyiv. “Europe was being tested. America was being tested. NATO was being tested. All democracies were being tested.”
When the Ukraine disappears from the map, Ukrainians may thank the US for their fate...

User avatar
cassowary
Posts: 7636
Joined: Thu Dec 15, 2016 11:30 pm

Re: Proxy Wars

Post by cassowary » Fri Mar 17, 2023 1:09 pm

Ukraine won’t disappear from the map. But Russia might.
The Imp :D

User avatar
neverfail
Posts: 10283
Joined: Sun Dec 18, 2016 3:47 am
Location: Australia

Re: Proxy Wars

Post by neverfail » Fri Mar 17, 2023 4:19 pm

Sertorio wrote:
Thu Mar 16, 2023 4:14 am
The war in Ukraine has little to do with Ukrainian freedom.....
...but everything to do with the country's SURVIVAL.
.....and a lot to do with degrading the Russian military and weakening Vladimir Putin’s grip on power.
....a side effect that quite a few would consider desirable.
When Russia invaded Ukraine “[t]he whole world faced a test for the ages,” Biden said after a lightning visit to Kyiv. “Europe was being tested. America was being tested. NATO was being tested. All democracies were being tested.”
Though that statement might contain a certain amount of rhetorical hot air (men in politics are partial to that) it is not entirely an untrue observation.

Post Reply