We
are approaching a time of enhanced clarity. This may appear
counter-intuitive in this moment of western elite furore where
accusations against Putin and Russia are flying by the hour.
Yet
this is an integral part of the clarification process where two distinct
and widely divergent approaches to living on this planet become
precisely defined.
Up to this point in time there has been a
degree of to and fro between these sides where some agreement, albeit
sketchy and quite unreliable at times, was achieved. The elites of the
western world over the last ten to twenty years were not happy to leave
the situation as is however, but quite clearly wished to push their
vision for the world and enforce it on all others. This is essentially
what has brought us to this moment.
Having applied the maximum
possible patience for the last 15 years toward a western world seeking
to enforce its domination on nations including but not exclusive to
Russia, Vladimir Putin reached an impasse around which he could not
steer Russia. This impasse was the coup on Kiev's Maidan in the winter
of 2013-14 and all that followed up to and including the most recent
violent provocations perpetrated by the Kiev regime.
His action
on the 21st of February to acknowledge the sovereign status of the
Donetsk Peoples Republic and Lugansk Peoples Republic and the upgraded
relationship between them and Russia has finally established the
defining border between one form of geopolitical approach and another,
i.e. in general terms, between that of Eurasia and the western world.
The
battle lines, so to speak, have now been formed without the ambiguity
that went before. Western elite media and political spheres are
naturally continuing the approach of before regarding Putin and the
Russian form of governance and ramping up their rhetoric to what appears
inevitably to reach new heights amounting to what John Pilger has
called the return of raw propaganda. The dividing line between these
systems is set then to become extremely well defined in the most
strident of terms, at least in regard to that emanating from and within
the western world.
How will this sharpening of the dividing lines
between east and west be felt in economic and geopolitical terms? I
would suggest that it will create an even greater rise in Russia's
eastward expansion in terms of trade and alliances. In terms of Europe
Russia will continue to do business there but in partial terms the
present campaign of western elites is aimed precisely to reduce this.
With the closure of NordStream 2 before it is even opened Russia will
lose a significant amount of potential income for a year or so until the
completion of the second major pipeline to China from Siberia presently
under construction, 'The Power of Siberia 2'.
Events in Ukraine
will have some knock on effects regarding Russia's trade with Europe,
that is clear. However, most sanctions have been tried already and have
failed to make a significant dent in the Russian economy. Taking Russia
out of the SWIFT system of financial transfers has apparently been
thought better of and rehashing sanctions on Russian banks is unlikely
to create significant damage to Russia. Denying Russian banks the
ability to convert rubles to dollars will mean they will simply convert
to euros instead. It is hard to see what other powerful sanctions can be
applied. Cultural exchange limitations and sanctions on more Russian
individuals are unlikely to make the difference perhaps claimed for
them.
As regards the geopolitical picture the situation in
Ukraine appears to be solidifying Russia's resolve and that of Russians
against the clear and constant pressure, including military pressure via
NATO from the western elites. China will remain Russia's most stalwart
ally, the most powerful state globally after the USA and destined to
eclipse the USA in most respects before long. China and Russia together,
in this time of enhanced clarity will certainly press on with their
allies toward the multipolar world that many see as the ideal
geopolitical system for our planet.
The USA, the UK and Europe
without sufficient gas for its needs, appear destined to become
increasingly weak in economic terms, social cohesion and global
influence. In the face of a largely unified Russia and China and their
allies the West appears to be heading for tough times indeed and this
is, I am sure, one reason why it is being so relentlessly aggressive
now.
The clarity of the times to come will scare many on both
sides of the divide. No sane person wants war or the threat of war and
the thought that war may erupt at any time is a frightening prospect
indeed. I believe however that no side in this new divided world wishes
or intends for war to feature to any degree at all. What will certainly
continue unless one side wins the war of words and economic prowess or
one side gives up trying in defeat, is that rhetoric and economic
weapons will be more to the fore than ever.
Those who have been
following events in Ukraine all along and in the geopolitical scene in
the wider world on as deep a level as they can, and thus gaining insight
and predictive opportunities will remain calm however. The great
trading nations of this world will never relish war close to home, no
matter how heightened the rhetorical atmosphere may be between nations
and no matter how many benefits may accrue to their military industrial
complexes, no matter how important these latter may be to their
economies. The fight for survival of one view of how our world should be
and the other will remain a war of words and diverse financial means.
We
can remain assured that the fighting will not spread from the Donbass
if the great powers have anything to do with it. Undoubtedly the West
will do all it can to punish Russia for what it sees as an abuse of its
power but which many others will see as fully justified. The situation
will be a frantic one in the short term with far more heat than light
within it but I am confident that what will ultimately emerge is a far
more defined position of both power blocks, east and west and ultimately
the rise of Eurasia eclipsing the belligerent, exceptionalist era of
the West and its diminished power leading to a fully multipolar world.
Tuesday, 22 February 2022
UKRAINE, RUSSIA, CHINA, USA, EUROPE & A TIME OF GREATLY ENHANCED CLARITY
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