Saturday, 30 November 2024

Sabre-Rattling.

Putin’s Thunderbolts: What message was the devastating arrival of the Russian Federation’s nuclear-defanged MIRVs supposed to send? And how should the government of far-away New Zealand respond?

THE IMAGES BROADCAST ON CNN were terrifying. Out of a glowing circle of dim light, multiple bolts of fire, moving at astonishing speed, burst from the lowering clouds and, in a thundering series of shattering explosions, struck the Ukrainian city of Dnipro.

It was a sight very few people, other than the weapons-scientists of the Cold War superpowers, had ever witnessed. Simply put, the arrival of MIRVs – Multiple Independently-targeted Re-entry Vehicles – was never intended to leave any witnesses.

How so? Because, at the tip of each independently-targeted re-entry vehicle was a nuclear warhead. Wherever they landed, destruction would be absolute.

Delivered by an ICBM – Inter-Continental Ballistic Missile – MIRVs were the ultimate doomsday device. Travelling at hypersonic speed, impossible to interdict (notwithstanding the claims of President Ronald Reagan’s notorious “Star Wars” programme) the MIRV innovation represented the apotheosis of the MAD – Mutual and Assured Destruction – doctrine. ICBM-delivered MIRVs were never supposed to be deployed, because their deployment signalled the imminent demise of human civilisation.

The man who ordered the strike on Dnipro, President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin, has told the world that what it witnessed was a new weapon: hypersonic, deadly-accurate, and devastating.

He should not be believed.

Russia has been firing its “new” hypersonic ballistic missiles at Ukraine for more than two years. Never before, however, has the launch of such missiles been preceded by a “heads-up” call to NORAD – the North American Aerospace Defence Command. Russia’s notification was necessary because NORAD’s satellite surveillance system is well aware of the difference between the “signature” of a hypersonic missile-launch, and that of an ICBM. Without the heads-up, NORAD would have had to treat the ICBM launch as the commencement of a nuclear attack.

Putin and his military commanders are not yet ready to initiate a countdown to Armageddon. So, what were they doing? What message was the devastating arrival of all those nuclear-defanged MIRVs supposed to send? And how should the government of far-away New Zealand respond?

Part of the answer to that question was supplied in the simultaneous confirmation of the Russian Federation’s latest protocols relating to the use of nuclear weapons. Whereas, in the past, the Federation declared its willingness to use nuclear weapons only in response to an attack using nuclear or other weapons of mass destruction “when the very existence of the state is put under threat.”

The Federation’s new nuclear war-fighting doctrine represents a significant lowering of that threshold. The deployment of nuclear weapons may now be contemplated in circumstances where military aggression by a non-nuclear state, acting “with the participation or support of a nuclear state” (a clear reference to Ukraine) threatens to inflict an unacceptable degree of devastation upon the people and infrastructure of the Russian Federation, and/or that of its close ally, Belarus.

Unsurprisingly, the Prime Minister of Poland, Donald Tusk, has expressed his alarm at this latest Russian attempt to pressure the USA and its Nato allies into forcing the Ukrainian government to suspend its recently-sanctioned deployment and use of American and British long-range ballistic missiles against targets hundreds of kilometres inside the Russian Federation’s borders.

On Friday, 22 November 2024, Tusk warned that: “The last few dozen hours have shown that the threat is serious and real when it comes to global conflict.” New Zealand’s Prime Minister, Christopher Luxon, and its Foreign Minister, Winston Peters, have yet to offer a substantive response to Russia’s terrifying demonstration of the MIRVs’ destructive potential.

New Zealand investors, by contrast, appear to be in exuberant spirits. While bourses across the European Union wobbled uneasily, the NZX50 closed out the trading week with a 2 percent surge to 13,017. Either the prospect of global conflict does not bother Kiwi investors, or they have already filed Russia’s threats under “sabre-rattling”.

Russia’s use of an ICBM equipped with MIRVs is not, however, an excuse for either indifference or exuberance. Taken together, the Dnipro attack and the changes to Russia’s nuclear doctrine are nothing more nor less than a direct threat to Ukraine, the USA, Nato, and the rest of the world’s free peoples – including our own.

Narrowly justifiable when issued in retaliation for an unprovoked nuclear attack, the threatened use of nuclear weapons is completely indefensible in the context of Ukraine’s conventional defensive response to the Russian Federation’s illegal invasion of its sovereign territory in February 2022. That Nato declined to offer a more robust response to Putin’s nuclear sabre-rattling of more than 1,000 days ago can only, with the benefit of hindsight, be viewed as a dangerous dereliction of its duty to protect Europe and the wider world.

That New Zealand has been content, ever since the Russian invasion of Ukraine, to take cover behind the broad shoulders of the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia, is also a kind of dereliction.

Since 1985, New Zealand has proudly declared itself nuclear-free, incurring thereby the profound disapproval – bordering on the wrath – of our traditional Anglophone allies. Internationally, successive New Zealand governments have advocated strongly for both nuclear non-proliferation and nuclear disarmament. In doing so, we have acted in accordance with the argument advanced by David Lange during the famous Oxford Union debate of 1 March 1985:

The fact is that Europe and the United States are ringed about with nuclear weapons, and your people have never been more at risk. There is simply only one thing more terrifying than nuclear weapons pointed in your direction and that is nuclear weapons pointed in your enemy’s direction: the outcome of their use would be the same in either case, and that is the annihilation of you and all of us. That is a defence which is no defence; it is a defence which disturbs far more than it reassures. The intention of those who for honourable motives use nuclear weapons to deter is to enhance security. Notwithstanding that intention, they succeed only in enhancing insecurity. Because the machine has perverted the motive.

This country’s obligation to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Ukraine is all the greater because the Ukrainians belong to that tragically small number of peoples who possessed nuclear weapons and gave them up.

In the aftermath of the Soviet Union’s collapse in 1991, the newly independent state of Ukraine was prevailed upon by the US and its allies to surrender its nuclear arsenal. In return, the United States, alongside the newly-minted Russian Federation, undertook to preserve and defend Ukraine’s territorial integrity – by force if necessary.

New Zealand has singularly failed to draw the correct lesson from Ukraine’s fate. We have cosied-up to our Five Eyes partners in the belief that, as a tiny country, we stand in need of large and powerful friends. But where were Ukraine’s large and powerful friends when she needed them? Tragically, they were in the same place they were in when the men and women (especially the women) of Afghanistan needed them.

If the invasion of a strategically-located European nation, a nation the United States had solemnly promised to defend, was not enough to persuade Uncle Sam to lock-and-load, then what possible reason could New Zealand possess for expecting him to lock-and-load on its behalf?

At the very most we might anticipate Uncle Sam being willing to arm us, and then watch us fight to the last New Zealander. Just as he was willing to (under)arm Ukraine and watch it fight to the last Ukrainian.

Putin is rattling his nuclear sabre in its scabbard for the very simple reason that, to date, it has worked.

Having staged aggressive manoeuvres on Ukraine’s borders for weeks prior to the February 2022 invasion, the Russian President had observed no instantaneous and unreserved mobilisation of Nato armies to the borders of Russia and Belarus; heard no announcement from the White House that America intended to honour its guarantee to defend Ukraine’s territorial integrity, and expected the Russian Federation to do the same; and observed no commitment on the part of the smaller members of the United Nations (which New Zealand could have led) to augment, as far as they were able, Ukraine’s right to self-defence.

All those measures, all those declarations, may not have been as terrifying as Putin’s demonstration of what a nuclear attack looks like; but every lesson to be drawn from the Russian bully’s career points to them being terrifying enough.

We can only hope that Donald Trump, soon to inherit America’s sabre – and its scabbard – is learning how to rattle it like mad.


This essay was originally posted on the Interest.co.nz website on Monday, 25 November 2024.

11 comments:

David Stone said...

Hi Chris
Where does the message of Lange's speech fit into your recommendation for either our or Trump's suggested action. The former could ultimately and the latter almost certainly and almost immediately would (will) precipitate Lange's fear. Surely.
D J S

mikesh said...

We can only hope that Donald Trump, soon to inherit America’s sabre – and its scabbard – is learning how to rattle it like mad.

NATO is an anachronism, and still operates only as an umbrella for American imperialism. I doubt whether Russia has the military strength, nuclear wepons aside (and I don't think she would use those except to defend herself) to attack western Europe, and nor do I think she would have anything to gain by doing so, if she had.

It's time the Europeans took heed of the late Henry Kissinger's comment that "America has no friends, only interests".

Anonymous said...

for godsake
How are we to take you seriously when the whole world knows it was not an ICBM?

Larry Mitchell www.cprlifesaver.co.nz said...

Chris having today caught up with your three most recent blogs I believe it to be no rash overstatement to profnounce that your blog- forum is the greatest single extant source of genuine informed and balanced public knowledge... certainly of international commentary ... today. In the event of your incapacity or demise I trust that you are currently training up some brilliant successors for a huge gap will inevitably appear should your contributions go to the sunset.

Wayne Mapp said...

Initially identified an ICBM, but in fact an IRBM with MIRV warheads. Almost certainly one of the larger IRBM, rather than a 1,500 km type.
This is a significant escalation. A long range IRBM (up to 5,000 km range) has a launch signature virtually identical to an ICBM. And would be very high hypersonic, at least Mach 7 or 8.
Is it strategically significant? Maybe. They would be extremely difficult to intercept, even with Patriot ABM since the speed of the missile is well above that of shorter range ballistic missiles. However, how many operational missiles of this type does Russia actually have. Does it have enough to tip the balance of the war?

David George said...

The election, and imminent coronation, of President Trump does seem to be already having an effect. The Russians, Ukrainians and even the Insane Iranian Islamists are sounding much more conciliatory, the wokesters are down and the institutions are, at least, questioning their delusions.
Great news all round.

Eschaton said...

What so many otherwise intelligent people completely overlook is that Russia has own legitimate security interests, and that includes keeping an obviously hostile United States (and its weapons that threaten Russia) out of Ukraine. If that necessitates Russia "rattling its sabres" from time to time, then so be it.

Last time I looked, the United States is thousands of miles away from Ukraine. One may legitimately ask, then, given that US troops, logistics and other forms of waging war have been present in Ukraine since 2022 (and realistically since at least the 2014 coup to overthrow the Ukrainian government), why the United States is, more or less, engaged in a hot war with Russia. The idea that the United States actually cares about Ukraine, other than due to its location on the border of its number one target and threat to its global hegemony Russia, is laughable. The US is not upholding Ukrainian sovereignty, it is engaged in an offensive against Russia, not least because strong Russo-European relations would have the obvious effect of leaving Washington out in the cold.

Fanciful talk about Russia having designs on "dominating" and "occupying" Europe in whole or in part are incredibly ironic, given that the United States has dominated and occupied Europe since 1945. I suppose this fact gets to the heart of why the United States is so anti-Russian (under the guise of being "pro-Ukrainian").

Archduke Piccolo said...

Looks as though we still have some sensible people around, judging by the comments in response to this astonishing blog post.

Let's begin with Trump and 'sabre rattling'. The United States has been flailing its sabre - sans scabbard - like something demented since God knows when, but especially once it became the Big Man on Campus after the Soviet Union disassembled itself. Just ask any Latin American country you can name; just ask Yugoslavia, Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria, Yemen, Somalia, and Libya. Just ask whoever is in the know about Nordstram II.

But, lest the US cut itself, it will allow someone else to so the swinging: like Israel, Ukraine, Georgia, and, of course, the lickspittle vassals that call themselves NATO. Oh, yes: I left out ISIS, al Qaeda, and, bugger me down: Turkey. Well Turkey's Erdogan seems seems to have ambitions of exceeding the likes of Boris, Angela, Emmanuel, Jens, Olaf, Benjamin and whoever occupies the Oval Office for duplicitous perfidy.

Yeah: I reckon D. Trump needs no invitation to begin sabre rattling.

Now, to what happened with tis hazeltree bomb: the Oreshnik. For a start, what is 'new' about it is not that the missile is hypersonic. Putin made no such claim. What IS new, seemingly, is that the multiple warheads land on the target is travelling at hypersonic speeds: upwards of Mach10 is what I've been hearing. Nor were those things actually armed. 'Inert' was one word I've heard about them. They relied for their effect upon what happens their kinetic energy stops being kinetic.

The delivery system is, I gather, an intermediate range missile. It was not an ICBM. Now, who was it walked away from the treaty that proscribed intermediate range missiles? Wasn't Russia! Now NATO knows what Russia felt when NATO started building missile bases capable of nuclear weapons delivery in Romania and Poland, and, potentially, Ukraine. What was it JFK said back in 1963, anent such a build-up in Cuba? No one on the planet believed the 'aimed at Iran', gag - even supposing that in itself was OK.

So, what has New Zealand to say anent these developments? Nothing. Time was, New Zealand might plausibly have claimed a moral high ground, added to an appearance of independence in foreign policy. Both are long vanished specks in the rearview mirror. New Zealand has no moral high ground upon which to stand; and New Zealand his so palpably ensconced in the US pocket that the US has been known to brag about it. Everybody knows.Fact is this country is frightened to death of the US. And rightly: the US is greatly to be feared.

In any case, Russia (along with everyone else not aligned with the US and the West) has had it up to here with Western hectoring, lecturing, self-righteous posturing, and platitudinous hypocrisy. If New Zealand has something to say to Russia, Russia will probably bend a polite ear, but, by God it had better be interesting.

We have it on the authority of Boris Johnson that NATO has involved itself in a proxy war. We have it on the authority of Sen. Lindsey Graham that it's 'all about money', and the '2 to 7 trillion dollars' worth of resources. The likes of Blackrock and similar financier corporations already own, I understand, more than half of Ukraine's farmland. Bear in mind Angela Merkel's and Emmanuel Macron's candid brag about their perfidious role in respect of the Minsk Accords. Recall that it was Boris Johnson, acting under US orders, who sabotaged the Istanbul negotiations that might have stopped the conflict in April 2022. And who REALLY 'weaponised' the gas delivery from Russia to Europe? Who blew up Nordstream 2, with the effect of Germany's gradual - not so gradual at that - deindustrialisation?

In the 1990s, Russia longed to become a 'normal nation', such as they imagined the West to be. Well, they have seen the 'colour of our money', and found it to be tinsel. Values? The West has no values. I forget who was the Roman writer who remarked: 'A people that lays claim to civilization is not apt to live up to the values it demands of others.'
Cheers,
Ion

new view said...

Chris, in the event of aggression to NZ from whoever. US wouldn't arm us and expect us to fight to the last man /person (: We would ask the US to help out and invite them to use NZ as a base and in effect we would become a de facto US state. As for Trump sabre rattling. If it's to be believed he is already threatening to sort out the middle east if the Israeli Hostages. aren't released. He doesn't like Nato but he can't afford to see Ukraine fall either. He will broker an agreement cease fire or continue supporting Ukraine. That's if he want's any co operation from Europe and US allies in the future.

D'Esterre said...

This entire article reads like US/UK/EU propaganda.

The 2022 SMO didn't come out of the blue. Nor was the Donbass "sovereign Ukraine territory": that area had declared Independence in 2014, after the US-sponsored putsch in Kiev. The Crimea - having had two previous attempts since 1991 to decamp - made a successful escape that same year.

Since 2014, the Donbass had been pleading with Russia for assistance, as the territory endured relentless attacks from the Ukrainian military. The Minsk Accords were intended to help that situation. As we all know, the West simply ignored its obligations. Angela Merkel has since admitted to this.

Russia took action in 2022, when intel revealed that Kiev intended to mount a large-scale invasion, designed to take back the Donbass by force. The death toll would have been immense.

And - as we all know - the West has since 2022 been conducting a proxy war against Russia, a war in which it is being ignominiously defeated.

We have extended family in that part of the world. The attack in Dnipro was on a Soviet-era factory complex making armaments. Said complex was obliterated. There was no attack on civilian apartment complexes, nor would there have been. Russia doesn't attack civilians.

Rather, Russia demonstrated that it doesn't need to use nukes, in order to destroy such complexes.

Anonymous said...

" the wokesters are down"
I have a theory why conservatives seem to be concentrating on culture wars at the moment. It's because people actually want progressive policies. Old age pensions, health care, the rich paying a fair share of taxation and so on. So basically they have nothing to offer except fear and anger. Seems to work too.