Superpower Swoop
What Russia and America are really doing in Georgia and who set the trap? Vladimir Putin and his thuggish FSB pals or Dick Cheney and his equally unflappable neocon friends?
Georgia's decision to seize large parts of Tskhinvali, the capital of the breakaway region of South Ossetia, on the evening of 7 August was a disastrous political miscalculation, even in an era that is increasingly defined by spectacularly poor judgement.
Within three days of the assault, Russian forces had responded by in effect neutralising Georgia's military capacity, which President Mikhail Saakashvili's government in Tbilisi had spent several years and considerable sums of money building up.
Clearly, Russia has been goading and provoking the Georgian government for several years into making the big mistake. The parastates of Abkhazia and, above all, South Ossetia, have been under the control of a toxic coalition of criminals and both former and serving FSB officers. Russian soldiers have been acting as their protectors under the guise of a peacekeeping mission, preventing Georgia's attempts to seek a negotiated reintegration of the two areas. The Georgian crisis has benefited the standing of hardliners in Moscow, still aggrieved at Vladimir Putin's decision to place the moderate, business-friendly Dmitry Medvedev in the Kremlin.
But under the influence of an energetic neo-con lobby in Washington, and with considerable support from Israeli weapons manufacturers and military trainers, Saakashvili and the hawks around him came to believe the farcical proposition that Georgia's armed forces could take on the military might of their northern neighbour in a conventional fight and win.
The Georgian minister for reintegration of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, Temur Yakobash vili, revealed the depth of the illusion the day after the conflict broke out when he thanked Israel for its assistance in training Georgian troops. "Israel should be proud of its military, which trained Georgian soldiers," Yakobashvili said, with reference to Defensive Shield, the private company run by Gal Hirsch, a former general in the Israel Defence Forces.
Still unaware of what was really happening on the battlefield, Yakobashvili reported that a small group of Georgian soldiers had been able to wipe out an entire Russian military division, thanks to the Israeli training. "We killed 60 Russian soldiers yesterday alone," he said. "The Russians have lost more than 50 tanks, and we have shot down 11 of their planes. They have sustained enormous damage in terms of manpower."
Warned off
The Russians, of course, knew all about Defensive Shield and the tens of millions of dollars worth of Israeli military equipment that Georgia had been purchasing. Just over a week before the conflict erupted, Putin put in a call to the Israeli president, Shimon Peres. His message, according to a western intelligence source, was simple: "Pull out your trainers and weapons or we will escalate our co-operation with Syria and Iran." Peres does not suffer the same illusions as Georgian ministers and the Israeli set-up left Tbilisi within two days.
The KGB has also been tracking Georgia's clandestine arms procurement in Ukraine (where most weapons dealers work for Russian intelligence anyhow). The Russian army was also fully briefed about the joint US-Georgian manoeuvres, which took place in Georgia last month. Russia was not taking a military risk when responding to the Georgian attack on Tskhinvali - Moscow knew the precise contours of its enemy's capability. David's victory over Goliath was sensational because of its rarity - in the real world Goliath always comes out on top.
So the Russians set a trap and, prodded by Dick Cheney's people, Georgia walked right into it.
The consequences of this egregious error begin in Georgia itself. Not only is it now defenceless, it can kiss goodbye to any restoration of sovereignty over both South Ossetia and Abkhazia. Even though President Sarkozy of France received tentative agreement from both Moscow and Tbilisi for the establishment of international talks to settle the status of the two areas, they are unlikely to rejoin Georgia any time soon. The loss of Abkhazia, with its considerable economic potential, is a huge blow.
The EU and the US will argue that there is no parallel to be drawn between Kosovo and the Georgian breakaway regions. But that is not how much of the world, including China, South Africa and Indonesia, see it. And it is not how Russia sees it. The first chickens of Kosovo's independence are coming home to roost.
Saakashvili is now very vulnerable. The Russian invasion has cut communications between Tbilisi and the main port in Poti. BP has closed down the pipeline running from Baku to Ceyhan in Turkey through Tbilisi, and Georgian banks are freezing all loans and blocking capital flight.
After only a week, the Georgian economy is teetering. "It doesn't look very good for Georgia," Edward Parker from the credit rating agency Fitch told the Moscow Times. "Going to war with Russia is bad for your creditworthiness, to put it mildly." And if the wheels do come off the economy, it is hard to see how Saakashvili might salvage his political position - such a combination of economic distress and military defeat is usually fatal. If he goes, Georgia is likely to fracture politically into a variety of fiefdoms familiar from the 1990s and living standards will plummet.
There is one faint consolation. The west may be impotent when it comes to responding to the situation militarily but it can rally round by offering the country a financial and commercial lifeline.
The foreign implications of the error are graver still. Russia is placing a marker on Ukraine. Do not, Moscow says, even think of allowing Ukraine into Nato, otherwise what we have seen in Georgia will be child's play. So the west will have to think hard how to play Ukraine's application to join the military alliance.
This in turn has accentuated the divisions within the European Union between those countries, including Germany, which remain cautious about a course of open confrontation with Russia, and Britain, which has echoed calls from Washington demanding that Russia's application to join the World Trade Organisation be reconsidered. Speaking from Tbilisi, one senior European diplomat told me that the split on this issue, which was openly on display at the Nato Bucharest summit in April, "is running deeper within the EU than was the case in the run-up to Iraq".
But the Georgian fiasco has implications for politics in the Middle East, the European Union and the United States.
For the Bush administration (or for its hawks at least), the Georgian mistake presents an opportunity - let us recast Russia as a threat to global stability and a potential enemy. Predictably, the toughest response to the Russian invasion came from Cheney. The outbreak of the crisis coincided with President Bush horseplaying with beach volleyball players in Beijing and the vice-president was in operational control at the time.
Cheney immediately announced that the Russian invasion cannot go "unanswered", a choice of words that the American former ambassador to Nato Robert Hunter described as "inflammatory". Cheney has been spoiling for a fight with the Russians for a couple of years, and he and his allies have seized upon Georgia's and Ukraine's stated aim to join Nato as a way of riling Moscow.
This plan came unstuck at the Bucharest summit, when some European countries, led by Germany, blocked the Nato road map for the two former Soviet republics. But the final statement did concede that the two countries' aspirations would eventually be met at some unspecified time in the future.
As a democratic country, Georgia has every right to apply for Nato membership, even though its inability to assert its sovereignty over South Ossetia and Abkhazia presents a problem to some existing Nato members. But the neocons in Washington have been pushing Georgian and Ukrainian membership as a critical goal for the maintenance of the western alliance. By cranking up the dispute with Russia over Nato, Cheney is shifting the political debate in the US away from the state of the economy and towards the issue of national security.
Global dangers
If the presidential election is fought on the former issue, Barack Obama is a shoo-in. But if the central issue is national security and who would be best at dealing with a major crisis like Georgia, then his Republican opponent, John McCain, has to be favourite. McCain's response to Georgia was almost as tough as Cheney's, explained in part by the fact that until May this year his chief foreign policy adviser was working as a lobbyist for Saakashvili.
This political dynamic is driving the west towards a rift with Russia that will polarise a number of other issues, including policy towards Iran. On this latter matter, Russia has played a relatively constructive and, perhaps more importantly, a moderating role. In the next three months, the issues of Ukraine and Iran will loom large in global politics and they may well have a decisive impact on the outcome of the US election. Who set the trap in Georgia? Vladimir Putin and his thuggish pals from the FSB, or Dick Cheney and his equally unflappable neocon friends?
Whether Georgia was defeated by the Russians or lost by the neocons, a touch of diplomatic sobriety on both sides would be a welcome development, if the Georgian conflict is not to mark a very dangerous new phase in the development of global politics - serial confrontation between the west and Russia.
Misha Glenny writes regularly for The New Statesman.
© 2008 The New Statesman
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37 Comments so far
Show AllGrousefeather says: "I strongly object to the term neocon. It's a hair-splitting attempt to exonerate the true culprits, the Republicans, by not calling a spade and spade."
I disagree. Neocon refers to a relatively new and well organized fascist-like development within the Republican Party. It does not characterize every Republican. When brush strokes are too sweeping, then the detail is lost. For instance, if Arlen Spector sponsors a bill that protects some part of the Constitution or human rights, it would be counter-productive to dismiss it outright as neocon.
when the shyt hits , i just hope i've planned well for the tsunami of misery, lost hope and starving,sick people wandering around in droves, searching for anything to eat or drink, amid the carnage that used to be their neighborhoods, watched and tracked by wary security units, placed in turrets surrounding the corporate elite's gated communities.
good luck world.
Clinton started the whole thing of a pipeline across Gerogia from the Caspian Sea when the former Soviet Union broke apart. This by passed Russia and Iran as that would be the logical route to take. Trouble is they (USA) didn't want Russia to have even more control over the flow of oil to Europe. There is new oil and natural gas lines being built now on Georgia. Why do you think the USA wants to control Iran? So this latest attack by Georgia? Who knows maybe the President of Georgia wanted to change the deal and now will be removed.
bryanD keep it coming baby !!
"Vladimir Putin and his thuggish pals from the FSB, or Dick Cheney and his equally unflappable neocon friends?"
I dont know about that ... compared to Cheney, Putin reminds me of a huggable little teddy bear.
Actually, BranD has it almost correct. The false-communist USSR and subsequent robber baron post-Soviet Empire are every bit as much a part of the international banking conspiracy's plan for global domination as the US is. Controlling one side of the equation is not their M.O.
Heard Holbrooke on the box this afternoon on the BBC21 news channel, lamenting that everyone he spoke to here seemed to think it was the Georgians' fault, when the truth was that the Russians had been terrorising and ethnically cleansing the Georgians in South Ossetia for more than a year.
Of course, to disbelieve him was my automatic response (See, for instance, Position on Iraq in his Wikipedia entry), and nothing has changed in the meantime. But the curious thought occurred to me... you know, Peter and the Wolf. Since when have our leading officials been trustworthy in any of their "pronunciamentos"? So, if as a result of some "affliction", such as that suffered by the Jim Carrey character in the film, Liar, Liar, he had been telling the truth there...
But heck, it wouldn't change much at all. Geopolitics and realpolitik bear no relationship whatsoever to morality. And if they did, the US would come out by far the worst, even in terms of the electoral shenigans in Georgia. And I don't mean Georgia, USA. Well... those, too.
Russia lost billions when the US attacked Iraq. Putin said OK as I am sure deals were made. Since then America is on a mission to expand its power. Russia said no and drove their tanks a few miles down the road and the fighting stopped. Now I can see Russia will back Iran even more and I am getting to a point I have no problem with that. The more often I see the USA caught just flat out lying on a world level the more I believe the other guy.
Lets see, 911 part 2 and a McCain win, that is how it will go down.
I see no one made a list to my question posted at 6:50 AM. Russia was doing what any country would do,
This is an excellent analysis and brings a litte bit of sanity to the discussion.
There isn't much "good guy" stuff on any side in this, but if anyone is right its Russia. They will defend their own sphere.
How anyone equates Republicans to neocons is beyond me. Thats the same as comparing radical leftists like Ayers to progressives or liberals.
I'd like to know how much (more) US taxpayer money was wasted in this avoidable fiasco. I'd also like to know if there was anyone in the upper echelons of the State Department or the Pentagon who didn't know that Saakashvili's folly would end up exactly this way.
FOR ALL OF YOU WHO SAY RUSSIA WANTS TO TAKE OVER THE WORLD JUST LIKE AMERICA/Israel ( since they are the same)
Please list the places Russia is presently or RECENT past at open or covert war with a country
US/Israel
Iraq, Afganistan, Syria, Lebanon, Gaza, Palestine, Georgia, Iran, Venezuela, Columbia, Brazil, Africa, I am sure there are a few more
OK now list Russia/and even China?????
yep, 100%
bryanD-
"you don't mention the american war pig plan, as we have seen it, whereby the russians get surrounded and overwhelmed by american weapons systems until they are hopelessly overpowered by the cheney/nwo/rothschild bank/globalist cabal"
webwalk-
"But it is beyond ridiculous to believe or pretend to believe that Russia is not angling for the same long-term global dominance that the US is"
Webwalk, please elaborate. With examples if you will. And please only use examples that predate neocon empire actions. Russian examples of angling for global dominance that postdate neocon empire actions may reasonably be assumed to be in response to the neocons, and are therefor not a priori.
bryanD of August 16th, 2008 12:56 pm has it exactly correct.
Glenny sez: "Cheney has been spoiling for a fight with the Russians for a couple of years..."
***
Beauty! Put a fresh battery in his pacemaker, lace on a pair of gloves and toss him in a ring with Putin.
Two countries keep the US from total world domination in the 21st century. And imagine the horror of that police-state.
Russia and China are in the way though.
Long live Putin.
And Bless those Capitalist-Commies too.
F'Gad'Sakes! Just read Crossing the Rubicon.
The world end-game now is about Oil/Power (they are intertwined). And of course, always needing an "enemy."
"na·ive·té or na·ïve·té (nä"¶v-t³", nä-¶"v¹-t³") n. 1. The state or quality of being artless, credulous, or uncritical. 2. An artless, credulous, or uncritical statement or act."
People ought to understand by now that neoconservatism is a psychotic disorder, a complete disconnection from reality. These ostensible intellectuals believe their own fantasies, convince others to believe them, and wreak havoc on the world. A string of military, foreign policy, economic, environmental, health care, public policy, constitutional, legal, correctional and human rights debacles is the result. McCain has bought the Weltanschauung lock, stock and barrel, and Obama is unfortunately adopting more and more of it, too.
In order to get their articles published, writers have to appear like they are democratic and condemn both parties, the guilty party and the pre-demonized one.
"a touch of diplomatic sobriety on both sides would be a welcome development"
_______________
Get real, Misha, diplomatic sobriety is lacking on one side only.
The latest Bush fiasco is just another fascist war of aggression. Spare us the loaded terminology. "Thuggish" Russians versus "unflappable" neocons, haha. (Misha, your bias is showing.) I can think of countless epithets for the neocons, but "unflappable" never would have crossed my mind. (Torturing mass-murderers, on the other hand, seems like a nice fit.) What exactly does she mean by "unflappable," anyway? That the neocons like to play nuclear brinksmanship, without considering moral quibbles like world destruction?
Now Bush is crowing over Poland's acceptance of a US anti-missile shield on Polish territory. If the neocons try to implement that agreement, Russia will have to choose between a de facto military defeat or launching a nuclear strike.
Jonathan Swift and Joseph Conrad, to name just two skeptics, looked into the human heart and recoiled in horror. In the age of the atom, best not to know what horrors are in store for the naked killer apes.
safiyyah August 16th, 2008 2:13 pm
"Another stupid liberal analysis blaming Russia for 'setting a trap', OH!, and the poor Georgians and US fell into it…blah,blah,blah. What myopic baloney!"
safiyyah,
The author did no such thing. If you read the last part of the article, there is a huge question left unanswered with reagard to the villian(s).
This article is another smudge of the relevant issues at hand: Russia is merely defending itself in the face of US proxy aggression. And the NATO alliance ain't nuthin no more. Who wants to be allied with the world's superthug USA? The only reason Georgia and Ukraine want to join NATO is that USA-driven breakdown of international law, order and justice makes for a chaotic, hostile, volatile world that delights Russian warmongers like all warmongers. And don't forget Russia's role in this world - it serves as a buffer to imperial ambitions of many neighbors - take a look.
America is claiming to be bringing aid to Georgia but Russia is worried what was on those 2 cargo planes ( largest in the world) that landed.
Now bring war crimes against America and Israel would be the icing on the cake.
There is some good stuff here, but it is hard to take the piece seriously when the writer says:
"Cheney has been spoiling for a fight with the Russians for a couple of years, and he and his allies have seized upon Georgia's and Ukraine's stated aim to join Nato as a way of riling Moscow."
As other commenters have pointed out, it has been US policy for a whole lot longer than "a couple of years" to encircle Russia (and China too), with the aim of denying them the opportunity to challenge the right of the US to do absolutely anything anywhere - yes it sounds crazy, like the US is moving forward with a strategy to dominate the entire globe militarily - but if it sounds crazy to anyone, please Google "full spectrum dominance" and read some of the links.
In fact, and documented fact, the strategy of the US is indeed to dominate the entire globe militarily, and deny all other nations even the possibility to develop into a threat to our dominance anywhere.
And yes the PNAC "neocons" have been especially forthrght in their public documents about stating this aim, and in their actions once in power, but with or without Cheney and the rest of the PNAC gangsters, the policies of the US for decades have been and continue to be to seek US global domination.
NONETHELESS, when commenters here uphold Russia under Putin as some sort of wonderful selfless defender of all that is good and right in the world - NONSENSE! It is one thing to point out the idiocies and disatrous long-term results of the nutcases who are running the US. That by no means indicates anything in particular about the long-term strategies or tactics of Russia, or of China. All three of these "great powers" are playing ugly games with the fate of the world's peoples.
As a US citizen i publicly denounce "my" government, and i work to stop the military / corporate juggernaut that is killing us all and the Earth. But it is beyond ridiculous to believe or pretend to believe that Russia is not angling for the same long-term global dominance that the US is. A pox on ALL their houses.
How overjoyed Castro and Chavez must be to have their military brought up to NATO standards
with arms provided by the Bush Cabal. :)
What would McCain give them? ICBMs?
"As the Russian officers sat on the American stockpiles of machine guns, ammunition, and equipment in Gori, they were savouring a highly unusual scenario. Not since the Afghan war had the Russians seized vast caches of US weaponry. "People are sick to the stomach in Washington," said a former Pentagon official. And the Russians are giddy with success."
- The Guardian, Saturday August 16 2008
Ok here is a question
HOW MANY MORE WOULD HAVE BEEN KILLED WITH THE HELP OF AMERICA AND ISRAEL IF RUSSIA HAD NOT MOVED IN?
Georgia got just what they should have and I hope Russia hangs around for years to keep Israel and America out.
As for parts of the story, pls stop quoting the Jewish New nightly as a source of intelligence
I strongly object to the term neocon. It's a hair-splitting attempt to exonerate the true culprits, the Republicans, by not calling a spade and spade.
Yes, yes!! A ticket of Obama/Hillary, two inveterate liars. Yes, We Can!! Let's bring Warren Christopher and Madeleine Albright on board with Brzezinski and Robert Gates. That'll solidify the sneakiness quotient. The neocons have ratcheted up the stakes to ever greater heights, and the Hidden Hand has all fingers firmly planted on the button--all Globalist, One-World Government tools.
On the Thom Hartmann radio program yesterday he said it was a matter of record that Karl Rove was in Georgia in mid-July attending meetings with Saakashvili and a few others (I've forgotten their names).
Another stupid liberal analysis blaming Russia for 'setting a trap', OH!, and the poor Georgians and US fell into it...blah,blah,blah. What myopic baloney!
The US has been advancing against Russia militarily for like about 2 decades now and this is the sort of analysis liberals have been consistently floating out last week about the Georgian South Ossetian front advance? Just pathetic.
This author has correctly assessed that the Georgia rift has escalated the world's chances of having John McCain sabre-rattling and bombing things for several years. And the very bad counsel of Bush/Rice to Georgia-- that they can make over-sized bluffs to Moscow and get away with it--is to blame.
Barack has a harder row to hoe over all this, and if/when he loses, you lose. If I were him, I'd be putting Hillary on the ticket without delay. Yeah, she's half nuts. And yeah, so is much of our electorate---enough probably to swing a win over McCain's war bluster----to your benefit.
so the russins are thugs are they - little miss bias showing
your assessment of this mess is contorted and incomplete - no wonder you write in the american press
you don't mention the american war pig plan, as we have seen it, whereby the russians get surrounded and overwhelmed by american weapons systems until they are hopelessly overpowered by the cheney/nwo/rothschild bank/globalist cabal
in the first place, what the fuck business does poland, the ukraine or georgia have doing applying for membership in the death machine that is nato
north atlantic - last time i looked these countries were nowhere near the north atlantic
you call the russians thugs - pandering to the hateful and uneducated american public - your propaganda is disgusting
who is it who attacked defensless afghanistan because 19 saudis were accused of catching the trillion dollar air defenses of the us jerking off in the washroom on 9/11
maybe larry craig was in town for the day - you know those gay gopers hate to miss an intimate washroom moment
while we are taling about it, let's face it, there is a man/boy love look in those american military outfits, tightly covering all those rippling man muscles - very gay
but let me ask you on a more serious note, which thugs were the ones who attacked iraq based on a shitpile of lies
who were the thugs who did that
once russia is neutralized then its on to china whereby he world domination plan will be completed
maybe the russians should sit back and let this all happen
maybe the chinese should not look forward and see the plans for their demise
but they do miss hateful propagandist
and they are prepared to fight it out
now i know the american imperial death machine really specializes in overrunning small defenseless countries but if they plan to rule the world they should have to fight one country, at least, who can defend itself
i mean to be truly deserving of world domination
what you seem to have missed is the russians clearly saying that they will not allow this mission creep to go any further
either in georgia, the ukraine or poland or anywhere else
enough is enough
if the us wants a fight, apparently they have one
history will show that it was the russians, who are not thugs as you describe, who stood up to the rothschild bank and the war/debt machine that is enslaving the world
history will show that the russians saved the world from the american war pig imperial thugs who jerk off in washrooms thinking about enslaving humanity
in short madam writer you can kiss my ass and i completely reject this dribble you offer in the guise of insight
you don't know what you are talking about
no wonder you write in the american press
But under the influence of an energetic neo-con lobby in Washington, and with considerable support from Israeli weapons manufacturers and military trainers, Saakashvili and the hawks around him came to believe the farcical proposition that Georgia's armed forces could take on the military might of their northern neighbour in a conventional fight and win.
Just like George Wanker Bush thought he would subjugate Iraq in a matter of days and have statues of himself erected in every public park and courthouse square in the USA. In San Francisco there is a ballot measure slated for November that will rename the city's sewage treatment plant after The Great Wanker. I myself have painted his name in red at the bottom of my toilet where I honor him each morning.
Hopefully in his next life cheney will return as a real slimy slug, after all that's what he's trying to be in this one.
This is an excellent analysis.
Perhaps we will see a new chapter in a revised addition of Naomi Klein's recent book...let's name it: The Chessboard's Crazy Eights.
"Georgia, ohh Georgia. No peace, no peace I find. Just an old sweet song keeps Georgia on my mind." Looking for Sarajevo? Looking for the Serb national with a bomb for a carriage? The 21st century is on track to make the 20th look like a warm-up. 8 years into the century we've racked up over a million dead victims already, more millions displaced, and millions more disfigured for life. Good beginning. Give the others a target to shoot for. Maybe Russia could kill a few million Ukrainians to up the ante.
Well, people want their Oligarchies and Empires so I guess this century instead of butchering what? 50 million, 80 million? 100 million like we did last century, this time maybe a couple of billion dead should do the trick. Keep up the good work children, and remember, stay on your knees and kiss the whip often. Master likes it when you do that, makes him smile and that's a good thing.
As in so many areas of geopolitics, an investigation of numbered Swiss bank accounts might prove interesting.
"But if the central issue is national security and who would be best at dealing with a major crisis like Georgia, then his Republican opponent, John McCain, has to be favourite."
It seems to me that Misha Glenny's assertion that McCain has to be favourite for the US presidential election, in the context of national security being the over-riding consideration, has to be the most foolish comment by a presumably serious correspondent/author I have ever read; aside that is from the farcical endorsements by our MSM's Brightest and Best of the Neocons' attempted impeachment of Clinton over a wholly private matter. Why is it that it is always the Neocons that are involved in farcical crises?
McCain is, frankly, and to put it mildly, severely intellectually challenged in terms of political understanding. And if Ms Glenny speaks of him as the symbolic "face" of Cheney and the rest of the Neocons, they are actually even more intellectually-challenged as the fiasco in Iraq and Afghanistan amply demonstrate.
Of course, unlike MCain, they are, for the most part, erudite and capable of filigrees of the finest logic, although, alas, on farcially blind and imbecilic premises; giant brains without a pulse - not informed by the heart, which alone can grasp fundamentals, and are always the life-time's work of the individual. A war with Russia cannot be won. Period. And to talk as if attacking her, would offer the US greater national security is as insane as to claim that the "war on terror" in the Moslem world has made the US more secure.
"Vladimir Putin and his thuggish FSB pals or Dick Cheney and his equally unflappable neocon friends?"
I fear Ms Glenny's slip is showing when she leads with alternative postulations, identifying the Russians as "thuggish", and then bizarrely describing the Neocons as "equally unflappable! A strangely muddled mixture of alternation, similituide and contradistinction, all seeming to point in the direction of a polar antithesis of the reality.
Well, perhaps that is, in one sense at least, an exaggeration in that, in terms of bloodshed inflicted on others, whether compatriots or foreigners, they don't seem wired in such a way as to consider it a matter of the least concern.
In the presumably conventional war that would be initiated, there would be casualties on the part of our troops on an enormous scale, not to speak of that of the civilian populations of the former satellite countries. However, as Barbara Tuchman so shrewdly observed, "war is the unfolding of miscalculations". Either Ms Glenny is unaware of this, or she is perfectly sanguine about precipitating WWIII. Just so long as she remembers Einstein's words to the effect that WWIV will be fought with sticks and stones.