
I’m surprised to say the
answer appears to be yes. Obama’s milquetoast response to Vladimir Putin’s bold
aggression in the Crimean Peninsula may have made him a laughingstock among
Russian leaders. But it’s also reduced the likelihood of U.S. intervention
there. And that’s a good thing.
Let’s face it: The United
States has absolutely no vital interest at stake in that part the world. What
do we care if a majority of citizens in Crimea vote to declare their
independence from Ukraine? Or even that they want to become part of Mother
Russia? What business is it of ours to tell them they can’t?
Now I’ll grant you, conducting
a plebiscite under the watchful eyes of 40,000 Russian troops may lead some to
suggest that a little pressure was being exerted on the populace. Was anyone
surprised to hear that the proposal to rejoin Russia was approved by a whopping
96 percent of the people who cast ballots? That’s the sort of landslide we’re
used to hearing from North Korea or some African dictatorship.
Now, I’m not about to beat the
drum for this country to take tougher measures against Russia. The best thing
for us to do is to sit this one out. I don’t think we should even provide aid,
whether financial or military, to Ukraine.
The House of Representatives
doesn’t agree. An emergency measure to give the Ukraine more aid was rushed
through by a sizable bipartisan majority. But when the bill reached the Senate,
Harry Reid decided to… send everyone home for a short vacation.
Mmmm, now I find myself
agreeing with Reid. Maybe I’d better rethink this.
OK, I did. And I still think
what happens in the Crimean Peninsula is not our problem or our responsibility.
But what Obama ended up doing
is worse than nothing. In what the President described as a “calibrated”
response, he decided to impose economic sanctions on all of 11 people. Obama
said the people on the list — seven from Russia and four from Ukraine — had
threatened “Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.” But none of them
were the key players in this melodrama. Putin’s chief of staff, his defense
minister and his chief intelligence officer were all conspicuous by their
absence.
The Russian stock market,
which had been falling for the two weeks after Russian troops invaded Crimea,
in fear of what sanctions might be imposed on the country, climbed higher when
it became apparent how insignificant the U.S. and European response would be.
Russian opposition leader
Alexei Navalny even sent out a tweet, declaring: “Obama only delighted all our
crooks and encouraged them.” One of the people on the list, Deputy Prime
Minister Dmitry Rogozin, promptly confirmed this appraisal, when he sent out
his own tweet, saying: “It seems to me that some kind of joker wrote the U.S.
president’s order.”
It doesn’t sound like they’re
taking our President too seriously, does it?
Meanwhile, Secretary of State
John Kerry has been flying all over Europe and the Mideast, trying to get
someone to agree with his “better not do this” brand of bluster. To say that he’s
been ineffective would be a compliment.
Kerry stuck his foot squarely
in his mouth by lecturing Putin: “You don’t just, in the 21stcentury,
behave in the 19th century fashion by invading another country
on a completely trumped-up pretext.”
When I heard this, I wondered
how long it would take someone to say: “Oh, yeah? What about Saddam Hussein and
all those so-called weapons of mass destruction?” I hope whichever speechwriter
was stupid enough to put those words in Kerry’s mouth is now looking for another
line of employment.
Or maybe we shouldn’t blame
some anonymous scribe for this embarrassing mistake. Maybe Kerry came up with
that absurd reprimand all by himself.
Unfortunately, it looks like
the situation will continue to escalate. Vice President Joe Biden has flown to
Lithuania to reassure countries on Russia’s borders that the United States will
stand by them. Since three former Soviet satellites — Latvia, Lithuania and
Estonia — are now members of NATO, we are committed by treaty to come to their
rescue if Putin puts his eyes (and his military) on them next.
“We’re in this with you,
together,” Biden said. Don’t you wish that weren’t the case?
And of course, the so-called
“international community” has to meddle in events as well. U.N. Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon is flying to Russia and the Ukraine, to meet with Putin and other
leaders in an effort to resolve things diplomatically. The United Nations is
also sending a 34-member “human rights monitoring mission” to Ukraine. And we
know how much good such observers have done in the past, in Chechnya, Serbia
and other hot spots, from the Mideast to Africa.
How should this conflict be
resolved? I like what Pat Buchanan, a longtime Washington observer and ardent
America-firster, had to say:
America and Russia are on a
collision course today over a matter — whose flag will fly over what parts of
Ukraine — no Cold War president, from Truman to Reagan, would have considered
any of our business.
If the people of Eastern
Ukraine wish to formalize their historic, cultural and ethnic ties to Russia,
and the people of Western Ukraine wish to sever all ties to Moscow and join the
European Union, why not settle this politically, diplomatically and
democratically, at a ballot box?
Of course, a peaceful,
practical solution like this one will never win the approval of the New World
Order advocates. There’s never been a tar baby they could resist. And they
don’t care how many eggs get broken along the way. The interventionists know
there is no better way to increase their control over their own citizens than
to focus on the threat posed by some far-off enemy.
It’s time to tell Washington
that in regard to Putin’s actions in the Crimean Peninsula, we’re going to mind
our own business: no aid, no troops, no interference. That’s what our country’s
foreign policy was for the first 150 years of our existence. Wouldn’t it be
great to return to it again?
Until next time, keep some
powder dry.
Chip Wood, Personal Liberty Digest, March 21, 2014
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