Niles Williamson
Mikhail Gorbachev, the last president of the Soviet Union, accused
the United States Thursday of initiating a new Cold War with Russia and
expressed fears that the conflict could escalate into a nuclear Third
World War.
Gorbachev made his comments as fighting escalated in
Ukraine between forces directed by the US- and European Union-backed
government in Kiev and pro-Russian separatists in the eastern Donbass
region.
“Plainly speaking, the US has already dragged us into a
new Cold War, trying to openly implement its idea of triumphalism,” the
former Soviet leader told Interfax. “What’s next?
Unfortunately, I cannot be sure that the Cold War will not bring about a
‘hot’ one. I’m afraid [the United States] might take the risk.”
He
criticized the US and the EU for continuing to press for more economic
sanctions against Russia. “All we hear from the US and the EU now is
sanctions against Russia,” he continued. “Are they completely out of
their minds? The US has been totally ‘lost in the jungle’ and is
dragging us there as well.”
Earlier this month, Gorbachev gave an interview to the German news magazine Der Spiegel
about the ongoing conflict between the US, EU and Russia over Ukraine.
While he stated that it was “something that shouldn’t even be
considered,” Gorbachev warned that a major war in Europe would
“inevitably lead to a nuclear war.” He added, “If one side loses its
nerves in this inflamed atmosphere, then we won’t survive the coming
years.”
In the same interview, Gorbachev lamented these
developments as the outcome of Washington’s construction of a “mega
empire” in the aftermath of the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
Gorbachev,
as the initiator in the late 1980s of the process of capitalist
restoration, in the form of the policies of “perestroika” and
“glasnost,” bears a huge degree of responsibility for the current crisis
in Ukraine and the expansion of NATO. At the time, he argued that the
relentless drive of imperialism toward war had been replaced by the
pursuit of universal “human values.”
The decision of the ruling
Stalinist bureaucracy to preserve its own interests by liquidating the
Soviet Union and restoring capitalism allowed NATO to expand its reach
to Russia’s Western border.
Gorbachev was not alone in warning of
the dangers involved in the Ukraine conflict. Former US Secretary of
State Henry Kissinger, who has been involved in countless crimes of US
imperialism, spoke Thursday before the US Senate Armed Services
Committee, declaring himself “uneasy about beginning a process of
military engagement [in Ukraine] without knowing where it will lead us
and what we’ll do to sustain it.”
The 91-year-old Kissinger added:
“I believe we should avoid taking incremental steps before we know how
far we are willing to go. This is a territory 300 miles from Moscow, and
therefore has special security implications.”
The ongoing
imperialist operations in Ukraine, from last year’s US- and EU-backed
fascist-spearheaded coup to the ongoing fighting in the Donbass, as well
as the current sanctions regime against Russia, are aimed at asserting
US hegemony over all of the former Soviet Union and ultimately breaking
the Russian Federation itself into a series of semi-colonies, opening
the way for the plunder of its vast natural resources.
While there
had been signs in recent weeks of a desire on the part of some EU
states, in particular France and Italy, to begin rebuilding diplomatic
relations with Russia, a deadly rocket attack on the Ukrainian city of
Mariupol last weekend brought the EU members back into line behind the
sanctions regime.
An emergency meeting of EU foreign ministers on
Thursday decided to extend travel bans and bank account freezes against
132 Russian citizens and 28 organizations until September of this year.
The foreign ministers will meet again on February 12 to discuss
escalating the current tranche of economic sanctions against Russia.
Speaking
after the meeting, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier
stated menacingly, “If there is an offensive towards Mariupol or other
regions, one will need to respond with clear and harsher measures.”
In
the wake of the EU foreign ministers meeting, Donetsk was subjected to a
new round of artillery shelling. At least five civilians were reported
killed when mortars struck a crowd of several hundred people waiting
outside a community center for the distribution of relief aid.
Another
two civilians were reported killed after a mortar shell landed near a
bus stop. Artillery shelling throughout the day on Friday in western
Donetsk killed at least five more civilians.
The pro-Russian
separatists continued their assault on a key railway hub between Donetsk
and Luhansk, taking control of the village of Vuhlehirsk, just west of a
city, Debaltseve, where at least 8,000 Ukrainian forces are currently
entrenched. While the city’s civilian population of 25,000 has for the
most part been evacuated, at least seven civilians were reported killed
by shelling on Friday.
Semen Semenchenko, founder of the Ukrainian
nationalist Donbas Battalion militia, which has been integrated into
the National Guard of Ukraine, reported that Kiev-backed forces in
Debaltseve had been fired upon by artillery shells, mortars and grad
rockets.
Ceasefire talks hosted by the Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europe that were set to resume on Friday failed to
even get off the ground. Vladislav Deinego and Denis Pushilin,
representatives of the pro-Russian separatists, announced they were
leaving Minsk for Moscow after Kiev’s representative, former president
Leonid Kuchma, failed to show.
The Ukrainian government and its
backers in the US and the EU have shown little desire to reach a
compromise with the rebels. Speaking in the UN Security Council last
week, US Ambassador Samantha Power dismissed the latest Russian peace
plan as an “occupation plan.”
On Friday, in a desperate attempt to
stimulate its economy and avoid a devastating recession, the Russian
central bank made a surprise announcement that it was cutting its key
interest rate by two percentage points, to 15 percent. This decision
came little more than a month after it raised the same interest rate by
6.5 percentage points, to 17 percent, in an attempt to stem the decline
of the ruble, which has lost more than 17 percent of its value since the
beginning of the year.
The sudden move by the Bank of Russia is
an indication that the sanctions regime, combined with the collapse of
oil prices, is contributing to a mounting political and economic crisis
within Russia. According to preliminary reports from Russia’s Statistics
Services, the country’s economy grew by a mere 0.6 percent in 2014.
Citigroup projects that, if the average price of Brent crude oil remains
deflated, Russia’s economy will contract by 3 percent in 2015.
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