November 4, 2012
The Pentagon
is working to encircle Eurasia and surround the Eurasian Triple Entente
composed of China, Russia, and Iran. For every reaction, however, there is a
counter-reaction.
Neither one of
these three Eurasian powers will sit ideally as passive US targets. Beijing,
Moscow, and Tehran are all taking their own distinct counter-measures to oppose
the Pentagon’s strategy of military encirclement.
In the Indian
Ocean the Chinese are developing their military infrastructure under what the
Pentagon calls the Chinese “string of pearls.”
Iran is going
through a process of naval expansion, which is seeing it deploy its maritime
forces further and further from its home waters in the Persian Gulf and Gulf of
Oman.
All three
Eurasian powers, along with several of their allies, also have naval vessels
stationed off the shorelines of Yemen, Djibouti, and Somalia in the
geo-strategically important maritime corridor of the Gulf of Aden.
The US global
missile shield is a component of the Pentagon’s strategy to encircle Eurasia
and these three powers. In the first instance, this military system is aimed at
establishing the nuclear primacy of the US by neutralizing any Russian or
Chinese nuclear response to a US or NATO attack. The global missile shield is
aimed at preventing any reaction or nuclear “second strike” by the Russians and
Chinese to a nuclear “first strike” by the Pentagon.
US GLOBAL MISSILE SHIELD VERSUS RUSSIAN NAVAL EXPANSION
All the new
reports about branches of the US missile shield being established in other parts
of the world are sensationalized in terms of how they are portraying its
geographic expansion as a new development.
These reports
ignore the fact that the missile shield was designed to be a global system with
components strategically positioned across the world from the onset.
The Pentagon had planned this in the 1990s and maybe much earlier. Japan and the Pentagon’s NATO allies have more or less been partners in the military project from the start.
Years ago both
the Chinese and Russians were aware of the Pentagon’s global ambitions for the
missile shield and made joint statements condemning it as a destabilizing
project that would disturb the global strategic balance of power. China and
Russia even jointly issued multilateral statements in July 2000 with
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan warning that the creation of the
Pentagon’s global missile shield would work against international peace and
that it contravened the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty.
The US government was repeatedly warned that the steps it was taking would polarize the globe with hostilities that would be reminiscent of the Cold War. The warning fell on deaf and arrogant ears.
The Russians are
now rebutting the Pentagon’s global missile shield through very practical steps
of their own. These steps involve an expansion of their country’s presence in
the high seas and an upgrade of their naval capabilities. Moscow plans on
opening new naval bases outside of its home waters and outside of both the
shorelines of the Black Sea and Mediterranean Sea.
.
.
The Russian Federation already has two naval bases outside of Russian territory; one is in the Ukrainian port of Sevastopol in the Black Sea and the other is in the Syrian port of Tartus in the Mediterranean Sea.
The Kremlin is
now looking at the Caribbean Sea, South China Sea, and eastern coast of Africa
(in close proximity to the Gulf of Aden) as suitable locations for new Russian
bases. Cuba, Vietnam, and the Seychelles are the prime candidates to host new
Russian naval bases in these waters.
The Russians
already had a presence in Vietnam’s Cam Ranh Bay until 2002. The Vietnamese
port was home to the Soviets since 1979 and then hosted Russian forces after
the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991. Russia also continued to have a
post-Soviet military presence in Cuba until 2001 through the Lourdes
intelligence signal base that monitored the US.
The Kremlin is
additionally developing its military infrastructure on its Arctic coast. New
Arctic naval bases in the north are going to be opened. This is part of an
overlap with the careful Russian strategy that includes the Arctic Circle. It
is drawn with two dual functions in mind. One function is to protect Russian
territorial and energy interests against NATO states in the Lomonosov Ridge.
The other purpose is to serve the Russian global maritime strategy.
Moscow realizes
that the US and NATO want to restrictively hem in its maritime forces in the
Black Sea and Mediterranean Sea. US and EU moves to control and restrict
Russian maritime access to Syria is an indicator of this strategic inclination
and objective. The moves to strategically hem in Russian marine forces are one
of the reasons that the Kremlin wants naval bases in the Caribbean, South China
Sea, and eastern coast of Africa.
The development
of Russia’s Arctic naval infrastructure and the opening of Russian naval bases
in places like Cuba, Vietnam, and the Seychelles would virtually guarantee the
global presence of Russian naval forces. Russian vessels would have multiple
points of entry into international waters and secure docking bases abroad.
These bases will give the Russians permanent docking facilities in both the
Atlantic Ocean and Indian Ocean too.
The future
overseas naval bases, like the one is Syria, are not being referred to as
“naval bases” by Russian officials, but by other terms. Moscow is calling them
“supply points” or bases for naval logistics to make them sound far less
threatening. The nomenclature does not really matter. The functions of these
naval facilities, however, are for the strategic military purposes that are
being outlined.
The Russians at
present only have permanent docking bases on their own national coastlines in
the Arctic Ocean and Pacific Ocean. Moreover, Russia’s naval infrastructure in
the Russian Far East, on the shores of the Pacific Ocean, has the greatest
access to open international waters.
Moscow’s naval
infrastructure in the Baltic is geographically in a constrained environment and
could be immobilized, like Russia’s naval infrastructure in the Black Sea, in
the event of a confrontation with the US and NATO.
The addition of
the naval infrastructure in places like Cuba would effectively guarantee that
Russia’s naval forces will have a free hand and not be hemmed in by the US and
its allies.
RUSSIA’S NEW NUCLEAR POSTURE AT SEA
Historically,
the mandate of the naval forces of the Russian Armed Forces has been to protect
the Russian coast. Both Russia and the Soviet Union based their defensive
strategies on countering a major land invasion. For this reason both the
characteristics of the Russian and Soviet naval forces were always based on
functions aimed at helping fight a land-based invasion. Thus, the Russian naval
fleet has not been structured as an offensive attack force. This, however, is
changing as part of Moscow’s reaction to the Pentagon’s strategy of
encirclement.
Russia, like
both China and Iran, is now focusing on sea power.
Russia is
upgrading and expanding its nuclear naval fleet. The Russian media has referred
to this as a new bid for their country’s “naval dominance.” Moscow’s aims are
to establish the nuclear superiority of its naval fleet with sea-based nuclear
attack capabilities. This is a direct reaction to the Pentagon’s global missile
shield and the encirclement of Russia and its allies.
Over fifty new
warships and more than twenty new submarines will be added to the Russian fleet
by 2020. About 40% of the new Russian submarines will have lethal nuclear
strike capabilities. This process started after the Bush Jr. White House began
taking steps to establish the US missile shield in Europe.
In the last few
years, Russia’s counter-measures to the US missile shield have begun to
manifest themselves. Trials of Russia’s Borey class submarine in the White Sea,
where the port of Archangel (Arkhangelsk) is situated, began in 2011. In the
same year the development of the submarine-launched Liner ballistic nuclear
missile was announced, which was said to be able to pierce through the US
missile shield. A Russian submarine would secretly test the Liner from the
Barents Sea in 2011.
FUTURE CUBA MISSILE CRISIS IN THE MAKING?
If an agreement
is reached with Havana, there is always the possibility that Russia may deploy
missiles to Cuba like the Soviets did. Speaking in the realm of the
hypothetical, these Russian missiles would most probably have nuclear warheads.
Simplistically, this can be portrayed as a replay of the scenario that led to
the Cuban Missile Crisis between the US, Soviet Union, and Cuba in 1962. There
is much more, however, to the background of this Cold War story and its causes
and effects.
The chief
perpetrator of the Cuban Missile Crisis was the US government. The deployment
of Soviet nuclear missiles to Cuba was a strategically asymmetric move to
counter-balance the secret deployment of US nuclear missiles to Turkey, which
targeted Soviet cities and citizens.
The US
government did not let its citizens know about its own nuclear missiles in
Turkey that were targeting the Soviet population, because it would have led to
many questions by the US public about whom the real aggressors were and what
side was really at fault for the sparking of the crisis in 1962.
The future
deployment of Russian nukes to Cuba would likewise be a reaction to the nuclear
weapons that the Pentagon is surrounding Russia and her allies with. Like in
1962, the US government would be at fault once again if nuclear missiles are
deployed to Cuba and a crisis emerges.
Hereto, there
are only talks underway about a renewed Russian presence in Cuba. Nothing has
been agreed upon in concrete terms between the governments in Havana and
Moscow, and there has been no mention of deploying Russian missiles to Cuba.
Any comments about Russian moves in Cuba are speculation.
The nuclear
upgrades that Russia is making to its navy are much more significant than any
future Russian base in Cuba or elsewhere. Russia’s new nuclear naval posture
actually allows it to cleverly station multiple mobile nukes around the US. In
other words, Russia has “multiple Cubas” in the form of its floating mobile
nuclear naval vessels that can deploy anywhere in the world. This is also why
Russia is developing is naval infrastructure abroad. Russia will have the
option of surrounding or flanking the United States with its own sea-based
nuclear strike forces.
Russia’s naval
strategy cleverly is meant to counter the Pentagon’s global missile shield.
Included in this process is the adoption of a pre-emptive nuclear strike policy
by the Kremlin as a reaction to the aggressive pre-emptive post-Cold War
nuclear strike doctrine of the Pentagon and NATO.
In the same year
as the test of the Liner by the Russians, the commander of the Strategic Rocket
Forces of the Russian Federation, Colonel-General Karakayev, said that Russia’s
inter-continental ballistic missiles would become “invisible” in the near
future.
The world is
increasingly becoming militarized.
US moves and
actions are now forcing other international actors to redefine and reassess
their military doctrines and strategies.
Russia is merely
just one of them.
An award-winning author
and geopolitical analyst, Mahdi Darius Nazemroaya is the author of The
Globalization of NATO (Clarity Press) and a forthcoming book The War on
Libya and the Re-Colonization of Africa. He has also contributed to several
other books ranging from cultural critique to international relations. He is a
Sociologist and Research Associate at the Centre for Research on Globalization
(CRG), a contributor at the Strategic Culture Foundation (SCF), Moscow, and a
member of the Scientific Committee of Geopolitica, Italy. He has also addressed
the Middle East and international relations issues on several TV news networks
including Al Jazeera, teleSUR, and Russia Today. His writings have been
translated into more than twenty languages. In 2011 he was awarded the First
National Prize of the Mexican Press Club for his work in international
investigative journalism.
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