So many times in the articles I have submitted to help with
this noble work – and I don't say that from a bully pulpit, whatever that is,
or with a heroic tear leaking from my far-seeing eye – I have emphasized the
real similarities between the combatants in this war, and really, in every war:
generally young, often not worldly, universally afraid, and almost wholly
unaffected in their daily lives by the outcome of the war they have been tapped
to fight. That is the nature of the young soldier, or pilot, or medic…they have
one heck of a lot more in common with the soldier they are staring at through
the gunsight than they do with the general who is sending them into the fire.
And they certainly have almost nothing in common with the politicians who are
making the decisions that affect them so strongly.
I read a death-bed interview with a Russian female soldier,
a sniper, who talked affectionately about her colleagues, Ukrainian, Russian,
Bessarabian, Modavian…Soviet, at the time, and the upshot of what she said about
her service in WWII was this: we all would have been fine without the bosses
screwing everything up. I didn't fight for the monster Stalin, but for the
millions of good and honest Soviet citizens who wanted nothing more than a
simple and happy life. And I am sure that the boys in the German tanks felt the
same. Bosses! We would have been fine without them!
Now one thing about the United States, plutocracy that it
is, is that the military is not seen as a career for the privileged any longer.
The fact that it was practically the only career for the wealthy in England,
Germany…any monarchy, really meant that the powerful had a personal stake in
things in the way our wealthy and powerful do not. Sure, Harvard guys served
during WW2, but from what I can tell, most of the officers who run today's
military are from large land-grant colleges in the west, or south…it just isn't
seen as a good investment of one's life and time, unless the far-sighted guy
who joins wants to go into politics or something.
It makes me wonder. British military historians had often –
generally – been soldiers themselves, thinking, rightly, that the best way to
understand an ambush, and thus describe one, was to be in one. Or twenty. Look
at the poetic tradition that emerged from WWI, Siegfried Sassoon, Wilfrid
Owens…Teilhard de Chardin, nobleman, Jesuit and enlisted stretcher bearer.
Is that why no one can see that the entrance of two new
members into NATO is being seen, and rightly, as a response, if not a
provocative response, to Putin's war in Russia? It means that if one Russian
soldier sets foot in Finland, it could set in train a string of events that
could lead to nuclear Armageddon. Do I understand why Finland wanted in?
Absolutely. But until now, Russia felt that there was a buffer zone surrounding
it from NATO, and now, with Finland, Sweden and Ukraine, not yet a member but
being treated somewhat like one, joining the ranks of those allied against
Russia…it Is easy to see why Mr. Putin Is not feeling like backing down is
wise. Instead, he is feeling increasingly ganged-up upon, and while he
certainly brought it on himself, well - blessed are the peacemakers, said the
man on the mount. He didn't call for an escalation. He called for swords being
beaten into ploughshares.
Increasingly the western media is portraying the war as
virtually won. It is not, and moreover, what happens afterward is really the
test. Putin is allegedly ill. Putin is allegedly more and more at odds with the
oligarchia, Russian billionaires who supported his rise.
Not so. Look to Mariupol, where the fight for the factory is
done, and both sides have declared victory. True, victory is a murkier concept
than it was when it meant overrunning the enemy's capitol and installing a
quisling there to help mulct it of its resources. Now it can mean territorial
gains; it can mean landing a plane on an aircraft carrier and putting up a big
banner declaring victory, and then fighting for another ten years. But it
really means what the people fighting want it to mean.
Starting a war, on the other hand, is remarkably clear.
Putin packed men at the border, and on the appointed day, the tanks rolled. A
clear commencement. And now he is angry and frightened about the decisions of
Sweden and Finland to join his enemies. Recall that Mr Putin is trained as a
lawyer and a spy. Having a NATO country abutting Russia is something
unthinkable from his youth in the USSR. Formative notions are perhaps the
strongest, and the presence of hostiles on the border – barbarians at his gate
– is really unlikely to have the success it hopes for, with Putin absolutely
agape at this turn of events.
I am afraid. I am in Kyiv as I write, enjoying few days of
sleep in a bed. Since I was the designated coffee-getter this morning, I went
around the corner to see my new friend Sergei, the coffee-maker. I went down in the scary, Soviet era
elevator, out the door and around to Shevchenko Prospekt, where Coffeycoffey is
manned, faithfully, by my new buddy, who has not taken off the Yankee cap I
gave him since I did. I think he might sleep with it on; he is 21, and will be
called up soon, so if you see a Ukrainian soldier wearing a real, live
non-adjustable official Yankee hat, with a formidable uinibrow, that's Sergei.
And despite the two air raids last night, both of which came to nothing, the
air was different this morning. Many more soldiers, all armed, were out on
Shevchenko. The Federal Police were walking in threes, not alone. And fighters
were going overhead, even old Mig 21's, which means they are hauling everything
out of mothballs.
Turkey opposed the move by Sweden and Finland, and although one
might ask why, it is because they stand in the direct way of an angry Russia. Erdogan
is the man on the top, and doesn't want the balance of power disturbed. I am
afraid that is what has happened; it is sort of like stationing nuclear rockets
in Cuba.
It hits too close to home.
So, while it may strengthen NATO, I also believe it brings
us closer to the Guns of August 2.0. Perhaps not, but let me quote Buffalo
Springfield, as a cautionary tale:
There's Battle lines being drawn
Nobody's right, if everybody's wrong
Young people speaking their mind
Getting so much resistance, from behind…
Anyway…we better watch out, children. This isn't over by a
long, long shot.
The writer is a former military man, now researching and writing about the Ukrainian Conflict. Questions can be sent directly to lhaesten@gmail.com.
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