World
N V Subramanian
Apr 04, 2016, 03:36 PM | Updated 03:36 PM IST
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The West and particularly Europe’s failure to prevent Islamic State (IS)
terrorist attacks on its big cities like Paris and Brussels is
contrasted by Russia’s staggering successes against the militant
organization in its bases inside Syria. Russian air and space forces
hours prior assisted Syrian troops loyal to the Bashar al-Assad
government to recapture the great Semitic city of antiquity called
Palmyra. Russian President Vladimir Putin has already arranged for
UNESCO to save such of Palmyra’s priceless heritage as has not been
destroyed by Islamic State philistines.
Russia’s success against the Islamic State and Europe’s failure bears an
uncanny resemblance to the tide of events in a global conflict of the
last century that spread catastrophe everywhere. This is the Second
World War. Until Russia’s predecessor state, the Soviet Union,
intervened against Nazi Germany, the war was going in favour of Adolf
Hitler’s ruthlessly efficient and enormously powerful Wehrmacht forces.
The West did not trust Soviet Russia from the first as war clouds began
gathering over Europe. Western Europe has always treated Russia with
scorn and disdain. Western militarists like Napoleon Bonaparte and Adolf
Hitler considered the vast territories of Central and Eastern Europe
fit for conquest and subjugation. Napoleon at least asked for the hand
of the Tsar’s younger sister in marriage. Hitler harboured racist hatred
for the Russians. He planned to starve Russia by annexing the rich
agricultural lands of Ukraine. The British had already accomplished a
variation of this programme in India when foodgrain was diverted to
troops and caused the Bengal Famine.
In the case of both Hitler and Napoleon, it was Russian opposition that
proved their nemesis. Taking their cue perhaps from the scorched earth
policy of the Romans to counter the rebellious Maximin in year 238, the
Russians laid waste the approaches to Moscow in 1812 to deter Napoleon’s
Grand Armee. Ironically in the campaign, Napoleon was reading an
account of Charles XII of Sweden who faced a rout in Russia in similar
circumstances over a hundred years previously.
The lack of food and
shelter in burnt out Moscow and the onset of the terrible Russian winter
killed Napoleon’s hopes of seizing Russia. He retreated and the
Russians followed him to Paris. He was finished as a world conqueror.
When the Duke of Wellington dealt the final blow in Waterloo, Napoleon
was a ghost of his former self, worn by exile, embattled and lacking in
new tactics.
Russia again saved the West and the world from Hitler though Western
powers spin it differently. The West was ready to accommodate the
Fuhrer. This is what Neville Chamberlain meant when he spoke of “Peace
for our time.” Hitler wanted a Lebensraum for Germans in the east and
the West saw no reason to oppose him. It was World War I in another
dimension. The West kept Russia out of the deal with Germany on
Czechoslovakia. Joseph Stalin had to act with cunning and dispatch else
Russia would be pulverised by resurgent Germany.
This was the basis for
the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact and the Russo-German agreement to partition
Poland. Stalin knew Hitler could not be appeased but he was playing for
time. He had to rebuild the Soviet military which lay in a shambles by
the closing stages of World War I when the Revolution claimed Russia;
not to speak of his own purges which swept away some of the best
officers.
When Germany did attack the Soviet Union after overrunning Western
Europe, Russia used its mammoth open spaces and boggy roadless
countryside to exhaust the strike power of German armour, the key to
blitzkrieg. Fortunately for Russia, the German army expended critical
summer days “pacifying” the Balkans. Other troubles surfaced. The
mobilization against Russia was delayed. German military commanders knew
the fate of armies trapped in the Russian rains and winter. Yet they
tempted fate out of fear of Hitler.
But it was not just the weather. By one reliable estimate, Stalin threw
six Red Army soldiers against one Wehrmacht trooper in the east and four
in the Caucasian push north of the Germans. Much Russian blood was shed
in stopping the German war machine whose impact on Russia’s demography
and skewed sex ratios is felt to this day. The West was not grateful to
Russia and no sooner was World War II over than the Cold War commenced,
which continues in one form or another against Russia even today.
The Russians are completely aware of this past and unfolding present and
know to take care of themselves. When US and European unilateralism in
the Middle East set the region aflame and terrorists took control,
Russia warned of the horrible consequences. In one summit conference
after another, President Putin pleaded with Western leaders not to arm
and encourage terrorists and destabilize existing governments in the
Middle East.
The West taunted him. (It was Afghanistan over again.) The
deposition of Saddam Hussein and Western meddling in Syria spawned the
Islamic State. The war against the Islamic State would have been lost
but for Russia’s bold and calculated intervention. The retaking of
Palmyra bolsters Russia’s credentials as a stabilizer in the Middle East
and grand preserver of heritage.
It is not too late for the West to heed Russia’s geopolitical advice on
the Middle East. As a former empire and Modern Great Power, Russia has
enormous experience and accumulated wisdom in these matters. Britain was
admirable in such things once. No longer. Pay attention to what Russia
says and does.
This article was first published here.
N.V.Subramanian is the Editor of www.newsinsight.net and writes on politics and strategic affairs.