Sunday, March 06, 2022

That means yes to defending any NATO ally, yes to supporting Ukraine with sanctions and weaponry, and absolutely no to a no-fly zone or any measure that might obligate us to fire the first shot against the Russians.

 

How to Stop a Nuclear War!

In September 1983, Stanislav Petrov was a lieutenant colonel in the Soviet military, assigned to the command center that monitored early-warning satellites over the United States. During one of his shifts, the alarms went off: The Americans had seemingly launched five Minuteman intercontinental ballistic missiles.

This was at a peak of Cold War tension, just a few weeks after the U.S.S.R. shot down a Korean airliner that strayed into Soviet airspace. With only minutes until the missiles were predicted to hit their targets, Petrov had to decide whether to report the attack up the chain of command, potentially triggering a swift retaliatory strike.

Following both intuition and the assumption that a real first strike would feature more than five missiles, he decided to report the alert as a malfunction, a false alarm. Which it was: The satellite had misread sunlight reflecting off clouds as a missile launch.

Petrov passed to his reward in 2017 — a suitable one, hopefully, for a man who saved millions of lives — but there are two reasons to reflect on his choices now, as the West tries to respond to Russia’s Ukrainian invasion with the Russian nuclear arsenal in the background.

The first is simply to be reminded how fortunate the world was to escape a nuclear exchange during the Cold War, when near-misses happened not just during moments of maximal brinkmanship like the Cuban Missile Crisis but also through randomness, coincidence and error. If there’s a path to nuclear war in this century, it will probably feature a similar kind of contingency and accident, the devil taking a hand in ways that can’t be predicted in advance.

But it’s also worth considering exactly what made Petrov’s position so excruciating: He had to decide whether to escalate toward Armageddon in a situation where not to escalate threatened his entire society with defeat. And then also to consider how he found a way out of his predicament: Through the fact that five missiles was not actually a defeating blow, which was both evidence that the satellites were erring and also a sign that he didn’t actually hold the final fate of his country in his hands.

His specific experience vindicates a general doctrine for confrontations between nuclear-armed powers: It’s often better to constrain yourself than to limit your enemy’s choices, pushing them toward a doom-laden decision between escalation and defeat.

Clear commitments — we will fight here, we won’t fight there — are the coin of the nuclear realm, since the goal is to give the enemy the responsibility for escalation, to make it feel its apocalyptic weight, while also feeling that it can always choose another path. Whereas unpredictable escalations and maximalist objectives, often useful in conventional warfare, are the enemy of nuclear peace, insofar as they threaten the enemy with the no-win scenario that Petrov almost found himself in that day in 1983.

These insights have several implications for our strategy right now. First, they suggest that even if you believe the United States should have extended security guarantees to Ukraine before the Russian invasion, now that war is begun we must stick by the lines we drew in advance. That means yes to defending any NATO ally, yes to supporting Ukraine with sanctions and weaponry, and absolutely no to a no-fly zone or any measure that might obligate us to fire the first shot against the Russians.

Second, they mean that it’s extremely dangerous for U.S. officials to talk about regime change in Moscow — in the style of the reckless Senator Lindsey Graham, for instance, who has called on a “Brutus” or “Stauffenberg” to rid the world of Vladimir Putin. If you make your nuclear-armed enemy believe your strategy requires the end of their regime (or very life), you are pushing them, again, toward the no-choice zone that almost trapped Colonel Petrov.

Third, they imply that the odds of nuclear war might be higher today than in the Soviet era, because Russia is much weaker. The Soviet Union simply had more ground to give up in a conventional war before defeat appeared existential than does Putin’s smaller empire — which may be a reason why current Russian strategy increasingly prioritizes tactical nuclear weapons in the event of a conventional-war retreat.

But if that makes our situation more dangerous, it also should give us confidence that we don’t need to take wild nuclear risks to defeat Putin in the long run. The voices arguing for escalating now because we’ll have to fight him sooner or later need to recognize that containment, proxy wars and careful line-drawing defeated a Soviet adversary whose armies threatened to sweep across West Germany and France, whereas now we’re facing a Russian army that’s bogged down outside Kyiv.

We were extremely careful about direct escalation with the Soviets even when they invaded Hungary or Czechoslovakia or Afghanistan, and the result was a Cold War victory without a nuclear war. To escalate now against a weaker adversary, one less likely to ultimately defeat us and more likely to engage in atomic recklessness if cornered, would be a grave and existential folly.

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/05/opinion/russia-nuclear-war.html


11 comments:

  1. Ross Douthat, who wrote the above article (published in the "Opinion" section of NYT), is a very naive young gentleman. His thoughts on Putin are simply wrong: You cannot compare the USSR and Russia today. The USSR leadership had Politburo, no decision could be made by one man only. Besides, those folks had their communist ideology that advocated the fight only against "rich" capitalists and not "poor" and "enslaved" nations of the West. And most Politburo members still remembered WW2 and knew that its horrors just could not be repeated. Putin is much different. He has no ideology, he does not care about millions dead. And he is already cornered, make no mistake! Imagine Putin halting his bloody genocide right now. What's next? Will he pay billions to Ukraine for his atrocities? No. Will he somehow explain his people mass casualties? No. Will he visit the Hague Tribunal? No, of course. He cannot stop at this point. But what if he occupies Ukraine, will he stop there? No, Hitler did not stop with Czechoslovakia, why should Putin? Yet someone may still claim that Putin is afraid of American nukes killing him and his large and corrupt family, therefore, he won't strike first unless provoked. But Putin is not afraid: Over decades, KGB has been building underground bunkers at the Yamantau mountain in the Urals. These structures, reportedly, can withstand multiple nuclear explosions, and people can live there for up to twenty years; they even made sort of middle-earth with artificial sun and pastures. Putin plans to sit out the nuclear holocaust in that bunker system and then reestablish new race of Slavic peoples on the planet. Because he knows that anything else will get him and his ilk to a Nuremberg trial. If we do not kill Putin now, he will certainly kill us.

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  2. If we do not kill Putin now, he will certainly kill us.


    *******

    If the CIA could, he would be dead by now!

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  3. Right, UOJ, but that just means Putin WILL kill us.

    Make no mistake: Putin has been preparing for this over the past decades.

    And the CIA has just woke up. Isn't that kinda late?

    If Anne Neuberger of pedophile Baltimore Ner Israel could become Biden's Deputy National Security Advisor for Cyber and Emerging Technology and part of the National Security Council, what do you expect of the CIA right now?

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  4. Ms. Neuberger is extremely competent at her job, she has been at it for a long time.

    The CIA could not find Saddam Hussein...

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  5. You surprise me. Anne with an "e" is a Bais Yaakov graduate. I know some former members of the intelligence community who aren't much happy with her and do not view her as competent. They say her appointment was because of her Hungarian billionaire dad and NIRC ties. Anyhow, if our intelligence has done nothing about Putin, especially after his infamous speech in Germany fifteen years ago against the West, what do you expect of us?

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  6. So what else is new about political appointees?

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  7. I know a yeshish person working for Northrop Grumman. A computer programmer who designs new missiles. Does not know basic math. And got hired by NG thanks to the parents.

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  8. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FNMX4cTWYBIAoqn?format=jpg&name=large

    https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FNMXwtrX0AE5577?format=jpg&name=large

    Horrifying photos taken today. After the Holocaust, nations kept repeating "Never Again." But it's again -- again!

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  9. No Rocket Scientist8:47 PM, March 06, 2022

    NASA once mistakenly released a top secret design to an industry magazine that was immediately duplicated by the Chinese. The entire dept of the leak was let go including a YU shvantz who had gone off the derech.

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  10. https://archive.org/stream/6539183-1028-New-York-John-WR-Doe-v-Camp-Mogen-Avraham/6539183-1028-New-York-John-WR-Doe-v-Camp-Mogen-Avraham_djvu.txt

    Here are Heshi's escapades in mid-60s Kaminetz Boro Park & late 60s Camp Mogen Avrohom. Shame on cover up meister Ronnie Greenwald!

    The story has not yet been written on Heshi's other adventures in Toronto (Eitz Chaim & elsewhere), Northern Ontario while working for COR Kashrus and Shabbatons in Winnipeg, Manitoba, where he worked with fellow pedo Ephraim Bryks.

    Someone recently asked about Heshi. From what I can discern he is apparently still breathing & fantasizing about his next victim even if the chemicals may have lessened his intensity.

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  11. Garnel Ironheart10:15 AM, March 07, 2022

    This situation has become incredibly complicated.
    Openly assist Ukraine? Risk starting WW3.
    Let Ukraine fall? You mean, like Czechoslovakia? We get WW3 anyway, just a couple of years later.

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