Oportuna nota de Eric Draitser
para el New Eastern Outlook sobre la presencia militar estadounidense en el Mar Negro. Provocaciones, claro, que pueden terminar mal. Como señala el autor, en ningún momento de la Guerra Fría los EEUU se embarcaron en acciones tan abiertamente hostiles hacia Rusia como las que está ensayando últimamente. Pasemos a la nota:
Título: Invading
the Black Sea: Washington's belligerent military maneuvers in traditional
Russian territory
Texto: While the
war in Ukraine has raged on for more than a year, the growing conflict between
the US-NATO and Russia has taken on new dimensions. From economic warfare waged
by the West in the form of sanctions, to the diplomatic rows over the
commemoration of Victory Day in Moscow, more and more it seems that relations
between East and West are fraying beyond repair. Though it may seem that this
conflict is escalating into simply an extension of what was once known as the
Cold War, the potential exists for a hot war of global dimensions.
Lost amid the
cacophony of saber-rattling and chest-thumping in Washington and Brussels is
the quietly emerging, and infinitely dangerous, military deployment in the
Black Sea. Once seen as a no-go zone for the US and NATO, the Black Sea, with
its expansive Russian shores, has recently become the site of a slew of provocative
military moves by the US, and equally significant counter-moves by Russia.
Adding fuel to this potential fire is the participation of Chinese naval assets
in this quietly brewing cocktail of global conflict.
The presence of
US military assets all throughout the Black Sea region is undoubtedly
provocative as it is pushing perilously close to Russia's borders. The
potential for escalation - premeditated or otherwise - puts the entire region,
and indeed the entire world, at risk of catastrophe.
This article will
focus on the US-NATO military developments in and around the Black Sea. While
by no means a comprehensive listing of all of Washington's moves in the region,
it is an attempt to provide a glimpse into a little discussed theater of deployment
for the West - one that is regarded as a very serious threat by Moscow.
Washington
Swimming in the Black Sea
There is no doubt
that US strategy vis-à-vis Russia places tremendous strategic importance on
maintaining and expanding a robust military presence in and around the Black
Sea. Recent moves by the US-NATO military forces make this fact all the more
apparent. Having deployed a significant amount of forces to littoral countries,
as well as initiating a series of critical military exercises and drills,
Washington is demonstrating unequivocally its commitment to escalating the
conflict with Russia.
Nearly a year
ago, in June 2014, former Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel laid bare US
intentions. In the wake of President Obama's public announcement of $1 billion
to expand the US military presence in Eastern Europe, Hagel stated that the
billion dollar commitment was for a "stronger presence of US ships in the
Black Sea," and that "[The US] will sustain that tempo going forward."
Put in slightly more understandable terminology, the US committed a significant
monetary investment to the permanent expansion of its military presence in and
around the Black Sea.
The permanence of
this new commitment is what is striking because, unlike much of the bluff and
bluster from Washington over Ukraine and related issues, this represents a
military deployment with real tactical value. It is not mere rhetoric, it is
military escalation. And, in the year since the announcement was made, this
process has evolved in earnest.
The US Army is
currently, or will soon be, leading a series of critical military exercises in
the Black Sea. One notable one is known as Noble Partner. This series of
exercises is being conducted with the de facto NATO member Georgia which has
effectively become a forward arm of NATO military forces. As the official page
of the US Army noted:
Noble Partner
will support Georgia's contribution of a light infantry company to NATO
Response Force, or NRF... The exercise will focus on unified land operations
... Exercise Noble Partner provides an opportunity for the U.S. military to
continue its training relationship with the Georgian Armed Forces as the
sponsor of Georgia's participation in the NRF. The NRF provides a rapid
military response force to deploy quickly, wherever needed.... Exercise Noble
Partner will include approximately 600 U.S. and Georgian Service members
incorporating a full range of equipment... Georgian forces will operate
alongside U.S. forces with their BMP-2 Infantry Combat Vehicle. The exercise
will consist of both a field training exercise and a live-fire exercise.
However, as part
of the US military training, a significant amount of military hardware is being
shuttled across the Black Sea in an unprecedented move by the US which has
never so brazenly treated this body of water as its own backyard. As the US
Army page wrote:
Fourteen Bradley
Infantry Fighting vehicles and several wheeled-support vehicles, roughly 748
metric tons of steel and rubber, cut across the Black Sea...bound for the port
in Batumi, Georgia, May 2. This is the first time that the U.S. Army has
deployed a mechanized company worth of equipment across the Black Sea. The
equipment will support the 2nd Battalion, 7th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Infantry
Division Soldiers, participating in Exercise Noble Partner.
Taken in
combination with Hagel's comments a year ago, it is clear that the US is
committed to escalating its military presence in the Black Sea. Of course, it
is self-evident that such a strategic development must be seen as an attempt to
both outgun and intimidate Russia in its traditional sphere of influence.
Additionally, and
concurrent to these military exercises, is the planned Trident Joust 2015,
which according to US Navy Admiral Mark Ferguson, will "test the
capability of the NRF [NATO Response Force] command and control element to work
at full operational capacity in a deployed location...TRIDENT JOUST 15...will
reinforce the NATO Readiness Action Plan from the Wales Summit and project
assurance measures to all NATO allies." Trident Joust should be understood
as an attempt to prepare NATO's military architecture for possible rapid
deployment in the Black Sea region, ostensibly as a defense against so-called
Russian aggression while in reality seeking to expand NATO military capability
against the backdrop of the war in Ukraine and increased tensions with Moscow.
At no time during
the Cold War did the US engage in such openly hostile and belligerent actions
designed more to provoke than to defend. It seems the policy now is to both
prepare for war and work to ensure that it comes to fruition. As if to make it
even more transparent what Washignton's intentions are with Trident Joust,
Admiral Ferguson was quoted as saying "I appreciate the efforts of Romania
as we work on other measures to transform the Alliance, such as the formation
of the Multinational Division Southeast and the NATO Force Integration
Unit."
There are other
important military moves that the US-NATO have made in the Black Sea in recent
months, all designed to send a stern warning to Russia. NATO's Standing NATO
Maritime Group Two (SNMG2) recently completed its training exercises
"designed to improve interoperability and enhance rapid integration of Alliance
maritime assets... The force trained on anti-air, anti-submarine and
anti-surface warfare procedures during separate exercises with the Turkish,
Bulgarian and Romanian navies." As part of SNMG2, NATO deployed
significant military assets to the Romanian port of Constanta, not
coincidentally a short distance across the Black Sea from Crimea and Russia's
fleet at Sevastopol. Participating in the SNMG2 was the USS Vicksburg with its
Mark 41 Vertical Launching System, Harpoon anti-ship missiles, and arsenal of guns.
In addition were Canadian, Italian, and Turkish warships, all carrying
significant firepower of their own.
Aside from these
specific sets of naval exercises, the US has had major assets in and around the
Black Sea to participate in a series of one-off maneuvers and a variety of
drills in the past year, even before Secretary Hagel's public announcement in
June 2014. These include the recently decommissioned USS Taylor which spent
much of 2014 in the Black Sea. Perhaps not so coincidentally, this US frigate
is now slated for sale to Taiwan in a move that is likely to be met with
disapproval in Beijing. Additionally, the USS Donald Cook, a missile destroyer,
conducted exercises with the USS Taylor and Romanian Navy. Also, the USS
Truxton and USS Vella Gulf both logged significant time in the Black Sea in
2014, undoubtedly motivating Russia to move quickly to ramp up its naval and
military capabilities.
It is interesting
to note that Russia's moves in Crimea in 2014 came within a matter of days of the
entrance into the Black Sea of these US naval assets. Anyone who doubts that
Moscow's decision to support Crimea's vote for reunification with the Russian
Federation was motivated by something other than military and strategic
pragmatism would do well to examine this timeline of events.
Comment: As the
Saker wrote:
[T]o understand
the US position you have to stop thinking like a rational and mentally sane
person, and try to think like an imperialistic maniac hell-bent on world
domination who sincerely sees Russia at the #1 obstacle to the realization of
this goal.
While making
these insane maneuvers against Russia the US elite have been preparing for war
against their citizens as well.
All of this makes
plain that the US and its NATO arsenal are gearing up for a "pivot" -
to borrow the grossly overused terminology of the Obama administration and the
Pentagon - that will see their forces focused on the Black Sea, just as they
have shifted attention to the Baltic Sea even more so in recent months. It does
not take exceptional powers of deduction to see what the US intends: continued
escalation, force preparedness, and intimidation against Moscow. However, it is
equally apparent that such provocative moves raise the risk of a misstep, an accident
or misunderstanding that could touch off a major military conflict. Considering
the players involved, such a blunder could spark World War 3.
A forthcoming
article will focus on the countermoves that Russia is employing to confront
US-NATO aggression near Russia's borders. The article will focus specifically
on the fast-developing military relationship between Russia and China.
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