Notes from the Upside-Down I: NATO's 'War', Geopolitics, and the Folly of EUrocrats
Why Kennedy's Rise & Fall of the Great Powers matters much more than the poli-sci BS emanating from the 'West' ever since: NATO is brain-dead, and here's a primer into the likely consequences
In October 2019, French president and paid globalist shill Emmanuel Macron made a few waves by declaring NATO ‘brain-dead’, which is about as much as anyone should remember about the present situation. As quoted by The Economist (paywalled),
Europe stands on ‘the edge of a precipice’, he says, and needs to start thinking of itself strategically as a geopolitical power; otherwise we will ‘no longer be in control of our destiny’.
That interview—and in particular this blunt admission (a gaffe?)—is very telling on two accounts: first, the neuro-degenerative consequences of all matters Covid-19 have quite effectively memory-holed Mr. Macron’s opinion, as evidenced by the massive upsurge in media reports suggesting NATO’s increasing popularity among wide cross-sections of the EUropean population.
This is insane on the face of it, but even more so it shows both the decay of historical consciousness across the board and the degeneracy of the EUrocratura in particular. Here, I shall restrict myself to mentioning NATO’s aggression against Yugoslavia in 1999 and the subsequent misadventures in central and western Asia (Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria) as well as in Africa (Libya) to make the point that all the hyperventilating BS coming from our betters is just that: huffing and puffing, but ultimately it is inconsequential.
What matters in geopolitics are the following three facts, and you’re herewith warmly invited to disagree with any or all of them:
Military capabilities matter most, and in this regard no EUropean country is more than a dwarf. Yes, high-tech weapons are all nice, but basically no NATO country has much to offer in terms of mechanised armour; there’s a lot of fighter jets and close air support (helicopters), but NATO membership essentially makes governments invest heavily in high-tech gimmicks and ‘smart’ devices for light infantry. It’s immensely costly, which is to say that it’s a boon for the highly integrated and class-conscious armaments manufacturers, but it’s hardly a winning argument in a war. Remember in this context that the general public is highly averse to any combat engagement anywhere and balks at even the prospect of potential casualties (hence the preponderance of UN peacekeepers from the Global South in real hotspots, such as Eastern Congo).
Economic power, of course, underwrites military capabilities, and there’s a lot to say about this (for starters, see Michael Hudson’s recent piece), and here, too, ‘Western’ planners must, in effect, face the uncomfortable truths of a mainly goods-and-service-oriented economy with limited manufacturing capabilities (which also cannot be scaled up rapidly to meet, say, increased military demand, in part due to EU/EEC trade and competition policies). In addition, esp. Germany and a few of its exporting neighbours are not only highly integrated economically with each other (which, by the way, further betray the ultimately inconsequential legal niceties of ‘neutrality’ claimed by both Austria and Switzerland), but their economic model—export high-value goods, such as BMWs or other expensive stuff ‘made in the EU’—is heavily dependent on customers. Many of whom are high net-worth individuals in China and Russia, hence the ludicrous follies in terms of the entirely expectable economic fall-out (to say nothing about EUrope’s energy security).
Credibility, or what Joseph Nye (in-) famously called ‘soft power’, is the third main ingredient, which is heavily contingent on both military and economic power-political potentials. Yet, I’d argue that being taken seriously also matters in both war and peace, as well as everywhere in-between. Take, say, the illegal US invasion of Iraq in 2003—and, by the way, if you don’t like that description, you may resort to the term ‘special operation’—which may be considered as an international engagement that everyone who’s watched The Godfather is able to understand. ‘Walk softly, and carry a big stick’, in Teddy Roosevelt’s famous dictum, is what matters, and being in a superior position typically conveys the considerable advantage of not having to resort to economic and/or military coercion. The fact that the collective ‘West’ has taken that particular road vis-à-vis Russia tells you everything you need to know about international relations: it’s not only that Russia is simply ‘too important and big’ to be pushed around, but the refusal of the US-led bloc to actually do anything meaningful beyond huffing and puffing shows the ‘West’s’ essential weakness.
Sidenote: there’s nothing the ‘West’ will—or can—can actually do about the Russian operations against Ukraine (that is, short of nuclear war), and while the entire Maidan-instigated misadventure was an outright folly, one shall also remember that whatever in terms of military hardware the ‘West’ is trying to funnel into Ukraine now will only prolong the agony of the people suffering in this conflict. It’s a shame that all the ‘Western’ leaders are like that, as in, totally irresponsible and careless with respect to the lives of others.
As regards the larger points made above, I shall conclude this post with a brief reminder from none other than Paul Kennedy’s memorable and very much readable The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers (1989), p. xv (emphasis in the original):
The triumph of any one Great Power…or the collapse of another, has usually been the consequence of lengthy fighting by its armed forces; but it has also been the consequence of more or less efficient utilization of the state’s productive economic resources in wartime, and, further in the background, of the way in which that state’s economy had been rising or falling, relative to the other leading nations, in the decades preceding the actual conflict. For that reason, how a Great Power’s position steadily alters in peacetime is as important to this study as how it fights in wartime.
And on that particular matter, I refer you to a selection of manufacturing capabilities since the 1970s—do you notice something?
And these graphs are telling you the same as the below two pictures, which show Shanghai in 1990 and 2010, respectively (for orientation, I’ve added a blue arrow to show the one large building that didn’t change):
And 2010:
So, today’s question for you may thus be summarised as follows:
How do you think the present situation will play out?
Kennedy's text can be summed up in a pithy little metaphore, or if it's a simile - things blur in my mind:
Great trees are either felled by the axe or rot from within.
Longer musings over cold coffee:
So the trick in politics is to keep the axe at bay while guarding against rot. That is, if one is a politician which cares at all about such things as one blood - one people, language, history and tradition, pro patria and so on: all the stuff declared evil for the past fifty years or more. Evil for white people to use the american's confused labelling of ethnicities. I'll use the american term, race, from here.
The successful races overtaking us share three themes: chauvinism (or bias towards their own kind), a low starting point meaning change measured in percentages will look great, and being inundated with monetary support from the West.
The first point, call it patriotism in short, is easily understood. They are doing it right and we are thrice deluded thinking patriotism evil, thinking prefering your own means hating the other and thirdly believing they will start to think like us if they get to our level socially and technologically, a point which really merits more exposure. I'll just say it's incredibly condescending and racist to believe a chinese or an arab moslem would want to mutate his own culture and mores to emulate the US dominated West. There is no one linear civilisational progression, and there's no goal or end.
The low starting point is the only lead one needs to understand that when it comes to non-european civilisations, they must either be subjugated and dominated - a fool's errand when one looks at the demographics involved - or be held at arm's length a business parterns. Sell and buy, trade with them, but don't let them buy land here, don't let them settle here and don't finance their anything other than by free trade. Again, this warrant exposition so I refer to Fukuyama's The Origins of Political Order" where he looks in on this, though without mentioning race since that's a no-no politically. He avoids it so deftly it instead becomes obvious: different races will have different outcomes in similar settings and circumstances, simply due to being different.
Finally, monetary support. Not only as aid money but in favourable deals and in western corporations and governements overlooking atrocities and perpetually excusing those when they're brought up as some kind of "developmental problems". Hee, Goodwin's law actually serves us in good stead: did nazi-Germany do it? Was it excused when they did it? If not, why is it excused when [Country] does it? And the killer question: if Hitler had refrained from starting the war, would it then have been business as usual despite the slave factorie and the eugenic programmes and the death camps? At this point, the liberal (to use it as a collective noun in an expanded sense) angrily pouts, stomps her feet and runs away.
Coda: we are well past the point of no return now. Historically, this is equivalent to the slow collapse during 400AD to 600AD. No existential outer enemy, too much corruption internally, lots of migration and a new religion - espoused as the 'bestest evah' by the state no less (very evident in Sweden where it is a crime to criticise islam if the criticism offends moslems) - and a failing monetary system. Of course, looking for historical parallells is like picking you nose - the very act defines what is to be found.
I'll close this this: any species, race, or civilisation which curbs its own breeding and expansion dooms itself.
I am looking at all of this from the U.S. and thinking about how our government has the habit of sending the army to a foreign country and making an even bigger mess of things...and how sending the army is perceived as the morally superior thing to do (at least in the beginning of a conflict). There a large number of people who are called 'isolationists' in the U.S., and they come to that position for various reasons, but I think this article https://zeroaggressionproject.org/perry-willis/the-munich-myth/ sums up a very good reason for taking the so-called 'isolationist' position. I am interested in your opinion of it, because of your professional background. Does he sum up the history correctly?