Senator JD Vance on Dec. 11 suggested that Ukraine surrender land in order to obtain a peace settlement with Russia.
Vance has apparently not heard of World War II, which did not end with a negotiation either in Europe or the Pacific. Moreover, given what he just said about a peace-for-land agreement with Russia, Vance also apparently knows nothing about the Munich Pact of 1938. I suspect he may not be able to locate the Sudetenland on a map.
Vance is not the only misguided American in Washington. Leaders, officials, and legislators across the political spectrum have gone crazy, thinking their crowd-pleasing but truly awful ideas, if implemented, will have no consequences.
We start with Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. The President thought nothing bad would follow from a precipitous withdrawal from Afghanistan in August 2021.
Those who do want America to be involved in these conflicts minimize them as just “regional” wars. Is that correct?
“It is possible in the 20th and 21st centuries to say that there are, in fact, no regional wars, because all of them have some degree of involvement by the great powers,” said Gregory Copley, president of the International Strategic Studies Association, to Gatestone this month. “Not one significant conflict anywhere in the world is without either the initiation by, or involvement of, some extra-regional players.”
We all hope Poast, an associate professor at the University of Chicago, is correct when he tells us that there is no global war, but in the 1930s separate conflicts merged into what we now call World War II. It is possible the same dynamic will occur this time.
The merger of conflicts at this moment is high because Moscow, and especially Beijing, are taking advantage of current disputes. “China is now backing aggressors on three continents,” Jonathan Bass of energy consultant InfraGlobal Partners tells Gatestone.
In other words, the Chinese regime is fighting proxy wars. “Israeli officials, privately voicing their own opinions and not government policy, say Hamas’s war on their country is part of China’s assault on America,” Bass, who is now based in the Persian Gulf, says.
“Proxy wars can, if left unattended, become direct wars between major powers,” Copley, also editor-in-chief of Defense & Foreign Affairs Strategic Policy, says. “World War I began with a regional conflict between Serbian independence movements, backed by Moscow, which killed the heir to the Austro-Hungarian crown. World War II began when Hitler kept escalating small regional disputes until major powers had to respond.”
Almost no one in an official position in America views today’s conflicts as part of or prelude to a major war. President Biden has completely ignored the troubles in North Africa and is trying to manage the wars in Ukraine and Gaza. He is far more interested in avoiding escalation than in winning, and not angering the totalitarians in Beijing and Tehran has apparently become his primary goal.
Many in the West say that Putin would not dare to attack a NATO country, yet a failure of the West to defend Ukraine, a country protected by the guarantees of the Budapest Memorandum of 1994, could convince Putin that he does not have to worry about the trans-Atlantic alliance or its most important member, the United States of America.
Vladimir Putin’s project is to restore the Russian Empire and rule, among others, all Slavs on the Eurasian landmass. With China’s backing and little opposition from America, anything can happen, especially if Beijing should then start moving against its neighbors or closing off nearby seas and skies.
“Big powers sense opportunities when small nations are in conflict,” says Copley, “and what seems an easy case of ‘conflict exploitation’ soon becomes an out-of-control firefight.”
The next “firefight” looks as if it will involve most of the world.