Ukraine
Executive Summary
- There's much you can do to reduce your risk in advance of the arrival of a:
- Trade war
- Energy war
- Financial war
- Cyber war
- Grid-down sabotage
- Shooting war
- Nuclear war
- The steps you should prioritze the most right now
If you have not yet read Part 1: Is It Time To Prepare For War? available free to all readers, please click here to read it first.
As a preamble, I need to note that I do not enjoy or derive any satisfaction from writing about or spending time on figuring out how to dodge the worst impacts of human behavior. War sits right at the top of my ‘This is stupid’ list, as war represents the idea that all other attempts at being smart or diplomatic have already failed. I'm sorry that I have to spend time writing this report, and I am sorry that you have to spend time considering it. With that said, I feel I have no choice, and somebody has to take on this task. With a heavy heart…
If the West (meaning the US and Europe) decides to further goad Russia, war may be inevitable. Sooner or later, Russia will have to switch from 'response' mode to 'reaction' mode. I’ve previous detailed the reasons for this in previous reports here, here and here.
As (sadly) expected, things have only escalated over the past year, not de-escalated. The West has a serious bone to pick with Russia, yet nobody can really explain what it is or why the conflict exists. (As an aside, I think it’s just bruised neo-con egos over Syria, but it really doesn’t matter what the explanation is at this point.) So, here we are in la-la land.
The consequences of an escalated conflict between Russia and the US/West could range from a very minor skirmish fought over some relatively meaningless items of trade, to an attack on financial markets, all the way to an all-out nuclear exchange.
The question becomes: What, if anything, can we do to prepare?
Lots, as it turns out.
No matter where…
How To Prepare For War
PREVIEW by Chris MartensonExecutive Summary
- There's much you can do to reduce your risk in advance of the arrival of a:
- Trade war
- Energy war
- Financial war
- Cyber war
- Grid-down sabotage
- Shooting war
- Nuclear war
- The steps you should prioritze the most right now
If you have not yet read Part 1: Is It Time To Prepare For War? available free to all readers, please click here to read it first.
As a preamble, I need to note that I do not enjoy or derive any satisfaction from writing about or spending time on figuring out how to dodge the worst impacts of human behavior. War sits right at the top of my ‘This is stupid’ list, as war represents the idea that all other attempts at being smart or diplomatic have already failed. I'm sorry that I have to spend time writing this report, and I am sorry that you have to spend time considering it. With that said, I feel I have no choice, and somebody has to take on this task. With a heavy heart…
If the West (meaning the US and Europe) decides to further goad Russia, war may be inevitable. Sooner or later, Russia will have to switch from 'response' mode to 'reaction' mode. I’ve previous detailed the reasons for this in previous reports here, here and here.
As (sadly) expected, things have only escalated over the past year, not de-escalated. The West has a serious bone to pick with Russia, yet nobody can really explain what it is or why the conflict exists. (As an aside, I think it’s just bruised neo-con egos over Syria, but it really doesn’t matter what the explanation is at this point.) So, here we are in la-la land.
The consequences of an escalated conflict between Russia and the US/West could range from a very minor skirmish fought over some relatively meaningless items of trade, to an attack on financial markets, all the way to an all-out nuclear exchange.
The question becomes: What, if anything, can we do to prepare?
Lots, as it turns out.
No matter where…
Executive Summary
- Ukraine's economic free fall
- The real risk of Ukraine igniting the next world war
- Why a lasting peace is unlikely
- What you should do in preparation of escalating conflict between Russia and the West
If you have not yet read Part 1: The US' Suicidal Strategy On Ukraine, available free to all readers, please click here to read it first.
What's At Risk
Now we come to the hard part of this report, the part where we have to discuss what might happen next. My analogy for this period of history is the year(s) before WW I. Historians still cannot quite say what led up to the immense human disaster that we now call World War I, but enough failed diplomacy, bugled treaties, inept leadership, and inflexible political institutions were all grating against one another that a single assassination of a single archduke was a sufficient spark to set the whole pile ablaze.
Were those other failures not all stacked up like so much try tinder, a dozen archdukes could have been shot without anything more serious than a dozen solemn state funerals would have resulted.
Similarly, today we have a conflict in Ukraine which nobody can exactly say what the US's compelling interests are with Ukraine because nobody really knows. It's more a matter of principle, with that principle being the US gets to do what it wants, when it wants, and nobody is supposed to challenge that.
Putin said as much on Feb 7, 2015:
“There clearly is an attempt to restrain our development with different means,” he told trade union activists. “There is an attempt to perturb the existing world order… with one incontestable leader [Obama] who wants to remain as such thinking he is allowed everything while others are only allowed what he allows and only in his interests. This world order will never suit Russia.”
(Source)
Clearly Russia is no pushover country and has no interest in having dangerous coups and rising ultra-nationalism on its borders go unchecked, and this is why we are in such dangerous territory. The US has not been up against a legitimate foe for such a long time, it may be like the school yard bully that fails to properly evaluate the new kids at school before picking a fight.
Russia is making its position known to the world. It has been…
America Vs Russia: What’s At Risk
PREVIEW by Chris MartensonExecutive Summary
- Ukraine's economic free fall
- The real risk of Ukraine igniting the next world war
- Why a lasting peace is unlikely
- What you should do in preparation of escalating conflict between Russia and the West
If you have not yet read Part 1: The US' Suicidal Strategy On Ukraine, available free to all readers, please click here to read it first.
What's At Risk
Now we come to the hard part of this report, the part where we have to discuss what might happen next. My analogy for this period of history is the year(s) before WW I. Historians still cannot quite say what led up to the immense human disaster that we now call World War I, but enough failed diplomacy, bugled treaties, inept leadership, and inflexible political institutions were all grating against one another that a single assassination of a single archduke was a sufficient spark to set the whole pile ablaze.
Were those other failures not all stacked up like so much try tinder, a dozen archdukes could have been shot without anything more serious than a dozen solemn state funerals would have resulted.
Similarly, today we have a conflict in Ukraine which nobody can exactly say what the US's compelling interests are with Ukraine because nobody really knows. It's more a matter of principle, with that principle being the US gets to do what it wants, when it wants, and nobody is supposed to challenge that.
Putin said as much on Feb 7, 2015:
“There clearly is an attempt to restrain our development with different means,” he told trade union activists. “There is an attempt to perturb the existing world order… with one incontestable leader [Obama] who wants to remain as such thinking he is allowed everything while others are only allowed what he allows and only in his interests. This world order will never suit Russia.”
(Source)
Clearly Russia is no pushover country and has no interest in having dangerous coups and rising ultra-nationalism on its borders go unchecked, and this is why we are in such dangerous territory. The US has not been up against a legitimate foe for such a long time, it may be like the school yard bully that fails to properly evaluate the new kids at school before picking a fight.
Russia is making its position known to the world. It has been…
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