Is A New Cold War Looming?

This article was last updated on April 16, 2022

Canada: Free $30 Oye! Times readers Get FREE $30 to spend on Amazon, Walmart…
USA: Free $30 Oye! Times readers Get FREE $30 to spend on Amazon, Walmart…While I am generally loathe to quote from media sources given their inaccuracy, I can only find references to this rather timely topic on Russian media websites.

 
According to several sites including TASS and RT (Russia Today), Russia's Ministry of Defense opened a new National Defense Control Center (NDCC) in Moscow at the beginning of December 2014.  Construction of this partially underground state-of-the-art centre was approved by Russian President Vladimir Putin on May 8, 2013 and, while the exact costs are not known, the centre is believed to have cost the equivalent of several billion dollars.  The NDCC is comprised of three parts; the Combat Control Centre which analyses domestic and international threats to Russia and its allies, the Daily Activities Control Center which is responsible for military procurement and the daily activities of Russia's armed forces and the Control Center of Strategic Nuclear Forces which oversees the use of weapons of mass destruction.  The centre will be staffed by around 1000 officers that have been selected based on their abilities to deal with the new systems. 
 
The NDCC is located on the Moscow River and contains several war rooms, a helicopter pad and secret transportation routes that would be used during an emergency evacuation.  As well, it contains a supercomputer that provides Russia's military with the computing horsepower necessary to make faster decisions during hostilities.  The computer is protected by high-level encryption and has multiple backup sites throughout the country in case the main facility in Moscow is attacked. 
 
The center's main raison d'être is to provide centralized, full-time monitoring of military threats against Russia including the use of both strategic nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles.  In peacetime, it will also monitor all of Russia's materiel and other strategic assets including weapons being produced by contractors, weather conditions and the state of the nation's key oil refineries.  If Russia should happen to enter a state of war, the NDCC would act as a communications hub, providing orders to personnel on the front lines and to state-operated organizations that would supply the materiel needed for battle. 
 
All of this is quite interesting in light of the recent comments from President Vladimir Putin and Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev regarding Russia's vision of the world after the crisis in Ukraine.  The view from Russia suggests that a new cold war with the West is in the making, largely because of the sanctions imposed by anti-Putin governments around the world.   Russia has regularly been reminding the West that Russia has, at its disposal, the ultimate weapon, a nuclear mutual assured destruction.  Russia's military has been holding regular massive exercises in preparation for a potential regional or global war.  As shown in this interview given to the Serbian newspaper Politika by Vladimir Putin on October 15, 2014, part two of the cold war is looming:
 
"As for the Russian-US ties, our aim has always been to build open partnership relations with the United States. In return, however, we have seen various reservations and attempts to interfere in our domestic affairs.
 
Everything that has happened since the beginning of this year is even more disturbing. Washington actively supported the Maidan protests, and when its Kiev henchmen antagonised a large part of Ukraine through rabid nationalism and plunged the country into a civil war, it blamed Russia for provoking the crisis.
 
Now President Barack Obama in his speech at the UN General Assembly named the “Russian aggression in Europe” as one of the three major threats facing humanity today alongside with the deadly Ebola virus and the Islamic State. Together with the sanctions against entire sectors of our economy, this approach can be called nothing but hostile.
 
The United States went so far as to declare the suspension of our cooperation in space exploration and nuclear energy. They also suspended the activity of the Russia-US Bilateral Presidential Commission established in 2009, which comprised 21 working groups dedicated, among other things, to combating terrorism and drug trafficking.
 
At the same time, this is not the first downturn in relations between our countries. We hope that our partners will realise the futility of attempts to blackmail Russia and remember what consequences discord between major nuclear powers could bring for strategic stability. For our part, we are ready to develop constructive cooperation based on the principles of equality and genuine respect for each other’s interests." (my bold)
 
In another interview, Russia's National Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev described the United States as Russia's eternal foe in an article entitled "The Second Cold War".  In his interview, he repeatedly states that the United States is fulfilling a strategic, multi-decade plan to marginalize and destroy Russia, a plan that was initiated in the 1970s by former National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski as shown in this comment (please pardon the rather poor Google translation):
 
"During the "Cold War" in the West there was a whole series of ideological doctrines to justify anti-Soviet policy. One of the authors of such developments was an American political scientist and statesman of Polish origin Zbigniew Brzezinski. He explained the so-called strategy of "vulnerability", the essence of which was to identify the weaknesses of a potential enemy and turning them into serious problems. Implementation of the strategy allowed to distract enemy's main forces on the real confrontation with the United States and force it to focus all resources on resolving their own growing difficulties.
 
In the 70s of the last century, Brzezinski developed version of the strategy "vulnerabilities" in relation to the USSR, which under President Reagan became the basis of US policy toward our country. Implementation of strategies directed the National Security Council headed by the President of the United States. Identification and specification of "vulnerability", as well as ways of organizing their transformation into significant problems for the USSR were assigned to the US Central Intelligence Agency.
 
It is noteworthy that the then CIA Director William Casey decided to involve eminent scholars, especially economists, as well as experts from the business world who had real experience of business wars with competitors. As a result of extensive analytical work were identified and systematically studied "vulnerabilities" of the USSR in the political, economic, ideological and other fields.
 
The main "weak spot" of our country, as determined CIA was our economy. After a detailed simulation of the American experts have revealed its most "weak link" — namely the USSR dependence on energy exports."
 
He also adds that one of the key issues could be a future struggle for control of the world's hydrocarbon resources and that a large part of Russia's problems began during the oil price drops of the 1980s which was thanks to U.S. intervention in the world's oil markets, a theory that came to prominence during the first Bush Presidency when it was rumoured that Iraq/Saddam Hussein colluded with the United States over the world's oil prices.
 
As a bit of background, Russia and the United States have the following nuclear weapons:
 
Strategic nuclear weapons are those weapons that are delivered by long-range delivery systems including ICBMs and long-range bombers and are targeted against strategic military/wartime assets.  Non-strategic nuclear weapons are those which have lower yields and shorter ranges and are not limited by arms control treaties.
 
In October 2014, Interfax reported that Russia's mspending on national defense in 2014 was rising to 3.286 trillion rubles or 4.2 percent of GDP.  This is an increase of 812 billion rubles over the 2014 level when military spending was only 3.4 percent of GDP, a very significant increase and one that may be difficult to maintain given the plunge in the value of both the ruble and oil.  The funds will be mainly used for upgrading of weapons systems for the army and navy. By way of comparison, in 2012, the United States spent $645.7 billion or 4.12 percent of GDP on its military. 
 
When we put the construction of the new Russian defense system headquarters into the context of increased military activity and spending and the sabre-rattling coming from both sides of this embryonic conflict, it certainly "smells" like the world could be entering a new cold war era.
 
Click HERE to read more of Glen Asher's columns
Share with friends
You can publish this article on your website as long as you provide a link back to this page.

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*