I Think Putin’s Getting Himself in a Pickle

How to talk to Mr Putin | The Economist

At this moment in the drama I’m probably in the minority who thinks this will end badly for Vladimir Putin. In these first moments he seems to hold all the best cards. But the consequences for this kind of naked aggression in the 21st century are yet to be felt.

Leading up to yesterday’s invasion of Ukraine there was plenty of discussion of why Putin would risk something like this? The most common answers being that he sees himself as the Grand Restorer of the Russian (i.e. Soviet) empire, and he’s doing it now while he still has the kind of economic leverage over the West that comes with pumping so much gas onto the world markets. It’s a leverage even he must know will dry up once western Europe in particular goes green (or nuclear) and stops sending him — and I do mean him, personally — billions of dollars (and they’re mostly dollars) in exchange.

But Putin’s bigger problem is also largely of his own making. He is administering a shockingly sick country. 20% of Russians don’t have indoor plumbing. The country is ranked 70th in the world standard of living. It has a GDP 20% smaller than Italy. Russian conscripts are paid the equivalent of $28 a month. (One pundit joked that this war would end today if the European Union offered citizenship to every Russian soldier who laid down his rifle and migrated west.)

Under Putin’s 23 year rule, he has orchestrated a partnering with a cadre of mob-like oligarchs to whom he is Vito Corleone. Each of these characters are not just looting Russian resources — gas, aluminum, etc. — for their private fiefdoms but are kicking back so much cash to Putin he is widely regarded as the wealthiest person on the planet as of this morning, far beyond the wildest dreams of Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk.

How Putin's Oligarchs Got Inside the Trump Team | Time

And every (thinking) Russian knows this.

Whether the sanctions — and other retaliations by the West — cyber attacks and the like, will be enough to incite revolt inside Russia remains to be seen. Russian history is after all a tale of an endless series of semi-god-like strong men tolerated by the woefully abused masses out of fear that Oppresive Leader is their only protection from another invasion — from the Asian east or the imperial/fascist West (Napoleon and Hitler).

But that was before the internet. Before a constantly interconnected liberal intelligentsia could see and hear in real time what was true and what was just the hysterical war-mongering of Putin’s state media.

Here by the way is a sample of what Russian TV (your average Rooskie’s FoxNews) was saying prior to the invasion. (Via the Los Angeles Times:

“To hear Russian media tell it, the government of Ukraine is run by neo-Nazis waging a genocidal campaign against ethnic Russians in the country’s east, where Moscow-backed authorities regularly uncover mass graves full of the corpses of women and children with bound hands and bludgeoned heads even as they face the hell of constant shelling.

Such false images and narratives have become a daily staple in Russia….The Russian media have gone into overdrive with stories depicting a government in Kyiv so cruel that Moscow has no choice but to swoop in and protect the ethnic Russians in eastern Ukraine’s Donbas region.

“ ‘It’s a war between the Ukrainian government and its own people…. People are dying there every day. Thousands of civilians died there. Thousands of children lost their limbs there, buried in little coffins’,” Margarita Simonyan, head of the state-funded broadcaster RT, said on a talk show on the Russia-1 channel.”

Having successfully undermined international confidence in the United States through his manipulation of social media and fluffing up Donald Trump, and by degrading Great Britain with Brexit, Putin appears to believe he’s succeeded in splitting the West. To the point that the principal forces of NATO are now so polarized and fragmented they are incapable of wreaking any serious economic damage on him personally.

Judging by Trump and Tucker Carlson and Steve Bannon and Mike Pompeo and the other usual suspects aligning themselves more with Putin than the United States and NATO, it’s tempting to think he’s right.

But I think he’s delusional. A creature of his own bubble. I believe NATO in particular, and world markets in general, are tired of the constant corruption-induced chaos they’re suffering at Putin’s hand. To the point that, with something as unquivocally outrageous as this invasion, they’re united enough to want him — Putin — to suffer a resounding defeat.

You’re hearing it from many quarters: Direct, personal sanctions on Putin and his high-flying mob cronies. Freezing of their accounts, confiscation of their property, (much of it likely acquired via money-laundering — hello again, Donald J. Trump), expulsion from Western communities, colleges, etc.

The tough nut on the personal finance front is — as usual — getting international bankers, our good friends the Swiss in particular, to accept that playing cute with the Third Reich wasn’t lesson enough. If you want credibility in the 21st century, you cut ties with indisputable, war-criminal gangsters.

America’s Trumpist media will continue align with Putin, and more loudly as gas prices spike up towards $5 and $6 a gallon. But I don’t see them convincing a majority of Americans – other than the 20% of Republicans who view Putin more favorably than Joe Biden — that this is anyone’s fault other than Putin’s and that things will only get worse if he prevails.

“Everyone Was in the Loop”

Well, other than the hotel guy who paid Trump $1 million to play “Ambasador to Europe” confirming that, yup, there really was a “quid pro quo” and what’s more, “everyone was in on it”, it was a pretty good day for Trump Nation.

But they still want to meet the whistleblower.

Everyone has their takeaway from Gordon Sondland’s day in the headlights — a day that, like John Dean, will be remembered for a very long time. Mine is that he’s one smug bastard. And, like Mick Mulvaney, Jim Jordan and John Ratcliffe, he’s another guy who is not nearly as smart as he thinks he is Further, a guy who better be praying to whatever god or golden idol he worships that no one ever puts him in a room or on a phone line amid a conversation about “Burisma” equaling “Joe and Hunter Biden.”

The fact Sondland claims that never in his long, illustrious career as Ambassador to Pretty Much Everything, (that’s a grand total of 17 months and counting), did he ever figure out that Trump and Rudy Giuliani meant “Biden” every time they mentioned “investigations” and “Burisma” is — how to put this? — undigestible bullshit.

Beyond that though his willingness today, finally, to roll Mike Pompeo, Mike Pence and John Bolton into the legal sausage makes my hardened partisan heart sing sweet hallelujahs. There are others, but only a few other threesomes who deserve a public outing as much as they do.

Donny found his Sharpie again …

Bolton — pretty much your textbook raging ideologue, but maybe not fully a criminal — clearly knew what was going on and now has to ruminate on what history will say about him, you know a deep-thinking, “principled conservative”, if Sondland and god knows who else paints him into Donny and Rudy’s boneheaded extortion plot. He signed on with Trump, but he didn’t sign on I’m guessing, for felony stupidity.

I repeat again, the truest words ever spoken about the Age of Trump is the title of Rick Wilson’s book, “Everything Trump Touches Dies.

The betting is that Bolton will soon see the wisdom of getting his version into the official record, even if it means cutting into sales of his forthcoming book on the fiasco. (Like Donny Jr., I’m sure the “bulk sales” machinery is already being greased and gassed.) Common sense he will now agree to testify, whether the courts “clear” his subpoena or not. But as we saw vividly again today, common sense is not exactly a foundational talent with the Trump crew.

Pompeo and Pence though, I feel certain, will ride the S.S. Trump down the full 1000 fathoms.

One little thing that keeps nagging at me as the list of “in the loopers” metastasizes. Who exactly advised Trump to emphasize to Sondland, “no quid pro quo”? I just don’t think Trump came up with that on his own. It’s the sort of legalized verbiage you get from a “looped in” attorney, like perhaps … John Eisenberg, the National Security Council Legal Advisor, and Deputy Counsel to the President for National Security Affairs appointed by … wait for it … Mike Flynn. Eisenberg being the guy who ordered the infamous July 25 call notes locked away in a super-secure server. That guy “stinks”, as Popeye Doyle and others in the movies are fond of saying.

If anyone reading this is a practicing defense attorney, you might want consider joining the caravan headed to D.C. There’s a hellish amount of good-paying work there for the taking.

Just make sure Trump pays up front.