The two biggest events of the past few days have, of course,
been the Super Bowl and the crisis in Ukraine. I turned on the Super Bowl but
after a while drifted off to Turner Classic Movies where I spent a delightful
time watching that grand old film The Music Man starring Robert Preston,
Shirley Jones, and Buddy Hackett. I have a special fondness for Shirley Jones
films because I appeared with her in summer stock in the summer
of 1956 (I am vastly exaggerating my role, it goes without saying, but I really
did spend two weeks in the pit chorus of a summer stock traveling performance
of The Beggar’s Opera in which Shirley Jones starred. The pit chorus never got
on stage and I never met Jones but I did honest to God appear with her in the
production. My proudest dramatic moment.) But all of that is neither here nor
there. Today I want to say a few words about the Ukraine crisis. Let me begin
with a disclaimer: I have never visited any of the territories implicated in
the crisis and I do not read, write, or speak any of the relevant languages so
take what I have to say with the appropriate grain of salt.
There are two basically different Imperial models which we
can think of as the Chinese model and the British model. The Chinese Empire,
when the central government was strong, expanded its control west, north, and
south into such areas as Mongolia and Tibet. When the central government was
weak, it contracted in upon itself. All of this is discussed elegantly in a
wonderful old book called The Inner Asian Frontiers of China by Owen Lattimore.
Even at its height, the Chinese Empire did not seek to conquer lands not
contiguous to the homeland. The British model, by contrast, was based on
overseas colonies stretching around the world. This model was also the basis
for the French, Dutch, Italian, Portuguese, and German empires.
Russia followed the Chinese model in its modern expansion.
At its height, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics stretched from the contiguous
far eastern territories of Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Khirgizia, Tadjikistan, and
Turkmenistan all the way to the north western republics of Latvia, Lithuania,
Estonia, to Georgia, White Russia (or Byelorussia – Belarus, as it is now
called), and to Armenia, Moldova, and Azerbaijan in the south. The Soviet Union
rarely if ever sent its troops to a land that was not contiguous to the
homeland. Its most disastrous effort was of course in Afghanistan (interested
parties can watch the third Rambo movie for details of the ways in which
Americans stood up the Taliban with shoulder fired anti-aircraft missiles to
defeat the Russians.)
The United States has followed a mixed Imperial model over
the course of its several hundred year existence. It started with the Chinese
model, expanding westward into spatially contiguous areas, which it incorporated
into itself. Unlike the Chinese and the Russians, the United States chose to
exterminate the populations of the territories it conquered, confining those it
could not kill on “reservations.” To be sure, there were overseas imperial
adventures which resulted in the acquisition of Puerto Rico, the domination for
a while of Cuba, the acquisition of Hawaii and Alaska and such minor
territories as Guam. But it was not until after the Second World War that the
United States fully embraced the British model of worldwide imperial expansion
through a combination of military force and alliances.
Hitler’s disastrous decision to invade Russia resulted not
only in his ultimate defeat but also in the enormous expansion westward of the
Soviet Union. At its height, the Soviet Union controlled, in addition to its
Eastern European Soviet Socialist Republics, the entire territory of what came
to be called the Warsaw Pact, including Romania, Bulgaria, and Poland.
With the collapse and breakup of the Soviet Union, the
United States and its Western European allies were able to establish on the
Central European plain the control that had eluded them at the close of World
War II. Little by little, the United States has been taking advantage of Russia’s
relative weakness to push eastward, seeking even to control in one way or
another territories that were originally Soviet Socialist Republics.
All of this has nothing whatsoever to do with freedom,
democracy, the fundamental principles of national independence or anything of
the sort. It is simply late 20th century and early 21st
century imperial struggling and positioning in an ever-changing world.
Vladimir Putin is attempting to reverse somewhat this
expansionist thrust of the United States and its allies, aided by an extremely
powerful military and the advantage of sizable oil and natural gas resources.
There is no neutral objectively correct distribution of geographic control
among competing imperial powers. There
is simply an endless struggle for position and control.
Whose side am I on? Well, I am certainly not on the side of
Vladimir Putin, and I very much approve of Joe Biden’s decision not to put American
troops at risk to maintain the independence of Ukraine. Beyond that, I confess
I have no settled convictions in the matter.