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We are Watching the Final Collapse of the Soviet Empire

Posted on Saturday, January 21, 2023
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by Ben Solis
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83 Comments

AMAC Exclusive – By Ben Solis

Following the downfall of the USSR in December 1991, Moscow’s primary objective has been to continue to exert Russian influence over the old Soviet republics. But Putin’s war in Ukraine has revealed that mission to be a failure and has furthered the collapse of Russia as a great world power.

The history of post-Soviet central Eurasian politics helps clarify the stakes of the Russia-Ukraine war. Once the Soviet regime fell, the immediate question became what would happen to Russia, which had always been the predominant cultural and political force within the USSR.

The Clinton administration, which came into office just one year after the Soviet Union’s collapse, adopted a policy of supporting the Russian state in an attempt to preserve some stability in the region – particularly given Russia’s status as a nuclear power. According to one advisor to former President Yeltsin, President Clinton saved Russia’s status as a superpower by granting it rights to be the only nuclear-armed state of the former Soviet Union. With The Highly-Enriched Uranium and Low-Enriched Uranium program (HEU-LEU) U.S. taxpayers financed the Russian nuclear industry for 20 years. The U.S. paid Russia approximately $17 billion for 14,446 tons of low-enriched uranium up through 2013.

This fact was a great concern for a few Russian specialists, including the former National Security Agency Director for President Reagan, Lt. General William E. Odom. In Fall 2001, General Odom stressed that the West’s generosity and kindness toward Russia was pointless, since it was highly unlikely Russia would ever become a great power aligned with the West. “Treating it like one is neither in Russia’s interests nor the West’s,” he prophetically stated. But Odom’s opinion was rather isolated at that time, since most Western security “experts” mostly praised Russia, although its foreign policy was supported by expansionary wars.

For Russian leaders, however, the chief priority was always continuing to exert influence in the old empire – by force if necessary. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russia created the Commonwealth of Independent States, promising to protect former republics and be a judge in often-heated border disputes like those between Azerbaijan and Armenia. The goal was to establish Russia as the predominant power in the region to stave off Western encroachment.

Ukraine, which has many cultural and historical bonds with Russia, was a centerpiece of this strategy. Former Russian President Boris Yeltsin told his Ukrainian counterpart that Kyiv will always be in “the system of Russia’s strategic interests.”

This Clinton administration’s approach, which was largely adopted by the Bush and Obama administrations, led to years of Russian provocations in places like Crimea, as well as proxy wars with the West in places like Syria. It was only President Donald Trump who broke with conventional wisdom on Russia. Unsurprisingly, he became the first U.S. president in the 21st century under whom Putin did not seize more territory. Unlike Washington bureaucrats, Mr. Trump became a classic business problem solver: first by recognizing Ukraine’s right to Crimea, secondly by arming Kyiv with modern anti-tank missiles, and thirdly by supporting Russian-Ukrainian negotiations.

But despite heightened tensions throughout the last several decades, Russian political and military leadership had also recognized the major risks associated with embroiling Russia in a major prolonged armed conflict with one of its neighbors – particularly Ukraine. Devoting a significant amount of resources to such a war, they feared, would cause Russia both to lose influence in other areas and provoke a harsh backlash from the West.

A strategic advisor to Mikhail Gorbachev, Alexander Yakovlev, observed that if Russia decided to wage war against Ukraine, “it would be its last war that would result in the country’s disappearance from the political map for decades.” A month before the current war, Colonel-General Leonid Ivashov, chairman of the All-Russian Officers Assembly, said that, according to international law, Russia “might be punished with the loss of statehood for an invasion of independent Ukraine.”

But in recent years that dynamic began to shift, to where Putin began to view an invasion of Ukraine as a show of strength to prevent post-Soviet states from falling out of Russia’s sphere of influence. Subsequent U.S. administrations had artificially preserved Russia’s great power status, but a weakened economy had also left Moscow feeling vulnerable. As a result, Putin apparently felt incentivized to invade Ukraine to preserve Russian influence in central Eurasia.

The warnings of prior Soviet leaders have proven prescient, however. With its focus on Ukraine, Russia has failed to fulfill its treaty obligations to other countries like Armenia, leading its Prime Minister to conclude that Russia’s military presence in the country threatens Armenia’s security.

Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan’s relations with Moscow have changed forever after they joined Turkic Council, with headquarters in Istanbul and opposite priorities from those of Russia, including capitalization and fortification of their borders.

Even the Russian state has become unstable. The Republic of Tatarstan, officially part of the Russian federation but with a predominantly Muslim population of 3.5 million, is now demanding more autonomy from Moscow. Last month, the Tatarstan Parliament replaced the president’s title with the historic name of an Islamic leader. The Kremlin had previously granted Tatarstan privileged status since it was their bridge to other Islamic-dominated regions, but now fractures are beginning to show.

Similarly, Dagestan in Kavkaz and Buryatia in Siberia, the regions that have suffered the most significant losses of servicemen in the war against Ukraine, recently demonstrated more resolve, denying Moscow further military recruitment of its young people.

Amid this bubbling turmoil, analysts have started to discuss potential scenarios of Russia’s complete downfall. Dr. Janusz Bugajski, a fellow at the Jamestown Foundation, has urged American policymakers to prepare for the imminent collapse of the Russian Federation. “We are witnessing an ongoing revolution in global security for which Western policymakers are unprepared,” he says. Similarly, analysts at the European Parliament anticipate Russia’s fall.

There is also concern inside Russia about this potential scenario. An independent Levada Center poll indicated in December that 82 percent of Russians were highly concerned or somewhat concerned about the Ukraine war. Nearly 50 percent expected unrest in Russia in 2023.

Most scenarios presented by experts presume that Russia falls into totalitarianism, with Soviet-style ideological control over citizens and a hyper-centralized government that will inevitably be unable to make informed decisions.

If this occurs, Western leaders should, as General Odom wisely recommended, not make the mistake of treating Russia as a great power again. Instead, they should let the Soviet empire die once and for all.

Ben Solis is the pen name of an international affairs journalist, historian, and researcher.

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Michael S.
Michael S.
1 year ago

The position the World faces today is the same one faced in the past, but the United States doesn’t TEACH HISTORY anymore. As Americans are finally seeing the conflict that is now happening in Ukraine maybe schools should start TEACHING HISTORY again instead of “WOKE” ideology and SEGREGATION!!! The infighting in AMERICA will destroy AMERICA if we let it and don’t look at the past and what AMERICA Was created for to be the binding factors of OUR GREAT NATION. The government needs to return to being BY THE PEOPLE-FOR THE PEOPLE-AND OF THE PEOPLE!
Wake up America, HISTORY IS CALLING!!!

Frank Bort
Frank Bort
1 year ago

Excellent; we can not and must not continue to feed the hungry communist ???? bear !!! Trump had it right !!!!

Frank Bort
Frank Bort
1 year ago

Excellent; we can not and must not continue to feed the hungry communist ???? bear !!! Trump had it right !!!!

Rick
Rick
1 year ago

Russian empire is not collapsing

Will KING
Will KING
1 year ago

Interesting article… Comments ?

MJB
MJB
1 year ago

NATO should give the Ukranian military the necessary weapons and military intelligence it requires to beat back Hitler’s protege Putin.
The CIA should be planting seeds of unrest within the Russian population so as to overthrow the Russian leadership from within. If the Russian population knew the whole truth about Russia’s invasion Ukraine, they would most likely have already done away with the mad man leading their country into ruination!
If only the USA had decent leadership this war would never have happened!

Eric
Eric
1 year ago

Well, I don’t think so, not just yet according to the Bible.

K
K
1 year ago

We need to stop supplying Ukraine as Biden and his Administration have done. It’s up to NATO to supply the Ukraine. And it’s overtime for other nations in NATO to take action physically And Financially!! We No Longer Can Afford To Be The Big Brother,Always Giving Beyond The Ability Of “WE THE PEOPLE”Of The United States !!

Zach
Zach
1 year ago

I digested the piece.

The question is when is it over. We know who, Vlad, when know how, war, we know where, Ukraine, we know what, death and destruction.

Vlad is guilty of war crimes; killing civilians to name one.

War goes on for long periods of time. WW2 was brewing for decades, officially ended in 1945, several years from the invasion of Poland for example. When is it over?

G C Lancaster
G C Lancaster
1 year ago

We, the current administration, needs to get out of the Ukraine war and let those people decide their own fate. We also need our upper administrators to get out of business affairs in the Ukraine especially their family members. That would stop the funnel of money through the Ukraine and into some of their pockets.

Mel C.
Mel C.
1 year ago

I can’t decide if this is a propaganda piece, and at least half the story was left out on purpose, or the writer doesn’t actually investigate past his own biases.

ESIR
ESIR
1 year ago

The article seems to be propaganda. The Ukraine country is being demolished slowly as the Russians downplay the war with NATO. Russia will win or negotiate a stalemate. The current administration and military leaders don’t have a strategy. As for the Satellite nations I don’t see a desire to test the ruling authority.

Lieutenant Beale
Lieutenant Beale
1 year ago

General George S. Patton: 
“The difficulty in understanding the Russian is that we do not take cognizance of the fact that he is not a European, but an Asiatic, and therefore thinks deviously. We can no more understand a Russian than a Chinaman or a Japanese, and from what I have seen of them, I have no particular desire to understand them, except to ascertain how much lead or iron it takes to kill them. In addition to his other Asiatic characteristics, the Russian has no regard for human life and is an all out son of bitch, barbarian, and chronic drunk.” 
Statement by Patton on 8 August 1945, as quoted in “General Patton : A Soldier’s Life” (2002) by Stanley P. Hirshson, p. 650

David Millikan
David Millikan
1 year ago

Excellent article.
Russia is learning the hard way.
Socialist/Communist/WOKE democrats and Communist China is next to fall.
GOD Bless the USA.

TruthMan
TruthMan
1 year ago

Opposite way around, it’s the United States that’s collapsing faster than a lightning bolt

TruthMan
TruthMan
1 year ago

It’s Called the American Dream Because You Have To Be Asleep to Believe It” – George Carlin.

Bill on the Hill
Bill on the Hill
1 year ago

Once again I can see opinions on this subject that ride both sides of the fence where Russia/Ukraine is concerned. I agree with much of what the author is highlighting here with respect to Russia/Ukraine & the western powers reaction to all of it going back to the Reagan era with most everything unraveling in this region since the collapse of the Soviet Union & western policies towards this region beginning with Bush, Clinton, back to Bush Jr & on to the Obama administration effectively finishing off any US credibility on a global scale to this very day, with the one exception of the ONE & DONE Trump administration that offered the FIRST pragmatic solution to the many global affairs happening around the world looking at it through the lens of a businessman, i.e. Donald J. Trump.
America needs true effective leadership out of Washington, DC, all but disappeared with the rigged 2020 presidential election with US state & local elections as well now compromised through electioneering efforts done in a massive effort to thwart the will of the American people.
Russia is in a box, the nation has been since it’s collapse in 1991. Trump understood this better than any other president ever did, same reasoning applies to China, N. Korea, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Pakistan, Latin America & so many other nations with totalitarian ambitions, in the end, they ALL fail the human test of respect for their fellow man, all in the name of remaining in ” perpetual power “, sound familiar? Look no further than the current evil & corrupt Biden administration running this nation into oblivion by every nefarious means they can come up with on a non-stop basis since the rigged election was allowed to stand by the highest court in the land, I bring you The Supreme Court of the United States of America, i.e. SCOTUS…
Bill… :~)

Connie
Connie
1 year ago

This article was written by a RINO or a Biden Democrat.

Kim
Kim
1 year ago

When Russia decomposes from the top, what happens next? Western countries can “…let the Soviet empire die once and for all”, but who will pick up the pieces? China? North Korea? Iran? You know someone will. Power abhors a vacuum.

One big mistake made by allies of Ukraine, including the U.S., was to miss out on the opportunity to subdue the beast at the outset of the war. Instead, it has dragged on, causing misery to us, all of the EU, and anyone doing business with Ukraine. For possibly a fraction of our investment over the past 2 years, and with help from other nations, we could have seen a much earlier end to this brutality. It would have taken a more serious contribution than blankets, helmets, and MRE’s–not necessarily American boots on the ground, but certainly more powerful weapons, and in particular, the types requested by Zelensky.

If Putin’s strength is a shell of power–the appearance of strength and resolve–it wouldn’t take much to crack it. My fear, maybe unfounded, is that the beast won’t truly die but will merely lie dormant in any of the outlying republics or within Russia. There are always those nuclear warheads… As much as the U.S. wants to stay out of this conflict, it is in our interests to at least engage in a relationship with whatever remains after Putin is out of the picture. If we don’t, we could be facing a much bigger and better armed threat.

Roger
Roger
1 year ago

This is bull sh*t. We all know who behind Ukraine

Hal-
Hal-
1 year ago

Don’t be fooled by the potential highlighted in this article. The Ruskies are not that weak. They have withered away from dominance of the smaller (non-China) Nations in Asia, but (as Hitler found out) they can defend their Nation. Their main problem is their Communistic governance which controls the population.

TruthMan
TruthMan
1 year ago

Reverse projecting your ills on other countries won’t change the fact that the USA (aka modern USSR) is failing and decompsing right infront of every eyes. Mirror mirror on the wall keeps you inside your sheltered make belief bubble though ☕

GTPatriot
GTPatriot
1 year ago

The feeling of inadequacy based on reality is very difficult for many third world and secondary
nations to absorb. Their leaders always feel compelled to show their citizens that their
nation is a strong global force and thus are always looking for a confrontation. Nations that are
comfortable with their international presence typically remain quiet and resolute. ( Just a theory)

GTPatriot
GTPatriot
1 year ago

Ukraine give the US military-industrial complex a job and a huge chunk of our budget so
a large number of DC lobbyists are happy.

Dean
Dean
1 year ago

wow, such a bu. ll. sh. i t.

Ray Mc Neal
Ray Mc Neal
1 year ago

Mr Trump, when He was president witheld military aid to ukraine, He does not get credit for delaying Putin’s annexation.

Stephen Russell
Stephen Russell
1 year ago

Round 2: 1991-2023?
Cold War demise: 1945 1991

Tom
Tom
1 year ago

The Minsk Accords were a sham to allow time to arm Ukraine.Using NATO as a surrogate to fight Russia.

Edward Irvin
Edward Irvin
1 year ago

I think this story is wishful thinking. Nato renigged on the Minsk Agreement. Eastern Ukraine is Russian speaking and voted to be part of Russia. Split the Nazi part from the Russian section and avoid nuclear war. China is our real enemy along with our current fake criminal administration.

Ezra MAGID
Ezra MAGID
1 year ago

Putin will be the reason that Russia loses 6 time zones.

Honey
Honey
1 year ago

The most important thing is if only we had a good president to guide our country and conduct our foreign affairs intelligently.
Trump in 2024!

Dean Hardy
Dean Hardy
1 year ago

I more worried about the USA’s decline. We too have tremendous issues, everything from our budget, to borders, to crime, to becoming an almost irreconcilably divided nation. The faith we use to have in our institutions is gone, our elections are compromised. We’re experiencing huge & rapid cultural changes with millions of illegal aliens entering the country. I understand Russia has issues but so do we. What happens if both countries disintegrate. I recommend spending more effort in fixing our country first; if it falls apart it does not matter what happens to Russia!

Morbious
Morbious
1 year ago

Something rarely mentioned but key here is the fact that three generations of stalinist rule has ruined the russian people. They’re incapable of thinking in terms of ‘getting ahead’, which still animates some of our citizens. Socialism in any form destroys. Putins economy is extraction based, not productivity based. The spirit of bolshevism is alive and well here in the usa. The treason party works night and day to erode the spirit of our people and to reduce them to pets wagging their tails waiting to be cared for. Right now its a pretty good free life. Soon enough it’ll be cheap vodka a loaf of bread and half an aspirin when they’re sick.

Pete from St Pete
Pete from St Pete
1 year ago

Ben Solis, I hope you are correct and I can look forward to the collapse of the communist Russian government in my lifetime. Gordon Chang has already convinced me that the communist Chinese government is in the process of failing. I even hear that the Venezuelan and Cuban communists are in danger of losing control of their countries. It seems to me that the only communists I have left to worry about are those in the good old US that continually advocate woke philosophies and are in the process of indoctrinating our young citizens to their fascist way of thinking that brooks no disagreement. Unfortunately as the old saying goes “hope is not a plan”..

John Bass
John Bass
1 year ago

I didn’t know we propped up the Soviet Union with taxpayers money for 20 years. It doesn’t surprise me knowing all the weak politicians we’ve have as leaders. I mean why not prop up your enemy that for the last 50 plus years was in direct competition with you and vowed to destroy you…our leaders were probably afraid that if we didn’t take care of them they would be mad at us.

It’s all such typical HS! I don’t know what else I would expect to come out of Washington.

Neal M Christensen
Neal M Christensen
1 year ago

No mention here that Putin is desperate and backed into a corner of his own making. But, he has nuclear weapons and may well use them in a final act of desperation. And if he doesn’t and Russia does collapse, who will wind up with those weapons?

Drew McEwan
Drew McEwan
1 year ago

You still see the Soviet Union? The problem never was communism or atheism themselves. There is no problem with those things all the time. You folks over think it and these false beliefs have made obsessions and phobias. The issue with Russia always was the culture and how it views power and people. Russia was capitalist and the iron curtain fell but no material change occurred. We fought the wrong war.

Steve
Steve
1 year ago

America has Billy to thank for another cluster . By the looks of Ukraine on the rag Free Press news it sure looks like mother Russia is losing but keep pumping all the newest weaponry into the country so the commies can have a free look over. If it happens it couldn’t happen to a better bunch of commies !

Victor
Victor
1 year ago

The most illiterate historically inacurate hogwash compilation of seemingly educated sentences constructed. To what end? – let the soviet union die? That was your big hooray?

Sara
Sara
1 year ago

I’m more concerned with the decline of our country…U.S.A.

Chit
Chit
1 year ago

We are watching the final collapse of the USA. Wellfair for bums.

Ben Yonan
Ben Yonan
1 year ago

Ben Solis says: [“We are Watching the Final Collapse of the Soviet Empire”] Actually, the Soviet Empire (USSR) collapsed decades ago. Russia is not the Soviet Empire.
[“The goal was to establish Russia as the predominant power in the region to stave off Western encroachment.”] Yes, the West was in fact encroaching. After the fall of the Berlin Wall the U.S. agreed not to bring NATO any closer to Russia. But the U.S. promptly broke that agreement.
[“This Clinton administration’s approach, which was largely adopted by the Bush and Obama administrations”] I recall rather Obama’s unprovoked hostility toward Putin. Obama made Putin into a scapegoat for any self-serving thing he could conjure up.

[“…led to years of Russian provocations in places like Crimea”] Complicated. For example, the Ukraine itself was a major problem for Crimea when it irresponsibly built a damn that cut the major source of Crimea’s fresh water supply, which had significant adverse effects on Crimea’s agriculture. When Russia invaded Ukraine one of its first special operations was to blow up that damn Ukrainian dam.

[“as well as proxy wars with the West in places like Syria”] This is backwards and certainly not a proxy war. Assad invited Russia to Syria as aid against rebels and terrorists attacking the legitimate government of Syria. Now the U.S. military and CIA were illegally and unconstitutionally active in Syria. According to international law Russia was the only foreign state legally operating in Syria. 
[“Russian political and military leadership had also recognized the major risks associated with embroiling Russia in a major prolonged armed conflict with one of its neighbors – particularly Ukraine.] True, but Putin did everything he could to avoid invading Ukraine. However, the U.S. continually refused to negotiate with Putin even though Putin’s terms were extremely reasonable and called for observing existing agreements (e.g. Minsk). But the West was using Ukraine to provoke Russia and has never owned up to its responsibility for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Recall the political and social unrest of the Maidan. The Obama State Department, CIA and military advisors contributed to the uprising, with the State Department bragging about its spending $25 million on the intervention.

Well, I could say a lot more but I’ll just add that Putin became disillusioned with Soviet Communism and was moving away from it. He even required high schoolers to read “The Gulag Archipelago” so they would understand how bad Soviet Communism was.

On the other hand, how many people know about Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s background, and just who promoted and financed this comedian’s political candidacy and why. 

Zelensky is very anti-democratic and oppressive — contrary to the news which comes out of the Ukraine, most of which is propaganda and outright falsification.

The U.S. has been using the Ukraine in its unconstitutional proxy war against Russia. And it could hasten the economic and military collapse of the U.S. It matters not to Biden, whose catastrophic pullout from Afghanistan left the Taliban with $80 billion of U.S. military equipment in the hands of the Taliban. Then he spends billions on the Ukraine, depletes the U.S. military of certain needed weapons and munitions, plus he sends over M1 Abrams tanks to a military that know nothing about how to use them. 

And the foolishness continues!

An older blonde women laughing in the kitchen with a grey haired man.
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