War with Russia: Two Great American Myths
The Saker • November 11, 2017
There
are two myths which are deeply imprinted in the minds of most US
Americans which are extremely dangerous and which can result in a war
with Russia.
The first myth is the myth of US military superiority.
The second myth is the myth of US invulnerability.
I
believe that it is therefore crucial to debunk these myths before they
end up costing us millions of lives and untold suffering.
In my latest piece for the Unz Review
I discussed the reasons why the US armed forces are nowhere nearly as
advanced as the US propaganda machine would have us believe. And even
though the article was a discussion of Russian military technologies I
only gave one example, in passing, of Russian military technologies by
comparing the T-50 PAKFA to the US F-35 (if you want to truly get a feel
for the F-35 disaster, please read this and this).
First, I am generally reluctant to focus on weapons systems because I
strongly believe that, in the vast majority of real-world wars, tactics
are far more important than technologies. Second, Andrei Martyanov, an
expert on Russian military issues and naval warfare, has recently
written two excellent pieces on Russian military technologies (see here and here) which gave many more examples (check out Martyanov’s blog).
Having read some of the comments posted under Martyanov’s and my
articles, I think that it is important, crucial, in fact, to drive home
the message to those who still are thoroughly trained by the propaganda
machine to instantly dismiss any notion of US vulnerability or, even
more so, technological inferiority. I am under no illusion about the
capability of those who still watch the idiot box to be woken out of
their lethargic stupor by the warnings of Paul Craig Roberts, William
Engdal, Dmitrii Orlov, Andrei Martyanov or myself. But I also think that
we have to keep trying, because the war party (the Neocon Uniparty) is
apparently trying really hard to trigger a conflict with Russia. So what
I propose to do today is to connect the notions of “war with Russia”
and “immediate and personal suffering” by showing that if Russia is
attacked two of the most sacred symbols of the US, aircraft carriers and
the US mainland itself, would be immediately attacked and destroyed.
The aircraft carriers myth
I
have to confess that even during the Cold War I always saw US aircraft
carriers as sitting ducks which the Soviets would have rather easily
destroyed. I formed that opinion on the basis of my study of Soviet
anti-carrier tactics and on the basis of conversations with friends
(fellow students) who actually served on US aircraft carriers.
I
wish I had the time and space to go into a detailed description of what
a Cold War era Soviet attack on a US aircraft carrier battle group
would typically look like, but all I will say is that it would have
involved swarms of heavy air and sea launched missiles coming from
different directions, some skimming the waves, others dropping down from
very high altitude, all at tremendous speeds, combined with more
underwater-launched missiles and even torpedoes. All of these missiles
would be “intelligent” and networked with each other: they would be
sharing sensor data, allocating targets (to avoid duplication), using
countermeasures, receiving course corrections, etc. These missiles would
be launched at standoff distances by supersonic bombers or by submerged
submarines. The targeting would involve space-based satellites and
advanced naval reconnaissance technologies. My USN friends were acutely
aware of all this and they were laughing at their own official US
propaganda (Reagan was in power then) which claimed that the USN would
“bring the war to the Russians” by forward deploying carriers. In direct
contrast, my friends all told me that the first thing the USN would do
is immediately flush all the carriers away from the North Atlantic and
into the much safer waters south of the so-called GUIK gap.
So here is the ugly truth: carriers are designed to enforce the rule of
the AngloZionist Empire on small and basically defenseless nations
(like Saddam Hussein’s Iraq). Nobody in the USN, at least not in the
late 1980s, seriously considered forward deploying aircraft carrier
battlegroups near the Kola Peninsula to “bring the war to the Russians”.
That was pure propaganda. The public did not know that, but USN
personnel all knew the truth.
[Sidebar: if the topic of carrier survivability is of interest to you, please check out this Russian article
translated by a member of our community which is a pretty typical
example of how the Russian don't believe for one second that US carriers
are such hard targets to destroy]
What
was true then is even more true today and I can’t imagine anybody at
the Pentagon seriously making plans to attack Russia with carrier based
aviation. But even if the USN has no intention of using its carriers
against Russia, that does not mean that the Russians cannot actively
seek out US carriers and destroy them, even very far from Russia. After
all, even if they are completely outdated for a war between superpowers,
carriers still represent fantastically expensive targets whose symbolic
value remains immense. The truth is that US carriers are the most
lucrative target any enemy could hope for: (relatively) small,
(relatively) easy to destroy, distributed in many locations around the
globe – US carriers are almost “pieces of the US, only much closer”.
Introducing the Zircon 3M22 hypersonic missile
First, some basic data about this missile (from English and Russian Wikipedia):
- Low level range: 135 to 270 nautical miles (155 to 311mi; 250 to 500km).
- High level range: 400nmi (460mi; 740km) in a semi-ballistic trajectory.
- Max range: 540nmi (620mi; 1,000km)
- Max altitude: 40km (130,000 feet)
- Average range is around 400km (250mi; 220nmi)/450 km.
- Speed: Mach 5–Mach 6 (3,806–4,567mph; 6,125–7,350km/h; 1.7015–2.0417km/s).
- Max speed: Mach 8 (6,090mph; 9,800km/h; 2.7223km/s) during a test.
- Warhead: 300-400kg (high explosive or nuclear)
- Shape: low-RCS with radar absorbing coating.
- Cost per missile: 1-2 million dollars (depending on configuration)
All
this is already very impressive, but here comes the single most
important fact about this missile: it can be launched from pretty much
*any* platform: cruisers, of course, but also frigates and even small
corvettes. It can be launched by nuclear and diesel-electric attack
submarines. It can also be launched from long range bombers (Tu-160),
medium-range bombers (Tu-22m3), medium-range fighter-bomber/strike
aircraft (SU-34) and even, according to some reports, from a multi-role
air superiority fighter (SU-35). Finally, this missile can also be
shore-based. In fact, this missile can be launched from any platform
capable of launching the now famous Kalibr cruise missile and that means
that even a merchant marine or fishing ship could carry a container
with the Zircon missile hidden inside. In plain English what this means
is the following:
- Russia has a missile which cannot be stopped or spoofed by any of the current and foreseeable USN anti-missile weapons systems.
- This missile can be deployed *anywhere* in the world on *any* platform.
Let
me repeat this again: pretty much any Russian ship and pretty much any
Russian aircraft from now on will have the potential capability of
sinking a US aircraft carrier. In the past, such capabilities were
limited to specific ships (Slava class), submarines (Oscar class) or
aircraft (Backfires). The Soviets had a large but limited supply of such
platforms and they were limited on where they could deploy them. This
era is now over. From now on a swarm of Zircon 3M22 could appear
anywhere on the planet at any moment and with no warning time (5000
miles per hour incoming speed does not leave the target anything
remotely comparable to even a short reaction time). In fact, the attack
could be so rapid that it might not even leave the target the time
needed to indicate that it is under attack.
None
of the above is a big secret, by the way. Just place “zircon missile”
in your favorite search engine and you will get a lot of hits (131,000
on Google; 190,000 on Bing). In fact, a lot of specialists have declared
that the Zircon marks the end of the aircraft carrier as a platform of
modern warfare. These claims are widely exaggerated. As I have written
above, aircraft carriers are ideal tools to terrify, threaten, bully and
otherwise attack small, defenseless countries. Even medium-sized
countries would have a very hard time dealing with an attack coming from
US aircraft carriers. So I personally think that as long as the world
continues to use the US dollar and, therefore, as long as the US economy
continues to reply on creating money out of thin air and spending it
like there is no tomorrow, aircraft carriers still have a bright, if
morally repulsive, future ahead of them. And, of course, the USN will
not use carriers to threaten Russia. Again, the US press has been rather
open about the carrier-killing potential of the Zircon, but what it
rarely (never?) mentions are the political and strategic consequence
from the deployment of the Zircon: from now on Russia will have an easy
and very high value US target she can destroy anytime she wants. You can
think of the US carrier fleet like 10 US hostages which the Russians
can shoot at any time. And what is crucial is this: an attack on a US
carrier would not be an attack on the US homeland, nor would it be a
nuclear attack, but the psychological shock resulting from such an
attack could well be comparable to a (limited) nuclear strike on the US
homeland.
This,
on one hand, will greatly inhibit the Russian willingness to strike at
US carriers as this would expose Russia to very severe retaliatory
measures (possibly including nuclear strikes). On the other hand,
however, in terms of “escalation dominance”
this state of affairs gives a major advantage to Russia as the US does
not have any Russian targets with an actual and symbolic value similar
to the one of a US carrier.
There is another aspect of this issue which is often ignored. Western analysts often speak of a Russian strategy of “deterrence by denial” and “Anti-Access Area Denial”
(A2AD). Mostly this is the kind of language which gets you a promotion
and a pay raise in US and NATO think tanks. Still, there is a grain of
truth to the fact that advanced Russian missiles are now providing
Russia with a very cheap way to threaten even fantastically expensive US
assets. Worse, Russia is willing (eager, in fact) to export these
(relatively cheap) missiles to other countries. I find it amusing to see
how US politicians are in a state of constant hysteria about the risk
of nuclear proliferation, but fail to realize that conventional
anti-ship missiles are a formidable, and much more likely, threat. Sure,
there are missile export limiting treaties, such as the MTCR,
but they only apply to missile with a range of over 300km. With modern
ballistic and cruise missiles becoming smaller, deadlier and easier to
conceal and with ranges which are (relatively) easy to extend, treaties
such as the MTCR are becoming increasingly outdated.
The
bottom line is this: as long as deterrences holds, attacking US
carriers makes no sense whatsoever for Russia; however, as soon as
deterrence fails, attacking US carriers, anywhere on the planet, gives
Russia an extremely flexible and powerful escalation dominance
capability which the US cannot counter in kind.
Striking at the Holy of Holies – the US “homeland”
If
you thought that discussing striking US carriers was bad, here we are
going to enter full “Dr Strangelove” territory and discuss something
which US Americans find absolutely unthinkable: attacks on the US
homeland. True, for the rest of mankind, any war by definition includes
the very real possibility of attacks on your own towns, cities and
people. But for US Americans who are used to mete out violence and death
far away from their own peaceful towns and cities, the notion of a
devastating strike against the US homeland is pretty much unthinkable.
On 9/11 the loss of 3000 innocent people placed the vast majority of US
Americans into a total state of shock which resulted in a massive
over-reaction at all levels (which was, of course, exactly the purpose
of this false flag operation by the US and Israeli deep states). Just as
with carriers, the dangers of a US over-reaction should serve as a
deterrent to any attacks on the US homeland. But, just as with the
carriers, that is only true as long as deterrence holds. If the Russian
territory becomes the object of a US attack this would clearly indicate
that deterrence has failed and that the Russian armed forces should now
switch from a deterrence mode to a war-fighting mode. At this point, the
US American over-reaction to begin attacked or taking casualties could,
paradoxically, result in a last-minute wake-up call indicating to
everybody that what will come next will be truly devastating.
Introducing the RS-28 Sarmat intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM)
Though
officially very little is know about the Sarmat and the Yu-71, the
reality is that the Internet has been full of educated guesses which
give us a pretty clear idea of what kind of systems we are dealing here.
You can think of the RS-28 Sarmat as a successor of the already formidable RS-36 Voevoda
(SS-18 Satan in US classification) missile: it is a heavy, very
powerful, intercontinental ballistic missile with multiple independently
targetable reentry vehicle (warheads):
- Weight: 100 tons
- Payload: 10 tons
- Warheads: 10 to 15
- Hypersonic glide vehicles: 3-24 (that’s the Yu-71 we will discuss below)
- Range: 10,000km
- Guidance: Inertial , satellite, astrocelestial
- Trajectory: FOBS-capable
That
last line, about being FOBS-capable, is crucial as it means that,
unlike most Soviet/Russian ICMBs, the Sarmat does not have to fly over
the North Pole to strike at the United States. In fact, the Sarmat could
fly over the South Pole or, for that matter, in any direction and still
reach any target in the US. Right there this capability is, by itself,
is more than enough to defeat any current and foreseeable US
anti-ballistic missile technology. But it gets better, or worse,
depending on your perspective: the Sarmat’s reentry vehicles/warhards
are capable of flying in low orbit, maneuver, and then suddenly plunge
towards their targets. The only way to defeat such an attack would be to
protect the US by a 3600 coverage capable ABM system,
something which the US is decades away from deploying. And just to add
to these already formidable characteristics, each Sarmat can carry up to
3-24 (depending on who you ask) Yu-71 hypersonic glide vehicles.
Introducing The Yu-71 (aka “Object 4202) hypersonic glide vehicle (HGV)
Yet
again, this is hardly a topic not covered in the media and you can find
numerous articles describing what a hypersonic glide vehicle is and how
it can be used. (the best article I could find in English was by Global
Security, it is entitled “Objekt 4202 / Yu-71 / Yu-74”).
Here is a summary of what we think we know about this HGV:
- Max Speed: from Mach 5, according to Scott Ritter, to Mach 9, according to a quasi official Russian source, to Mach 15, acccording to Sputnik, to Mach 20 (that’s 7 kilometer per second, or 25,200kh/h, or 15,000mph), according to Global Security. Whatever the true speed, it will be fantastic and far, far beyond the kind of speeds current or foreseeable US anti-missile systems could hope to engage.
- Hypermaneuverability: Russian sources describe the Yu-71 as “сверхманевренная боеголовка” or “hypermaneuverable warhead”. What that exactly means in turns of sustained Gs does not really matter as this is not about air-to-air combat, but about the ability to perform sudden course changes making it close to impossible for anti-missile systems to calculate an engagement solution.
- Warhead: nuclear and conventional/kinetic.
That
last line is very interesting. What it means is that considering the
speeds attained by the Yu-71 HGV it is not necessary to equip it with a
conventional (high explosive) or nuclear warheard. The kinetic energy
generated by its high speed is sufficient to create an explosion similar
to what a large conventional or small nuclear warhead could generate.
Bringing it all together now
Did you notice the similarities between the Zircon missile and the Sarmat+Yu-71 combo?
In both cases we have:
- an attack which can come from any direction
- speed of attack and maneuver capabilities which make interception impossible
- the capability for Russia to destroy a very high value US target in a very short time
It is amazing to see that while US decision makers were talking about their Prompt Global Strike
program, the Russians actually developed their own version of this
capability, much faster than the US and at a fraction of the cost.
These
are all ideal ways to “bring the war home” and to encourage a country
which enjoyed total impunity for its policies to seriously thinking
about the consequences of messing around with the wrong people.
To
make things even more potentially dangerous for the US, the very same
geography which protected the US for so long is now becoming a major
vulnerability. Currently 39% of the US population lives in counties
directly on the shoreline. In fact, the population density of coastal
shoreline counties is over six times greater than the corresponding
inland counties (source). In 2010 the US Census Bureau produced a fascinating report entitled “Coastline Population Trends in the United States: 1960 to 2008”
which shows that the coastal counties provide an “intense concentration
of economic and social activity”. In fact, a very large number of US
cities, industrial centers and economic hugs are located near the US
coastline making them all *ideal* targets for Russian conventional
cruise missile strikes which could be launched from very long distances
(including over open water). And we are not talking about some future,
hypothetical, cruise missile, we are talking about the very same Kalibr
cruise missiles the Russians have been using against the Takfiris in
Syria. Check out this very well made video which explains how Kalibr
cruise missiles can be hidden pretty much anywhere and used with
devastating effect on military and/or civilian targets:
The
reality is that the US homeland is extremely vulnerable to any kind of
attack. This is only in part due to recent Russian advances in military
technology. For example, the “just on time” manufacturing or delivery
practices which are aimed to minimize costs and inventory are, from a
strategic/military point of view, extremely dangerous as it take very
little disruption (for example in the distribution network) to create
catastrophic consequences. Likewise, the high concentration of some
industries in specific areas of the United States (oil in the Mexican
Gulf) only serve to further weaken the ability of the United State to
take any kind of punishment in case of war.
Most
TV watching Americans will dismiss all of the above by saying that
“anybody come mess with us and we will kick their ass” or something
equally sophisticated. And there is some truth to that. But what this
mindset also indicate is a complete mental inability to operate in a
scenario when deterrence has failed and the “other guy” is coming for
you. That mindset is the prerogative of civilians. Those tasked with the
defense of their country simply cannot think that way and have to look
beyond the “threshold of deterrence”. They will be the one asked to fix
the bloody mess once the civilians screw-up. Georges Clemenceau
reportedly once said that “War is too serious a matter to entrust to military men”.
I believe that the exact opposite is true, that war is too serious a
matter to entrust to civilians, especially the US Neocons (the vast
majority of whom have never spend any time in uniform) and who always
make it sound like the next war will be easy, safe and painless.
Remember Ken Adelman and his famous Iraqi “cakewalk”?
The very same kind of scum is in power today and they want us to
believe that the next war will also be a cakewalk or that being on a
high speed collision course with Russia is something the US can afford
and should therefore engage in. The combined effect of the myth of US
military superiority with the myth about the US invulnerability result
in a US American sense of detachment, or even impunity, which is not at
all supported by fact. I just fervently hope that the people of the US
will not find out how mistaken they are the hard way.
In the meantime, the Russian Chief of General Staff, General Gerasimov, has announced
that Russia had completed what he called a “non-nuclear deterrence
system” based on the Iskander-M, Kalibr and X-101 missiles. According to
General Gerasimov, the Russian armed forces now have enough
high-precision weapon systems to strike at any target within a 4000km
range. Furthermore, Gerasimov declared that the number of platforms
capable of launching such missiles has increased twelve times while the
number of high precision cruise missiles has increased by a factor 30.
General Gerasimov also explained that the combined capabilities of the
Kalibr cruise missile, the Bastion
mobile coastal defense missile system and the S-400 air defense system
made it possible for Russia to fully control the airspace and surface of
the Baltic, Barents, Black and Mediterranean seas (talk about A2AD!).
Gerasimov concluded his briefing by saying “the development of
high-precision weapons has made it possible to place the main burden of
strategic deterrence from nuclear to non-nuclear forces”.
To fully evaluate the implications of what Gerasimov said please consider this: deterrence is, by definition,
discouraging an action or event through instilling doubt or fear of the
consequences. So what Gerasimov is really saying is that Russia has
enough conventional, non-nuclear, capabilities to inflict unacceptable
consequences upon the US. This is something absolutely new, a
fundamental game changer. Most importantly, that is the official
declaration by a senior Russian official that the US does not have any
technological superiority and that the US is vulnerable to a devastating
counter-attack, even a conventional one. In one short sentence General
Gerasimov has put to rest the two most important myths of US
geostrategic theory.
Keep
in mind that, unlike their US counterparts, the Russians typically like
to under-evaluate Russian military capabilities. You will find the
Russia media bragging about how “totally awesome and best in the world”
Russian weapons systems are, but military personnel in Russia still have
a corporate culture of secrecy and under-reporting your real
capabilities to the enemy. Furthermore, while junior officers can say
pretty much anything they want, senior officers are held to very strict
rules and they have to carefully weigh every word they say, especially
acting officers. So when the Chief of Staff officially declares that
Russia now has a conventional strategic deterrence capability – you can
take that to the bank. It’s real.
Alas,
the western media is still stuck in the “full idiot” mode we saw during
the transit of the Russian aircraft carrier from the North Atlantic to
the Mediterranean: on one hand, the Admiral Kuznetsov was presented as a
rusty old bucket while on the other NATO forces constantly shadowed it
as if it was about to strike London. Likewise, US politicians present
Russia as a “gas station” while, at the same time, stating that this
“gas station” has the capability to decide who lives in the White House.
This kind of reporting is not only unhelpful but outright dangerous.
One one hand the “the Russians are backward brutes” fosters are arrogant
and cocky attitude. On the other hand, constantly speaking about fake
Russian threats results in a very dangerous case of “cry wolf” in which
all possible Russian threats (including very real ones) are dismissed as
pure propaganda. The reality is, of course, very different and simple
in a binary way: Russia represents absolutely no threat to the United
States or anybody else (including the three Baltic statelets). But if
some western politician decides that he is smarter and stronger than
Napoleon or Hitler and that he will finally bring the Russians to their
knees, then he and his country will be destroyed. It is really that
simple.

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