The world is getting wearier by the day of a war in Ukraine that the Biden administration has promised to fuel āas long as it lasts.ā That appears to mean at least until Vladimir Putin accepts early retirement and the Kremlin unconditionally surrenders. Not many bookies in Las Vegas are willing to bet on either of those things happening any time soon. All of which means that āas long as it lasts” could translate as āforever,ā an epithet that ends up being attached to most of the wars the US gets involved in.
Even the nations of Europe most loyal to NATO have begun to understand the danger of committing to a war that they perceive as having less and less to do with Ukraine and everything to do with Washingtonās belief in its capacity to control the global economy, even at the cost of undermining the economy of its allies.
Wars are expensive and produce a wide range of annoying effects. They end up taking a toll on peopleās psyche. And though most of the time what the people think and want generally has little effect on policy, when elections roll around, their psyche might end up mattering. And even if the US manages to control the message at home, it counts on its allies, whose media are much harder to control from Washington.
The grief attached to the Ukraine war has begun to rattle some people in Washington. The Washington Post featured an this week with the title: āU.S. privately asks Ukraine to show itās open to negotiate with Russia.ā The three journalists who authored the article describe the delicate task the US government is faced with today, as many leaders in Europe are beginning to worry precisely about the state of their populationsā psyche.
Chorus for Peace in Ukraine Sings Louder
As the articleās title indicates, it isnāt a question of making decisions or revising policy. The point is āto showā something, not to make it happen. Politics will also produce a particular version of hyperreality, in which things need not be real. They must simply appear to be real.
The article claims to share with its readers the true motives of the White House, āaccording to people familiar with the discussions.ā It takes the trouble to clarify what this āshowā of being open does not mean. āThe request by American officials is not aimed at pushing Ukraine to the negotiating table, these people said. Rather, they called it a calculated attempt to ensure the government in Kyiv maintains the support of other nations facing constituencies wary of fueling a war for many years to come.ā
Americans can thus be reassured. The āshowā isnāt: an attempt to provoke the unimaginable: actual negotiations with the diabolical Vladimir Putin. Itās nothing more than a ācalculated attemptā to show something that isnāt true.
°Õ“ǻ岹²āās Weekly Devilās Dictionary definition:
Calculated attempt:
Carefully fabricated lie designed to create an impression opposite to visible reality
Contextual note
The trio of The Washington Post journalists articulate with precision whatās behind this need for a calculated attempt. āUS officials,ā they report, āacknowledge that President Volodymyr Zelenskyās ban on talks with [Putin] has generated concern in parts of Europe, Africa and Latin America, where the warās disruptive effects on the availability and cost of food and fuel are felt most sharply.ā In other words, this is neither a diplomatic nor a political problem. It certainly isnāt inviting a debate about the morality of war or promoting the advantages of peace. No, itās about the image of a policy that is beginning to fray some peopleās nerves in other parts of the world. In short, itās a PR problem. The task at hand is damage control.
One person cited in the report has even given it a name. āUkraine fatigue is a real thing for some of our partners,ā according to one of their anonymous officials. Notice this officialās emphasis on the idea of Ukraine fatigue being āa real thing.ā Itās the fatigue thatās real and worrying, not the horrors associated with the war or its consequences for humanity at large.
Is Thinking Now Forbidden in the Media?
One interesting and revealing remark in this article concerns The Washington Postās analysis of the state of opinion in the US, where āpolls show eroding support among Republicans for continuing to finance Ukraineās military at current levels.ā The Biden administration and The Washington Postās want readers to believe that only Republicans are questioning the unlimited generosity of the White House in its commitment to prolonging the war. In fact, a significant minority of Democrats (19%) also even supporting the Ukraine war effort, let alone signing a blank check.
American media and US politicians appear to be complicit in seeking to maintain the perception of an absolute contrast between the two dominant parties, even when, more often than not, they rarely disagree, especially on foreign policy. The insistent focus on a binary contrast and party rivalry conveniently serves to deviate attention from the more fundamental issues that neither of the parties seems eager to address.
Historical note
Most people are now aware of the fact that after a series of traumatic events we are living through a momentous period of history: four years of Donald Trump in the White House, three years of Covid and the dramas attached to it, the chaotic US withdrawal from the oldest of its āforever warsā in Afghanistan, and the Russian invasion of Ukraine followed by the apoplectic if not apocalyptic reaction of the nations associated in NATO, to say nothing of the increasingly visible effects of climate change. All these things have heightened everyoneās uncertainty about the future and of the trajectory of human history.
°Õ“ǻ岹²āās journalism has an uncomfortable relationship with history. Journalists have traditionally preferred highlighting the drama of simple oppositions, of contests that pit one side against the other. They prefer reducing questions to the level of black and white decision-making. But history will always be complex. At moments of radical transition or transformation, simple oppositions cannot do justice to reality. Believing they can make things even more desperately complex. In this case it raises the very real prospect of nuclear war.
The Washington Postās journalists acknowledge the growing complexity but decline to make sense of it. Here is how they describe the quandary the US is faced with. āThe discussions illustrate how complex the Biden administrationās position on Ukraine has become, as U.S. officials publicly vow to support Kyiv with massive sums of aid āfor as long as it takesā while hoping for a resolution to the conflict that over the past eight months has taken a punishing toll on the world economy and triggered fears of nuclear war.ā
In Times of War History Goes Missing
The journalists even highlight what has become an embarrassing historical fact, adding to the complexity. āWhile Zelensky laid out proposals for a negotiated peace in the weeks following Putinās Feb. 24 invasion, including Ukrainian neutrality and a return of areas occupied by Russia since that date, Ukrainian officials have hardened their stance in recent months.ā But that is as far as they accept to go.
Unsurprisingly ā because that would truly complicate things ā they donāt ask themselves the essential questions any journalist aware of these facts should focus on. Who are these āUkrainian officials?ā What is their relationship with Zelenskyy or Zelenskyyās with them? What avowable or unavowable logic is behind the āhardeningā that took place? Do the hardliners represent average Ukrainians or, as some have suggested, groups of radical nationalists with strong neoNazi sympathies? Are there other identifiable interests inside or outside Ukraine that have produced this hardening?
All mainstream journalists in the US appear not to be curious about these questions. Or perhaps they are instructed not to be curious in public. As the kerfuffle within the Democratic party around progressives timidly recommending negotiations showed, seeking peace is a forbidden topic of discussion. Policy, everywhere and always, is about power plays. So why shy away from tracking and analyzing them, especially when the stakes may be nuclear war?
For the media, the answer to that question is easy. Just as at the time of George W. Bushās invasion of Iraq, journalists interested in keeping their jobs have been given a task to accomplish: make sure that the nation remains unified behind its leaders. Itās an argument that has some merit. But when things become this complex and downright dangerous, it may be time to reconsider its wisdom.
*[In the age of Oscar Wilde and Mark Twain, another American wit, the journalist Ambrose Bierce produced a series of satirical definitions of commonly used terms, throwing light on their hidden meanings in real discourse. Bierce eventually collected and published them as a book, The Devilās Dictionary, in 1911. We have shamelessly appropriated his title in the interest of continuing his wholesome pedagogical effort to enlighten generations of readers of the news. Read more of 51³Ō¹Ļ Devilās Dictionary.]
The views expressed in this article are the authorās own and do not necessarily reflect 51³Ō¹Ļās editorial policy.
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