Toggle Menu

High Noon Over Syria

Are the US and Russia gearing up for another proxy war?

Stephen F. Cohen

October 15, 2015

In this photo made from the footage taken from Russian Defense Ministry official web site on Monday, October 5, 2015, a bomb is released from Russian Su-24M jet fighter in Syria. (Russian Defense Ministry Press Service via AP)

The John Batchelor Show, October 14.

Nation contributing editor Stephen F. Cohen and John Batchelor continue their weekly discussions of the new US-Russian Cold War. This installment focuses, as did the preceding one, on the Russian military air campaign over Syria and the increasingly vehement US political media establishment’s anti-Russian reactions.

Cohen emphasizes a general point: Russian President Vladimir Putin is doing exactly what he says he is doing—trying to stop a perilous terrorist threat represented by ISIS, and not only ISIS; and this is, in the view of Putin and the Moscow policy elite, a dire threat to Russia’s national security as well as to international security, including that of the United States. Cohen argues that American calls for a “no-fly-zone” over Syria and even the shooting down of Russian war planes, along with giving “moderate” US-backed forces in Syria surface-to-air weapons to do so, would result at best in another ongoing US-Russian proxy war (along with the one in Ukraine) and possibly actual war with Russia.

Cohen and Batchelor also discuss such US-Soviet proxy wars during the preceding 40-year Cold War, from Vietnam and Afghanistan to Africa; whether in the new Cold War Europe is now tilting away from Washington and toward Moscow; and the official Dutch investigative report on the shooting down of a Malaysian passenger plane over Ukraine in 2014.

Stephen F. CohenStephen F. Cohen is a professor emeritus of Russian studies and politics at New York University and Princeton University. A Nation contributing editor, his most recent book, War With Russia? From Putin & Ukraine to Trump & Russiagate, is available in paperback and in an ebook edition. His weekly conversations with the host of The John Batchelor Show, now in their seventh year, are available at www.thenation.com.


Latest from the nation