I've been a journalist for 12 years and I created Tangle because I recognize that the media is broken. Most news outlets have biases that are obvious to every American, we are all living in self-curated "news bubbles" where we are spoon-fed beliefs we already have, and if we log onto social media the people we disagree with are caricatured into the worst people possible.
Political reporting is often sensationalized and helps spread lies and misconceptions. Politicians and pundits on both sides work hard to elevate the worst arguments of their opponents and say they're representative of the other side's perspective. If you read any single news article, you are seldom getting the full story.
I created Tangle to fix these problems. My goal is to get people out of their bubbles, help us understand the political debates happening in a more nuanced way, and build a media organization trusted by people on the left, right and center.
There is no doubt that Russia is the aggressor in this war, while the United States and European countries continue to fuel the confrontation by providing weapons and funds to Ukraine. As an American patriot and a supporter of the right of Ukraine to remain an independent country, I am of the opinion that an end to the war will not be possible until the United States and the world at large recognizes and acknowledges the role which the U.S. and NATO has played in provoking Russia into taking the actions it has on the world stage.
Obviously, "This war is Russia's fault", as you say, but the policies of the United States government over the past 15 years have brought us to where we are today, and created a new Cold War which threatens an escalation that could have disastrous consequences.
In line with Tangle's desire to seek and present a balanced overview of important issues, I would appreciate it if someone on your staff would dig deeper into the history of this confrontation and try to present BOTH sides of the story.
More Russia vs. Ukraine?
I realize there are many important topics and issues that Tangle must attempt to deal with and every day seems to present another threat or tragedy which makes headlines across the U.S.
But now you folks are talking about WWIII!
"...one truth has remained: The man behind the threat of World War III — the one whose reaction everyone is so worried about — is Vladimir Putin."
"Putin is the one who invaded Ukraine. He is the one who can leave Ukraine. He is the one who believes Ukraine rightfully belongs to Russia, and he is the one who can end the war any day."
"He has long been committed to destabilizing NATO and the EU."
"I'm the last person in the world who wants to see more war. But there already is a war. Putin started it. I am insisting that the world (especially Americans) look at what is happening in Europe with clear eyes. This has been the plot from the very beginning."
Where is the other side of this argument? Tangle is supposed to see all sides and debate the merits of each point of view.
America and NATO are the good guys and Putin is one bad dude - AGREED! But the recent history of NATO seems to demonstrate a strategy of encroachment and an attempt to surround Russia with NATO countries, NATO armies, and NATO nuclear weapons.
And if we are approaching WWIII, shouldn't we look at both sides of this issue? Reagan and Gorbachev established a "détente", Nixon and Brezhnev signed SALT agreements. Then the U.S. government and NATO members began expanding into former Soviet bloc countries. Putin is certainly the bad guy in all this, but what role does the U.S. and NATO play in boxing Russia into a corner and threatening its very existence?
Sorry for not replying earlier. I had followed the link. A few things:
1) We have definitely shared a version of this perspective before in Tangle, and will continue to (we actually have a lengthy podcast interview coming out soon with Richard Sakwa)
2) I don't really understand your argument here, if I'm honest. What is the "new kind of terrorism" that is threatening the world? You never explain or elaborate, so I have no idea what you are talking about.
3) NATO "encroachment" as a framework here is bizarre; you talk about it as if the United States compelled these countries into the NATO orbit, rather than Russia compelling them. These nations were moved to join NATO not just because the U.S. and Europe wanted them, but because they wanted protection from Russia. And Putin's invasion of Ukraine proves exactly why that protection was wise. I don't really see how anything you lay out here undermines that argument.
I was very interested in reading the two exclusive interviews featured in the October 17th edition of Tangle. And equally disappointed with the content.
Dueling perspectives on the Ukraine–Russia War
I've been honored and impressed by the time you have personally invested in replying to my emails and point of view. You sure have no obligation to correspond with a 73 year old rock & roll musician in flyover country about United States foreign policy. And why should you? You and your staff are affiliated with and plugged into national and international news media and political operatives in both parties.
And yet, that IS the appeal of and the essence of Tangle, as I understand it - not relying on legacy media and entrenched politicians or political party hacks along with "gotcha" journalists and influencers, but reaching out for answers and dialogue from anyone and everyone in search of common ground and an understanding of issues from all sides.
In my previous email on this topic, I had hoped you would at least be willing to approach and consider what I see as the "elephant in the room" regarding relations between the United States, Russia, NATO, and Ukraine. A possible descent into WWIII is something I would hope we would all like to avoid!
Ronald Reagan originally referred to the Soviet Union as the "Evil Empire".
"Reagan relaxed his aggressive rhetoric toward the Soviet Union after Gorbachev became General Secretary of the Soviet Politburo in 1985, and took on a position of negotiating. In turn, the Soviets reversed their hostile view of Reagan and began negotiating in earnest. Reagan came quickly to recognize that Gorbachev's goals, far from being traditional, were downright revolutionary. He also saw that the transformation Gorbachev had in mind for his country would, if it came about, serve American interests.
As a result, without much fuss and without many of his supporters noticing, Reagan underwent a transformation of his own. The fire-breathing cold warrior set about trying, through intense, sustained personal engagement, to convince Gorbachev that the United States would not make him sorry for the course he had chosen."
Reagan and Gorbachev: Shutting the Cold War Down
We heard talk about détente: "The main terms of the détente era were the easing of tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union, characterized by diplomatic negotiations, arms control agreements, and increased communication, particularly in the 1970s."
And President Reagan stated his goal was: "...to keep America strong and free, while we negotiate real and verifiable reductions in the world's nuclear arsenals and one day, with God's help, their total elimination."
I lived through the Cuban Missile Crisis and realised how close we came to experiencing MAD first hand. It's critical to understand the motivations behind Khrushchev and the Soviet Union's decision to secretly install both defensive and offensive nuclear missiles in Cuba in the early '60s.
"The U.S. tried to get rid of Castro, first by funding and organizing a military intervention of Cuban exiles in 1960 called the 'Bay of Pigs Invasion.' Despite its bloody failure, the CIA repeatedly tried to overthrow or eliminate Castro, and the Department of Defense made plans to invade Cuba, calling for an invasion force nearly 100 times larger than the Bay of Pigs."
"Khrushchev felt he had good reasons for parking weapons of mass destruction in Cuba. First, he was certain a U.S. invasion of Cuba was imminent and wanted to protect the island. He was also frustrated that the previous year, the U.S. had placed nuclear missiles in Turkey, on the border of the Soviet Union. These missiles could have delivered a nuclear warhead to many strategic targets in Soviet territory, including Moscow. Khruschev argued that his intention for putting similar missiles in Cuba was to give the United States 'a little of their own medicine.'"
Reagan wanted threats of nuclear war to lead the U.S. and Russia away from confrontations and war via communications, negotiations, treaties, and arms reductions, through the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT I) and the Helsinki Accords. Unfortunately —
Cohen: "The chance for a durable Washington, Moscow strategic partnership was lost in 1991 after the Soviet Union ended. Actually, it was lost earlier because it was Reagan and Gorbachev who gave us the opportunity, but it certainly ended in the Clinton administration and it didn't end in Moscow. It ended in Washington. It was squandered and lost in Washington. And it was lost so badly, that today we have been in literally a new Cold War with Russia. It's a really horrible situation and exceedingly dangerous."
Tucker Carlson was excoriated for his long interview with Vladimir Putin because he avoided confrontations and arguments. And yet, I thought it was a fascinating discussion which revealed a lot about Putin's beliefs and motivations. At the very least, here was a man with a deep and expansive knowledge about and personal interest in Russian history and international politics. Right or wrong, his thoughts and opinions are never shallow or contrived.
And nothing excuses the crimes and atrocities being committed each and every day in Ukraine by the Russian military and its leaders.
But perhaps - if we listened to one another and discussed our different points of view and political objectives - we could find some common ground and untangle the "tangle" without first sending submarines, aircraft carriers, and B2 bombers all armed to the teeth with MIRVed nuclear missiles to surround Russia throughout western Europe.
Cohen: "This new Cold War has all the potential to be even more dangerous than the preceding 40 year Cold War."
"You'll remember that after the Cuban Missile Crisis, Moscow and Washington developed certain rules of mutual conduct. They saw how dangerous, how close we came to nuclear war. There are no red lines today. One of the things that Putin and his predecessor, Medvedev, keep saying to Washington, 'You're crossing our red lines.' And Washington says, 'There are no red lines! You don't have any red lines. We have red lines.' I mean, 'You can't have a military base in Canada or Mexico, but we can have all we want around your borders.' Now, the position of the American political media establishment is that this new Cold War is all Putin's fault. War is all Putin's fault. All of it, everything. We did nothing wrong. At every stage, we were virtuous and wise, and he was aggressive. And a bad man."
From the Tucker Carlson interview:
Putin: "Russia even agreed voluntarily and proactively to the collapse of the Soviet Union and believed that this would be understood by the so-called 'Civilized West' as an invitation for cooperation and associateship. That is what Russia was expecting, both from the United States and the so-called Collective West as a whole."
"After 1991, when Russia expected that it would be welcomed into the brotherly family of civilized nations, nothing like this happened. You tricked us. I don't mean you personally when I say you, of course. I'm talking about the United States. The promise was that NATO would not expand eastward, but it happened five times. There were five waves of expansion. We tolerated all that. We were trying to persuade them. We were saying, please don't, we are as bourgeois now as you are. We are a market economy, and there's no Communist party power. Let's negotiate."
Tucker Carlson Interviews Vladimir Putin Transcript
"The reality is, for whatever reasons the Clinton administration adopted in the 1990s, a Winner-Take-All policy toward Russia, they said we won the Cold War. But the four policies that most offended Russia and offend them today were the following. The decision to expand NATO right to Russia's borders. I mean, it's a joke. We say Putin has violated the post-Cold War order of Europe. Russia was excluded from the post-Cold War Order of Europe by NATO's expansion. Russia kept saying, 'Hey, let's do a pan-European security arrangement like Gorbachev and Reagan said.' And we said, 'This is not military. This is about democracy and free trade and it's going to be great for you. Swallow your poison with a smile.' And while they had no choice, they did, and then when they had a choice, not - they start pushing back."
"Secondly, there's the absolute refusal on the part of the United States to negotiate on missile defense. Missile defense is now a NATO project that means missile defense, building installations, whether it's on land or sea, is now part of NATO expansion, encirclement of Russia. It's part of the same system. Russians are absolutely convinced it's targeted at their nuclear retaliatory capability. The reality is that the Pro Cold War forces in Washington in particular, who control the New York Times, The Washington Post, all the main broadcast and cable television networks, NPR and PBS are so powerful that it is a shock when a dissenting voice has gotten on their pages or on their air."
What this all begins to look like - from my perspective - is a takeover of U.S. foreign policy by the military-industrial complex which is promoting weapons, missiles, tanks, warships, bombers and submarines and a policy of confrontation that puts all of us at the risk of a real WWIII.
Putin: "Moreover, I have also said this publicly before, there was a moment when a certain rift started growing between us. Before that, Yeltsin came to the United States. Remember, he spoke in Congress and said the good words, 'God bless America.' Everything he said were signals. 'Let us in.'"
"There were smart people, including in Germany, Egon Barr, a major politician of the Social Democratic Party who insisted in his personal conversations with the Soviet leadership on the brink of the collapse of the Soviet Union, that a new security system should be established in Europe. Help should be given to unify Germany, but a new system should be also established to include the United States, Canada, Russia, and other central European countries, but NATO needs not to expand. That's what he said. If NATO expands, everything would be just the same as during the Cold War, only closer to Russia's borders."
"I became president in 2000. I thought, okay, the Yugoslav issue is over, but we should try to restore relations. Let's reopen the door that Russia had tried to go through, and moreover, I said it publicly. I can't reiterate. At a meeting here in the Kremlin with the outgoing president, Bill Clinton, right here in the next room I said to him, I asked him, Bill, do you think if Russia asked to join NATO, do you think it would happen? Suddenly he said, you know, it's interesting. I think so. But in the evening when we met for dinner, he said, you know, I've talked to my team. No, it's not possible now."
There is SO much more information within that interview - and I won't keep posting excerpts - but if I have to look at what Putin is saying and what politicians in the United States are telling us, I gotta say - Vladimir Putin sounds much more reasonable and understanding of the political and military aspects of the decisions being made with regards to Russia, Ukraine and NATO.
Mr. Sakwa seems to agree with some of the history here:
Sakwa: "After the end of the Cold War in 1989–91, the United States insisted on maintaining its hegemony, its dominance, and that precluded allowing Europe to become more autonomous and, indeed, to allow Germany and Russia to come together with France and the other countries. That couldn't be allowed. NATO is a dysfunctional organization internally and catastrophic for Europe and global politics internationally. Absolutely catastrophic. It keeps boasting with its 32 members, the most successful military organization in history. It basically exists to sustain its own existence, and therefore to do that it has to foster and generate conflict. So you could say it's the most disastrous military alliance in history."
"Biden had absolutely no contact with Moscow after the war began. And even the contacts before that were rather — well, I'd say confused and really not diplomatic, they just consisted of a series of threats."
Applebaum: "Of course they hope that the U.S. will help them — and there has been, by the way, talk of the U.S. giving them some more long-range weapons that will make their campaign against the Russian oil industry go faster. And that would be great, and everybody would be happy. But no one is counting on it."
Sakwa: "Can Ukraine withstand if you just give it more weapons, pile on the sanctions to Russia, cut its oil revenues and so on, then we will force Russia to the negotiating table? No. I don't think that argument really stands up. And Russia's strategy — and this is why it's been moving very slowly — has been not to gain territory in a spectacular manner, but basically to destroy the Ukrainian manpower and armed forces. And in that, they are winning in the sense that they've achieved their goal. Ukraine is demographically depleted, an economic basket case. Zelensky is increasingly unpopular. The population are demanding more and more now — a negotiated end, even if it means giving up some territory."
Applebaum: "Listen to what Putin says. He has never said he wants to end the war. Listen for him to start talking about ending the war. And once he does it seriously, then we'll know we're in a new phase."
Putin: "Wouldn't it be better to negotiate with Russia, make an agreement already understanding the situation that is developing today, realizing that Russia will fight for its interest to the end and realizing this, actually return to common sense, start respecting our country and its interests and look for certain solutions. It seems to me that this is much smarter and more rational. The world should be a single whole. Security should be shared rather than meant for the golden billion. That is the only scenario where the world could be stable, sustainable, and predictable."
And finally, from Stephen S. Cohen:
Cohen: "Whichever existential or grave world threat you might emphasize, and for some people, it's climate change. For some people, it's human rights. For some people, it's a spread of democracy. For me, it has been for quite a while, the new kind of terrorism that afflicts the world. It's no longer these so-called non-state actors. These guys are organized, they have an army, they have a self-professed state and they have a capacity to harm us gravely.
This is the real threat today. This kind of threat cannot be even marginally diminished. And I'm not sure we can ever end it in our lifetime, unless we have a partner in the Kremlin. That's the long and the short of it. What we need are these common interests in a partnership. The way two business people make a contract. They've got the same interests. They trust each other because if one side violates the interest, the other guy's interest is violated. We haven't had that. We don't have it today."
In closing this too long email, let me emphasize I am no hippie holdover from the '60s whining about the "military industrial complex". We must have a strong military and we always need to negotiate from a position of strength, backed up by powerful military weapons and overwhelming force. That was the Reagan strategy, as well, and it led to better relations with the Soviet Union, arms reductions, détente and a safer world. But after Reagan, politicians charted a course for world dominance, "winner take all", NATO expansion, and the absolute isolation of Russia. I wonder what The United States would do if these roles were somehow reversed?
Tangle has the format, people, the resources and credibility to take a deep dive into the history of the United States and our relations between Russia, NATO and Ukraine on the world stage.
Please keep doing the important work Tangle is doing in trying to promote all sides of these issues and to find sanity and common ground which might lead to a safer and more productive world.