Former Carter Administration National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski, whose daughter, Mika, is a liberal Margaret Dumont employed to prevent Joe “Gummo” Scarborough from being absolutely the dumbest person in the room, spoke to Sebastian Fischer and Holger Stark of Spiegel about the contretemps with Russia. Brzezinski’s technically correct in labeling the West’s stalemate with Russia a new Cold War, but let’s not use that term as if had the same meaning as it did during the Soviet days. Russia is still nuked-up, sure, and Ukraine is of great concern, but the pre-Glasnost standoff was a completely different order of magnitude. The opening:
Spiegel:
Mr. Brzezinski, are we seeing the beginning of a new Cold War between Russia and the US?
Zbigniew Brzezinski:
We are already in a Cold War. Whether it will become hot is fortunately still less than likely.
Spiegel:
The last Cold War lasted more than 40 years. Will it last that long this time around?
Zbigniew Brzezinski:
I don’t think so. Things move much more rapidly. Pressures from the outside are more felt internally. If this continues, and if Ukraine doesn’t collapse, domestic pressures in Russia will force whoever is in charge to explore alternatives. Hopefully, Putin is smart enough to know that it’s better to explore alternatives ahead of time and not too late.
Spiegel:
Is he smart enough?
Zbigniew Brzezinski:
That’s very hard to say. He has what’s called “smarts” in American, which is a kind of instinctive smartness. He has a real sophistication. I wonder why he’s almost deliberately antagonizing more than 40 million people in a country next door which, until very recently, were not driven by any hostility towards Russia.
Spiegel:
Do you think it is right for the US to send heavy weaponry to Eastern Europe and the Baltic states?
Zbigniew Brzezinski:
Do you think it is right to send troops and weapons into a sovereign country and start up a limited war after having seized a larger portion of it?
Spiegel:
You are talking about Russia’s actions in Ukraine.
Zbigniew Brzezinski:
You have to see both sides.•