Future historians may well identify Russian President Vladimir Putin’s landmark March 1 speech as the ultimate game-changer in the 21st-century New Great Game in Eurasia. The reason is minutely detailed in Losing Military Supremacy: The Myopia of American Strategic Planning, a new book by Russian military/naval analyst Andrei Martyanov.
Martyanov is uniquely equipped for the task. Born in Baku in the early 1960s, he was a naval officer in the USSR era up to 1990. He moved to the US in the mid-1990s and is now a lab director in an aerospace firm. He belongs to an extremely rarified group: top military/naval analysts specializing in US-Russia.
From quoting Alexis de Tocqueville and Leo Tolstoy’s War and Peace to revisiting the balance of power during the Soviet era and beyond, Martyanov carefully tracks how the only nation on the planet “which can militarily defeat the United States conventionally” has reacted to a situation where any “meaningful dialogue between Russia and America’s politicians is virtually impossible.”
What is ultimately revealed is not only a case of disregarding basic Sun Tzu – “if you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles” – but most of all undiluted hubris, turbocharged, among a series of illusionistic positive feedback loops, by Desert Storm’s “turkey shoot” of Saddam Hussein’s heavily inflated, woefully trained army.
The United States’ industrial-military-intel-security complex profits from a compounded annual budget of roughly US$1 trillion. The only justification for such whopping expenditure is to manufacture a lethal external threat: Russia. That’s the key reason the complex will not allow US President Donald Trump even to try to normalize relations with Russia.
Yet now this is a whole new ball game as the US faces a formidable adversary that, as Martyanov carefully details, deploys five crucial capabilities.
- Command, control, communications, computers, intel, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities equal to or better than the US.
- Electronic warfare capabilities equal to or better than the US.
- New weapons systems equal to or better than the US.
- Air defense systems that are more than a match for US airpower.
- Long-range subsonic, supersonic and hypersonic cruise missiles that threaten the US Empire of Bases and even the entire US mainland.
So how did we get here?
Debunking American military mythology
Martyanov argues that Russia, all through the first decade of the millennium, spent enough time “defining herself in terms of enclosed technological cycles, localization and manufacturing.”
In contrast, Germany, even with a large, developed economy, “cannot design and build from scratch a state-of-the-art fighter jet,” while Russia can. Germany “doesn’t have a space industry, and Russia does.”
As for those who pass in the US for Russian “experts,” they never saw these techno-breakthroughs coming; they “simply have no grasp of the enormous difference between the processes involved in a virtual monetized economy and those involved in manufacturing of the modern combat informational control system or of the cutting-edge fighter jet.”
Martyanov produces plenty of snapshots. For instance, “Russia …without any unnecessary fanfare, launched a complete upgrade of her naval nuclear deterrent with state of the art ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs) of the Borey-class (Project 955 and 955A)…. This is the program which most Russia ‘analysts’ were laughing at ten years ago. They are not laughing any more.”
A central tenet of the book is to debunk American military mythology. That must include in-depth reappraisal of World War II and a re-examination of how the Soviet Navy was closing the technological gap with the US Navy already by the mid-1970s, even as it remained “a dedicated sea denial force designed strictly for deterrent.” The Soviet Navy, as the Russian Navy today, “was built largely for a single purpose: to prevent a NATO attack on the USSR from the sea.”
Moving to the post-USSR era, it’s inevitable that Russia had to come up with a concerted strategy to counteract the North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s relentlessly moving east – a clear violation of the (verbal) agreement between George Bush Senior and Mikhail Gorbachev.
And that leads us to the holy of the holies concerning the favorite Beltway mantra, “Russian aggression.” Even as Russia “does have the capability to deal major damage to NATO,” as Martyanov reminds us, “why would Russia attack or damage European countries which are worth way more for Russia free and prosperous than they would be if damaged and, theoretically, subjugated?”
The caliber of Brzezinski’s nightmare
The book’s Chapter 7, titled “The Failure to Come to Grips with the Modern Geopolitical Realignment,” brings us back to another game-changing moment: the 2015 Victory Parade in Moscow, with Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping sitting next to each other, graphically exposing the worst Zbigniew “Grand Chessboard” Brzezinski nightmare of the “two most powerful Eurasian nations declaring full independence from the American vision of the world.”
And then there was Russia’s campaign in Syria; on October 7, 2015, six 3M14 Kalibr cruise missiles were launched in intervals of five seconds from the Russian Navy’s small missile ships in the Caspian Sea, aimed at Daesh targets in Syria. The USS Theodore Roosevelt and its carrier battle group immediately understood the message – exiting the Persian Gulf in a flash.
Since then, the message has been amplified: the Eastern Mediterranean, the Black Sea, or “the Russian Navy’s Pacific zones of responsibility” are becoming “completely closed zones for any adversary.”
The lesson from the Kalibr-in-the-Caspian saga, writes Martyanov, is that “for the first time it was openly demonstrated, and the world took note, that the American monopoly on symbols of power was officially broken.”
As Martyanov shows how “in both Donbass and especially in Syria, Russia called the American geopolitical and military bluff,” there’s no question this Syria-Ukraine interconnection – which I analyzed here – is the foundation stone of the current “historically unprecedented anti-Russian hysteria in the US.”
So the ball – just like the one offered by Putin to Trump in Helsinki – is in the United States’ court. What Martyanov describes as “the deadly combination of contemporary American elites’ ignorance, hubris and desperation,” though, cannot be underestimated.
Already during his election campaign, Trump announced multiple times that he would contest the post-Cold War international (dis)order. Helsinki was a graphic demonstration that now Trump’s “drain the swamp” faces a massive immovable object, as the swamp will take no prisoners to preserve its trillion-dollar power.
In contrast, Russian diplomacy, as explicitly reaffirmed once again this week by Putin himself, is adamant that anything is permitted when it comes to avoiding Cold War 2.0.
But just in case, Russia’s new-generation weapons have now been formally unveiled by the Defense Ministry, and some of them are already operational.
‘Pearl Harbor meets Stalingrad’
It’s crystal clear that President Trump is applying Kissingerian divide-and-rule tactics, trying to reduce Russian political/economic connectivity with the two other Eurasian integration poles, China and Iran.
Still, the swamp cannot possibly contemplate The Big Picture – as this must-watch conversation between two of the very few Americans who actually know Russia in-depth attests. Professor Stephen Cohen and Professor John Mearsheimer go to the jugular: Nothing can be done when Russophobia is the law of the land.
Over and over again, we must go back to Putin’s March 1 speech, which presented the US with what can only be described, writes Martyanov, as “a military-technological Pearl Harbor-meets-Stalingrad.”
Martyanov goes all the way to explain how the latest Russian weapons systems present immense strategic – and historical – ramifications. The missile gap between the US and Russia is now “a technological abyss,” with ballistic missiles “capable of trajectories which render any kind of anti-ballistic defense useless.” Star Wars and its derivatives are now – to use a Trumpism – “obsolete.”
The Kinzhal, as described by Martyanov, is “a complete game-changer geopolitically, strategically, operationally, tactically and psychologically.” In a nutshell, “no modern or prospective air-defense system deployed today by NATO can intercept even a single missile with such characteristics.”
This means, among other things – and stressing it is never enough – that the whole Eastern Mediterranean can be closed off, not to mention the whole Persian Gulf. And all this goes way beyond asymmetry; it’s about “the final arrival of a completely new paradigm” in warfare and military technology.
Martyanov’s must-read book is the ultimate Weapon of Myth Destruction (WMD). And unlike the Saddam Hussein version, this one actually exists. As Putin warned (at 7:10 in the video), “They did not listen to us then.” Are they listening now?

There is a country described in Scripture that is destroyed in a surprise attack and it all happens in "One Hour’s Time". She is the Hammer of the earth literally the Policeman of the World. She is rich beyond measure the economic engine for the world. She is a mingled people from her beginning. In Jeremiah 50-51 this country is described as the "Hindermost of the Nations" and for centuries Rabbis have understood this to mean that she is the last of the great nations, a young nation compared to the other nations of the world, an endtime nation. Revelation 17-18, Jeremiah 50-51, portions of Isaiah 13-18 and Isaiah 47. There are about 60-70 characteristics that describe this nation. I have only mentioned a few. She is a nation that sits on many waters and has a large Jewish population. In "One Hour’s Time" great riches come to absolutely nothing. Pastor R A Coombes wrote a book that cost him friends, finances and family. "America the Babylon". If it is America, she is a proud nation and proud to be proud. You can watch a presentation given in 1998 on youtube by Pastor Coombes at The Prophecy Club. Regardless your only Hope is 1 Corinthians 15:1-4
What he fails to realize, we are rapidly transitioning from conventional warfair to opening up our black projuects into the white. Capabilities that are 50-100 years ahead of what is in the white now. What we have is more and better than anyone elses. When the global financialk reset happens, conventional military stuff will be too expensive and out dated. Bring out the black projects that are laready here and funded and you have the technology and power to control the world; militarillay. When Israel attacked 20 targets in Syria, even with troops on the ground, getting and out unscathed, what was Iran’s, Syria’s and Russia’s respponse? Nothing! Why? Was somehting used that they had no response for? Was there a message sent? We shall see.
Worldwide athiest zionism will not destroy Christian Russia this time.It is the last bastion of Christian europe. Two world wars that killed at least 60 million Christians, can’t be blamed on just on Germany. The world needs to look elsewhere. Russia will fight to the end and they will win.
This guys sometimes, publishing wrong info
Russia’s power is only to bluff western country like US but the truth is they can’t win a war with US military fire power.
Ivor Large I was just waiting for a infantile post from you and I got it. Thanks and I can have a beer now
Ivor Large Basically, no argument (for USA hegemony); but, for better or worse, the USA is (currently) a big player on the globe. The big ‘power brokers’ could (and maybe should) ‘cooperate’; but, until they do, a multiplicity of such will actively ‘push & shove’ against the other to hold things in balance (and in their percieved self interest) . Meanwhile, the USA gives countries a bloody nose or worse and China, a nice boa constrictor like hug. Look on a globe; Russia sits on a teeter totter between the two.
Vicente de la Fuente If you believe in The Grand Geometrician, then can you really murder 6m Jews, 70m Chinese or 4m Ukrainians…. NO
Anthony Martin Can I ask WHY should YOUR potus be global. Come on mate ? It’s about sodding time you Yanks stopped giving a she-ite about the world, and about time you lot stopped dragging us into every conflict.
Let’s stop trying to assume Iraqis or afghanistanis can build a land like Germany. Let’s work out who we can like and trust, and then make them part of our UN security system… and let the rest of the world go to ……
KS Chin Chinese have small weapons
Keith Horsey Actually sport, it is all about foolish 1st world communists. Sure K Marx had a point, but since then Communism has always been about the small minority overthrowing the system for … the small minority. G Orwell summed it up v well in 1984.
The idealogy failed big time in the 1980’s and small time with the nationalist variety (1945).
So I wont tell you unrestrainted capitalism is great, but I will tell you that half my family that SUFFERED under Communism in M Europe from 1945-90 would string you up for saying anything nice about Communism.
Please come over and enjoy some Slavic hospitality !
Dan King Quote from Ivor Large ‘what use is China without Wanking’…. make any more sense than Putin ?
Ivor Large OK, Siberia is a huge and diverse area (1/3 is above the Arctic Circle). Resource extraction is at the forefront; oil & gas, minerals, timber, lines of communication (N.E passage & railroad & pipelines e.g.). Granted that a strong middle class (agraian based in the past) makes for a strong society, neither Russia’s or the USA’s current model is exemplary; but US global strategy under Trump is incoherent.
Ivor Large I’m sure they have enough.
Richard Truong Erections…. yes and I bet you wish you had erections in China, esp large ones like in the West.
FredBarb Russ Have you ever been to Russland, I have. And folks there are doing it tough, much tougher than the USA.
And how many nuc subs do the Septics have ?
ie he wanted more money.
The Yanks are not scared of the smaller Chinese weapons.
Alan Wang Small wang ? Do you realise that chinese adies are 10x more likely to marry a foreigner (usually white) than the men (who usually marry another small Asian).
Numbers don’t lie.
Alan Wang What was that about respecting women ? I think you have a problem, must be seeing all those you chinese ladies who prefer larger westerners !