Has WW3 already started?

Ian Beckett MSc
3 min readMar 1, 2022
vladimir putin © politico

The greatest trick the Devil ever pulled was convincing the world he didn’t exist” is a memorable line from the 1995 movie The Usual Suspects.

I was surprised at the rapid and coordinated response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine when Putin’s $600Bn “war chest” was frozen in coordinated sanctions by USA, EU and even Switzerland. Germany, normally a conservative observer changed more in 5 days than 20 years to engage in indirect offensive military intervention. Poland, Bulgaria, Slovakia are sending 70 planes to support the Ukrainian armed forces.

The world response is far faster than the response to the Coronavirus pandemic.

Reading the interview with Fiona Hill in the current edition of Politico “Yes, He Would’: Fiona Hill on Putin and Nukes” perhaps explains the speed of response.

Reynolds: The more we talk, the more we’re using World War II analogies. There are people who are saying we’re on the brink of a World War III.

Hill: We’re already in it. We have been for some time. We keep thinking of World War I, World War II as these huge great big set pieces, but World War II was a consequence of World War I. And we had an interwar period between them. And in a way, we had that again after the Cold War. Many of the things that we’re talking about here have their roots in the carving up of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the Russian Empire at the end of World War I. At the end of World War II, we had another reconfiguration and some of the issues that we have been dealing with recently go back to that immediate post-war period. We’ve had war in Syria, which is in part the consequence of the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, same with Iraq and Kuwait.

All of the conflicts that we’re seeing have roots in those earlier conflicts. We are already in a hot war over Ukraine, which started in 2014. People shouldn’t delude themselves into thinking that we’re just on the brink of something. We’ve been well and truly in it for quite a long period of time.

But this is also a full-spectrum information war, and what happens in a Russian “all-of-society” war, you soften up the enemy. You get the Tucker Carlsons and Donald Trumps doing your job for you. The fact that Putin managed to persuade Trump that Ukraine belongs to Russia, and that Trump would be willing to give up Ukraine without any kind of fight, that’s a major success for Putin’s information war. I mean he has got swathes of the Republican Party — and not just them, some on the left, as well as on the right — masses of the U.S. public saying, “Good on you, Vladimir Putin,” or blaming NATO, or blaming the U.S. for this outcome. This is exactly what a Russian information war and psychological operation is geared towards. He’s been carefully seeding this terrain as well. We’ve been at war, for a very long time. I’ve been saying this for years.

Reynolds: So just as the world didn’t see Hitler coming, we failed to see Putin coming?

Hill: We shouldn’t have. He’s been around for 22 years now, and he has been coming to this point since 2008. I don’t think that he initially set off to do all of this, by the way, but the attitudes towards Ukraine and the feelings that all Ukraine belongs to Russia, the feelings of loss, they’ve all been there and building up.

What Russia is doing is asserting that “might makes right.” Of course, yes, we’ve also made terrible mistakes. But no one ever has the right to completely destroy another country — Putin’s opened up a door in Europe that we thought we’d closed after World War II.”

Hopefully we learn from the past and our failed strategies of appeasement of autocratic leaders — remember the myth that Mussolini made the trains run on time — he didn’t.

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Ian Beckett MSc

Ian is a digital transformation expert who has saved companies over $250m by integrating technologies and diverse global teams effectively— he is a CEO and poet