Ooooh, sounds scary, doesn't it?
Hint: think about what the deep red countries have in common.
Well, just seems to me that the US did a bit more than just arms sales to Poland...
Yeah, they sent in McDonalds...
Look, I know there's a narrative for all this, and it's meant to inform you a certain way. However, it's VERY important that you step far, far, far away from the conversation and just look at the world as it actually is.
America's military isn't, and hasn't, been this inescapable worldwide-influential superpower for probably 20-30 years. They're a for-hire kneebreaker. Nobody's fought the kind of war the American (or Russian) military was built to fight in decades. When they have, the American military was about as negotiable as a steamroller. But, then, that's not the
war anymore. The war in Iraq with an actual military resistance was over in a matter of weeks, at most. The actual war in Iraq, fought against ever-shifting factions of guerrillas, took over a decade. America, in fact all countries, are not prepared to deal with that kind of war. They're still trying to figure out how to fight it.
However, that doesn't stop American arms companies from selling munitions. And what you need to understand, rather urgently, is that war makes the most money during the periods on the brink, so times when those last for very long periods are very good for arms manufacturers. How's this for a statistic. The last time official reliable records were available, Russia was the second largest arms exporter with total exports of 4 billion dollars. The United States was first... with 50 billion. That's right, everything you've ever heard about Russia selling weapons, it's small potatoes compared to the money US companies have invested into that.
And, lest we forget, the US arms companies actually employ companies from around the world and in multiple states, meaning that everyone has hands in the pie. It's why you don't see much in the realm of weapons sales regulations here. They employ people in all 50 states and in countries from Israel to Germany.
So the phrase, "more than arm Poland", is a misnomer. They will sell weapons to anyone that wants them as long as they can drum up fear of an appreciable threat. Poland's more than armed already, and Putin probably just sealed them a ton of business in Eastern Europe. This is after ISIS showed up, which, alone, in 2008, more than TRIPLED arms sales out of the United States.
Putin's playing the same game, of course, but he doesn't understand the stakes or contestants. That's why everyone's talking about the United States here when Obama has, probably shrewdly, decided to let Putin take the heat and follow the EU's bouncing ball. We all remember that his political situation was starting to look shaky for the first time in decades and he needs a boogeyman as much as any conservative politician. But he's fighting from an old playbook. He took over a piece of ground that's doing little but sucking up money and given his "enemies" all the PR they need. He's made his oil supply seem unreliable, his intentions seem imperialistic, and his economy vulnerable to international sanctions.
His army, of course, isn't going to stand up to the combined forces of NATO, but then again NATO isn't interested in
stopping him completely. They need a boogeyman, too, and a lot of the old boogeymen in the Middle East aren't painting themselves in such broad strokes. If we, as people, suddenly hit the brakes and decide to start looking at our domestic situations rather than fearing foreign powers, we have a tendency to tell them to do very difficult things or we vote them out of office. It's always expedient, if you aren't interested in improving your country, to make sure everyone's afraid of what's outside of it.
So look back at your images. Ever wonder who makes them? Who informs you as to what they mean? Who even tells you that these are the affairs of state for the United States and Russia even though we'd probably rather someone fix our broken infrastructure and social lattice? A very few, but very influential people have, for the better part of human history, led us all around by the nose.
Don't buy the hype. There's heavy metal in Iran, Starbucks in Russia, and we celebrate Cinco de Mayo in the US. The only thing stopping a true cultural revolution in our lifetimes is that global power is based entirely on fear, and unfortunately fear is easily marketable.