A New Cold War?

What is often called the first Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union started shortly after the end of World War II. Sometimes this is called the second Cold War since shortly after the end of War War I and the start of the Russian Revolution several countries including the United States under President Woodrow Wilson sent troops into Russia to fight against the Bolsheviks in the Russian Civil War. Diplomatic recognition of the new Soviet Union that came out of that civil war was not granted by the United States until President Roosevelt recognized the Soviet Union in 1933, thus ending that first cold war. But since most forget or never knew about that American intervention, we will refer to the cold war that started after World War II as the first cold war.

Truman Doctrine

The beginning of this cold war is widely assumed to have started with the promulgation of the “Truman Doctrine” by President Harry Truman in 1947. Nineteen Forty Seven was a big year for the birth of a new America. Later in that same year the National Security Act was passed, which among other things created that infamous three letter agency the Central Intelligence Agency, known widely as the CIA. The CIA was an outgrowth of the wartime OSS (Office of Strategic Services) and German ideas that were brought into this country by Operation Paperclip and especially Reinhard Gehlen, (https://warfarehistorynetwork.com/article/german-spymaster-reinhard-gehlen/) who was the head of German spy organizations under several leaders.

Birth of CIA

The reason that 1947 was such a banner year was indicated by the Saturn-Pluto conjunction that took place that summer. As you can judge by the nature of these planets and historical association, this combination is not good news. There have been only two such conjunctions since the one of 1947. The one in the early Eighties indicates the start of the”New Cold War” with fighting in several central American countries; the results of those wars we are now seeing at the southern border of the United States. The next Saturn-Pluto conjunction was in January of 2020. I initially thought the fact that President Trump had ordered the assassination of Iranian military leader Qusem Soleimani would lead to a large scale war between the United States and Iran but something else of great import happened instead.

Saturn-Pluto Conjunction of 1947

This Cold War is shown by the Long Sextile of Neptune and Pluto. The two planets conjoined in the 1890s, thus suggesting the momentous changes that were about to begin and grow more prevalent in the new Twentieth Century. After that conjunction it would take half a century before the opening sextile of those two planets occurred.

First Cold War

If we look at this graphical ephemeris we see that there is a sixth harmonic conjunction between the two outer planets — the long sextile between Neptune and Pluto. It goes from the late Forties (Number 1) to the early Nineties (Number 2). I saw several years ago that this was an indicator of the Cold War. This time period is between the Truman Doctrine and the fall of the Soviet Union. But Pluto reached its perihelion — closest to the Sun — at about the turn of the century and so there will be another long sextile in the Twenty-First Century. When I saw that many years ago I figured this could not be a return to the Cold War since that had long gone. How naive I was! There is another long sextile — but not as long — from 2021 to 2036. So maybe this will indicate another Cold War, or perhaps a Hot War which the West seems to be gearing up for.

Neptune and Pluto have an interesting pattern. Pluto has a very elliptic orbit so that sometimes it is inside the orbit of Neptune. The astronomer (and astrologer) Johannes Kepler created the laws of planetary motion that are the basis of the ephemerides that we use in astrology today. His second law states that planets sweep out equal arcs in equal time, which implies that when a planet is farther from the Sun (which is one of the two centers of the ellipse that is the planetary orbit) it moves slower than when it is closer to the Sun. Thus Pluto takes a lot longer to go through the sign of Gemini — 30 year — than the sign of Sagittarius — 11 years. As result of this speedup/slowdown Neptune and Pluto can hold the same aspect for many years.

Second Cold War?

This second long sextile occurs from 2021 (Number 1) until 2036 (Number 2) with the most intense period between 2024 (Number 3) and 2029 (Number 4).

For anyone familiar with the uses of propaganda it appears that this country is trying to build up to a war with Russia. The anger and hate directed towards Russia dwarfs what was seen during the First Cold War from 1947 to 1992. During that one we would at least talk to the Soviet Union as did Eisenhower (though he was shanghaied by a U2 flight over the Soviet Union right before the talks, but that at least it gave its name to a rock group whose leader at a recent show in Las Vegas celebrated Navalny, the Russian dissident I mentioned previously), Nixon, and Reagan, who almost abolished nuclear weapons in consultations with the leader of the Soviet Union. But that was so Twentieth Century.

After the attack on the World Trade Center in New York City President Putin was the first to offer condolences to the United States and allowed the US to use Russian airspace for an attack on Afghanistan.

Putin Catches Fish; Bush Applauds

I recently saw a photograph taken in Summer of 2007 of a fishing trip taken by both Presidents Bush and President Putin at Kennebunkport, Maine. Putin is the only one who caught anything and he threw it back. The younger Bush is applauding in the background. Bush and Putin were even at the same dance once in Russia in 2008: https://x.com/MarioNawfal/status/1794537840639881245. But it is hard to imagine anything like that happening now, such as for example Biden and Putin going on a bicycle trip or even eating ice cream together.

One wonders what will end this second Cold War. Will Russia collapse like the Soviet Union did? Will the United States collapse instead, thus ending a conflict between those two superpowers. Or perhaps there will be a hot war that will end the planet and thus also this second Cold War. Stay tuned.

The Cold War

The Cold War between the United States and its allies  against the Soviet Union and its allies started right after World War II ended — we will deal with the exact start in a later post — and  supposedly ended  with the fall of the Soviet Union on Christmas Day 1991.  Some authorities contend that the Cold War started with the rise to power of the Communist Party in Russia at the end of World War I.  That  was indeed an early version of the Cold War,  which involved the United States, Britain, France, Italy, and Japan sending troops to fight against the Communist government in a Civil War that occurred with the fall of the Czar in Russia.  And near the beginning of the Second World War several leaders, such as Harry Truman, maintained that we should support Germany if it looked like the Soviets would win, and support the Soviet Union if it looked like Germany   would win, in a hope that both countries would destroy each  other.  Nevertheless, the Soviet Union was allied with the United States during World War II and so the Cold War did not start in all its glory until that war ended

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Cold War 1950

The operative aspect during the Cold War was what is called the Long Sextile between Neptune and Pluto.  Pluto is an oddity among the planets since its orbit is very eccentric so that at some times it travels  much faster than at other times, and once every 250 years it goes inside the orbit of Neptune so that it is no longer the outermost planet.  That happens appropriately when, since Pluto is considered to be the ruler of the sign Scorpio, the planet is in the sign Scorpio.  This happened between January 1979 and February 1999, with Pluto closest to the sun (perihelion) half way between those two dates.  As the result of this, the sextile between the two planets lasted a very long time, and it will return in another decade, but that is an important topic for another time.  As a result, this is called the Long Sextile.

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Cold War 1980

The first two charts illustrate a typical sextile between the two planets , one from 1950 near the beginning of the Cold War,and one for 1980, thirty years later when the Cold War had warmed up again. In both charts notice the blue line representing a sextile between the planets  Neptune and Pluto.  But the real  proof is in the graphical ephemeris shown below. This graphical ephemeris covers a fifty year period, between 1944 and 1994, and shows in the sixth harmonic just two planets, Neptune and Pluto.  We know that in a sixth harmonic chart, planets that are exactly sextile show as conjunctions, or lines that are together in the graphical ephemeris.  From the graph we can see that the two planet first came close together in 1946 or 1947, stay close together until they finally separate in 1991 or 1992, mirroring the extent of the cold war that lasted all those years. We also  notice that the lines get very close together in he early Fifties, just as the Cold War was getting intense with the successful Communist victory in China, the Korean War, the first successful atomic bomb explosion by the Soviets, and in the United States McCarthyism.  The other time the planets are very close together is in the early Eighties with President Ronald Reagan,  when defense spending greatly increased, when he talked  about the military plan called “Star Wars” and helped the fights in El Salvador and Nicaragua.

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The Cold War 1945-1991

Also notice that the two lines, representing Neptune — blue– and Pluto — red in the late Sixties, early Seventies are further apart.  This is  when President Richard Nixon was practicing the policy of détente with the Soviet Union.  One important treaty negotiated during this period was called SALT I for Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty.  This was in the works between late 1969 through 1972.  On May 26, 1972 an Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty was signed between Richard Nixon and Leonid Brezhnev.  Also in this period was the famous “Nixon Goes to China” moment when Richard Nixon when to “Red” China, something that was unheard of before then, and the subsequent recognition of China by the United States and then the admission of mainland China to the United Nations, something that had been blocked (mostly by the United States) since 1949.  In fact, it was because the Soviet Union was not in the United Nations Security Council in 1950 to protest the exclusion of China from that body that allowed the United States to have the United Nations approved the start of the Korean War.

As we’ve seen previously, a midpoint involving the three outer planets represents a watershed moment.  For the midpoint that indicates the start of the Cold War, this is certainly true.  It was a bifurcation point in the flow of time, where the future was radically different that it would have been without the Cold War.  The Cold War has affected the whole world and the way it behaves, in ways unimaginable and not really seen at the time it started.  But by now the “official” Cold War has been over for almost a quarter century.  We are living in a post Cold War world, but the effects of the Cold War has changed the way we response to most everything.

America has always had enemies, someone it could dominate and rail against, someone that the people at home would draw together against.  For much of the early  years of the country the enemy was Great Britain, the country it was a colony of for a long  time, and finally rebelled against.  The US then had another war against that country a quarter century later.  But by the time of the Spanish-American War, the enemy was that by then decrepit empire Spain.  This served as an enemy until the Huns in World War One intervened.  But at the end of that war there was the Russian Revolution  and they became the official enemy, a status that has endured even though the official Cold War has supposedly ended.  One historian (Gordon Wood, The Idea of America) has an interesting theory as to why the Russians were so hated  after their Revolution.  For over a century after the American Revolution, America is where  anyone considering a more democratic country would look.  It was almost as if the definition of revolution was illustrated with a map of America.  But after the Russian Revolution, this  was no longer the case.   After that act,  when people though of revolution, they thought of Russia.  We  were no longer the top dog in the Revolution-definition business.  Russia had stolen America’s thunder, and America was not about to allow that to happen.

After the Soviet Union ceased to exist, America searched for another enemy to take its place.  The first choice  was the menace of drugs, come to steal out precisions bodily fluids.   That audition did not go over too well, and fortunately 9/11 allowed America to bring back a bogeyman that Ronald Reagan declared war on 20 years earlier, but this time it seemed more real and was brought  home to Americans on their television screens,  the window to reality. This new threat was terrorism, and so a  War on Terrorism was declared.  Some people pointed out the difficulty in declaring war on a noun, and that terrorism was a tactic, and some  even pointed out that America was the largest purveyor of terrorism, but none of those  arguments held much sway with the American people.  In fact, the argument became are you for the country or for the terrorist, just like in previous times the question  was are you for us or the Communist.  It was a black and white world.

It won’t be for several hundred years, when we are able to look back at the Cold War as a historical period and  not as a entity which has just recently passed, and maybe not really, that we can see this period is one of insanity.  It changed drastically where money was spent, so that trillions were sent to defense companies, making their owners very wealthy, which reduced the amount of money  available for most of the people.  As President Eisenhower said “Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed.”  These  days that certainly sounds like Communist propaganda, and the person who said is not fit to be allowed in society, but Eisenhower was a Republican President  and a war hero of the Second World War.  That one quote shows how much things have changed in the last sixty years.

We are now in the post Cold War world, but having the Cold War as such a prominent feature of the world for so long — 45 years — has changed the way people think.  Our first response to any problem is to send in the weapons, if not “boots on the ground” then at the very least a few bombs, missiles, or drones. The  world has developed so that the killing of strangers because they happen to be in the wrong place at the wrong time does not seem worthy of comment, and the interception of all personal messages seems perfectly normal.  In fact, supporters will often give praise, or at least find an excuse, when their leader does any of that.