Column: Society
Region: USA in the
World
US
President Donald Trump may have lit the fuse on an international cataclysm that
is irreversible. Operating on supposed evidence by the questionable White
Helmets group inside Syria, the United States and allies operated with
pretentious impunity by attacking this sovereign nation. But this reckless
abandon concurrent American administrations have exhibited did not simply
materialize overnight. Here’s focused look at the underpinnings of hegemony, a
disease we may have already succumbed to.
Another
great war seems imminent at this moment. After eons of illogical wars and
endless killing, our advanced society here at the dawn of the 21st century has
cast logic and reason to the four winds. War with both Russia, Iran, Turkey and
other regional powers in the Middle East is a real danger. But the impetus for
this unbridled aggressiveness did not happen over some flashpoint like Crimea
or the Caucasus. This crise and the one in Syria are symptoms of a systematic
idealistic disease. And the disease spreads from the point of each injection
site as if administered by a clinician. One of these veins of political
propaganda is academia, where the seeds of political wisdom are sewn. The US
backed liberal world order has been infecting the planet via hypodermic
injections of influence, money, and even brainwashing since before World War
II. And today the world’s organs are hot with the infection. If you’ll excuse
the metaphors, they are the only literary tools for sharing how critical the
situation is. And for us to fix our current predicament, it is necessary for
analysts like me to share the deeper implications of these crises, their
causes, and possible solutions.
Why
Hegemony?
The
roots of the world’s bleeding conflagrations wind deep down into the oil giving
sands of the deserts of the Middle East, roots which feed the energy glutton
the great United States became. The unsustainable nature of our so-called
“American Dream” has been obscured from us for decades. Today, America has
refused to elect one contemptable kleptocrat and has instead pinned the hopes of
the world on a narcissist billionaire no one understands. In Europe, a
veritable mafia has seized control of business, media, academia to create
perpetual piracy of public wealth. Bankers in Frankfurt, London, and Luxembourg
hold hostage the people of the continent with unpayable debts. From Portugal to
Greece generations of people now suffer, for the failures of sellout leaders.
And the public is largely unaware of the true perpetrators of these economic
crimes. The long and short of this system is that we have all become indentured
slaves to a system that cannot be prolonged, not without growth. The problem
now is that the growth needed to prop up the American system can only be fueled
by Earth’s remaining resources, which are largely centered in Russia and Iran.
But this is a subject for a future report, should a “future” exist after
tomorrow.
Across
Latin America, in large swaths of Asia, and in the whole of Africa America’s
new brand of imperialism and debt weighs heavily on the people of the planet. Obfuscating
the breadth and depth of the situation, lies the world media network now owned
by key governments and billionaire investors, which are part of the US led
hegemony. It is no secret that the elite bankers and technocrats control every
aspect of western society. Supercapitalism, the US hegemony that was supposed
to ensure the security of Americans forever, it is failing. And because it will
fail very soon, there must be a devastating war to cover the tracks of both the
imbeciles and the diabolical thieves at the head of all our institutions. The
“game” is winding down, America must expand or die. At least, this is the only
strategy the order understands. However, the bad news is that it may be too
late for the world to reverse course. We may be too far gone.
Ebola
of Ideas
Recently,
a colleague in Pakistan who is a researcher ran an assessment for me, more or
less an evaluation of the Russian position of the Syria crisis. Noaman Khan
Marwat is currently a masters student at Quaid-i-Azam University. A highly
intelligent expert in the politics of Pakistan and the philosophies and
theories of the discipline, he’s a perfect example for the reader, of how the
American hegemony has passively influenced the entire world of policy. When I
asked Noaman to study Vladimir Putin’s real role in the forwardness of modern
Russia, his theories smacked of American Cold War propaganda. When I read his
report on Putin and Russia socioeconomic, I was stunned by the matter-of-fact
assessment; one might have as easily been submitted to Donald Trump in a US
State Department study. Here is a piece of Marwat’s conclusions presented to me
for this report. According to his study of the situation in the world:
“Russia
actions can best be theoretically understood on the theory of Offensive Realism
by John Mearsheimer, as Russia is on the offensive side, always keen to
intervene in the world issues to help its allies.”
Of
course, this “take” on the new west-east crisis verifies the hypocrisy of the
American hegemony. The “pot calling the kettle black” has been taken to new
heights since the George W. Bush administration, and since Pakistan
universities are fertile fields for sewing support for the empire. It’s a bit
fascinating that Noaman’s hypothesis on the matter of Putin is only misdirected,
and not incorrect. For Offensive Realism is exactly what the United States has
been practicing since World War II, tho few of us would have made this
assessment a few decades ago. Still, the overall report wreaked inaccuracies
and subjective reason. When I quizzed him later about the “source” of his
intellectual understanding on Putin’s domestic and geopolitical strategies, the
Pakistani political scientist cited the US influenced textbooks, rather than
his coursework and professors. At first, I rationalized his West bias to have
come from his mentors, you see? This was not the case.
Looking
at Noaman’s courses of study, it’s easy to see how intellectuals are influenced
into perpetuating the lie of western democracy. After receiving his report, I
became interested in how such an intelligent and dedicated student could be
swayed in this way. The answer arrived shortly after looking at the School of
Politics and International Relations (SPIR) at Quaid-i-Azam University. Like
most universities in geo-critical nations, SPIR has collaborations with various
think tanks and NGOs closely aligned with the security sector. One
collaboration that bears looking at here is the one this school has with CRDF-Global Washington,
a think tank formerly named the US Civilian Research and Development Foundation
for the Independent States of the Former Soviet Union (CRDF). To understand the
root mission of CRDF, we need only look at its current President and CEO,
Michael A. Dignam, who was President and CEO of PAE, an
Arlington, VA-based services and logistics company joined at the hip with the
US State Department and the Pentagon. The company history back to the 1960s
tells us the mission of the company and the think tank:
“When
the United States entered the conflict in Southeast Asia, the government
selected PAE as one of the primary design firms supporting the construction of
infrastructure in the region. The Vietnam experience established a great part
of the PAE culture – a can-do, make-it-happen attitude and the ability to
provide flexible, rapid and responsive services in challenging environments to
support the US and Allied troops. When the United States entered the conflict
in Southeast Asia, the government selected PAE as one of the primary design
firms supporting the construction of infrastructure in the region. The Vietnam
experience established a great part of the PAE culture – a can-do,
make-it-happen attitude and the ability to provide flexible, rapid and
responsive services in challenging environments to support the US and Allied
troops.”
I’m
not going to veer off into a study of State Department contractors hell-bent on
perpetuating America’s warlike intentions here. But it will help the reader to
know that a top Pakistani grad student is loosely linked to the same company
recently awarded a $59.9M Security and Support Services (SaSS) contract by the
Department of State next door in Afghanistan. Additionally, the PAE Solutions pipeline
work in Pakistan adds further impetus to my arguments here. But, we’ve grown
accustomed to the US and allied corporations linked to the ongoing wars around
the globe. It’s also devastating to consider the infiltration of all world
networks by the western hegemony. PAE Pakistan, for instance, advertises jobs
on Facebook. And Russia is blamed for influencing people via
social media! What’s so devastating here is to learn of the brainwashing going
on at international universities. However, as easy as it may be to condemn a
university and its leadership, this oversimplified means or attribution won’t
do. The metastasizing disease of hegemony begins at the cell level, inside the
nucleus of ideas.
Autoimmune
to Change
Returning
to the curriculum at Quaid-i-Azam University, I find it interesting that the
head of the school my colleague attends, Nazir Hussain seems to be an astute
and moderate academic. Hussain’s recent analysis of Vladimir Putin, “The Role
of Leadership in Foreign Policy: A Case Study of Russia under Vladimir Putin,”
while missing the point of his policies in some regards, is built on poly sci
framework for the scientific inquiry. I will have to ask Noaman Khan Marwat
from which source he gained his perception that Putin was the aggressor,
instead of the United States. It’s interesting to note that his school is
supported by a USAID Merit & Need Based Scholarship. I would be very
interested to know if the US State Department or NGOs contribute textbooks to
the school. The point though is that the professors in charge of nurturing
young minds do not, more often than not, even suspect that they are tools of
propaganda. This has now become clear to me.
So,
these factors do not implicate the leadership of a fine institution, but the
influence money and power have on “ideas” is pointed. Just as George Soros’
Open Society Foundations operates in Eastern Europe and the CIS, other agents
plant the seeds of hegemony in Asia and elsewhere. This cultivation of minds
has been going on for decades now, with God knows how many US imperialism
minions who’ve grown up in the Petrie dish. If you are still with me, then the
horrific diagnosis for humankind has now swum into view. Everything we know,
think, and endeavor to achieve may be a part of the cancer of exceptionalism –
at the cellular level of humanity. This notion brings to mind key questions we
must address.
Has
the universal spread of tainted ideas doomed us all? Maybe it has, and maybe
this explains why me and my colleagues cannot convince more people to simply
“think” about world crises. Maybe they are thinking! Maybe the diseased ideas
and ideals make people immune to the truth? This is where I think we are,
doomed by ideas sutured into our minds by the mad doctors of world domination.
Phil
Butler, is a policy investigator and analyst, a political scientist and expert
on Eastern Europe, he’s an author of the recent bestseller “Putin’s Praetorians” and other books. He writes exclusively
for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook.”
https://journal-neo.org/2018/04/21/doomed-to-the-hegemony-by-an-ebola-of-ideas/
https://journal-neo.org/2018/04/21/doomed-to-the-hegemony-by-an-ebola-of-ideas/
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