Column: Politics
Region: USA in the
World
The
recent bombing of Syria is another action which rests on the concept of the
“coalition of the civilized”. As many other countries can be brought into this
action as possible, the more justified it is, in the eyes of the US.
The
United States of America claims to be a predominantly Christian country. Many
of its politicians, including its president, who has multiple sexual harassment
claims against his name and a wife who has posed for pornographic pictures,
openly court a self-proclaimed Christian electorate.
But
when Christ was brought to trial Pilate couldn’t even get a seconder for the
proposal to spare His life. It was only His enemies who loudly insisted that
they were the majority and therefore must be right, as the US is doing now.
This indicates that the US knows it no longer supports just causes, and is
hiding behind different variations on the “might is right” principle to try and
quell any argument.
But
this in turn lays bare the one fact no one in the US wants to face up to. It
has always maintained that it won the Cold War, and has thus become the world’s
only superpower, because it was morally superior. Communism was bound to
collapse one day because it was wrong and evil, while democracy and the free
market were good.
Most
of the people on earth at any given time would agree with this assessment of
the qualities of the two systems. Therefore the Western triumph was Manifest Destiny, just like the slaughter of the Native
Americans in the nineteenth century was. But what has happened since?
Most
people who lived under Communism don’t need to be told how bad it was. They
would agree that it only survived for as long as it did through declaring war
on the people in whose name it claimed to be acting. No one could disagree with
the system; no one could get away. Eventually even the rulers themselves,
having long since lost the people, saw the moral problem with this and disappeared into obscurity
if they got the chance
But
contrary to Vladimir Putin’s assertions, the Soviet Union and the Eastern bloc
have not gone away. The US has become the new Soviet Union, and all its allies
are increasingly turning into helpless, only nominally independent satellites
after the Warsaw Pact model.
They
all knew the intelligence about a gas attack in Douma was flawed at best, and most likely a false flag. But as always
they have gone along with the bombing because Big Brother has told them too,
even though their governments could win kudos at home by telling the Americans
to do as they said they would, and stop getting involved in foreign wars.
As
many individuals found, it was very difficult to escape from the Soviet bloc.
The US offered a warm welcome to anyone who made it, if we leave out the Yalta agreement.
But
what happens to the individuals of today who want to leave the US bloc? What
happens to countries who think there might be a better way of doing things than
recreating the Evil Empire under a different flag?
Same
excrement, different era
It
is often said that the Rothschild family controls the world’s banking system.
If this is so, the Rothschilds could base themselves in any country and run
their empire from there, pulling the strings of all governments through its
financial instruments. But the Rothschilds choose to remain in the US, despite
the growing strength of other countries, such as China, which are currently
giving a greater return on investment.
One
reason for this is that the USD has been the world’s reserve currency since
Richard Nixon, who needed friends, took the US off the gold standard in 1973.
Through this mechanism the US can retain its place as the driver of global
trade, and thus retain political influence, even though other countries
outperform it in every sphere you can think of.
However
the USD has come under increasing pressure for this very reason. More and more
countries, including China and Russia, no longer peg their currencies to the
dollar. When a big country, with significant investments in the US and its
partners, does this there is only so much the US can do about it. When a
smaller country does so however Big Brother consistently does one particular
thing about it.
Iran
abandoned its link with the dollar. So did Iraq, who the West had supplied
millions of armaments to bash the Ayatollah. So did Libya, under Gaddafi, the
protégé of Senator Jesse
Helms. So did Syria, under the Assad regime which continues to succeed at
being everything the US says can’t work in the modern world.
These
governments did this to “take back control”, as the promoters of Brexit are
fond of saying. But unlike the UK after Brexit, their countries had somewhere
else to go. They could peg their currencies to others which could challenge the
dollar, controlled by new partners the US couldn’t control.
The
nearest analogy to this would be the communist Afghan government of Nur Muhammad Taraki becoming increasingly independent
of Brezhnev-era Moscow, and turning to the non-aligned movement for support. We
all know how that particular invasion ended. The US condemned that one, but has
entered Iraq, Libya and Syria in recent years for exactly the same reasons,
determined to maintain its levers of influence over supposedly independent
countries, who by definition are entitled to choose their own path, whether or
not others agree or that path is correct.
South
and Central America have long seen oppressive regimes forced upon them by the
US and then propped up by CIA torture trainers and other “diplomats”. But if
that was the only alternative the communism, most would still grin and bear it.
Now
there is supposed to be no communism, only terrorism, but the US is even supporting
terrorists to keep its own allies in line. Even US president Eisenhower,
the committed old soldier who once directly ordered the murder of Patrice Lumumba would have balked at this.
Protected
from all but their friends
Of
course the US cannot attack its closer allies because they are all members of
NATO. According to that organisation’s constitution, if one member is attacked
all the others must defend it. So if the US attacked a NATO member it would be
taking on all the other NATO members, and wouldn’t want to isolate itself in
that way when it still insists it is only doing what any decent, sensible
country would do.
Russia
is now surrounded by missiles pointed at it because most of the former Soviet
satellites rushed to sign defence agreements with the US. These countries were
heartily sick of the Russians, so if that is what the Americans were offering
they were glad to take it. But try and pursue their own paths and they soon
found out what happens to those who try and cross the invisible contemporary
Berlin Wall.
The
first Georgian Zviad Gamsakhurdia, legally elected, was virulently
anti-communist and an avowed admirer of Ronald Reagan. When he finally gained
power in Georgia, with 87% of the vote, he did what he said he would do and
replace Soviet influence with Georgian traditions. But this did not mean
adopting US policies – indeed, his biggest error in the eyes of Washington was
persisting with state sponsored capitalism because it was working in Georgia.
Gamsakhurdia
lasted a few months, but those who had genuine grievances against him and his
works gained nothing from what followed. Ever since, Georgia has had to live in
a virtual reality of “democracy” and “economic liberalism” which no one on the
ground there, whatever their politics, has ever seen.
The
price Georgia has had to pay for the preservation of this fiction, and the
protection offered for doing it which mysteriously vanished during the 2008
war, has been to become the CIA dirty tricks capital of the region. That lesson
has not been lost on most Georgians, but apparently Viktor Yanukovych wasn’t
aware of it when he assumed that if the Americans wanted to help his country
they wouldn’t object to others helping it too.
We
also know what happened to him, and now Ukraine is replacing Georgia as the
regional dirty tricks base, by the merest coincidence. What are the benefits
for those countries? Widespread poverty, and continual instability because
there is no common understanding between governments and the people about what
the country should and should not be. But only the US can resolve these
problems, as the US has gained for itself all the necessary levers for doing
so, and has no interest in allowing any more independent thought and action
amongst even peripheral allies.
No
one is safe
Recently
this journal went offline as a result of hacking activities from outside
Russia. This could have happened at any time, as it publishes material
mainstream Western outlets often ignore because they are too true for comfort.
A
lot of people in high places do not like what these articles say, and as we
have seen from rebuttals issued by John McCain over his arms smuggling links,
the Government of Georgia over its drug testing on unwitting victims and
various other people, the more they pretend they don’t read the articles the
more likely it is that they do.
So
it was interesting that the hack, coincidence or not, occurred just after one
particular article appeared – this one. If the content of this piece is accurate, the US
has plotted to remove the UK from the EU to get its hands on Gibraltar, which
it would use to supply its various existing conflicts and perhaps new ones.
This move also makes a number of existing bases less important, thus giving the
US more levers to keep those countries under control, as they will need
continued US support more than the US needs them when potential rivals see not
so many US protectors around.
Others
will have different interpretations of these events, if they are interested.
But apparently this argument was too much for the sophisticated hackers who
closed this journal down at that particular time. It is very reminiscent of the
Czechoslovak government finally agreeing to broadcast an opposition rally in
1989, and then cutting the broadcast off as soon as a participant said the word “Dubcek” In true communist fashion,
freedom of speech is fine provided you don’t say anything the rulers don’t
like.
Nor
do the concepts of free speech and difference of opinion apply only to the
press in countries not aligned with the US. Around 15 years ago an ethnic
minority community organisation in London called ACP devised a development plan
for a part of Africa its founders were associated with. It had made contacts
with local villagers and political leaders, and worked out how to improve their
livelihoods on a “trade not aid” basis, so went seeking support from other
organisations active in the area.
When
it approached aid organisations sent by Western governments, the local
programme managers invariably said that they knew who was who locally and what
could be done. The organisation was pleased with this response, and asked for
more details. But in each case it was told that it hadn’t understood: the aid
agency bosses were in charge, and only they were allowed to distribute any aid
or comment on why it was necessary.
Whatever
the needs of the people, no one else was allowed to come and help them, and
potentially challenge what others were doing. Is it any wonder that bodies such
as USAID have become notorious for money laundering, political manipulation and
all the other crimes real aid agencies would be trying to protect people from?
We
told you so
When
communism was at its height Czechoslovakia almost prided itself on being the
most repressive of the Eastern Bloc states. One of the regular victims of this
repression was the avant-garde musical group The Plastic People of the
Universe, whose members were harassed at every turn because they were different
rather than dissident, though they were dissident too.
One
of their songs is called 100 Bodu.
It lists 100 things the communists were afraid of, including their own party
members, the young, the old, art and science and both socialism and democracy.
At the end of this long list, the song asks “So why are we afraid of them?”
Trump
revealed in a recent interview that he doesn’t even know which country he is bombing. Nevertheless, his allies
have gone along with it because they fear what will happen to them if they do
not. Is this the world any Western ally, and Americans themselves, ever wanted?
The US will only have itself to blame when its greatest friends suddenly
realise that the US is now so afraid of everyone.
Seth
Ferris, investigative journalist and political scientist, expert on Middle
Eastern affairs, exclusively for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook”.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.