14.05.2018 Author: F. William Engdahl
Brzezinski’s Ghost Shapes Washington Eurasia
Geopolitics
Column: Politics
Region: USA in the
World
One of
the most outstanding features of a truly standing-out Trump Presidency to date
is how precisely the actual policy developments, when we clear away the
deliberate smoke and mirrors of tweets and scandal, follow a basic strategy of
Washington geopolitics going back to at least 1992. This is the case in the
latest unfortunate and quite illegal unilateral decision to leave the Iran
nuclear agreement. This is also the case in the relentless Cold War-style
demonization campaign against Russia and the deployment of insidious new
sanctions. This is also the case with the looming trade war the Trump
Administration has initiated with the Peoples’ Republic of China.
Contrary
to a widely-held belief that US President Trump acts only out of impulse or is
being unpredictable, I believe that the opposite is the case. Strategic
geopolitical policies of the Trump Administration are a response, not of the
President himself, but rather of the powers that be, the permanent
establishment who actually control what is sometimes called the Deep State. The
geopolitics of that policy determines to a large degree who they allow to be
President.
The
first official formulation of today’s Washington foreign policy came in 1992
when Dick Cheney was Defense Secretary under Bush senior. The Soviet Union had
collapsed and Bush triumphantly declared America as Sole Superpower. Cheney’s
deputy secretary, Paul Wolfowitz, was responsible for developing a Defense
Planning Guidance, 1994-1999. It was blunt, and later described by Senator Ted
Kennedy as imperialist. In part the unedited Wolfowitz Doctrine declared “Our
first objective is to prevent the re-emergence of a new rival, either on the
territory of the former Soviet Union or elsewhere…to prevent any hostile power
from dominating a region whose resources would, under consolidated control, be
sufficient to generate global power.” Under George W. Bush the Wolfowitz
Doctrine re-emerged as the Bush Doctrine after 2002 in the runup to the Iraq
war, declaring unilateralism and use of preventative war as central to US
policy.
Basic
Geopolitics
Going
back to my title, I quote from the 1997 book of the late Presidential advisor,
Zbigniew Brzezinski, The Grand Chessboard: American Primacy and its
Geostrategic Imperatives to make the point of what US foreign and
defense policy under Trump today is. It is nothing less than application of the
Brzezinski geopolitical challenge and the preventive war notion of the
Bush-Wolfowitz doctrine in context of today’s emerging resistance to an
American sole superpower domination.
Brzezinski,
was of course architect of Jimmy Carter’s Afghan war against the Soviet Army
using Mujahideen Islamic terrorists trained by the CIA, Saudi Intelligence and
Pakistan ISI.
In 1997
he wrote that it was “imperative that no Eurasian challenger emerges, capable
of dominating Eurasia and thus of also challenging America.” He further
declared, “Potentially the most dangerous scenario would be an ‘anti-hegemonic’
coalition united not by ideology but by complementary grievances…a grand coalition
of China, Russia, perhaps Iran…Averting this contingency…will require US
geostrategic skill on the western, eastern, and southern perimeters of Eurasia
simultaneously.”
When we
add to this the recent Pentagon National Defense Strategy document that defines
Russia and China as the greatest potential threat to American hegemony, then
combine this with the growing ties between Russia, China and Iran since lifting
of sanctions in 2015, especially in Syria, it becomes clear what Washington is
doing. They are in an all-out effort to break what I call the Eurasian
Challenge to the sole hegemon—Russia, China, Iran.
As
Brzezinski pointed out, for American purposes of continued domination, it
matters not that there are ethnic, religious and other differences between
Russia, China and Iran. US foreign policy since September 2001 has increasingly
forced those three to cooperate, despite those differences, for what they see
as defense of their national sovereignty.
Target
Russia…
Look at
the recent events in light of the Brzezinski Eurasia warning of 1997.
Washington stood behind the UK in the bogus Skripal poisioning affair that was
blamed, with no proof, on Russia. A fake chemical attack outside Damascus then
was used as pretext for the illegal US bombing raid, ignoring all precepts of
the UN Charter and international law. That, in retrospect, was more of a test
of possible Russian reaction. Whether or not US Tomahawk and other missiles hit
or not, the precedent was set for Israel and other US allies to escalate attacks
on Iran in Syria.
Then
come diabolical new crippling sanctions against “Putin’s oligarchs” such as
Deripaski of Rusal, world’s second largest aluminum producer. Washington
doesn’t even try to make up excuses for new sanctions. They state as reason that
the Russian government is involved in “a range of malign activity around the globe.”
The new
sanctions punish any Western banks or investors holding shares in sanctioned
Russian companies even if they were bought before the new sanctions. It is the
US Treasury’s new form of financial war, every bit as deadly as shooting wars,
if not more so. It developed in the wake of 911 and has since been refined to a
devastating weapon of warfare using the fact that under economic globalization,
the world is still dependent on the US dollar for trade and for central bank
currency reserves to an overwhelming degree.
For the
first time, under the latest US sanctions on Russian individual oligarchs and
companies, not only is future access to borrow in western capital markets
blocked. Non-Russian investors who invested billions in select Russian companies
in recent years have been forced to panic liquidate or face secondary sanctions
for holding Russian assets. But who will buy? Already the two major EU
securities clearing companies, Clearstream and Euroclear have been forced to
refuse clearing sanctioned Russian securities. They also face sanctions to hold
the Russian shares. If, say, a Chinese state bank is borrowing from dollar
markets, they are now de facto prohibited from doing business with sanctioned
Russian companies.
Target
China…
At the
same time as Washington escalates pressure on Putin’s Russia over Syria and
Ukraine, they launch the early stage of what will clearly be a devastating
economic war with China using trade as the initial lever. Washington, as I
pointed out in a previous article, is aiming to force China to dismantle its
strategy to bring China’s economy over the next decade into leading status of
hi tech producer. The strategy is called China 2025 and is the heart of the Xi
Jinping strategic agenda and of his Belt Road Initiative or economic Silk Road
project.
The first taste of what Washington plans to target
China’s move to become a high-tech world leader under China 2025 is the
treatment of leading China telecomm maker ZTE and Huawei, major challengers of
Apple. ZTE was sanctioned in April by Washington for allegedly selling
telecommunications equipment to Iran. US suppliers have been banned from
supplying essential components to the China tech group. The company has
temporarily shut operations as it tries to win a reprieve from the US.
Target
Iran…
Now,
over the vehement protests of Germany and France and other EU states, Trump
unilaterally tears up the Iran nuclear agreement. The aim is clearly to
reimpose crippling sanctions again on Iran, disrupt the feeble progress that
was begun since 2015. The fact that the EU refuses to break its treaty
agreement with Iran will be ultimately of little consequence as US sanctions on
Iran also threaten with sanctions EU companies doing business in Iran.
As part
of the latest Trump tearing up of the nuclear agreement with Iran, the USA
gives other countries like China or Japan or EU countries 180 days to end any
purchase deals for Iran oil. European companies like Airbus that have
multi-billion aircraft purchase orders from Iran will be forced to cancel. On 6
August, the purchase of US dollars, trade in gold and certain other metals, as
well as aviation and the car industry will be sanctioned. After 4 November US
sanctions will target Iran’s financial and oil institutions and sanctions
reinstated against individuals previously on the US Treasury sanctions list.
The
clear aim is to use the devastating new weapons of US Treasury pin-point
sanctions to plunge Iran’s fragile economy into crisis. At the same time
reports are that NSC Adviser John Bolton is advocating reinvigorating the
Iranian Mujahedeen Khalq, or MEK terrorist organization to launch a new try at
a Color Revolution. MEK was removed from the US State Department terror
list by Secretary of State Clinton in 2012.
CENTCOM
If we
step back from the specific details of each country and Washington actions
against each, we see that the three Eurasian powers—Russia, China, Iran—are
being systematically targeted and so far with varying degrees of success.
At the
end of February, General Votel, commander of US Central Command or CENTCOM gave
an interview to DoD News. There, in addition to listing Russia and especially
her involvement in Syria and China and both its new Belt Road Initiative and
its military bases in Djibouti and elsewhere, Votel cites the ties of both to
Iran. Votel states that, “both Russia and China are cultivating
multidimensional ties to Iran. The lifting of UN sanctions under the joint
comprehensive plan of action opens the path for Iran to resume membership application to the Shanghai Cooperation Organization.”
Ironically,
the simultaneous opening of a de facto three-front war, even if on the level of
economic warfare at present, creates a strategic imperative for the three
powers to work even more closely. China is the largest buyer of Iranian oil.
Russia provides military equipment and is negotiating far more. Each of the
triad—China, Iran, Russia—for reasons of self-survival –have no better option
than to collaborate as never before, whatever mistrust or differences, in face
of Washington’s geopolitical three-front war.
F.
William Engdahl is strategic risk consultant and lecturer, he holds a
degree in politics from Princeton University and is a best-selling author
on oil and geopolitics, exclusively for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook.”
https://journal-neo.org/2018/05/14/brzezinski-s-ghost-shapes-washington-eurasia-geopolitics/
https://journal-neo.org/2018/05/14/brzezinski-s-ghost-shapes-washington-eurasia-geopolitics/
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