.....
I find the view… that prevails today in large portions of our
governmental and journalistic establishments so extreme, so
subjective, so far removed from what any sober scrutiny of external
reality would reveal, that it is not only ineffective, but dangerous
as a guide to political action.
This
endless series of distortions and oversimplifications; this
systematic dehumanization of the leadership of another… country;
this routine exaggeration of... military capabilities...: this
monotonous misrepresentation of the nature and the attitudes of
another... people...; ...this reckless application of the double
standard to the judgment of…[their] conduct and our own, this
failure to recognize, finally, the commonality of many of their
problems and ours...: and the corresponding tendency to view all
aspects of the relationship in terms of a supposed total and
irreconcilable conflict of concerns and of aims; these, I
believe, are not the marks of the maturity and discrimination one
expects of the diplomacy of a great power...
And
we shall not be able to turn these things around as they should be
turned, on the plane of military and nuclear rivalry, until we learn
to correct these childish distortions... If we insist on demonizing
these… leaders -- on viewing them as total and incorrigible
enemies, consumed only with their fear and hatred of us and dedicated
to nothing other than our destruction -- that, in the end, is the way
we shall assuredly have them, if for no other reason than that our
view of them allows for nothing else, either for them or just us.
The
above, edited-for-clarity quote comes to me courtesy of a thoughtful
friend, E. Martin Schotz, and is taken from George Kennan’s 1982
book, The Nuclear Delusion:
Soviet-American Relations in the Atomic Age.
Kennan is widely recognized as one of the architects of the Cold War.
His post-World War II writing on the supposed Soviet threat spurred the US
policy of containment. Some thirty-five years after he helped spark a
wasteful arms race that threatened to destroy the world, Kennan had
the powerful second thoughts reflected above.
I
purposefully excised the references to the Soviet Union in the Kennan
quote with the hope that others might see how unerringly Kennan’s
words capture US foreign policy today towards our newly contrived
“enemies.” Without much imagination, one could credibly
substitute the names of countries that have been anointed
“incorrigible enemies” of the US in recent years: Cuba,
Yugoslavia, Serbia, Iran, Venezuela, Iraq, Libya, Syria, Russia,
China, and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK).
Unfortunately,
despite George F. Kennan’s never-too-late regrets, the arrogance of
empire remains a deeply embedded disposition of US ruling elites. The
frequent and persistent wars of aggression underscore the
Marxist-Leninist thesis that a reach for dominance over all rivals or
those daring to show independence is an essential, inescapable
feature of mature capitalism.
If
we take seriously Marx, paraphrasing Hegel, asserting that history
repeats “the first time as tragedy, the second time as farce,”
then we must believe that we live in times of frightening absurdity.
The irresponsible demonizing of Milosevic, Saddam, Gaddafi, or
al-Assad has tragically sacrificed well over a million lives to US
and NATO aggression, but the painting of Russia, DPRK, and the
People's Republic of China (PRC) as absolute evil today reaches
previously unimaginable levels of madness and danger.
Russia
Last
week’s indictment of 13 Russian nationals and 3 Russian entities
only underlines the vacuity of the Mueller investigation. Over nine
months of probing, interviewing, and developing evidence has produced
(1) an admission of lying to the FBI by General Flynn, an
indictment based on his efforts on behalf of Israel (and not Russia),
(2) an indictment of Rick Gates, a lobbyist, fundraiser, and
political operative accused of working unregistered for a previous
Ukrainian government, (3) an indictment of a bigger fish, Paul
Manafort, who for four decades represented any and every shady
international character with the wherewithal to pay his fees. He,
too, was accused of failure to register, laundering money, and making
false statements, practices that occupied him for his whole career,
(4) a guilty plea by George Papadopoulos, a bit player with an ego
far larger than his résumé, who habitually met with any contact
that he could impress that he was a “player,” (5) an indictment
of and guilty plea of Richard Pinedo, an internet hustler who stole
identities (any connection to Russia was “unwitting”), and most
recently, (6) the guilty plea of Dutch lawyer Alex van der Zwaan, who
earned a brief imprisonment by lying to the FBI about the date of his
last meeting with Gates, placing it in mid-August instead of
September.
For
a fishing expedition, the taxpayer-funded Mueller excursion has
landed few trophies. Until last week’s indictment, it was hard to
find anything importantly connecting Russia, the Russian government,
or the highest levels of the Trump administration. No doubt the
paucity of connections or evidence of “collusion” spawned the
latest indictments.
But
even assuming that there is evidence forthcoming to back up the
latest Russian indictments (they are, of course, merely formal
charges unless prosecuted), it is more than curious that there is no
direct claim of linkage either to the Russian government or to the
Trump presidency. Instead, we have a charge that a wealthy, well
connected caterer has established an organization dedicated to
injecting information onto social media and, in a few cases, staging
modest political events in the US. This, surely, is a far cry from
the primary mission of the Special Counsel: to establish “any links
and/or coordination between Russian government and individuals
associated with the campaign of President Donald Trump.…”
Judging
by last Friday’s indictments, one might be inclined to view the
machinations of Concord Catering, the Internet Research Agency,
Concord Management and Consulting, and their alleged mastermind,
should the charges be true, as very much akin to the private
operations of the intrusive NGOs funded by billionaires George Soros
or Bill Gates in numerous countries. In all cases, wealthy
individuals use their resources to change the direction of target
countries in ways that conflict with the current leadership.
As
weak as the Mueller investigation has been, it continues to stimulate
a hungry news media bent upon demonizing Russia. And there are plenty
of pundits and opinion-makers ready to accommodate.
One
of the most ridiculous “contributors” to the RussiaGate fiasco is
Harvard Law professor, Laurence Tribe. A liberal icon with academic
and policy gravitas, Tribe claimed,
according to Glenn Greenwald, that Russian President Putin may have
been responsible for the death of an important, conspiracy-related
person in a recent airliner crash in Russia. Tribe never bothered to
verify that said “victim” was on the flight. He wasn’t. But
never mind.
Thanks
to the RussiaGate hysteria, the FBI and CIA now enjoy more
credibility than at any time since the heyday of Joe McCarthy. The
Pew poll reports that, for the first time, Democrats now have more
confidence in these illiberal institutions than do Republicans.
Both
the Washington Post
and NPR
have found their own FBI expert in the person of a three-year veteran
of the agency, Asha Ranappa. Now serving as a lecturer at Yale
University, her articulate, confident voice and intoxicating
earnestness make one forget that a very brief tour as an agent hardly
constitutes expertise on the history and workings of the FBI any more
than my three high school years selling shoes in a department store
make me an expert on the shoe industry. Nevertheless, the attractive
Ranappa is the darling of the networks, even Comedy Central. She’s
not above discussing with an interviewer that she was voted
“America’s hottest female law school dean.”
In
a Washington
Post
op-ed published earlier this month (and in a more recent NPR
interview), Ranappa enthusiastically defends the FBI against the
highly publicized Nunes memo. She rests the argument on a tissue of
weasel phrases-- “would have,” “could include,” “would
probably have,” “suggests that” and so forth-- that amount to a
“just-so” story and not a robust defense of the FBI. She
emphasizes the fact that FISA warrants are difficult for the FBI to
acquire and renew. They are not. Out of 35,529 FISA requests for
electronic surveillance from 1979 to 2013 only 12 have been denied!
Unless one zealously believes that the FBI never oversteps its
bounds, this speaks poorly for the scrutiny of a secret process by a
secret court and Ranappa’s faith in the process.
On
the thin basis of the Nunes memo, Ranappa stops a “could
have” short of accusing Carter
Page-- a target of FBI surveillance-- with being a Russian spy:
“...the memo suggests that the Trump campaign could
have had an active Russian spy
working as a foreign policy adviser.” [my italics] No one but
Ranappa has gone beyond collusion to lodge such a serious charge. In
better times, without new evidence, this would surely be grounds for
libel.
These
are not better times.
Of
course, the trusted FBI, working diligently with Mueller and feeding
gossip to the mainstream press, failed abysmally to find and thwart
the 19-year-old mass murderer in Parkland, Florida, despite multiple
alerts from private citizens and a Facebook threat with the
perpetrator identified by name! It never dawns on the pundits in the
monopoly corporate media that these devastating, catastrophic errors
suggest a more universal incompetence.
This
failure did not deter NPR
from offering the following inflammatory headline: “As
An American Tragedy Unfolds, Russian Agents Sow Discord Online.”
The source for NPR’s sensational story accusing “agents” of
“sowing discord” over the Parkland shootings is a well-financed
website dubbed Hamilton 68.
As Julian Assange points out, H68 is
less a watchdog over Russian propaganda than itself a source of
propaganda. Its leaders and advisors are veteran Cold Warriors and
intimates of the US national security apparatus,
less-than-independent, less-than-objective monitors. Curiously, the
identified ‘Russian agents’ that they monitor are the
state-supported news and entertainment agencies that Russia has
established internationally. They are only “agents” because the
US government has insisted that RT,
Sputnik,
and others now register as such. Supposedly, the same logic would
apply to NPR--
itself a government-supported news and entertainment agency. ‘Agents’
are lurking everywhere!
But
the reigning award for Russia-baiting must go to former Dutch Foreign
Minister Halbe Zijlstra, who has maintained that two years ago he
overheard Vladimir Putin discuss grandiose plans to create a Greater
Russia hacked out of Eastern Europe and the Middle East. When it was
demonstrated that he could not possibly have overheard any such
comments, he backed off and claimed that he had overheard a friend
who had overheard… The ensuing kerfuffle forced his resignation.
Finian
Cunningham reminds us
that former Polish Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski also claimed that
he personally overheard Putin express similar expansionist plans
in 2008. He, too, was forced to retract, labeling his claim as a
“surreal joke” (Sikorski is the spouse of the rabidly
anti-Soviet, anti-Communist Washington
Post
pundit and Cold Warrior, Anne Applebaum).
And
now (2-20-18, Code Red for America),
The New York Times
resident village idiot, Thomas Friedman, weighs in with a host of
hyperbole: Russia presents “the biggest threat to our democracy
today,” “...to undermine the very core of our democracy,”
“...to poison American politics.” In his servile mind, “Our
FBI, CIA, and NSA, working with the special counsel, have done us
amazingly proud.”
Is
it war that Friedman wants? He asks that “we bring together our
intelligence and military experts to mount an effective offense
against Mr. Putin-- the best defense of all.”
Russiaphobia
and Putin-fever continue to reach absurd levels.
China
and the DPRK
The
PRC is also a target for hysterical patriot paranoia. FBI Director
Christopher Wray, addressing the Senate Intelligence Committee,
explained: "One of the things we're trying to do is view the
China threat as not just a whole-of-government threat, but a
whole-of-society threat on their end, and I think it's going to take
a whole-of-society response by us." With this tortured
“whole-of-society” explanation, the Director and his staff see
danger from Chinese students, visitors, scholars, businesspeople,
athletes, and entertainers-- all would-be “collectors.”
Presumably,
US students, scholars, businesspeople, athletes, and entertainers
(the “whole-of-society”) should be vigilant and active against
the Chinese threat. Another step towards a vigilante society.
Predictably,
The Washington Post
picked up on this bizarre forewarning with an op-ed from the
breathless Josh Rogin. Rogin expands the Chinese machinations into a
“massive foreign influence campaign” (China
is Infiltrating US Colleges,
2-19-18). Quoting the deranged Marco Rubio, Rogin sees a nefarious
plot to implant a pro-China bias in innocent, vulnerable students and
faculty in the Chinese university-affiliated Confucius Institutes.
Established as a language proficiency and cultural link to US higher
education, Rogin and his friends see a conspiracy lurking behind this
innocuous facade.
Rogin
offers a curious and contradictory defense of campus free speech:
“Confucius Institutes must… yield full control over curriculum to
their American hosts and pledge not to involve themselves in issues
of academic freedom for American or Chinese students.”
Protecting
“academic freedom” by denying it!
The
Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) is no newcomer to
demonization. It has long been on the US and EU lists of “evil”
actors despite neither owning foreign military bases nor pursuing any
overt aggression. More than any other country, DPRK foreign policy
revolves around the simple demand that they be left alone. The only
official corollary to their isolationism is the goal of Korean
unification.
Nonetheless,
the US and some of its allies have been picking a fight with DPRK for
several decades. As tensions mounted, the DPRK made overtures to the
new Moon government of the Republic of Korea, including several
highly publicized, well-received gestures surrounding the Winter
Olympics.
A
promise of peaceful, rational discourse was met with a feverish
mania in US ruling circles and with their media servants. The
Washington Post called the demure
DPRK visitor to the games, Kim Yo-jong, “the Korean Ivanka Trump,”
a witless comparison that serious people should find embarrassing.
Justin
Peters, writing
in
Slate,
gives the DPRK cheerleaders a proper smart-ass thrashing: “Why did
the cheerleaders make the trip? Because North Korea is an oppressive
totalitarian state that hopes to use every facet of its involvement
in the Pyeongchang Games for propaganda purposes. The objective is to
project strength, confidence, and unanimity, in the process extending
the influence and stability of the Kim regime.” He offers his
explanation for their prowess: “I suppose it is easy to mastermind
mosaics on a large scale if participation is compulsory and missing
your cue carries a hideous punishment, but, still, impressive
stuff...To be clear, the cheerleaders’ enthusiasm is likely
compulsory and the cheerleaders themselves are surely being monitored
ceaselessly by state minders during their stay in Pyeongchang.”
Not
to be outdone, The
Guardian
gave a slightly different spin:
“At the end of each row, older male minders sat still for the
entire game, a reminder that despite appearances, these women were
also prisoners of one of the most brutal regimes in the world.”
(Check out the video
supplied by The
Guardian
and see if you can find the elusive “male minders.”)
But
The Independent
deviates
from this slave/prisoner narrative. The cheerleaders are not
intimidated into their cheerful performances, they are “picked for
having the right ‘ideology.’ They are closely vetted to ensure
that they’ll properly represent North Korea both at home and
abroad, according to local reports, through a process that checks
whether they’re related to Japanese sympathisers or defectors.”
Clearly,
the corporate media do not know what to do with the DPRK
cheerleaders-- The
New York Post
headline
exclaimed: Kim
impersonator a hit with North Korean cheerleaders,
while the infamous Washington
Free Beacon
headline
disagrees: North
Korean Cheerleaders Were Not Impressed by Kim Jong Un Impersonator.
Skye
News
thought the cheerleaders were ”appalled” and Reuters
saw them as “caught off guard.”
********
Like
the media lapdogs who, generations ago, demeaned any spark of
humanity exhibited by Soviet citizens, today’s patriotic
“journalists” stamp out any hint of human sentiment or empathy
towards the “enemies” anointed by the imperialist state.
As
the US empire recognizes its decline, it engages in more and more
desperate means to shore up the sinking credibility of its
institutions. The compliant media, two political parties that can
only agree on manufactured enemies, and even a spineless left, join
in conjuring evil spirits in need of an exorcist. Unfortunately, we
live in a world of destructive, devastating weapons that threaten the
very existence of the planet. As George Kennan’s belated apology
reminds us, the folly of demonizing, fostering manufactured enemies,
fear-mongering, and bear-baiting court disaster. We are well along
that destructive path.
One
can only hope that wiser heads will emerge and call for a retreat
from this course.
Greg
Godels