What is Henry
Kissinger Up To?
By Paul Craig
Roberts
December 28,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
The English language Russian news agency,
Sputnik, reports that former US Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger is advising US president-elect Donald Trump
how to “bring the United States and Russia closer
together to offset China’s military buildup.”
https://sputniknews.com/politics/201612271049024500-kissinger-trump-russia/
If we take this
report at face value, it tells us that Kissinger, an old
cold warrior, is working to use Trump’s commitment to
better relations with Russia in order to separate Russia
from its strategic alliance with China.
China’s
military buildup is a response to US provocations
against China and US claims to the South China Sea as an
area of US national interests. China does not intend to
attack the US and certainly not Russia.
Kissinger, who
was my colleague at the Center for Strategic and
International studies for a dozen years, is aware of the
pro-American elites inside Russia, and he is at work
creating for them a “China threat” that they can use in
their effort to lead Russia into the arms of the West.
If this effort is successful, Russia’s sovereignty will
be eroded exactly as has the sovereignty of every other
country allied with the US.
At President
Putin’s last press conference (http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/46100.htm
), journalist Marat Sagadatov asked if Russia wasn’t
already subject to forms of foreign semi-domination:
“Our economy, industry, ministries and agencies often
follow the rules laid down by international
organizations and are managed by consulting companies.
Even our defense enterprises have foreign consulting
firms auditing them.” The journalist asked, “if it is
not time to do some import substitution in this area
too?”
Every Russian
needs to understand that being part of the West means
living by Washington’s rules. The only country in the
Western Alliance that has an independent foreign and
economic policy is the US.
All of us need
to understand that although Trump has been elected
president, the neoconservatives remain dominant in US
foreign policy, and their commitment to the hegemony of
the US as the uni-power remains as strong as ever. The
neoconservative ideology has been institutionalized in
parts of the CIA, State Department and Pentagon. The
neoconservatives retain their influence in media, think
tanks, university faculties, foundations, and in the
Council on Foreign Relations.
We also need to
understand that Trump revels in the role of tough guy
and will say things that can be misinterpreted as my
friend, Finian Cunningham, whose columns I read, usually
with appreciation, might have done (http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/46103.htm
).
I do not know
that Trump will prevail over the vast neoconservative
conspiracy. However, it seems clear enough that he is
serious about reducing the tensions with Russia that
have been building since President Clinton violated the
George H. W. Bush administration’s promise that NATO
would not expand one inch to the East. Unless Trump were
serious, there is no reason for him to announce Exxon
CEO Rex Tillerson as his choice for Secretary of State.
In 2013 Mr. Tillerson was awarded Russia’s Order of
Friendship.
As Professor
Michel Chossudovsky has pointed out, a global
corporation such as Exxon has interests different from
those of the US military/security complex. The
military/security complex needs a powerful threat, such
as the former “Soviet threat” which has been transformed
into the “Russian threat,” in order to justify its hold
on an annual budget of approximately one trillion
dollars. In contrast, Exxon wants to be part of the
Russian energy business. Therefore, as Secretary of
State, Tillerson is motivated to achieve good relations
between the US and Russia, whereas for the
military/security complex good relations undermine the
orchestrated fear on which the military/security budget
rests.
Clearly, the
military/security complex and the neoconservatives see
Trump and Tillerson as threats, which is why the
neoconservatives and the armaments tycoons so strongly
opposed Trump and why CIA Director John Brennan made
wild and unsupported accusations of Russian interference
in the US presidential election.
The lines are
drawn. The next test will be whether Trump can obtain
Senate confirmation of his choice of Tillerson as
Secretary of State.
The myth is
widespread that President Reagan won the cold war by
breaking the Soviet Union financially with an arms race.
As one who was involved in Reagan’s effort to end the
cold war, I find myself yet again correcting the record.
Reagan never
spoke of winning the cold war. He spoke of ending it.
Other officials in his government have said the same
thing, and Pat Buchanan can verify it.
Reagan wanted
to end the Cold War, not win it. He spoke of those
“godawful” nuclear weapons. He thought the Soviet
economy was in too much difficulty to compete in an arms
race. He thought that if he could first cure the
stagflation that afflicted the US economy, he could
force the Soviets to the negotiating table by going
through the motion of launching an arms race. “Star
wars” was mainly hype. (Whether or nor the Soviets
believed the arms race threat, the American leftwing
clearly did and has never got over it.)
Reagan had no
intention of dominating the Soviet Union or collapsing
it. Unlike Clinton, George W. Bush, and Obama, he was
not controlled by neoconservatives. Reagan fired and
prosecuted the neoconservatives in his administration
when they operated behind his back and broke the law.
The Soviet
Union did not collapse because of Reagan’s determination
to end the Cold War. The Soviet collapse was the work of
hardline communists, who believed that Gorbachev was
loosening the Communist Party’s hold so quickly that
Gorbachev was a threat to the existence of the Soviet
Union and placed him under house arrest. It was the
hardline communist coup against Gorbachev that led to
the rise of Yeltsin. No one expected the collapse of the
Soviet Union.
The US
military/security complex did not want Reagan to end the
Cold War, as the Cold War was the foundation of profit
and power for the complex. The CIA told Reagan that if
he renewed the arms race, the Soviets would win, because
the Soviets controlled investment and could allocate a
larger share of the economy to the military than Reagan
could.
Reagan did not
believe the CIA’s claim that the Soviet Union could
prevail in an arms race. He formed a secret committee
and gave the committee the power to investigate the
CIA’s claim that the US would lose an arms race with the
Soviet Union. The committee concluded that the CIA was
protecting its prerogatives. I know this because I was a
member of the committee.
American
capitalism and the social safety net would function much
better without the drain on the budget of the
military/security complex. It is more correct to say
that the military/security complex wants a major threat,
not an actual arms race. Stateless Muslim terrorists are
not a sufficient threat for such a massive US military,
and the trouble with an actual arms race as opposed to a
threat is that the US armaments corporations would have
to produce weapons that work instead of cost overruns
that boost profits.
The latest US
missile ship has twice broken down and had to be towed
into port. The F-35 has cost endless money, has a
variety of problems (
http://www.stopthef35.com/pentagon-f-35-wont-have-a-chance-in-real-combat/
) and is already outclassed. The Russian missiles
are hypersonic. The Russian tanks are superior. The
explosive power of the Russian Satan II ICBM is
terrifying. The morale of the Russian forces is high.
They have not been exhausted from 15 years of fighting
without much success pointless wars against women and
children.
Washington,
given the corrupt nature of the US military/security
complex, can arms race all it wants without being a
danger to Russia or China, much less to the strategic
alliance between the two powers.
The
neoconservatives are discredited, but they are still a
powerful influence on US foreign policy. Until Trump
relegates them to the ideological backwaters, Russia and
China had best hold on to their strategic alliance.
Anyone attempting to break this alliance is a threat to
both Russia and China, and to America and to life on
earth.
Dr. Paul Craig
Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury
for Economic Policy and associate editor of the Wall
Street Journal. He was columnist for Business Week,
Scripps Howard News Service, and Creators Syndicate. He
has had many university appointments. His internet
columns have attracted a worldwide following. Roberts'
latest books are
The Failure of
Laissez Faire Capitalism and Economic Dissolution of the
West,
How America Was
Lost,
and
The
Neoconservative Threat to World Order.
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The views
expressed in this article are the author's own and do
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editorial policy. |