There
Will Be No Russophobia Reset
By Pepe
Escobar
April
28, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- In the end, there was hardly a reset;
rather a sort of tentative pause on Cold War
2.0. Interminable days of sound and fury were
trudging along when President Trump finally
decided NATO is "no longer obsolete"; still, he
wants to "get along" with Russia.
Just ahead
of meeting US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson
in Moscow, President Vladimir Putin
had stressed
on Russian
TV that trust (between Russia and the US) is "at
a workable level, especially in the military
dimension, but it hasn't improved. On the
contrary, it has degraded." Emphasis on a
pedestrian "workable," but most of all
"degraded" as in the National Security Council
releasing a report essentially
accusing Moscow
of spreading fake news.
At the apex of the Russia-gate hysteria, even
before the extremely the controversial
chemical incident
in Syria and the subsequent
Tomahawk show
arguably a cinematographic show-off a
Trump-conducted reset on Russia was already
D.O.A., tomahawked by the Pentagon, Capitol Hill
and media-misguided public opinion.
Yet
only armchair Dr. Strangeloves would argue it's
in the US national interest to risk a direct hot
war against Russia and Iran in Syria. Russia
has all but won the war in Syria on its own
terms; preventing the emergence of an Emirate
of Takfiristan.
The notion
that Tillerson would be able to issue an
ultimatum to Russian Foreign Minister Sergey
Lavrov you're either with us or with Damascus
and Tehran is laughable. Moscow simply is not
going to yield its hard-earned sphere
of influence in Southwest Asia to the Trump
administration or the US deep state. What Moscow
really wanted to know is who's making Russia
policy in Washington. Now they've got their
answer.
And
then, there's the Big Picture. The Iran-Russia
strategic partnership is one of the three key
nodes, along with China, in the big story of the
young 21st century; Eurasia integration,
with Russia and Iran closing the energy equation
and China as the investment locomotive.
That
leads us to the real heart of the matter: the
War Party's fear of Eurasia integration, which
inevitably manifests itself as acute Russophobia.
Russophobia is not monolithic or monochord
though. There's room for some informed
dissidence and even civilized inflections.
Exhibit A
is Henry Kissinger, who as a Lifetime Trustee
recently spoke at the annual meeting of the
Trilateral Commission
in Washington.
The Trilateral Commission, created by the
late David Rockefeller
in 1974, had its members meticulously selected
by Dr. Zbigniew "Grand Chessboard" Brzezinski
whose whole career has been a slight variation
on the overarching theme that the US should
always prevent the emergence of a "peer
competitor" in Eurasia or, worse still,
as today, a Eurasian alliance.
Kissinger is the only geopolitical practitioner
that manages to get President Trump's undivided
attention. He had been, so far, the top
facilitator of a dialogue and possible reset
between Washington and Moscow. I have
argued this is
part of his remixed balance of power, Divide and
Rule strategy which consists in prying away
Russia from China with the ultimate aim
of derailing Eurasia integration.
Kissinger
felt compelled to tell his supposedly
well-informed audience that Putin is not a
Hitler replica, does not harbor imperial
desires, and to describe him as a global
super-evil is an "error of perspective and
substance."
So
Kissinger favors dialogue even as he insists
Moscow cannot defeat Washington militarily. His
conditions: Ukraine must remain independent,
without entering NATO; Crimea is negotiable. The
key problem is Syria: Kissinger is adamant
Russia cannot be allowed to become a major
player in the Middle East (yet with Moscow
backing up Damascus militarily and conducting
the Astana peace negotiations, it already is).
Implicit in all that is the difficulty
of negotiating an overall "package" for Russia.
Now compare Kissinger with Lavrov who, while
quoting Dr. K,
recently issued a diagnostic that would make him
cringe: "The formation of a polycentric
international order is an objective process. It
is in our common interest to make it more stable
and predictable." Once again, it's all
about Eurasia integration.
Putin was
already outlining it,
in detail,
five years ago, even before the Chinese fully
fleshed out the One Belt, One Road (OBOR)
concept in 2013. OBOR can certainly be
interpreted as an even more ambitious variation
of Putin's idea: "Russia is an inalienable and
organic part of Greater Europe and European
civilization
That's why Russia proposes moving
towards the creation of a common economic space
from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean, a
community referred to by Russian experts as 'the
Union of Europe' which will strengthen Russia's
potential in its economic pivot toward the 'new
Asia.'"
The West or, to be more precise, NATO vetoed
Russia. And that, in a flash, precipitated the
Russia-China strategic partnership and its
myriad subsequent declinations. It's this
symbiosis that led the recent report by the
US-China Economic and Security Review Commission
to admit China
and Russia are experiencing what is arguably
their "highest period of bilateral [military]
co-operation."
The War
Party never sleeps
Exhibit B, on a par with Kissinger stressing
that Putin is no Hitler, reveals the
theoretically preeminent professional journal
of American diplomacy compelled to
publish a quite remarkable essay
by Robert English from the University
of Southern California, and a Ph.D. in politics
at Princeton.
Under
careful examination,
the inevitable conclusion is that Prof. English
did something very simple, but unheard of: with
"careful scholarship," he challenged "the
prevailing groupthink" and "thrashed the
positions" of virtually the whole US foreign
policy establishment addicted to Russophobia.
The
Russia-China strategic partnership uniting the
Pentagon's avowed top two threats to America
does not come with a formal treaty signed
with pomp and circumstance. There's no way
to know the deeper terms Beijing and Moscow have
agreed upon behind those innumerable Xi-Putin
meetings.
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It's
quite possible, as diplomats have let it slip,
off the record, there may have been a secret
message delivered to NATO to the effect that if
one of the strategic members is seriously
harassed be it in Ukraine or in the South
China Sea NATO will have to deal with both. As
for the Tomahawk show, it may have been a
one-off; the Pentagon did give Moscow a heads
up and Tillerson, in Moscow, guaranteed the
Trump administration wants to keep all
communication channels open.
The War Party though
never sleeps.
Notoriously disgraced neocons, re-energized
by Trump's Tomahawk-with-chocolates show, are
salivating
over the "opportunity" of an Iraq Shock and Awe
remix on Syria.
The
War Party's cause cιlθbre is still a war
on Iran, and that now conflates with the
neoliberalcon's Russophobia deployed via the
currently "disappeared" but certainly not
extinct Russia-gate. Yet Russia-gate's real dark
story, for all the hysterics, is actually
about the Orwellian surveillance powers of the
US deep state, as
stressed
by former CIA analyst Ray McGovern and
whistleblower Bill Binney.
Whatever the practical outcome, in the long run,
of the turbulent, two-hour, trilateral
Putin-Lavrov-Tillerson meeting, ultimately
Russophobia and its sidekick, Iranophobia
won't vanish from the US-NATO geopolitical
spectrum. Especially now that Trump may have
finally shown his real face, a
"housebroken dog to neocon
dogma."
The
masks, at least, have fallen and these
relentless intimations of Cold War 2.0 should be
seen for what they are: the War Party's primal
fear of Eurasia integration.
This article was first published by
Sputnik
-
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.