July 09, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- It was pleasing to see Donald Trump and
Vladimir Putin greet each other cordially at the
G20 summit. After their breakthrough first
meeting, one hopes the two leaders have a
personal foundation for future cooperation.
At a
later press conference in Hamburg, where the G20
summit was held, Russian President Vladimir
Putin
said he
believed there was a chance for restoring the
badly frayed US-Russia relations. He praised
Trump for being thoughtful and rational. “The TV
Trump is quite different from the real life
one,” quipped Putin.
Meanwhile, the White House issued a statement
hailing the two-hour discussion (four
times longer than originally scheduled)
between the two leaders as a good start
to working together on major world problems.
“No problems were solved. Nobody expected any
problems to be solved in that meeting. But it
was a beginning of a dialogue on some tough
problem sets that we’ll begin now to work
on together,”
said HR
McMaster, Trump’s top national security adviser.
Trump
deserves credit for the way he conducted
himself. He met Putin on equal terms and
with respect. “It’s an honor to meet you,” said
the American president as he extended a
handshake.
The
much-anticipated encounter comes nearly seven
months after Trump was inaugurated in the White
House. Over that period, large sections of the
US media have run an unrelenting campaign
accusing Trump of being a Russian stooge and
alleging that Putin ordered an interference
operation in last year’s US election to benefit
Trump.
Apart from innuendo
and anonymous US intelligence claims, recycled
endlessly by dutiful news organizations, there
is no evidence of either Trump-Russia collusion
or Putin-sanctioned
cyber hacking.
Trump has dismissed the claims as “fake news”,
while Moscow has consistently rejected the
allegations as baseless Russophobia.
Against this toxic background of anti-Russian
propaganda, President Trump met Putin at the
weekend. The two men were due to
talk face-to-face
for 30 minutes. As it turned out, their
discussions went on for two hours. They
reportedly exchanged views on pressing matters
of
Syria, Ukraine
and North Korea among other things. Trump
brought up the issue of alleged Russian meddling
in the US elections, and Putin responded
in detail to assure his American counterpart it
was a fabricated brouhaha in which Russia had
nothing to do with it.
Only days before the big meeting, US media
editorialists and pundits were warning Trump
to confront Putin in an aggressive manner. The
Washington Post, one of the leading anti-Russia
voices,
exhorted Trump
to rap Putin on “US election meddling” as if the
claim was a proven fact. It also urged the
president to give notice to Putin that Russia
had to accede to regime change in Syria. It was
a get-tough order.
To his
credit, Trump did not allow the Russophobia
in the US media to influence his manner
with Putin. He was cordial, respectful and open
to listening to the Russian viewpoint on a range
of issues. So much so that it appears both
leaders have agreed to work together going
forward.
The
question now is: what next? Trump and Putin have
evidently got off to a good start despite the
inordinate delay and toxic background. But what
does Trump’s willingness to engage positively
with Moscow actually mean in practice?
The US
Deep State comprising the military-intelligence
nexus and their political, media machine
in Washington does not want to normalize
relations with Russia. Russian independence as a
powerful foreign state under President Putin is
a problem that rankles US global ambitions.
That’s why the Deep State wanted anti-Russia
hawk Hillary Clinton to win the election.
Trump’s victory upset their calculations.
Under immense pressure, Trump has at times
appeared to buckle to the US political
establishment with regard to projecting
hostility towards Russia, as seen in the
prosecution of the covert
war in Syria
and renewed sanctions on Moscow.
The day before he met Putin in Germany, Trump
was in
Poland where he
delivered a barnstorming speech in Warsaw
in which he accused Russia of “destabilizing
countries”, among other topics. The American
president also inferred that Russia was
undermining “Western civilization”. It was
provocative speech bordering on hackneyed
Russophobia. It did not bode well for his
imminent meeting with Putin. A clash seemed
to be coming, just as the US media had been
cajoling.
However,
the meeting the next day with Putin was
surprisingly congenial. And the substance
of discussions indicates a genuine desire
from both sides to cooperate.
It is
good that both presidents have struck up a
rapport and personal understanding.
Nevertheless, it is important to not bank too
much on that.
Immediately following the constructive meeting
between the leaders, the US media started
cranking up the Russophobia again. The US media
are vents for Deep State hostility towards Trump
and his agenda for normalizing relations
with Moscow.
The New York Times
reported
another breathless
story
about Trump’s election campaign having contact
with “Kremlin-connected” people. CNN ran
opinion pieces
on how the president had fallen into a trap laid
by Putin.
It is
hard to stomach this outlandish confabulation
that passes for journalism. And it is astounding
that a friendly meeting between leaders
of nuclear powers should not be received as a
good development.
But it
shows that Trump his up against very powerful
deep forces within the US establishment who do
not want a normalization with Russia. The US
Deep State depends on confrontation, war and
endless militarism for its existence. It also
wants a world populated by vassals over which US
corporations have suzerainty. An independent
Russia or China or any other foreign power
cannot be tolerated because that upends American
ambitions for unipolar hegemony.
Trump’s
encounter with Putin was commendable because he
did not succumb to toxic Russophobia and adopt a
stupid, mindless tough-guy posture. Instead,
Trump reached out to Putin in a genuine way,
as two human beings should do.
The US
Deep State is not about humanity or
understanding. It is about maintaining perceived
dominance over other humans, where anyone seen
to be an obstacle is disposed of in the most
ruthless way.
President John F Kennedy was assassinated
in broad daylight by the US Deep State because
he dared to seek a normalization and peaceful
coexistence with Moscow. The Deep State does not
want normalization or peace with Russia or
anyone else for that matter because there are
too many lucrative vested interests
in maintaining the war machine that is American
capitalism.
This is
not to predict a violent demise for Trump. The
Deep State has other methods, such as the
orchestration of media and other dirty tricks.
Trump’s
friendly overtures to Russia are at least a
promising sign. But given the power structure
of the US, and its incorrigible belligerence, it
is doubtful that Trump will be allowed to go
beyond promises. If he attempts to, we can
expect the dark forces to step up.
What needs
to change is the US power structure through a
democratic revolt. Until that happens, any
president in the White House is simply a hostage
to the dark forces of the Deep State.
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