Trump’s Betrayal is Complete as
Military-industrial Complex Rises to Power
By
Finian Cunningham
August 22, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- If one moment stands out as the clearest
signal yet of US President Trump turning his
back on supporters, it was his announcement
this week to re-escalate American military
intervention in Afghanistan.
His
signature campaign promise of putting
“America First” and ending the folly of
overseas wars launched by previous
administrations was shredded on prime time
television when he gave orders for thousands
of more US troops to be sent to Afghanistan.
The already 16-year war in that country –
America’s longest – will now go on
indefinitely longer.
The Huffington
Post
headlined:
“Trump’s vague new
Afghanistan strategy continues an endless
war.”
Not
only that, but this president is refusing to
give any public information on force numbers
or timescale. America’s overseas wars are
not just expanding under Trump; they are
going secret and unaccountable.
This surge in militarism is precisely what
candidate Trump said he would not do when he
campaigned for votes among blue-collar
workers in the Rust Belt states, vowing
instead to channel US economic resources to
revive “forgotten” communities at
home. Recall his blustering inauguration
speech on January 20 when he bemoaned the
“American Carnage,” at home and
abroad.
As the Huffington Post
writes: “When
Obama was still in office and overseeing a
massive troop presence in Afghanistan, Trump
repeatedly bashed the operation as a waste
of money and called for a quick withdrawal
from the country.”
How’s that for
a U-turn? This is at a time when support
among Trump’s voter base in the Rust Belt
states has plummeted. There is weakness in
the heartland,
reported
NBC, because workers fear Trump is reneging
on past commitments to revitalize their
livelihoods. Their concern is that this
president is too interested in giving tax
breaks to corporations and kowtowing to the
Pentagon.
Ironically, Donald Trump likes to portray
himself as an “alpha-male” who is
his own boss. It is abundantly clear now
that Trump is a mere manikin who sits in the
White House taking orders from his generals.
When Trump ousted Stephen Bannon, his
staunchest ally in the White House, it was
under the orders of the military figures who
are now dominant in his administration.
Trump’s chief of staff, former Marine
General John Kelly, wanted Bannon out
because of his contrarian views.
When Bannon
gave a surprise
interview
last week contradicting the militarist
policy on North Korea that was the last
straw. Bannon said there was no military
option in solving the North Korea standoff,
which flew in the face of what the Pentagon
has been advising Trump, with “all
options on the table.” Only days later,
he was kicked out.
Bannon has now returned to edit Breitbart
News, the nationalistic website which has in
the past served as a media booster for
Trump. Following the announcement on
Afghanistan, Breitbart News declared:
“Trump reverses course” and blasted his
speech a “flip-flop,” as
reported by
Politico.
Bannon had been a vigorous counsel to Trump
against overseas militarism and in
particular about Afghanistan. He is thought
to have been the primary influence behind
Trump’s economic nationalism of America
First.
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It
is no coincidence that Trump decided to get
rid of Bannon while huddled with military
generals and intelligence chiefs at Camp
David last weekend. Then three days after
his departure from the White House, Trump
delivers his U-turn on re-escalating the
military involvement in South Asia, exactly
as the Pentagon top brass had been urging.
With little or no policy achievements so
far, Trump is emerging as a blowhard who is
all too willing to toe the line to survive –
even if that means stabbing his supposed
allies in the back. This is a president who
has a big mouth and big ego, and not much
else. All the promises to his voter base are
being seen to be cruel hoaxes, perpetrated
by one who is always denouncing others over
hoaxes.
The
rise of the generals in Trump’s
administration, alongside a weak-kneed
figurehead president, should surely be cause
for concern for its sinister constitutional
implications. But disturbingly, the drift
toward a military government in the US
hardly causes a public ruffle; indeed, it is
actually welcomed by prominent news media.
In an
editorial
last weekend condemning “The Failing
Trump Presidency,” the New York Times
seems to be oblivious in its endorsement of
military control over the White House.
It states:
“One measure of the despair
caused by Mr. Trump’s behavior is that we
find ourselves strangely comforted by things
that in any normal presidency would be cause
for concern… Americans accustomed
constitutionally and politically to civilian
leadership now find themselves relying on
three current and former generals — John
Kelly, the new White House chief of staff;
H. R. McMaster, the national security
adviser; and Jim Mattis, the secretary of
defense — to stop Mr. Trump from going
completely off the rails.”
Last week, too, when the five Joint Chiefs
of Staff roundly rebuked Trump over his
ambiguous comments on racial violence, the
US media widely saw that intervention by the
Pentagon as a welcome “disciplining”
of the president.
It’s a sobering reality-check on how the
supposed radical, populist president who
promised to return governing power to the
ordinary citizens is now firmly in the vice
of a corporate-military cabal.
Look at Trump’s cabinet. Apart from the
three generals, Kelly, McMaster and Mattis,
the other key posts are run by an ex-oil
CEO, Rex Tillerson at the State Department,
and former Wall Street executives, Steven
Mnuchin as Treasury Secretary, Gary Cohn as
national economic adviser, and Wilbur Ross
as Commerce Secretary.
This combination of military and industrial
corporatism at the executive level of
government is a definition of a fascist
state. Combine that with a malleable
megalomaniac who is willing to betray his
allies and voter base, and that makes for a
dangerous cabal.
Trump’s readiness to go to war in Venezuela,
North Korea, and Iran and to give license to
the Pentagon to step up its air force
slaughter in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen are all
signals of how far this presidency has
degenerated.
But
it is Trump’s brazen backtracking on
Afghanistan that most transparently shows
his unscrupulous character and just how much
the Pentagon has taken control over this
presidency.
Last November, the American people voted for
a radical change, one that would deliver
economic revival and jobs at home, while
implementing more peaceful foreign
relations.
Today, Americans have got the opposite of
what they were calling for when they elected
President Trump. The implications are
blatant and disconcerting. American
democracy no longer exists, if it ever did.
The will of the people has been subverted by
the will of the military-industrial complex.
Trump is but a pathetic puppet who is taking
orders from the generals and his oligarchic
friends in Wall Street.
The
so-called “exceptional nation” –
the one that never tires of proclaiming its
lofty democratic virtues to the rest of the
world – has degenerated into a
military-corporatist state. Trump’s betrayal
is complete and stands out as one of the
biggest cons in modern political history.