Neocon
Creep
By Karen Kwiatkowski
September
05, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- Those
of us who closely observed, and tried to stop,
the neoconservative takeover of the Presidency,
and the nation’s security and intelligence
leadership between 1999 and 2004, may have
thought it was so well publicized and so
destructive that it couldn’t happen again.
Others, while blaming the Bush and Cheney crowds
for bringing cavalier interventionist
chickenhawking perspectives into the White
House, figured that at least it wouldn’t happen
again with an outsider like Mr. Trump.
Still others, falsely believing that the eight
Obama years were years of neoconservative
silence, may have thought, given Trump’s
non-interventionist America First campaign last
year, that at least neoconservatism wouldn’t be
the main thing they’d need to worry about.
These days, most everybody is wrong when it
comes to politics in the US.
The neoconservatives have already crept into key
parts of the national security state
decision-making process.
As pointed out by The
Guardian recently,
we are seeing pressure from US political
appointees on the intelligence agencies to
produce data to support interventionist
decisions already made. Honest men and women are
again retiring and leaving their positions,
rather than participate in the politicization of
US intelligence.
The layman, perceiving the United States to be a
democratic republic and a force for peace and
goodwill around the world, may wonder why war
decisions would be made before the intelligence
case supporting those decisions had been put
forth. But those less trusting souls, here and
around the world, perceive correctly that the
United States is a military corporate machine,
and those who control its foreign policy not
only get the chance to play war around the
world, but to alter and create markets for goods
and services, markets from which these
individuals directly and indirectly benefit.
Crony capitalism is far too kind a label for
this system; it is very nearly the
fascist-elitist Mafiosi-style kidnapping of the
powerful and dangerous structural organs of a
great empire.
When I mention fascist, many will think I am
speaking of Mr. Trump himself. But he is far
less fascinated by the sweet promises of a
fascist state than have been most modern
presidents, FDR, the Bushes, and Obama included.
Elitist? Surely I am speaking of Mr. Trump again
– but no, he is a striver, and a builder, a man
who takes public pride in his straightforward
and simplistic manner, and is deeply despised by
the US elite for that reason, among others. When
I mention mafias, I don’t mean the New York mob
that all builders and politicians in that city
must deal with, but rather a certain private and
clannish criminality, where threats, blackmail
and deadly force are used, and the limelight is
avoided.
But enough silliness. Let’s talk about who is
doing what and where, in the Trump White House,
eight months into what had been a very promising
presidency – for those who hate the centralized
warfare welfare state circa 2016.
Last fall, I
observed reports of specific neoconservatives
positioning themselves for places throughout the
new Trump administration. Rest assured, these
emplacements were already fixed for the expected
Clinton win, but late in the race, signs of
neoconservative bet-hedging were seen. Woolsey
was one such potential appointee. Then, radio
silence.
After the election, there was a lot of exposure
of Trump’s advisors, and the ever-present focus
on something – anything – about Russia. I was
happy to see General Flynn out regardless of the
reason, but for every sacrificed appointee and
advisor we found out about, it was those waiting
in the wings we should have been screaming
about.
Just like a cheap horror flick, the audience is
advising the next hapless victim to “Look behind
you!” or “Get out now!” to no avail. The script
is written.
It is interesting that National Security Advisor
McMaster is credited for changing the
President’s mind on Afghanistan. Was the
reversal in Trump’s thinking a ploy to gain
time, a nod to the fantasy that this is a
winnable war? Is he now convinced that the
mineral, gas, and a strategic location for
strikes against all other enemies makes
Afghanistan a good occupation? Or was it a deal
with the CIA and the money laundering global
banks to keep the opium supply stable?
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McMaster conducted a devastating
study of politicization of war,
and was passed over for flag officer twice
before finally being promoted above Colonel. He
is rather a remarkable intellect, but he is
perhaps human, fallible. But there’s more.
Throughout the intelligence and strategic
advisory arms of the federal government, key
names are popping up as new appointees, many of
them awaiting new clearances. The inner circle
of Trump advisors includes not just Betsy DeVos
in the education propaganda department, but
DeVos’s brother Erik Prince of Blackwater, Xe
and Academi fame. Now owned by Constellis,
the security services firm is bigger than ever,
and Erik Prince has been advising the president,
although according
to him, not effectively.
The sure to fail “new” policy in Afghanistan is
already being blamed on McMaster and the
generals. Hold that thought.
Richard Perle is reportedly ensconced in the
Pentagon again, and neoconservative advisors
like Paul Wolfowitz, who “might
have had to vote for Hillary”,
and a host of other interventionist chickenhawks
may be found in the American Enterprise
Institute lineup, incidentally including Erik
Prince’s brother-in-law, Dick DeVos as an AEI
Trustee, along with Dick Cheney and others.
Wayne Madsen also wrote about the neoconservative
invasion into the Trump administration back
in November. The only bright side of the story,
as it unfolded, was that someone or some thing
in the administration was pushing back – and
some dangerous advisors like General Flynn were
eliminated.
But the urge to shape and control US foreign and
war policies is strong in neoconservative
circles. The critiques from the AEI stable of
advisors and op-ed writers alone on a Presidency
under constant attack from the domestic left and
a generally neoconservative TV, radio and print
media, can be very effective. The center and
left leaning thinktanks in D.C. all embrace
aggressive interventionism abroad, and advocate
for it.
Meanwhile, the neoconservative war drums beat
steadily, messaging each other and any who care
to listen, like those infamous aspens in
the letters of Scooter Libby.
No one is calling out the cowards for what they
are. War profiteers and globalists, they are
just about back in power, and they have a
long-term strategy that both enriches them and
keeps them out of prison. We are not hearing
enough about them, and in an age where
25 percent of the population doesn’t remember
9/11, a far
smaller percentage remembers how the
neoconservatives deceitfully engineered Iraq and
Libya and Syria.
We might hope that the context of Trump’s
Afghanistan speech contained the makings of a
deal with the warfare establishment, one where
clear parameters of success were outlined, and
the ball will be in Trump’s court when they come
back within months asking for more money, more
troops, more time, and lowered expectations.
But given what we are seeing and what we all
know about how policy is made, the
neoconservative strategy in Washington is
proceeding apace, with a B-team at the ready,
including at
the very top of the political food chain.
It may be that we can begin the official autopsy
of the Trump promise to his America First,
non-interventionist, hopeful beyond hope
supporters – and it is not because Mr. Trump’s
instincts were wrong, but rather because he had
no idea how the swamp operates and what was at
stake for its reptilian inhabitants.
Am I suggesting that Trump will be taken down,
and replaced by a neoconservative compliant
elite government, one that will put the hammer
down both at home via a militaristic
surveillance state, and abroad in expanded war,
leading to an America even the modern pessimists
cannot imagine? I
only know what I read in the papers.
Karen
Kwiatkowski, Ph.D., a retired USAF lieutenant
colonel, farmer and aspiring anarcho-capitalist.
She ran for Congress in Virginia's 6th district
in 2012.
This article was first published by
LewRockwell
-
Copyright ©
2017 Karen
Kwiatkowski