Unmasked:
Trump Doctrine Vows Carnage For New Axis of Evil
North Korea, Iran, Venezuela are targets in
"compassionate" America's war on the "wicked few."
It's almost as though Washington felt its hegemony
threatened
By Pepe Escobar
September 20,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- This was no “deeply philosophical address”. And
hardly a show of “principled realism” – as spun by
the White House. President Trump at the UN was
“American carnage,” to borrow a phrase previously
deployed by his nativist speechwriter Stephen
Miller.
One should
allow the enormity of what just happened to sink in,
slowly. The president of the United States, facing
the bloated bureaucracy that passes for the
“international community,” threatened to “wipe off
the map” the whole of the Democratic People’s
Republic of Korea (25 million people). And may
however many millions of South Koreans who perish as
collateral damage be damned.
Multiple
attempts have been made to connect Trump’s threats
to the
madman theory cooked
up by “Tricky Dicky” Nixon in cahoots with Henry
Kissinger, according to which the USSR must always
be under the impression the then-US president was
crazy enough to, literally, go nuclear. But the DPRK
will not be much impressed with this madman remix.
That
leaves, on the table, a way more terrifying upgrade
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki (Trump repeatedly invoked
Truman in his speech). Frantic gaming will now be in
effect in
both Moscow and Beijing:
Russia and China have their own stability
/ connectivity strategy under development to contain
Pyongyang.
The Trump
Doctrine has finally been enounced and a new axis of
evil delineated. The winners are North Korea, Iran
and Venezuela. Syria under Assad is a sort of
mini-evil, and so is Cuba. Crucially, Ukraine and
the South China Sea only got a fleeting mention from
Trump, with no blunt accusations against Russia and
China. That may reflect at least some degree of
realpolitik; without “RC” – the Russia-China
strategic partnership at the heart of the BRICS bloc
and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) –
there’s no possible solution to the Korean Peninsula
stand-off.
In
this epic battle of the
“righteous many” against the “wicked few,” with the
US described as a “compassionate nation” that wants
“harmony and friendship, not conflict and strife,”
it’s a bit of a stretch to have Islamic State –
portrayed as being not remotely as “evil” as North
Korea or Iran – get only a few paragraphs.
The art of unraveling a deal
According to the Trump Doctrine, Iran is
“an
economically depleted rogue state whose chief
exports are violence, bloodshed and chaos,” a
“murderous regime” profiting from a nuclear deal
that is “an embarrassment to the United States.”
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad
Zarif tweeted: “Trump’s
ignorant hate speech belongs in medieval times – not
the 21st century UN – unworthy of a reply.” Russian
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov once again stressed
full support for the nuclear deal ahead of a P5+1
ministers’ meeting scheduled for Wednesday, when
Zarif was due to be seated at the same table as US
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson. Under review:
compliance with the deal. Tillerson is the only one
who wants a renegotiation.
Iran’s
President Hassan Rouhani has, in fact, developed an unassailable
argument on the
nuclear negotiations. He says the deal – which the
P5+1 and the IAEA all agree is working – could be
used as a model elsewhere. German chancellor Angela
Merkel concurs. But, Rouhani says, if the US
suddenly decides to unilaterally pull out, how could
the North Koreans possibly be convinced it’s worth
their while to sit down to negotiate anything with
the Americans ?
What the
Trump Doctrine is aiming at is, in fact, a favourite
old neo-con play, reverting back to the dynamics of
the Dick Cheney-driven Washington-Tehran Cold War
years.
This
script runs as follows:
Iran
must be isolated (by the West, only now that won’t
fly with the Europeans); Iran is “destabilizing” the
Middle East (Saudi Arabia, the ideological foundry
of all strands of Salafi-jihadism, gets a free
pass); and Iran, because it’s developing ballistic
that could – allegedly – carry nuclear warheads, is
the new North Korea.
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That lays the groundwork for Trump to decertify
the deal on October 15. Such a dangerous
geopolitical outcome would then pit Washington,
Tel Aviv, Riyadh and Abu Dhabi against Tehran,
Moscow and Beijing, with European capitals
non-aligned. That’s hardly compatible with
a “compassionate nation” which
wants “harmony and friendship, not conflict and
strife.”
Afghanistan comes to South
America
The
Trump Doctrine, as enounced, privileges the absolute
sovereignty of the nation-state. But then there are
those pesky “rogue regimes” which must be, well,
regime-changed. Enter
Venezuela, now on “the brink of total collapse,” and
run by a “dictator”; thus, America “cannot stand by
and watch.”
No standing
by, indeed. On Monday, Trump had dinner in New York
with the presidents of Colombia, Peru and Brazil
(the last indicted by the country’s Attorney General
as the leader of a criminal organization and
enjoying an inverted Kim dynasty rating of 95%
unpopularity). On the menu: regime change in
Venezuela.
Venezuelan “dictator” Maduro happens to be supported
by Moscow and, most crucially, Beijing, which buys
oil and has invested widely in infrastructure in the
country with Brazilian construction giant Odebrecht
crippled by the
Car Wash investigation.
The
stakes in Venezuela are extremely high. In early
November, Brazilian and American forces will be
deployed in a joint military exercise in the Amazon
rainforest, at the Tri-Border between Peru, Brazil
and Colombia. Call it a rehearsal for regime change
in Venezuela. South America could well turn into the
new Afghanistan, a consequence that flows from
Trump’s assertion that
“major
portions of the world are in conflict and some, in
fact, are going to hell.”
For all the
lofty spin about “sovereignty”, the new axis of evil
is all about, once again, regime change.
Russia-China aim to defuse the nuclear stand-off,
then seduce North Korea into sharing in the
interpenetration of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI)
and the Eurasia Economic Union (EAEU), via a new
Trans-Korea Railway and investments in DPRK ports.
The name of the game is Eurasian integration.
Iran is a
key node of BRI. It’s also a future full member of
the SCO, it’s connected – via the North-South
Transport Corridor – with India and Russia, and is a
possible future supplier of natural gas to Europe.
The name of the game, once again, is Eurasian
integration.
Venezuela,
meanwhile, holds the largest unexplored oil reserves
on the planet, and is targeted by Beijing as a sort
of advanced BRI node in South America.
The Trump
Doctrine introduces a new set of problems for
Russia-China. Putin and Xi do dream of reenacting a
balance of power similar to that of the Concert of
Europe, which lasted from 1815 (after Napoleon’s
defeat) until the brink of World War I in 1914.
That’s when Britain, Austria, Russia and Prussia
decided that no European nation should be able to
emulate the hegemony of France under Napoleon. In
sitting as judge and executioner, Trump’s
“compassionate” America certainly seems intent on
echoing such hegemony.
Pepe
Escobar is an independent geopolitical analyst.
This
article was first published by
Asia Times
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