Trump’s
“Mein Kampf” Tirade at the United Nations
By Bill Van
Auken
September
20, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- The speech delivered Tuesday by Donald Trump to
the opening session of the United Nations General
Assembly in New York was without precedent either
for the UN or the American presidency.
Speaking
before a world body ostensibly created to spare
humanity the “scourge of war” and founded on the
principles elaborated at the Nuremberg trials of
Nazi leaders, the American president openly embraced
a policy of genocide, declaring that he was “ready,
willing and able” to “totally destroy” North Korea
and its 25 million people.
The fact
that nobody in the assembly moved for Trump’s arrest
as a war criminal, or even told the fascistic bully
to sit down and shut up, is a measure of the
bankruptcy of the UN itself.
“The United
States has great strength and patience, but if it is
forced to defend itself or its allies, we will have
no choice but to totally destroy North Korea,” Trump
told the meeting. “Rocket Man [Trump’s imbecilic
nickname for North Korean leader Kim Jong-un] is on
a suicide mission for himself and for his regime.
The United States is ready, willing and able…”
As with his
every public utterance, Trump’s megalomaniacal
remarks began with the supposed revival of America’s
fortunes since his election last November, which has
found expression, he argued, in the Wall Street
stock market bubble and the passage of a $700
billion military budget.
At the core
of Trump’s speech was the promotion of his “America
First” ideology. The US president presented the
promotion of nationalism as the solution to all the
problems of the planet. “The nation-state remains
the best vehicle for elevating the human condition,”
he proclaimed in a speech in which the words
“sovereign” or “sovereignty” were repeated 21 times.
While
declaring his supposed support for the sovereignty
of every nation, Trump made it clear that his
administration is prepared to wage war against any
nation that fails to bow to Washington’s diktat.
In addition
to threatening to incinerate North Korea for testing
ballistic missiles and nuclear weapons, he
threatened to abrogate the 2015 nuclear agreement
with Iran, describing it as an “embarrassment.’’ He
thereby placed the US on the path to war against
Iran, whose government he described as a “corrupt
dictatorship,” a “rogue state” and a “murderous
regime.”
He also
singled out Venezuela, declaring that its internal
situation “is completely unacceptable, and we cannot
stand by and watch.” He added: “The United States
has taken important steps to hold the regime
accountable. We are prepared to take further action
if the government of Venezuela persists on its path
to impose authoritarian rule on the Venezuelan
people.”
Iranian
Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif responded in a
tweet, saying that “Trump’s ignorant hate speech
belongs in medieval times—not the 21st century
UN—unworthy of a reply.”
The foreign
minister of Venezuela, Jorge Arreaza, charged Trump
with seeking “regime change by force,” adding that
he “wants to rule the world when he can’t even rule
his own country.”
Trump made
no attempt to explain the glaring contradiction
between his invocation of universal national
sovereignty and his assertion of US imperialism’s
“right” to bomb, invade or carry out regime change
against any nation it sees fit.
On the eve
of the speech, a senior White House official told
reporters that the American president had spent a
great deal of time pondering the “deeply
philosophical” character of his address.
What
rubbish! The speech’s “philosophy,” such as it is,
is drawn from the ideology of fascism. Indeed, no
world leader has delivered the kind of threat
uttered by Trump against the people of North Korea
since Adolf Hitler took the podium at the Reichstag
in 1939 and threatened the annihilation of Europe’s
Jews.
The kind of
nationalist doctrine put forward by Trump at the UN
distinctly echoes the positions of Hitler and
Mussolini in the 1930s. As Leon Trotsky wrote in his
1934 article “Nationalism and Economic Life”:
“Italian
fascism has proclaimed national ‘sacred egoism’ as
the sole creative factor. After reducing the history
of humanity to national history, German fascism
proceeded to reduce nation to race and race to
blood... The enduring value of the nation,
discovered by Mussolini and Hitler, is now set off
against the false values of the 19th century:
democracy and socialism.”
The
parallels are not accidental. The text of the speech
bears the visible fingerprints of Trump’s fascistic
senior policy advisor and speechwriter Stephen
Miller, who seems to work best with a volume of
Hitler’s Mein Kampf close at hand.
Just as
this promotion of reactionary nationalism in the
1930s was the ideological expression of world
capitalism’s descent into world war, so it is today.
The threats
against North Korea and Iran are bound up with far
wider geostrategic aims of US imperialism, as Trump
indicated in his oblique denunciation of China and
Russia for trading with Pyongyang and his reference
to the South China Sea and Ukraine. Moreover, the
attacks on Iran and threats to tear up the 2015
nuclear accord are aimed not only against the
government in Tehran, but also at Washington’s
erstwhile allies in Western Europe, which are
already seeking new sources of profit based on trade
and investment deals with Iran.
The absence
from the UN’s opening session of Russian President
Vladimir Putin, Chinese President Xi Jinping and
German Chancellor Angela Merkel was significant. No
doubt they had a sense of what was coming and feared
the domestic political consequences of being seen as
giving legitimacy through their presence in the
auditorium to Trump’s diatribe.
French
President Emmanuel Macron, who spoke shortly after
Trump, delivered a right-wing speech promoting the
“war on terrorism,” but was forced to directly
oppose the US position on North Korea, warning
against military escalation and calling for
dialogue. In relation to Iran, he opposed any
abrogation of the nuclear treaty. The French media
compared the split to the tensions that arose during
the Bush administration’s drive to war against Iraq.
The threats
today, however, are far greater. Trump’s speech has
made it unmistakably clear to the world that the
government he heads is comprised of criminals.
Having drawn multiple lines in the sand, threatening
war on virtually every continent, Trump’s own
demagogy leads almost inexorably to escalation and
military action.
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The
speech included a passage warning the world that
the American military is no longer subordinate
to civilian control. “From now on,” Trump
declared, “our security interests will dictate
the length and scope of military operations, not
arbitrary benchmarks and timetables set up by
politicians.”
In other
words, the military will decide, not elected
officials—the fundamental characteristic of a
military dictatorship. That this “principle” is
accepted by the US Congress, which approved the $700
billion Pentagon budget while voting down an
amendment calling on the legislative body to reclaim
its constitutional power to declare war, is a
measure of the putrefaction of American democracy.
The
consolidation of such a government, with the
repulsive figure of Donald Trump at its head, is the
culmination of a quarter-century of economic and
political degeneration, combined with unending wars
and military interventions waged with the aim of
reversing the erosion of American capitalism’s
global hegemony.
Contradicting the vision presented in Trump’s speech
of a Hitlerian springtime for nationalism, UN
Secretary General Antonio Guterres preceded the
American president with an address to the General
Assembly describing “a world in pieces.”
“People are
hurting and angry,” he warned. “They see insecurity
rising, inequality growing, conflict spreading and
climate changing.” He added that “global anxieties
about nuclear weapons are at the highest level since
the end of the Cold War.”
This
undeniable reality found indirect expression in
Trump’s own address, with his attempt to exploit the
crisis in Venezuela—a country where the dominance of
finance capital is today greater than it was three
decades ago—to denounce socialism.
“Wherever
true socialism or communism has been adopted, it has
delivered anguish and devastation and failure,” said
Trump. “Those who preach the tenets of these
discredited ideologies only contribute to the
continued suffering of the people who live under
these cruel systems.”
A
quarter-century after the dissolution of the Soviet
Union and the proclamation of the failure of Marxism
and triumph of capitalism, the threat of socialism
has become a central preoccupation of an American
president delivering a reactionary and militarist
diatribe before the United Nations.
Trump
speaks for a US financial and corporate oligarchy
that feels itself under siege. It fears growing
popular anger. It has been shaken to the core by the
revelation during the 2016 election that a broad
social constituency within the working class and
among the youth is intensely hostile to the profit
system and sympathetic to socialism.
Ultimately,
Trump’s belligerent threats of war and nuclear
annihilation are the projection onto the world stage
of the class policy pursued by the American ruling
class at home, and the very advanced state of
political and social tensions within the United
States itself
This article was first published by
WSWS
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