The Trump
Presidency
Or How to Further Enrich “The Masters of the
Universe”
By Noam Chomsky and David Barsamian
[This interview
has been excerpted from
Global Discontents: Conversations on the
Rising Threats to Democracy,
the new book by Noam Chomsky and David
Barsamian to be published this December.]
October 06,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- David
Barsamian: You have spoken about the difference
between Trump’s buffoonery, which gets endlessly
covered by the media, and the actual policies he is
striving to enact, which receive less attention. Do
you think he has any coherent economic, political,
or international policy goals? What has Trump
actually managed to accomplish in his first months
in office?
Noam
Chomsky: There is a diversionary process under way,
perhaps just a natural result of the propensities of
the figure at center stage and those doing the work
behind the curtains.
At
one level, Trump’s antics ensure that attention is
focused on him, and it makes little difference how.
Who even remembers the charge that
millions of illegal immigrants
voted for Clinton, depriving the pathetic little man
of his Grand Victory? Or the accusation that Obama
had
wiretapped Trump Tower?
The claims themselves don’t really matter. It’s
enough that attention is diverted from what is
happening in the background. There, out of the
spotlight, the most savage fringe of the Republican
Party is carefully advancing policies designed to
enrich their true constituency: the Constituency of
private power and wealth, “the masters of mankind,”
to borrow Adam Smith’s phrase.
These
policies will harm the irrelevant general population
and devastate future generations, but that’s of
little concern to the Republicans. They’ve been
trying to push through similarly destructive
legislation for years. Paul Ryan, for example, has
long been advertising his ideal of virtually
eliminating the federal government, apart from
service to the Constituency -- though in the past
he’s wrapped his proposals in spreadsheets so they
would look wonkish to commentators. Now, while
attention is focused on Trump’s latest mad doings,
the Ryan gang and the executive branch are ramming
through legislation and orders that undermine
workers’ rights, cripple consumer protections, and
severely harm rural communities. They seek to
devastate health programs, revoking the taxes that
pay for them in order to further enrich their
Constituency, and to
eviscerate the
Dodd-Frank Act, which imposed some much-needed
constraints on the predatory financial system that
grew during the neoliberal period.
That’s just a sample of how the wrecking ball is
being wielded by the newly empowered Republican
Party. Indeed, it is no longer a political party in
the traditional sense. Conservative political
analysts Thomas Mann and Norman Ornstein have
described it more accurately as a “radical
insurgency,” one
that has abandoned normal parliamentary politics.
Much of
this is being carried out stealthily, in closed
sessions, with as little public notice as possible.
Other Republican policies are more open, such as
pulling out of the Paris climate agreement, thereby
isolating the U.S. as a pariah state that refuses to
participate in international efforts to confront
looming environmental disaster. Even worse, they are
intent on maximizing the use of fossil fuels,
including the most dangerous; dismantling
regulations; and sharply cutting back on research
and development of alternative energy sources, which
will soon be necessary for decent survival.
The reasons
behind the policies are a mix. Some are simply
service to the Constituency. Others are of little
concern to the “masters of mankind” but are designed
to hold on to segments of the voting bloc that the
Republicans have cobbled together, since Republican
policies have shifted so far to the right that their
actual proposals would not attract voters. For
example, terminating support for family planning is
not service to the Constituency. Indeed, that group
may mostly support family planning. But terminating
that support appeals to the evangelical Christian
base -- voters who close their eyes to the fact that
they are effectively advocating more unwanted
pregnancies and, therefore, increasing the frequency
of resort to abortion, under harmful and even lethal
conditions.
Not all of
the damage can be blamed on the con man who is
nominally in charge, on his outlandish appointments,
or on the congressional forces he has unleashed.
Some of the most dangerous developments under Trump
trace back to Obama initiatives -- initiatives
passed, to be sure, under pressure from the
Republican Congress.
The
most dangerous of these has barely been reported. A
very important study in the Bulletin of the
Atomic Scientists, published in March 2017,
reveals that the Obama nuclear weapons modernization
program has
increased “the
overall killing power of existing US ballistic
missile forces by a factor of roughly three -- and
it creates exactly what one would expect to see, if
a nuclear-armed state were planning to have the
capacity to fight and win a nuclear war by disarming
enemies with a surprise first strike.” As the
analysts point out, this new capacity undermines the
strategic stability on which human survival depends.
And the chilling record of near disaster and
reckless behavior of leaders in past years only
shows how fragile our survival is. Now this program
is being carried forward under Trump. These
developments, along with the threat of environmental
disaster, cast a dark shadow over everything else --
and are barely discussed, while attention is claimed
by the performances of the showman at center stage.
Whether
Trump has any idea what he and his henchmen are up
to is not clear. Perhaps he is completely authentic:
an ignorant, thin-skinned megalomaniac whose only
ideology is himself. But what is happening under the
rule of the extremist wing of the Republican
organization is all too plain.
Barsamian: Do you see any encouraging activity on
the Democrats’ side? Or is it time to begin thinking
about a third party?
Chomsky:
There is a lot to think about. The most remarkable
feature of the 2016 election was the Bernie Sanders
campaign, which broke the pattern set by over a
century of U.S. political history. A substantial
body of political science research convincingly
establishes that elections are pretty much bought;
campaign funding alone is a remarkably good
predictor of electability, for Congress as well as
for the presidency. It also predicts the decisions
of elected officials. Correspondingly, a
considerable majority of the electorate -- those
lower on the income scale -- are effectively
disenfranchised, in that their representatives
disregard their preferences. In this light, there is
little surprise in the victory of a billionaire TV
star with substantial media backing: direct backing
from the leading cable channel, Rupert Murdoch’s
Fox, and from highly influential right-wing talk
radio; indirect but lavish backing from the rest of
the major media, which was entranced by Trump’s
antics and the advertising revenue that poured in.
The
Sanders campaign, on the other hand, broke sharply
from the prevailing model. Sanders was barely known.
He had virtually no support from the main funding
sources, was ignored or derided by the media, and
labeled himself with the scare word “socialist.” Yet
he is now the
most popular
political figure in the country by a large margin.
At the very
least, the success of the Sanders campaign shows
that many options can be pursued even within the
stultifying two-party framework, with all of the
institutional barriers to breaking free of it.
During the Obama years, the Democratic Party
disintegrated at the local and state levels. The
party had largely abandoned the working class years
earlier, even more so with Clinton trade and fiscal
policies that undermined U.S. manufacturing and the
fairly stable employment it provided.
There
is no dearth of progressive policy proposals. The
program developed by Robert Pollin in his book
Greening the Global Economy
is one very promising approach. Gar
Alperovitz’s work on
building an authentic democracy
based on worker self-management is another.
Practical implementations of these approaches and
related ideas are taking shape in many different
ways. Popular organizations, some of them outgrowths
of the Sanders campaign, are actively engaged in
taking advantage of the many opportunities that are
available.
At the same
time, the established two-party framework, though
venerable, is by no means graven in stone. It’s no
secret that in recent years, traditional political
institutions have been declining in the industrial
democracies, under the impact of what is called
“populism.” That term is used rather loosely to
refer to the wave of discontent, anger, and contempt
for institutions that has accompanied the neoliberal
assault of the past generation, which led to
stagnation for the majority alongside a spectacular
concentration of wealth in the hands of a few.
Functioning
democracy erodes as a natural effect of the
concentration of economic power, which translates at
once to political power by familiar means, but also
for deeper and more principled reasons. The
doctrinal pretense is that the transfer of
decision-making from the public sector to the
“market” contributes to individual freedom, but the
reality is different. The transfer is from public
institutions, in which voters have some say, insofar
as democracy is functioning, to private tyrannies --
the corporations that dominate the economy -- in
which voters have no say at all. In Europe, there is
an even more direct method of undermining the threat
of democracy: placing crucial decisions in the hands
of the unelected troika -- the International
Monetary Fund, the European Central Bank, and the
European Commission -- which heeds the northern
banks and the creditor community, not the voting
population.
These
policies are dedicated to making sure that society
no longer exists, Margaret Thatcher’s famous
description of the world she perceived -- or, more
accurately, hoped to create: one where there is no
society, only individuals. This was Thatcher’s
unwitting paraphrase of Marx’s bitter condemnation
of repression in France, which left society as a “sack
of potatoes,” an
amorphous mass that cannot function. In the
contemporary case, the tyrant is not an autocratic
ruler -- in the West, at least -- but concentrations
of private power.
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The
collapse of centrist governing institutions has been
evident in elections: in France in mid-2017 and in
the United States a few months earlier, where the
two candidates who mobilized popular forces were
Sanders and Trump -- though Trump wasted no time in
demonstrating the fraudulence of his “populism” by
quickly ensuring that the harshest elements of the
old establishment would be firmly ensconced in power
in the luxuriating “swamp.”
These
processes might lead to a breakdown of the rigid
American system of one-party business rule with two
competing factions, with varying voting blocs over
time. They might provide an opportunity for a
genuine “people’s party” to emerge, a party where
the voting bloc is the actual constituency, and the
guiding values merit respect.
Barsamian: Trump’s first foreign trip was to Saudi
Arabia. What significance do you see in that, and
what does it mean for broader Middle East policies?
And what do you make of Trump’s animus toward Iran?
Chomsky:
Saudi Arabia is the kind of place where Trump feels
right at home: a brutal dictatorship, miserably
repressive (notoriously so for women’s rights, but
in many other areas as well), the leading producer
of oil (now being overtaken by the United States),
and with plenty of money. The trip produced promises
of massive weapons sales -- greatly cheering the
Constituency -- and vague intimations of other Saudi
gifts. One of the consequences was that Trump’s
Saudi friends were given a green light to escalate
their disgraceful atrocities in Yemen and to
discipline Qatar, which has been a shade too
independent of the Saudi masters. Iran is a factor
there. Qatar shares a natural gas field with Iran
and has commercial and cultural relations with it,
frowned upon by the Saudis and their deeply
reactionary associates.
Iran has
long been regarded by U.S. leaders, and by U.S.
media commentary, as extraordinarily dangerous,
perhaps the most dangerous country on the planet.
This goes back to well before Trump. In the
doctrinal system, Iran is a dual menace: it is the
leading supporter of terrorism, and its nuclear
programs pose an existential threat to Israel, if
not the whole world. It is so dangerous that Obama
had to install an advanced air defense system near
the Russian border to protect Europe from Iranian
nuclear weapons -- which don’t exist, and which, in
any case, Iranian leaders would use only if
possessed by a desire to be instantly incinerated in
return.
That’s the
doctrinal system. In the real world, Iranian support
for terrorism translates to support for Hezbollah,
whose major crime is that it is the sole deterrent
to yet another destructive Israeli invasion of
Lebanon, and for Hamas, which won a free election in
the Gaza Strip -- a crime that instantly elicited
harsh sanctions and led the U.S. government to
prepare a military coup. Both organizations, it is
true, can be charged with terrorist acts, though not
anywhere near the amount of terrorism that stems
from Saudi Arabia’s involvement in the formation and
actions of jihadi networks.
As for
Iran’s nuclear weapons programs, U.S. intelligence
has confirmed what anyone can easily figure out for
themselves: if they exist, they are part of Iran’s
deterrent strategy. There is also the unmentionable
fact that any concern about Iranian weapons of mass
destruction (WMDs) could be alleviated by the simple
means of heeding Iran’s call to establish a WMD-free
zone in the Middle East. Such a zone is strongly
supported by the Arab states and most of the rest of
the world and is blocked primarily by the United
States, which wishes to protect Israel’s WMD
capabilities.
Since the
doctrinal system falls apart on inspection, we are
left with the task of finding the true reasons for
U.S. animus toward Iran. Possibilities readily come
to mind. The United States and Israel cannot
tolerate an independent force in a region that they
take to be theirs by right. An Iran with a nuclear
deterrent is unacceptable to rogue states that want
to rampage however they wish throughout the Middle
East. But there is more to it than that. Iran cannot
be forgiven for overthrowing the dictator installed
by Washington in a military coup in 1953, a coup
that destroyed Iran’s parliamentary regime and its
unconscionable belief that Iran might have some
claim on its own natural resources. The world is too
complex for any simple description, but this seems
to me the core of the tale.
It also
wouldn’t hurt to recall that in the past six
decades, scarcely a day has passed when Washington
was not tormenting Iranians. After the 1953 military
coup came U.S. support for a dictator described by
Amnesty International as a leading violator of
fundamental human rights. Immediately after his
overthrow came the U.S.-backed invasion of Iran by
Saddam Hussein, no small matter. Hundreds of
thousands of Iranians were killed, many by chemical
weapons. Reagan’s support for his friend Saddam was
so extreme that when Iraq attacked a U.S. ship, the
USS Stark, killing 37 American sailors, it
received only a light tap on the wrist in response.
Reagan also sought to blame Iran for Saddam’s
horrendous chemical warfare attacks on Iraqi Kurds.
Eventually, the United States intervened directly in
the Iran-Iraq War, leading to Iran’s bitter
capitulation. Afterward, George H. W. Bush invited
Iraqi nuclear engineers to the United States for
advanced training
in nuclear weapons production -- an extraordinary
threat to Iran, quite apart from its other
implications. And, of course, Washington has been
the driving force behind harsh sanctions against
Iran that continue to the present day.
Trump, for
his part, has joined the harshest and most
repressive dictators in shouting imprecations at
Iran. As it happens, Iran held an election during
his Middle East travel extravaganza -- an election
which, however flawed, would be unthinkable in the
land of his Saudi hosts, who also happen to be the
source of the radical Islamism that is poisoning the
region. But U.S. animus against Iran goes far beyond
Trump himself. It includes those regarded as the
“adults” in the Trump administration, like James
“Mad Dog” Mattis, the secretary of defense. And it
stretches a long way into the past.
Barsamian: What are the strategic issues where Korea
is concerned? Can anything be done to defuse the
growing conflict?
Chomsky:
Korea has been a festering problem since the end of
World War II, when the hopes of Koreans for
unification of the peninsula were blocked by the
intervention of the great powers, the United States
bearing primary responsibility.
The North
Korean dictatorship may well win the prize for
brutality and repression, but it is seeking and to
some extent carrying out economic development,
despite the overwhelming burden of a huge military
system. That system includes, of course, a growing
arsenal of nuclear weapons and missiles, which pose
a threat to the region and, in the longer term, to
countries beyond -- but its function is to be a
deterrent, one that the North Korean regime is
unlikely to abandon as long as it remains under
threat of destruction.
Today, we
are instructed that the great challenge faced by the
world is how to compel North Korea to freeze these
nuclear and missile programs. Perhaps we should
resort to more sanctions, cyberwar, intimidation; to
the deployment of the Terminal High Altitude Area
Defense (THAAD) anti-missile system, which China
regards as a serious threat to its own interests;
perhaps even to direct attack on North Korea --
which, it is understood, would elicit retaliation by
massed artillery, devastating Seoul and much of
South Korea even without the use of nuclear weapons.
But
there is another option, one that seems to be
ignored: we could simply accept North Korea’s offer
to do what we are demanding. China and North Korea
have
already proposed
that North Korea freeze its nuclear and missile
programs. The proposal, though, was rejected at once
by Washington, just as it had been two years
earlier, because it includes a quid pro quo: it
calls on the United States to halt its threatening
military exercises on North Korea’s borders,
including simulated nuclear-bombing attacks by
B-52s.
The
Chinese-North Korean proposal is hardly
unreasonable. North Koreans remember well that their
country was literally
flattened by U.S. bombing,
and many may recall how U.S. forces bombed major
dams when there were no other targets left. There
were
gleeful reports in
American military publications about the exciting
spectacle of a huge flood of water wiping out the
rice crops on which “the Asian” depends for
survival. They are very much worth reading, a useful
part of historical memory.
The offer
to freeze North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs
in return for an end to highly provocative actions
on North Korea’s border could be the basis for more
far-reaching negotiations, which could radically
reduce the nuclear threat and perhaps even bring the
North Korea crisis to an end. Contrary to much
inflamed commentary, there are good reasons to think
such negotiations might succeed. Yet even though the
North Korean programs are constantly described as
perhaps the greatest threat we face, the
Chinese-North Korean proposal is unacceptable to
Washington, and is rejected by U.S. commentators
with impressive unanimity. This is another entry in
the shameful and depressing record of near-reflexive
preference for force when peaceful options may well
be available.
The
2017 South Korean elections may offer a ray of hope.
Newly elected President Moon Jae-in seems intent on
reversing the harsh
confrontationist policies of his predecessor. He has
called for exploring diplomatic options and taking
steps toward reconciliation, which is surely an
improvement over the angry fist-waving that might
lead to real disaster.
Barsamian: You have in the past expressed concern
about the European Union. What do you think will
happen as Europe becomes less tied to the U.S. and
the U.K.?
Chomsky: The E.U. has fundamental problems, notably
the single currency with no political union. It also
has many positive features. There are some sensible
ideas aimed at saving what is good and improving
what is harmful. Yanis Varoufakis’s
DiEM25
initiative for a democratic Europe is a promising
approach.
The U.K.
has often been a U.S. surrogate in European
politics. Brexit might encourage Europe to take a
more independent role in world affairs, a course
that might be accelerated by Trump policies that
increasingly isolate us from the world. While he is
shouting loudly and waving an enormous stick, China
could take the lead on global energy policies while
extending its influence to the west and, ultimately,
to Europe, based on the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization and the New Silk Road.
That Europe
might become an independent “third force” has been a
matter of concern to U.S. planners since World War
II. There have long been discussions of something
like a Gaullist conception of Europe from the
Atlantic to the Urals or, in more recent years,
Gorbachev’s vision of a common Europe from Brussels
to Vladivostok.
Whatever
happens, Germany is sure to retain a dominant role
in European affairs. It is rather startling to hear
a conservative German chancellor, Angela Merkel,
lecturing her U.S. counterpart on human rights, and
taking the lead, at least for a time, in confronting
the refugee issue, Europe’s deep moral crisis. On
the other hand, Germany’s insistence on austerity
and paranoia about inflation and its policy of
promoting exports by limiting domestic consumption
have no slight responsibility for Europe’s economic
distress, particularly the dire situation of the
peripheral economies. In the best case, however,
which is not beyond imagination, Germany could
influence Europe to become a generally positive
force in world affairs.
Barsamian: What do you make of the conflict between
the Trump administration and the U.S. intelligence
communities? Do you believe in the “deep state”?
Chomsky: There is a national security bureaucracy
that has persisted since World War II. And national
security analysts, in and out of government, have
been appalled by many of Trump’s wild forays. Their
concerns are shared by the highly credible experts
who set the Doomsday Clock, advanced to
two and a half minutes to midnight
as soon as Trump took office -- the closest it has
been to terminal disaster since 1953, when the U.S.
and USSR exploded thermonuclear weapons. But I see
little sign that it goes beyond that, that there is
any secret “deep state” conspiracy.
Barsamian: To conclude, as we look forward to your
89th birthday, I wonder: Do you have a theory of
longevity?
Chomsky:
Yes, it’s simple, really. If you’re riding a bicycle
and you don’t want to fall off, you have to keep
going -- fast.
Noam Chomsky is the author of numerous bestselling
political works, including Hegemony
or Survival and Failed States. A
laureate professor at the University of Arizona and
professor emeritus of linguistics and philosophy at
MIT, he is widely credited with having
revolutionized modern linguistics. His newest book
(with David Barsamian) is
Global Discontents: Conversations on the Rising
Threats to Democracy
(Metropolitan Books, December 2017) from which this
piece was excerpted. He lives in Tucson, Arizona.
David
Barsamian is the award-winning founder and director
of Alternative Radio, an independent syndicated
radio program. In addition to his 10 books with Noam
Chomsky, his works include books with Tariq Ali,
Howard Zinn, Edward Said, Arundhati Roy, and Richard
Wolff. He lives in Boulder, Colorado.
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Copyright
2017 Noam Chomsky and David Barsamian
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