How
Netanyahu Pulls Trump’s Strings
It turns out that Hillary Clinton was partly
correct: President Trump is a “puppet,” but his
puppet master isn’t Russian President Putin but
Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, reports Robert
Parry.
By Robert Parry
In the final
presidential debate of 2016, Hillary Clinton
famously called Donald Trump the “puppet” of Russian
President Vladimir Putin. But what’s increasingly
clear is that Trump has a more typical puppet master
for a U.S. politician – Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu.
Since Sept.
18, when the two men met in New York around the
United Nations General Assembly, Netanyahu has been
pulling Trump’s strings on almost every foreign
policy issue. Arguably, the puppet/puppeteer
relationship began much earlier, but I’ve been told
that Trump bridled early on at Netanyahu’s control
and even showed a few signs of rebellion.
For
instance,
Trump initially resisted Netanyahu’s demand
for a deeper U.S. commitment in Syria by ordering
the shutdown of the CIA operation supporting
anti-government rebels, along with the Trump
administration’s statement that U.S. policy no
longer sought “regime change” in Damascus.
Immediately after that announcement, Netanyahu had
some success in getting Trump to reverse direction
and fire 59 Tomahawk missiles at a Syrian air base
on April 6. The attack followed what one
intelligence source told me was
a staged chemical weapons incident
by Al Qaeda operatives in the rebel-controlled town
of Khan Sheikhoun in Idlib province, possibly using
sarin delivered via drone from a Saudi/Israeli
special operations base in Jordan. Yet, although
apparently duped by the subterfuge into the missile
strike, Trump still balked at a complete reversal of
his Syrian policy.
Then,
in May, Trump picked Saudi Arabia and Israel as
his first overseas
trip as president – essentially following the advice
of his son-in-law Jared Kushner – but I’m told he
came away feeling somewhat humiliated by the
over-the-top treatment that involved him getting
pulled into a ceremonial sword dance in Saudi Arabia
and facing condescension from Netanyahu.
So, over
the summer, Trump listened to advice about a
possible major overhaul of U.S. foreign policy that
would have checked Israeli/Saudi regional ambitions,
opened diplomatic doors to Iran, and addressed the
Korean crisis by brokering negotiations between the
North and the South over some form of loose
confederation.
There was
even the possibility of a Nixon-goes-to-China moment
with tough-guy Trump meeting with Iranian President
Hassan Rouhani and the two countries restoring
diplomatic ties, a process that could have given
U.S. companies a better chance to compete in the
Iranian market.
Those
proposed moves had the advantage of reducing
international tensions, saving the U.S. government
money on future military adventures, and freeing
U.S. corporations from the tangle of economic
sanctions – exactly the “America First” strategy
that Trump had promised his working-class base.
However, instead Netanyahu succeeded in pulling
Trump’s strings during their conversations on Sept.
18 in New York, although exactly how is still a
mystery to some people close to these developments.
One source said the Kushner family real-estate
company has exposure to substantial Israeli
financing that could be yanked, although Jared
Kushner’s
financial disclosure form
only lists a $5 million unsecured line of credit,
held jointly with his father, from the Israel
Discount Bank.
Trump
also has
major pro-Netanyahu donors
to his political war chest and his legal defense
fund who are strong advocates for war with Iran,
including casino tycoon Sheldon Adelson, who has
plowed $35 million into the pro-Trump Super PAC
Future 45 and has publicly
called for dropping a nuclear bomb on Iran
as a negotiating tactic. So, Netanyahu had a number
of potential strings to pull.
Going on Rants
Whatever the precise reasons, on Sept. 19,
Trump turned his maiden speech
to the U.N. General Assembly into a war-like rant,
personally insulting North Korean leader Kim Jong Un
as “Rocket Man,” threatening to “totally destroy”
his nation of 25 million people, and parroting
Netanyahu’s calls for another regime change project
aimed at Iran.
Most
diplomats in the audience sat in stunned silence as
Trump threatened aggressive war from the podium of
an organization created to prevent the scourge of
war. The one notable exception was Netanyahu who
enthusiastically applauded his success in jerking
Trump into the neocon camp.
So, rather
than shift U.S. policy away from confrontation,
Trump jettisoned the diplomatic strategy although it
already had dispatched intermediaries to make
contacts with the Iranians and North Koreans.
Instead, Trump opted for the classic neocon approach
favored by Netanyahu, albeit with Trump dressing up
his neocon surrender in some “America First”
rhetoric.
The
U.N. speech left some of the U.S. intermediaries
scrambling to explain to their contacts in Iran and
North Korea why Trump had repudiated the messages
that they had been carrying. Privately, Trump
explained to one that
he just liked to “zigzag”
and that the intended end point hadn’t change.
Some of
these tensions surfaced in late September when
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson took the
extraordinary step of announcing the
behind-the-scenes contacts with North Korea during a
state visit to China.
“We
are probing, so stay tuned,” Tillerson
said. “We ask,
‘Would you like to talk?’ We have lines of
communications to Pyongyang — we’re not in a dark
situation, a blackout.” Tillerson added, “We have a
couple, three channels open to Pyongyang … We do
talk to them. ,,, Directly. We have our own
channels.”
In reaction
to Tillerson’s efforts to salvage the backchannel
initiatives, Trump showed that his obeisance to
Netanyahu and the neocons outweighed loyalty to
either his Secretary of State or the intermediaries
who had ventured into dicey situations on Trump’s
behalf.
In Twitter
messages, Trump belittled the idea of a dialogue
with North Korea, tweeting: “I told Rex Tillerson,
our wonderful Secretary of State, that he is wasting
his time trying to negotiate with Little Rocket
Man.”
“Save
your energy Rex,” Trump
added, before
slipping in another thinly veiled threat of a
military strike: “we’ll do what has to be done!”
While on
the surface, Trump’s repudiation of Tillerson might
have been viewed as another “zigzag,” it is now
clear that Trump’s “zigzag” explanation was just
another lie. Rather than zigzagging, he is instead
following a straight line marked out by Netanyahu.
Meanwhile, in Syria, Netanyahu seems to have won
more concessions from Trump. The U.S. military
appears to be
helping the remnants of Islamist forces
still fighting the government, according to Russian
officials. Their accusation is that the U.S. is
secretly aiding the Islamist terror groups with
weapons, tactical advice and aerial reconnaissance.
In other
words, Trump appears to be continuing U.S. military
intervention in Syria – just as Netanyahu desires.
Falling in Line
Trump
further showed that he is following Netanyahu’s
marching orders with the extremist speech about Iran
on Friday, essentially repeating all the Israeli
propaganda lines against Iran and burning whatever
bridges remained toward a meaningful diplomatic
approach.
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Trump’s
Iran speech was so
ludicrous it almost defies serious analysis. It
ranks with the reckless rhetoric of President George
W. Bush when he pronounced an “axis of evil,” with
the incongruous linking of Iraq and Iran (two bitter
enemies) and North Korea accompanied by Bush’s bogus
claims about Iraq’s WMD and Iraq’s alleged
collaboration with Al Qaeda.
In Friday’s
speech, which looked like the handiwork of John
Bolton, one of Bush’s neocon advisers who was seen
entering the White House last week, Trump repeated
all the nonsense tying Iran to Al Qaeda, presumably
thinking that the American people still don’t
understand that Al Qaeda is a fanatical Sunni terror
group that targets both the West and Shiites, the
dominant Muslim faith in Iran, as heretics deserving
death.
The
inconvenient truth is that Al Qaeda has long been
connected to Saudi Arabia, which has supported these
fanatics since the 1980s when Saudi citizen Osama
bin Laden was supported in his jihad against Soviet
troops in Afghanistan, who were there trying to
protect a secular regime.
Though officially the Saudi monarchy insists that it
is opposed to Al Qaeda, Saudi intelligence has used
Al Qaeda as essentially an unconventional fighting
force deployed to destabilize and terrorize
adversaries in the region and around the world. [For
details, see Consortiumnews.com’s “The
Need to Hold Saudi Arabia Accountable.”]
As
the Israelis have developed a de facto alliance with
Saudi Arabia in recent years, they also have
expressed
a preference for an Al Qaeda victory in Syria
if necessary to destroy what Michael Oren, former
Ambassador to the U.S. and now a deputy minister
under Netanyahu, has described as the Shiite
“strategic arc” running from Tehran through Damascus
to Beirut.
One of the
frequent Israeli complaints about Iran is that it
has assisted the sovereign government of Syria in
defeating Al Qaeda and its militant allies (as well
as Al Qaeda’s spinoff Islamic State), which should
tell you a lot about where Netanyahu’s loyalties
lie.
A
Compromised Media
Yet, as
dishonest as Trump’s Iran speech was, the U.S.
mainstream media won’t criticize it as harshly as it
deserves because virtually all the important
journalists and talking heads have swallowed
Israel’s anti-Iran propaganda whole. They have
frequently repeated the canard about Iran as “the
world’s chief sponsor of terrorism” when that title
clearly should go to the Saudis and the Qataris if
not others.
The
West’s major news outlets also have ingested all the
sophisticated propaganda against the Assad
government in Syria, particularly the claims about
chemical weapons attacks while ignoring evidence
that Al Qaeda’s operatives and their “civil defense”
collaborators have staged attacks with the goal of
provoking a direct U.S. military intervention. [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “A
New Hole in Syria-Sarin Certainty.”]
In
his Friday speech, Trump also touted one of the
earliest canards about Iranian “terrorism,”
the attack by Lebanese Shiite militants on the U.S.
Marine barracks in Beirut in 1983 killing 241
Americans.
When that
attack happened, I was working at The Associated
Press as an investigative reporter specializing in
national security issues. While the precise Iranian
role was not clear, what should have been obvious
was that the attack was not “terrorism,” which is
classically defined as violence toward civilians to
achieve a political goal.
Not
only were the Marines not civilians but the Reagan
administration had made them belligerents in the
Lebanese war by the decision to order the USS New
Jersey to shell Muslim villages. Reagan’s National
Security Advisor Robert McFarlane, who
often represented Israel’s interests
inside the administration, was the spark plug for
this mission creep, which killed Lebanese civilians
and convinced Shiite militants that the United
States had joined the war against them.
Shiite
militants struck back, sending a suicide truck
bomber through U.S. security positions, demolishing
the high-rise Marine barracks in Beirut. Reagan soon
repositioned the surviving U.S. forces offshore. At
the AP, I unsuccessfully argued against calling the
Beirut attack “terrorism,” a word that other news
organizations also sloppily applied. But even senior
Reagan officials recognized the truth.
“When the
shells started falling on the Shiites, they assumed
the American ‘referee’ had taken sides,” Gen. Colin
Powell wrote in his memoir, My American Journey.
In other words, Powell, who was then military
adviser to Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger,
recognized that the actions of the U.S. military had
altered the status of the Marines in the eyes of the
Shiites.
(Although
this “terrorism” is always blamed on Hezbollah, the
group did not officially come into existence until
1985 as a resistance movement against the Israeli
occupation of Lebanon which did not end until 2000.)
Opposed to Putin
So, Trump
is now on the path to wars with both North Korea and
Iran, neither of which Russian President Putin
favors. Putin, who played a key role in helping
President Obama achieve the Iran-nuclear agreement,
now sides with the Europeans in opposition to
Trump’s decertification.
Putin also
favors a prompt end to the Syrian conflict with the
defeat of Al Qaeda and its allies, and he wants
peaceful negotiations with North Korea over its
desire for security against threatened American
aggression. Trump is on the opposite side of all
these Putin priorities.
In
other words, not only does the Russia-gate hysteria
have core evidentiary problems – both on the issues
of
“hacking” Democratic emails
and claims about
suspected “Russia-linked” entities paying for an
infinitesimal number of ads
on social media (including some about puppies and
another promoting a critical documentary about
Donald Trump’s golf course in Scotland) – but Trump
is behaving in ways that are directly contrary to
Putin’s desires and interests.
If indeed
Clinton were right that Trump was Putin’s “puppet,”
then he would have agreed to negotiations to address
the North Korean crisis; would have accepted
constructive diplomacy toward Iran; and would have
ended all U.S. support for the Syrian militants and
encouraged a quick end to the bloodletting.
Instead,
Trump is moving in opposite directions, lining up
with Netanyahu and the neocons, whom some European
allies refer to as “America’s Israeli agents.”
Although dressing up his capitulation to Netanyahu
in tough-guy phrasing, Trump is doing what most U.S.
politicians do – they grovel before Bibi Netanyahu.
And,
if you have any doubts about that reality, you can
watch how often both Republicans and Democrats jump
to their feet when
Netanyahu addresses a joint session of Congress,
an honor that he has received three times, tying him
with British Prime Minister Winston Churchill.
Those
moments of American humiliation – as almost all 535
members of Congress act like puppets on invisible
strings – represent the actual
subservience of the U.S. government to a foreign
power. And that
power is not Russia.
President
Trump is just the latest American politician to have
his strings yanked by Israeli Prime Minister
Netanyahu.
Investigative reporter Robert Parry broke many of
the Iran-Contra stories for The Associated Press and
Newsweek in the 1980s. You can buy his latest book,
America’s Stolen
Narrative,
either in print
here or as an
e-book (from
Amazon and
barnesandnoble.com
This
article was originally published by
Consortium News
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