Trump
Claims Credit For The Russian/Syrian Defeat Of
ISIS
Trump’s
National Security Speech
By
Paul Craig Roberts
December 20, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- What do we make of
Trump’s
national security speech?
First of all, it is the military/security
complex’s speech, and it is inconsistent with
Trump’s intention of normalizing relations with
Russia.
The
military/security complex, using Trump’s
position as President, has defined Russia and
China as “revisionist powers,” Washington’s
rivals who seek to put their own national
interests ahead of Washington’s unilateralism.
Russia and China are “revisionist powers”
because their assertion of their national
interests limits Washington’s hegemony.
In
other words, Washington does not accept the
validity of other countries’ interests if those
interests are contrary to Washington’s
interests. So, how does Trump expect to work
with Russia and China when he reads a speech
that Russia and China seek to “shape a world
antithetical to our interests and values.”
“Our
values” means, of course, Washington’s
dominance.
Trump
begins by honoring the military, police,
Homeland Security, and the Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff. In other words, “America first”
means domination by Washington over the
citizenry as well as over foreign countries.
Trump
then cloaks himself in the American people who
“voted to make America great again.”
Then
Trump’s speech picks up the Israel Lobby’s line
about a bad deal with Iran and asserts that
previous administrations tolerated ISIS, when in
fact they created it and set in upon Libya and
Syria.
Then he
attacks environmental protection and complains
of illegal aliens, while ignoring the refugees
Washington’s wars imposed on Europe.
In an
era of neoconservative celebration of US world
hegemony, Trump accuses his predecessors of
losing confidence in America. This is
extraordinary. When a country’s entire foreign
policy is based on the assumption that it is the
“exceptional and indispensable country,” how is
this a loss of confidence? It is massive
arrogance and hubris. The problem is not a loss
of confidence by the rulers but an overbearing
hubris.
Then
Trump claims that through him, Americans again
rule their nation.
He says
that now Washington is serving the citizens.
Looking at the tax bill, he must mean that
citizens consist of the One Percent.
He next
associates making America first with more money
for the military.
Then he
blames Iran for terrorism, something that Iran
lives in fear of, but he does not mention Saudi
Arabia’s support for terrorism or that of the US
military/security complex’s which encourages
terrorism as a weapon against Iran and Russia
and as an excuse for its massive budget and
power.
Trump
then claims credit for the Russian/Syrian defeat
of ISIS. It has been proved that ISIS is
supported and financed by Washington. Trump’s
claim is even more ridiculous than the previous
claims of the Obama regime that the US defeated
National Socialist Germany. Russia, which did
defeat Germany, was not invited to the
anniversary celebration.
Trump
next demands that the countries we defend pay
for it. Who are these countries and who do we
defend them from? He can only mean Europe,
Canada, Australia, Israel, and Japan. Is
Washington defending them from Russia, China,
North Korea and Iran or from the terrorists
Washington creates, arms, and supplies to
overthrow Libya, Syria and whatever countries
Washington is successful siccing terrorists on.
Apparently, some of these CIA-created terrorist
organizations break loose from their creator and
conduct operations on their own. So, Washington
is a government that creates its own enemies.
Trump
next brags on the sanctions he has imposed on
“the North Korean regime.” He doesn’t mention,
and I would bet he does not know, that
Washington has withheld a peace treaty since the
1950s from North Korea. Washington has kept the
war status open for 64 years. Having seen the
fate of Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria,
Somalia, etc., little wonder North Korea wants
nuclear weapons.
Trump,
standing there threatening the world, says that
Washington will take all necessary steps to
prevent North Korea from threatening the world.
Trump
then delivers the establishment’s propaganda
that unemployment is at an all time low and the
stock market at an all time high. So, what is
Trump rescuing Middle America from if
unemployment is at an all time low? What
happened to Trump’s case against jobs offshoring?
This is
nothing but feel-good talk. Trump is repeating
the lies because the lies make him look good.
What Trump should be doing is pointing out the
meaninglessness of the unemployment rate,
because it doesn’t count the unemployed, only
those few who looked for a job in the last 4
weeks. He should be pointing out that the stock
market is not a sign of a growing economy but a
sign of massive money creation by the central
banks of the US, EU, UK, and Japan. The massive
printing of money has flooded into paper assets,
driving up their price and further enriching the
One Percent.
Trump
says that one leg of the strategy is to
“preserve peace through strength.” What peace is
he talking about? In the past two decades
Washington has destroyed in whole or part eight
countries and overthrown democratic governments
in others. Is Trump equating peace with
Washington’s wars? No other country has
initiated wars and invasions and bombings and
aggressive military actions on other countries’
borders. Trump says that America is threatened
by enemies and to protect us the military will
be enlarged. He said he was overturning the
“defense sequester,” something that clearly does
not exist.
My
conclusion is that Trump has surrendered to the
real rulers of America—the powerful interest
groups such as the military/security complex,
the Israel Lobby, the environmental polluters,
Wall Street and the banks “too big to fail.”
America
is a country in which despite the hopes flyover
America had in Trump, an oligarchy rules. The
American people, regardless of who they elect,
have no voice, no input, no representation.
The
governments of Ronald Reagan and George H. W.
Bush were the last governments that were subject
to any accountability. With the Clinton regime
the United States entered into the age of
tyranny.
Dr.
Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of
the Treasury for Economic Policy and associate
editor of the Wall Street Journal. He was
columnist for Business Week, Scripps Howard News
Service, and Creators Syndicate. He has had many
university appointments. His internet columns
have attracted a worldwide following. Roberts'
latest books are
The Failure of Laissez Faire
Capitalism and Economic Dissolution of the West,
How America Was Lost,
and
The Neoconservative Threat to
World Order.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.