By Liza Featherstone
January 24, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
Adam Schiff, the liberal hero
of impeachment, is a wholly owned subsidiary of the
military-industrial complex and a fervent exponent
of permanent war.
o some Democrats and
journalists, Representative Adam Schiff (D-CA) is a
hero. All over the internet, people are thanking him
for defending the Constitution, hoping he’ll run for
president someday. After his performance during this
week’s impeachment hearing, the worship was
especially intense; a letter writer to the New
York Times called it “brilliant” and a “tour
de force,” while the conservative Washington
Times made fun of all the blue-checked
Twitter accounts losing their objectivity in
ecstatic praise. As the face of the impeachment
effort, especially for liberals disengaged from the
election process, Schiff represents a glimmer of
hope for domestic regime change.
We’d like to be on his side. After all, he’s
working hard to take down Donald Trump, one of the
worst presidents in American history. But let’s not
get carried away in fandom. Schiff is a dangerous
warmonger, and his efforts to fuel paranoia about
Russia only serve to feed that agenda. It would be
admirable if Schiff’s impeachment crusade was
limited to Trump’s corruption. But something else
drives him: he wants a proxy war in Ukraine with
Russia, and he has for some time.
Adam Schiff physically resembles a prosperity
preacher. That is to say, he looks like a classic
dodgy American salesman, but with a beatific glow of
righteousness. This creepily wholesome look lends a
corny Cold War ambiance to his constant fulmination
about “the Russians.” It’s hard not to listen to him
without thinking of Allen Ginsberg’s 1956 poem
“America”:
America, it’s them bad Russians
Them Russians, them Russians and them
Chinamen.
And them Russians.
Assuring us that he is aware, actually, of what
century this is,
Schiff said in 2015, “Now, we’re not seeing the
same bipolar world we had between communism and
capitalism.” (Phew!) He then added, “But we are
seeing a new bipolar world, I think, where you have
democracy versus authoritarianism.” Schiff has not
viewed this as a mere contest of ideas: he
constantly advocated for Obama to impose tougher
sanctions on Russia and give more weapons to
Ukraine.
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Although delicately opposed to violence in some
contexts — he’s a vegan! — this isn’t the only war
Schiff has championed. He supported the Afghanistan,
Iraq, and Libya wars, greater US intervention in
Syria, as well as the Saudi war with Yemen (although
he has, in the past year, turned against the latter
adventure, seeming to draw the line at sawing up
journalists with bonesaws — he is a moderate
after all, plus very popular with the media),
and he has voted for nearly every possible increase
in the defense budget.
As
Jacobin’s own Branko Marcetic observed
two years ago, Schiff’s bellicosity is
extensively funded by arms manufacturers and
military contractors. A Ukrainian arms dealer named
Igor Pasternak held a $2,500 per head fundraiser for
Schiff in 2013, as the late Justin Raimondo
reported in a terrific analysis on Antiwar.com
in 2017, at a time when Ukraine was desperately
trying to counter the Obama administration’s
disinterest in funding its war with Russia. Despite
that disinterest, the State Department approved some
very profitable dealings for Pasternak in Ukraine
after that fundraiser.
And that’s only one example. In the current
cycle, donations from the war industry have
continued to flood his coffers. Many come from
employees of firms with extensive Department of
Defense contracts, including Radiance Technologies
and Raytheon. PACs representing the defense industry
also make a robust showing among Schiff’s
contributors, according to data on Open Secrets.org;
companies funneling money to Schiff — sorry,
contributing to those PACs — include Lockheed
Martin, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, Radiance, and
others, including L3Harris Technologies (which
got in big trouble with the State Department in
September and had to pay $13 million in penalties
for illegal arms dealing).
Guess what these companies want? War with
Ukraine. Why wouldn’t they?
Last October, the United States approved a $39
million sale of anti-tank missiles to Ukraine, a
joint contract between Raytheon and Lockheed Martin.
The previous year, Ukraine bought $37 million worth
of missiles from the same two companies. As a
missile-maker, Zacks Equity Research has noted,
Northrop Grumman also benefits richly from conflict
in Ukraine, as missiles are heavily used in
cross-border wars.
Despite his enthusiastic support for state
violence and cozy ties to the makers of deadly
weaponry, Schiff, an Alexander Hamilton–quoting
windbag, doesn’t have much crossover appeal to the
sort of people who put “These Colors Don’t Run”
stickers on their trucks. His impeachment crusade
only seems to reinforce Trump’s support among the
faithful; at this writing, 93 percent of Republicans
oppose the president’s removal from office.
Welcome to the #Resistance.
Liza Featherstone is a columnist
for Jacobin, a freelance journalist,
and the author of Selling Women Short: The
Landmark Battle for Workers’ Rights at Wal-Mart.
This article was originally published by "Jacobin"
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