By Philip Giraldi
March 20, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - Now
that the Democratic Party has apparently
succeeded in getting rid of the only two voices
among its presidential candidates that actually
deviated from the establishment consensus, it
appears that Joe Biden will be running against
Donald Trump in November. To be sure, Bernie
Sanders and Tulsi Gabbard are still hanging on,
but the fix was in and the Democratic National
Committee (DNC) made sure that Sanders would be
given the death blow on Super Tuesday while
Gabbard would be blocked from participating in
any of the late term debates.
It is widely believed that the abrupt
withdrawal of candidates Amy Klobuchar and Pete
Buttigieg on the eve of Super Tuesday that
targeted Sanders was arranged through an
intervention by ex-President Barack Obama who
made a plea in support of “party unity,”
offering the two a significant quid pro quo down
the road if they were willing to leave the race
and throw their support to Biden, which they
dutifully did. Rumor has it that Klobuchar
might well wind up as Biden’s vice president. An
alternative tale is that it was a much more
threatening “offer that couldn’t be refused”
coming from the Clintons.
Tulsi meanwhile was marginalized after being
smeared by Hillary Clinton’s claim that she was
a “Russian asset” being “groomed” by the
Kremlin. She was then denied her rightful place
in the March 15th debate by a sudden
and unexpected rules change in the format which
was deliberately designed to exclude her. So
much for the internal democracy of the so-called
Democratic Party.
Now that the line-up for November seems set,
the discussion has moved to specific policy
issues. Foreign policy did not play much of a
part in the Democratic Party debates, but it is
expected to be more visible in the presidential
race, particularly in light of some of the more
visible blunders committed by Donald Trump and
his associates.
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The latest mistake by the White House,
the January 3rd airstrike in Iraq
that killed Iranian Major General Qassem
Soleimani and eight Iraqi associates is
still resonating, having just last week
produced an attack on a U.S. base that
killed two American and one British
soldiers, followed by a retaliatory bombing
by U.S. forces directed against Iraqi
militia Kataib Hezbollah, which is reported
to be supported by Iran but has also been
integrated into the Iraqi armed forces. The
U.S. unilateral action is taking place
without Baghdad’s consent and in spite of
Iraqi government demands that Washington
close its bases and withdraw its remaining
troops, numbering approximately 5,000.
Ironically, killing Soleimani and the
consequences is unlikely to be a theme picked up
on by the genial but muddled Biden as both major
parties are firmly in the grip of the Israel
Lobby and are unlikely to complain about killing
a senior Iranian official. Nor will the next
president, whoever he is, reverse the disastrous
Trump decision and rejoin the JCPOA agreement of
2015 which was intended to monitor Iran’s
civilian use nuclear program.
Both Trump and Biden might reasonably
described as Zionists, Trump by virtue of the
made-in-Israel foreign policy positions he has
delivered on since his election, and Biden by
word and deed during his entire time in
politics. When Biden encountered Sarah Palin in
2008 in the vice-presidential debate, he and
Palin sought to outdo each other in enthusing
over how much they love the Jewish state. Biden
has said that “I am a Zionist. You don’t have to
be a Jew to be a Zionist” and also,
ridiculously, “Were there not an Israel, the
U.S. would have to invent one. We will never
abandon Israel — out of our own self-interest.
[It] is the best $3 billion investment we
make.” Biden has been a regular feature speaker
at the annual AIPAC summit in Washington.
Trump might be described as both paranoid and
narcissistic, meaning that he sees himself as
surrounded by enemies and that the enemies are
out to get him personally. When he is
criticized, he either ridicules the source or
does something impulsive to deflect what is
being said. He attacked Syria twice based on
false claims about the use of chemical weapons
when a consensus developed in the media and in
congress that he was being “weak” in the Middle
East. Those attacks were war crimes as Syria was
not threatening the United States.
Trump similarly reversed himself on
withdrawing from Syria when he ran into
criticism of the move and his plan to extricate
the United States from Afghanistan, if it
develops at all, could easily be subjected to
similar revision. Trump is not really the man
who as a candidate indicated that he was
seriously looking for a way out of America’s
endless and pointless wars, no matter what his
supporters continue to assert.
Biden is on a different track in that he is
an establishment hawk. As head of the Senate
Foreign Affairs committee back in 2002-2003 he
green lighted George W. Bush’s plan to attack
Iraq. Beyond that, he cheer-leaded the effort
from the Democratic Party benches, helping to
create a consensus both in Washington and in the
media that Saddam Hussein was a threat that had
to be dealt with. He should have known better as
he was privy to intelligence that was suggesting
that the Iraqis were no threat at all. He did
not moderate his tune on Iraq until after 2005,
when the expected slam-dunk quick victory got
very messy.
Biden was also certainly privy to the
decision making by President Barack Obama, which
include the destruction of Libya and the killing
of American citizens by drone. Whether he
actively supported those policies is unknown,
but he has never been challenged on them. What
is clear is that he did not object to them,
another sign of his willingness to go along with
the establishment, a tendency which will
undoubtedly continue if he is elected president.
And Biden’s foreign policy reminiscences are
is subject to what appear to be memory losses or
inability to articulate, illustrated by a whole
series of faux pas during the campaign. He has a
number of times told a tale of his heroism in
Afghanistan that is
complete fiction, similar to Hillary
Clinton’s lying claims of courage under fire in
Bosnia.
So, we have a president in place who takes
foreign policy personally in that his first
thoughts are “how does it make me look?” and a
prospective challenger who appears to be
suffering from initial stages of dementia and
who has always been relied upon to support the
establishment line, whatever it might be. Though
Trump is the more dangerous of the two as he is
both unpredictable and irrational, the
likelihood is that Biden will be guided by the
Clintons and Obamas. To put it another way, no
matter who is president the likelihood that the
United States will change direction to get away
from its interventionism and bullying on a
global scale is virtually nonexistent. At least
until the money runs out. Or to express it as a
friend of mine does, “No matter who is elected
we Americans wind up getting John McCain.”
Goodnight America!