By Philip Giraldi
Biden has
been a major disappointment for those
who hoped that he’d change course
regarding America’s pathological
involvement in overseas conflicts.
February 27, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - The
new White House Team has been in place for more than
a month and it is perhaps time to consider where it
is going with America’s fractured foreign policy. To
be sure, when a new administration brings in a bunch
of “old hands” who made their bones by attacking
Syria and Libya while also assassinating American
citizens by drone one might hope that those mistakes
might have served as valuable “lessons learned.” Or
maybe not, since no one in the Democratic Party ever
mentions the Libya fiasco and President Joe Biden
has already made it clear that Syria will continue
to be targeted with sanctions as well as with
American soldiers based on its soil. And no one will
be leaving Afghanistan any time soon. The Biden team
will only let up when Afghanistan is “secure” and
there is regime change in Damascus.
A big part of the problem is
that the personnel moves mean that the poison from
the Barack Obama years has now been reintroduced
into the tottering edifice that Donald Trump left
behind. Obama’s United Nations Ambassador Susan Rice
once made the case for attacking the Libyans
by explaining how Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi
provided his soldiers with Viagra so they could more
readily engage in mass rapes of presumably innocent
civilians. Unfortunately, Sue is back with the new
administration as the Director of the Domestic
Policy Council where she will no doubt again wreak
havoc in her own inimitable fashion. She is joined
at the top level of the administration by Tony
Blinken as Secretary of State, Avril Haines as
Director of National Intelligence, Jake Sullivan as
National Security Advisor, Samantha Power as head of
USAID and retired General Lloyd J. Austin as
Secretary of Defense. All of the appointees are
regarded as “hawks” and have personal history
working with Biden when he was in Congress and as
Vice President, while most of them also served in
the Obama administration.
Be that as it may, Joe Biden
and whoever is pulling his strings have assembled a
group of establishment warmongers and aspirant
social justice engineers that is second to none.
Those who expected something different than the
usual Democratic Party template have definitely been
disappointed. Hostility towards China continues with
warships being sent to the South China Sea and the
president is seeking to create a new
Trans-Atlantic alliance directed against both
Beijing and Moscow. The Europeans are reportedly not
enthusiastic about remaining under Washington’s
thumb and would like some breathing room.
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In a phone conversation
where it would have been interesting to be a fly
on the wall, Biden warned Russian President
Vladimir Putin that the United States would no
longer ignore his bad behavior. The official
White House account of the call included the
following pithy summary: “President Biden
reaffirmed the United States’ firm support for
Ukraine’s sovereignty. He also raised other
matters of concern, including the SolarWinds
hack, reports of Russia placing bounties on
United States soldiers in Afghanistan,
interference in the 2020 United States election,
and the poisoning of Aleksey Navalny.”
And to be sure, there have
already been a number of issues that Biden might
have dealt with by executive order, like lifting the
illegal and unjustified blockade of Cuba, that could
have inspired some hope that the new administration
would not be just another bit of old wine in new
bottles. Alas, that has not taken place but for
a series of moves to unleash another wave of
illegal immigration and to
“protect LGBTQ rights globally.” Biden has also
retained a heavy military presence in Washington
itself, possibly as part of a Constitution-wrecking
plan to tackle what he is referring to as “domestic
terrorism.” The domestic terrorists being targeted
appear to largely consist of people who are white
working and middle class and voted for Trump.
In some ways, foreign policy
might have been the easiest fix if the new
administration were really seeking to correct the
misadventures of the past twenty years. Quite the
contrary, Biden and his associates have actually
reversed the sensible and long overdue policies
initiated by Donald Trump to
reduce troop strength in Germany and bring the
soldiers home from Syria and Afghanistan. Biden has
already committed to an indefinite stay in
Afghanistan, America’s longest “lost” war, and has
covertly sent more soldiers into Syria as well as
Iraq.
As regards Latin America, the
U.S. clearly is prepared to double down on regime
change in Venezuela,
continuing its Quixotic support of Juan Guaido
as president. Meanwhile, the new Secretary of State
Tony Blinken has clearly indicated that there will
be no end to deference to Israeli interests in the
Middle East. Under questioning by Congress, he has
insisted that Israel will be “consulted” on U.S.
policy to include arms sales in the region, which
has been interpreted to mean that Jerusalem will
have a veto, and has confirmed that his view on Iran
is identical to that of Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu. Both are apparently promoting the view
that Iran will have enough enriched uranium to
construct a weapon within a few weeks, though they
have not addressed other technical aspects of what
would actually be required to build one. Netanyahu
has been making the claim about the Iranian threat
since the 1980s and now it is also an element of
U.S. policy.
Biden and Blinken have also
moved forward slowly on a campaign commitment to
attempt renegotiation of the 2015 JCPOA nuclear
agreement with Iran that President Trump withdrew
from in 2017. As a condition to re-start
discussions, the Iranian leadership has demanded a
return to the status quo ante, meaning that
the punitive sanctions initiated by Trump would have
to be canceled and Iran would in return cease all
enrichment activities. Biden and Blinken, which
admittedly sounds a bit like a vaudeville comedy
duo, have reportedly agreed to
withdraw the Trump sanctions but have also
suggested that Iran will have to make other
concessions, to include ending its ballistic missile
development program and ceasing its “meddling” in
the Middle East. Iran will refuse to agree to that,
which means that the bid to renegotiate could turn
out to be nothing more than a bit of theater
involving multilateral “discussions” hosted by the
European Union and the pointless hostility between
Washington and Tehran will continue.
And speaking again of Israel,
there have been concerns expressed by the usual
suspects because Biden had not called Netanyahu
immediately after the inauguration. It may be true
that the president was sending a somewhat less than
subtle message signaling that he was in charge, but
the call has now taken place and everything is
hunky-dory. As a separate issue, the Jewish state
has, of course, the world’s only secret nuclear
arsenal, estimated to consist of at least 200 bombs,
and it also has several systems available to deliver
them on target. For no reasons that make any sense,
the United States since the time of President
Richard Nixon has never publicly confirmed the
existence of the weapons, preferring to maintain
“nuclear ambiguity” that allows Israel to have the
weapons without any demands for inspections or
constraints on their use. The most recent four
presidents have, in fact, signed secret agreements
with Israel not to expose the nuclear arsenal. Biden
has apparently not done so yet, but appeals by
international figures, including most recently South
African Desmond Tutu, had produced some expectations
that the new administration might
break with precedent.
Giving aid to Israel is, in
fact, illegal due to the Symington Amendment to the
Foreign Assistance Act, which bans U.S. economic and
military assistance to nuclear proliferators and
countries that seek to acquire nuclear weapons. But
Biden has already indicated that he would not under
any circumstances cut aid to Israel, so the matter
would appear to be closed. In any event the
Symington Amendment includes an exemption clause
that would allow the funding to continue as long as
the president certifies to Congress that continued
aid to the proliferator would be a vital U.S.
interest. Given Israel’s power in both Congress and
the White House it is not imaginable that its aid
would be affected no matter what Netanyahu and his
band of criminals choose to do.
So, it would seem that Biden
is unprepared to either pressure or pursue any
distancing from Israel and its policies, not a good
sign for those of us who have encouraged some
disengagement from the Middle East quagmire. And one
final issue where some of us have hoped to see some
movement from Biden has also been a disappointment.
That is Julian Assange, who is fighting against
efforts to have him extradited from England to face
trial and imprisonment in the U.S. under the
Espionage Act. Many observers believe that Assange
is a legitimate journalist who is being set up for a
show trial with only one possible outcome. The
entire process is to a large extent being driven by
a desire for revenge coming largely from the
Democratic Party since Assange was responsible for
publishing the Hillary Clinton emails as well as
other party documents. Biden
has already indicated that the process of
extraditing Assange will continue.
So, Biden has been a major
disappointment for those who expected that he might
change course regarding America’s pathological
involvement in overseas conflicts while also having
the good sense and courage to make relations with
countries like Iran and Israel responsive to actual
U.S. interests. Finally, it would be a good sign if
Assange were to be released from the threat of trial
and prison, if only to recognize that free speech
and a free press benefit everyone, but that is
perhaps a bridge too far as the United States moves
inexorably towards a totalitarian state intolerant
of dissent.
Philip M. Giraldi, Ph.D., is
Executive Director of the Council for the National
Interest, a 501(c)3 tax deductible educational
foundation that seeks a more interests-based U.S.
foreign policy in the Middle East. Website is
www.councilforthenationalinterest.org,
address is P.O. Box 2157, Purcellville VA 20134 and
its email is
inform@cnionline.org.
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