For
Leviathan, it’s so cold in Alaska
Wang Yi and Yang Jiechi will seek to make
shark's fin soup out of Antony Blinken and Jake
Sullivan at the Anchorage summit
By Pepe Escobar
March 19, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - - "Asia
Times" -
Leviathan seems to be positioning itself for
a geopolitical Kill Bill rampage – yet brandishing a
rusty samurai high-carbon-steel sword.
Predictably, US deep state masters have not
factored in that they could eventually be
neutralized by a geopolitical
Five Point Palm Exploding Heart Technique.
In a searing, concise
essay, Alastair Crooke pointed to the heart of
the matter. These are the two key insights –
including a nifty Orwellian allusion:
1. “Once control over the justifying myth of
America was lost, the mask was off.”
2. “The US thinks to lead the maritime and
rimland powers in imposing a searing psychological,
technological and economic defeat on the
Russia-China-Iran alliance. In the past, the outcome
might have been predictable. This time Eurasia may
very well stand solid against a weakened Oceania
(and a faint-hearted Europe).”
And that brings us to two interconnected
summits: the Quad and the China-US 2+2 in
Alaska.
The virtual Quad last Friday came and went like a
drifting cloud. When you had India’s Prime Minister
Narendra Modi saying the Quad is “a force for global
good,” no wonder rows of eyebrows across the Global
South were raised.
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi remarked last
year that the Quad was part of a drive to create an
“Asian NATO.”
It is. But the hegemon, lording over India, Japan
and Australia, mustn’t spell it out. Thus the vague
rhetoric about “free and open Indo-Pacific,”
“democratic values,” “territorial integrity” – all
code to characterize containment of China,
especially in the South China Sea.
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The exceptionalist wet dream – routinely
expressed in US Thinktankland – is to position
an array of missiles in the first island chain,
pointing towards China like a weaponized
porcupine. Beijing is very much aware of it.
Apart from a meek
joint statement, the Quad promised to deliver 1
billion doses of Covid-19 vaccines throughout the
“Indo-Pacific” by the end of… 2022.
The vaccine would be produced by India and
financed by the US and Japan, with the logistics of
distribution coming from Australia.
That was predictably billed as “countering
China’s influence in the region.” Too little, too
late. The bottom line is: The hegemon is furious
because China’s vaccine diplomacy is a huge success
– not only across Asia but all across the Global
South.
This ain’t no ‘strategic
dialogue’
US Secretary of State Tony Blinken is a mere
apparatchik who was an enthusiastic cheerleader for
shock and awe against Iraq 18 years ago, in 2003. At
the time he was staff director for the Democrats on
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, then chaired
by Senator Joe Biden.
Now Blinken is running US foreign policy for a
senile cardboard entity who mutters, live, on
camera, “I’ll do whatever you want me to do, Nance”
– as in Nancy Pelosi; and who characterizes the
Russian president as “a killer,” “without a soul,”
who will “pay a price.”
Paraphrasing Pulp Fiction: “Diplomacy’s
dead, baby. Diplomacy’s dead.”
With that in mind, there’s little doubt that the
formidable Yang Jiechi, director of the Office of
the Foreign Affairs Commission of the CPC Central
Committee, side by side with Foreign Minister Wang
Yi, will make shark’s fin soup out of their
interlocutors Blinken and National Security Advisor
Jake Sullivan at the 2+2 summit in Anchorage,
Alaska.
Only two days before the start of the
Two Sessions in Beijing, Blinken proclaimed that
China is the “biggest geopolitical challenge of the
21st century.”
According to Blinken, China is the “only country
with the economic, diplomatic, military and
technological power to seriously challenge the
stable and open international system – all the
rules, values and relationships that make the world
work the way we want it to, because it ultimately
serves the interests and reflects the values of the
American people.”
So Blinken tacitly admits what really matters is
how the world works “the way we want it to” – “we”
being the hegemon, which made those rules in the
first place. And those rules serve the interests and
reflect the values of the American people. As in:
It’s our way or the highway.
Blinken could be excused because he’s just a
wide-eyed novice on the big stage. But it gets way
more embarassing.
Here’s his foreign policy in a nutshell (“his”
because the hologram at the White House needs 24/7
instructions in his earpiece to even know what time
it is):
Sanctions, sanctions everywhere; Cold War 2.0
against Russia and “killer” Putin; China guilty of
“genocide” in Xinjiang; a notorious apartheid state
getting a free pass to do anything; Iran must blink
first or there’s no return to the JCPOA; Random
Guaido recognized as President of Venezuela, with
regime change still the priority.
There’s a curious kabuki in play here. Following
the proverbial revolving door logic in DC, before
literally crossing the street to have full access to
the White House, Blinken was a founding partner of
WestExec Advisors,
whose main line of business is to offer
“geopolitical and policy expertise” to American
multinationals, the overwhelming majority of which
are interested in – where else – China.
So Alaska might point to some measure of
trade-off on trade. The problem, though, seems
insurmountable. Beijing does not want to eschew the
profitable American market, while for Washington
expansion of Chinese technology across the West is
anathema.
Blinken himself pre-empted Alaska, saying this is
no “strategic dialogue.” So we’re back to bolstering
the Indo-Pacific racket; recriminations about the
“loss of freedom” in Hong Kong – whose role of US/UK
Fifth Column is now definitely over; Tibet; and the
“invasion” of Taiwan, now on spin overdrive, with
the Pentagon stating it is “probable” before 2027.
“Strategic dialogue” it ain’t.
A junkie on a bum trip
Wang Yi, at a press conference linked to the 13th
National People’s Congress and the announcement of
the next Five-Year Plan, said: “We will set an
example of strategic mutual trust, by firmly
supporting each other in upholding core and major
interests, jointly opposing ‘color revolution’ and
countering disinformation, and safeguarding national
sovereignty and political security.”
That’s a sharp contrast with the post-truth
“highly likely” school of spin privileged by
(failed) Russiagate peddlers and assorted
Sinophobes.
Top Chinese scholar Wang Jisi, who used to be
close to the late Ezra Vogel, author of arguably the
best Deng Xiaoping biography in English, has
introduced an extra measure of sanity, recalling
Vogel’s emphasis on the necessity of US and East
Asia understanding each other’s culture.
According to Wang Jisi, “In my own experiences,
I find one difference between the two countries most
illuminating. We in China like the idea of “seeking
common ground while reserving our differences.” We
state that the common interests between our two
countries far exceed our differences. We define
common ground by a set of principles like mutual
respect and cooperation. Americans, in contrast,
tend to focus on hard issues like tensions over
Taiwan and the South China Sea. It looks that the
Chinese want to set up principles before trying to
solve specific problems, but the Americans are eager
to deal with problems before they are ready to
improve the relationship.”
The real problem is that the hegemon seems
congenitally incapable of trying to understand the
Other. It always harks back to that notorious
formulation by Zbigniew Brzezinski, with trademark
imperial arrogance, in his 1997 magnum opus The
Grand Chessboard:
“To put it in a terminology that harkens back to
the more brutal age of ancient empires, the three
grand imperatives of imperial geostrategy are to
prevent collusion and maintain security dependence
among the vassals, to keep tributaries pliant and
protected and to keep the barbarians from coming
together.”
Dr Zbig was referring, of course, to Eurasia.
“Security dependence among vassals” applied mostly
to Germany and Japan, key hubs in the Rimland.
“Tributaries pliant and protected” applied mostly to
the Middle East.
And crucially, “keep the barbarians from coming
together” applied to Russia, China and Iran. That
was Pax Americana in a nutshell. And that’s what’s
totally unraveling now.
Hence the Kill Bill logic. It goes back a long
way. Less than two months after the collapse of the
USSR, the 1992
Defense Planning Guidance preached total global
dominance and, following Dr Zbig, the absolute
imperative of preventing the emergence of any future
peer competitor.
Especially Russia, defined as “the only power in
the world with the capacity of destroying the United
States.”
Then, in 2002, at the start of the “axis of evil”
era, came the
full spectrum dominance doctrine as the bedrock
of the US National Security Strategy. Domination,
domination everywhere: terrestrial, aerial,
maritime, subterranean, cosmic, psychological,
biological, cyber-technological.
And, not by accident, the
Indo-Pacific strategy – which guides the Quad –
is all about “how to maintain US strategic primacy.”
This mindset is what enables US Think Tankland to
formulate risible
“analyses” in which the only “win” for the US
imperatively requires a failed Chinese “regime.”
After all, Leviathan is congenitally incapable of
accepting a “win-win”; it only runs on “zero-sum,”
based on divide and rule.
And that’s what’s leading the Russia-China
strategic partnership to progressively establish a
wide-ranging, comprehensive security environment,
spanning everything from high-tech weaponry to
banking and finance, energy supplies and the flow of
information.
To evoke yet another pop culture gem, a
discombobulated Leviathan now is like Caroline, the
junkie depicted in
Lou Reed’s Berlin:
But she’s not afraid to die / All of her
friends call her Alaska / When she takes speed /
They laugh and ask her / What is in her mind / What
is in her mind / She put her fist through the window
pane / It was such a / funny feeling / It’s so cold
/ in Alaska.
Pepe Escobar is
correspondent-at-large at
Asia Times.
His latest book is
2030. Follow him on
Facebook.-
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