June
16, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - - "Unz"
- With the
exception of his perseverance in a long overdue
withdrawal from Afghanistan, President Joe Biden has
been assiduously pursuing policies that make the
world a more dangerous place for Americans, up to
and including opening up the country’s southern
border to waves of illegal immigration. Ironically,
if an opinion poll were to be taken in the United
States it would likely show that most respondents
regard the Republicans as America’s designated
conflict-friendly party based on the fact that the
GOP is considered to be more “conservative” and
therefore more likely to resort to force. But that
assumption is not actually true as the Republican
Party historically has been reluctant to embrace
foreign engagements while presidents like Ronald
Reagan, George H.W. Bush and even Donald Trump were
measured in their responses to developing
international crisis situations. Trump, for all his
aggressive language and several missteps, actually
started no new wars and may even have been genuine
in his desire to extricate from foreign conflicts
only to be circumvented by his advisers and the
entrenched government bureaucracy. He was widely
condemned as a “Putin puppet” even though the
bilateral relationship actually worsened during his
time in office due to his inability to overcome the
Establishment forces lined up against him.
Historically speaking, it is
the Democrats who can be credited with conniving to
enter both the First and Second World Wars while
more recently entering into wars that served
absolutely no national interest in places like Libya
and Syria. They can also get credit for increasing
the use of one-off cruise missile attacks
supplemented by terrorism-like tactics that might
reasonably be construed as war crimes, to include
killing civilians using drones based solely on the
target fitting a “profile.”
It might be reasonably argued
that Washington has only one really important
bilateral relationship and that is with Russia since
Moscow alone has the capability to destroy the
United States. There too it was the Democrats who
seemingly deliberately sought to turn a post-Cold
War reconstruction of Russia into a looting of the
country’s natural resources combined with an
encroachment of NATO right up to the Russian border,
both initiated and implemented under Bill Clinton.
The relationship has been suffering ever since,
nearly leading to war when Barack Obama’s
Administration spend $5 billion overthrowing a
government friendly to Russia in Kiev in 2014.
Russia has repeatedly claimed, not without some
justification, that successive American
administrations have continued that process, using
various means to undermine and replace the Putin
government.
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The Democrats also were the
driving force behind the Magnitsky Act, which was
sponsored by Russia-phobic Senator Ben Cardin and
signed by President Barack Obama in 2012. Using the
Act, the US asserted its willingness to punish
foreign governments, particularly Russia, using
sanctions and other means for claimed violations of
human rights. Russia reacted angrily, noting that
the actions taken by its government internally,
notably the operation of its judiciary, were being
subjected to outside interference. It reciprocated
with sanctions against US officials as well as by
increasing pressure on foreign non-governmental
pro-democracy groups and western media operating in
Russia, which meant that the Act was actually
counter-productive. Tension between Moscow and
Washington increased considerably as a result and
Congress subsequently approved a so-called Global
Magnitsky Act as part of the 2016 annual defense
appropriation bill. It expanded the use of sanctions
and other punitive measures against regimes guilty
of egregious human rights abuses though it has never
been applied against well documented serial human
rights violators like Saudi Arabia and Israel. It
was also sponsored by Senator Ben Cardin and was
clearly intended to threaten Russia.
More recently there has been
the totally fabricated Russiagate that was intended
to place the blame for Hillary Clinton’s defeat by
Donald Trump on the Kremlin and Russian President
Vladimir Putin. And the pro-Democratic Party media
has been working hard to come up with other “news”
pieces that depict Moscow as the enemy du jour,
including the now discredited claim that the Kremlin
has been paying Afghan fighters “bounties” to kill
American soldiers.
Now Joe Biden is preparing to
meet with Vladimir Putin in Geneva on June 16th
and the prospects are not good even if one discounts
Biden’s having labeled Putin as a “killer” lacking
“soul” as little more than hyperbole. The meeting
was requested after a phone call to Putin arranged
by Biden in April, at a particularly tense moment
when Ukraine was threatening to retake the Crimea
from Russia, using its supply of lethal weaponry
from the United States to do the job. Washington and
the NATO alliance also declared that their support
for Kiev was “unwavering” even though they
recognized that Ukraine would have little to no
chance of defeating the Russian army. The Kremlin
responded to the threat by rushing troops to its
border and the US sent warships to Turkey to enter
the Black Sea, though it quickly withdrew them when
Putin made clear that their appearance offshore of
Russian territory would be considered a major
provocation.
Some rational voices in the
US government are, however, prepared to step back
from the precipice. William Burns, currently
Director of the CIA and Ambassador to Russia under
George W. Bush, reported concisely how Moscow viewed
the Ukraine situation. He observed in a cable
entitled “NYET MEANS NYET: RUSSIA’S NATO ENLARGEMENT
REDLINES” that “Russia would view further eastward
expansion as a potential military threat. NATO
enlargement, particularly to Ukraine, remains ‘an
emotional and neuralgic’ issue for Russia…” But even
the New York Times is having difficulty in
finding a positive outcome that will result in
better “management” of the bilateral relationship,
reporting that “The meeting comes at the worst
point in Russian-American relations since the fall
of the Soviet Union about 30 years ago.”
To be sure the spin
surrounding the meeting has been intense, with the
US media running stories about new cyberattacks on
America’s infrastructure, attributing them to Russia
with scant evidence, while Putin responded by
declaring publicly that
he does not expect any breakthroughs, observing
that the fractured bilateral relationship has
unfortunately become “hostage to internal political
processes in the United States itself.” Putin has
said repeatedly that he wants his country to be
treated with respect by a US that perversely
perceives itself as “an exceptional nation, with
special, exclusive rights to practically the entire
world…I cannot go along with that.”
Biden for his part is also
piling on the rhetoric, pledging that he will “stand
up to Putin…from a position of strength.” Upon
arrival in Britain at the start of his European
trip, where he is desperately seeking to be
relevant,
he pledged to strengthen ties with America’s
allies, an interesting objective as it has been
recently revealed that the US has been aggressively
spying on its closest friends in Europe. He also
warned Russia that it will suffer “robust and
meaningful” consequences if it engages in “harmful
activities.” It was not a good starting point for a
meeting intended to establish a modus vivendi
between two adversaries. And there is additional
noise coming from the Democrats. Former CIA Senior
Russia Analyst Ray McGovern
asks whether Democratic Party “Representative
Jason Crow, really believe[s] that ‘Vladimir Putin
wakes up every morning and goes to bed every night
trying to figure out how to destroy American
democracy.’ And what does Speaker Nancy Pelosi mean
exactly, as she keeps repeating ‘All roads lead to
Putin’? Are we correctly informed that Hillary
Clinton suggested President Putin was giving
President Trump instructions on January 6th
as [the] Capitol building was attacked?”
The most recent hint of what
Biden will want to discuss to make points with the
media is that it will be heavy on “human rights,”
which is, of course, the issue to raise when all
else fails. Human rights means Magnitsky-plus and
the subject of imprisoned Russian dissident Alexei
Navalny, who is likely an agent of both the CIA and
a number of other western intelligence agencies,
will undoubtedly come up. That suggests that
Washington will yet again be seeking to interfere
with Russian internal politics, which will in turn
mean that the discussion will go nowhere.
The Times and
some other analysts speculate in somewhat
positive terms that the meeting might actually be
mostly about establishing channels of communication
that will enable the two countries to deal
confidently with each other, closing the door on any
possible surprises that might inadvertently lead to
war. Putin has said that he is prepared to “work
with Biden” while both Foreign Minister Sergei
Lavrov and National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan
have indicated that that will be looking for areas
of agreement, to start relations moving in the right
direction. If so, it will of necessity avoid any
detailed discussions of Ukraine and Syria, where the
US and Russia have opposing views, though in both
those cases it might benefit from some clarification
of where the “red lines” are for the two sides.
Areas that are likely to be common ground might well
include climate change and combatting COVID and it
is hoped that those areas of agreement might lead to
other lines of communication.
Sergei Lavrov has in fact to
a certain extent set the tone for the gathering,
complimenting the US foreign policy team of
Secretary of State Toni Blinken and Jake Sullivan
for communicating “frankly” and “respectfully” at
previous meetings in Reykjavik and Anchorage. Lavrov
also made clear that the Biden people, though sure
to be highly critical of Russia, might be expected
to be more predictable than the Trump rotating cast
of characters at cabinet level who frequently
contradicted themselves.
But all of that said, it is
highly unlikely that Biden will try to mitigate the
major irritants between the two countries, even
though that is what he has promised to do, because
that would mean treating Russia as an equal. Of
prime importance are the disagreements that could
lead to war, including future status of Ukraine and
also Georgia, the bump in the road caused by the
current situation in Belarus, and the role of Russia
in the Middle East. Biden will also lean heavily on
the cybersecurity issue as that is currently popular
in the media, but as Putin has already denied any
Russian hand in the hacking that discussion is
likely to go nowhere. Likewise, any claims that
Moscow interfered yet again in US politics during
the 2020 election will only poison the discussion.
At the end of the day, the
hostility of the Democratic Party towards Russia,
which has been festering ever since 2016, will
prevail and it is likely that nothing dramatic will
come out of the meeting of the two presidents. It is
clearly in the United States’ national interest to
disengage from those areas like Ukraine which Russia
sees as vital and which are of no value to the US,
but it is unlikely that Biden or any of his closest
advisers can see that far. The Democratic Party in
power and controlling both houses of Congress as
well as the presidency can only be relied upon to
deal with any developing crisis involving Russia
with a heavy hand.
Philip M. Giraldi, Ph.D.,
is Executive Director of the Council for the
National Interest, a 501(c)3 tax deductible
educational foundation (Federal ID Number
#52-1739023) that seeks a more interests-based U.S.
foreign policy in the Middle East. Website is
https://councilforthenationalinterest.org
address is P.O. Box 2157, Purcellville
VA 20134 and its email is
inform@cnionline.org
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