August 03, 2022:
Information Clearing House
--
Every leader and top
official now in power in the so-called
Western World seems to have forgotten that
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) was founded in 1949 as an alliance
that was ostensibly defensive in nature,
intended to counter the expansion of Soviet
style communism in Europe. That role
continued to be the raison d’etre
of the organization until communist
governments themselves collapsed in both
Russia and in the Eastern European states
that collectively made up the Warsaw Pact
during the 1990s. After that point, NATO no
longer had any reason to exist at all as the
alleged military threat posed by the Kremlin
and its allies vanished virtually overnight.
But clever
politicians were quick to put the alliance
on life support instead of simply
dismantling it. Lacking the threat posed by
the Warsaw Pact, NATO was forced to come up
with other reasons to maintain military
forces at levels that could quickly be
enhanced and placed on a wartime footing.
Washington and London took the lead in this,
citing the now shopworn defense of a “rules
based international order” as well as of
“democracy” and “freedom.” And fortunately
for the national defense industries and the
generals, it soon proved possible to find
new enemies that provided justification for
additional military spending. The first
major engagement outside the obligations
defined by the original treaty took place in
Europe to be sure, but it was in the Balkans
where of NATO during the 1995 Operation
Deliberate Force. The war ended after the
signing of the General Framework Agreement
for Peace in Bosnia and Herzegovina in Paris
on December 14th 1995. Peace
negotiations were finalized a week later but
fighting resumed between Kosovo and Serbia
in the following year, which led to another
NATO intervention that eventually ended with
the restoration of Kosovo’s autonomy and the
deployment of NATO forces, which bombed the
Serbs to compel their compliance with a
draft cease fire agreement.
Get Our Free Newsletter
NATO also played a
role improbably enough in the US invasion
and occupation of Afghanistan, which was
justified by claiming that an Afghanistan
free to set its own course would become a
hotbed of terrorism which would inevitably
impact on the United States and Europe. It
was a paper-thin argument, but it was the
best they could come up with at the time and
it also eventually involved soldiers from
additional friendly countries like
Australia. As we have subsequently seen,
however, it was all an argument without
merit as Afghanistan became a money pit and
a graveyard for thousands of locals and
foreign soldiers. It is now again in the
hands of the Taliban after a bungled
withdrawal of US forces and the collapse of
the puppet government in Kabul that
Washington had installed.
Turn the clock
forward to the present. As everyone but
President Joe Biden has recognized, Policing
the World Is a Full-Time Job
By Philip Giraldi, which many observers
already believe has some of the attributes
of World War III. As Russia neither
threatened nor attacked any NATO member
state, the argument that the response in
arming and training Ukraine was defensive
was rendered irrelevant. Nor can it be
credibly be claimed that Russia is a haven
for terrorists, quite the contrary.
Nevertheless, Biden has stated that the US
will be in the fight on behalf of Ukraine
for “as long as it takes.” Does he mean
years, and all done without a declaration of
war by Congress as required by the US
Constitution?
And more appears to
be coming. Joe Biden, during last week’s
trip to Israel,
made clear that the United States is
“prepared to use all elements of its
national power” to stop Iran from getting a
nuclear weapon and has signed a pledge with
the Israeli government to commit itself to
do so. If Biden presses the argument that
Iran is an international threat due to its
impending development of nuclear weapons,
will he appeal to NATO to support a joint
military option to disarm it? I believe he
just might do that. And he might just want
to consider how the entire set-up and
framing of the issue by Israel is somewhat
of a trap. Israel considers Iran’s current
nuclear program to be intended to create a
weapon, which “they continue to develop,”
and there are plenty in the US Congress who
would agree with that.
So, if Iran is
clearly creating a thermonuclear device, the
time to strike is now, isn’t it? And bear in
mind how the US/Israeli campaign to condemn
is multifaceted. Shortly before the meetings
held by Biden and his crew with the
Israelis, US government sources set the
stage for what was to come by going on the
offensive regarding reports that Iran may be
selling highly capable offensive drones to
Russia for use in Ukraine as well as
subsequent claims coming out of
Washington that the Iranians are seeking to
assassinate senior US officials in revenge
for the killing of Revolutionary Guards
General Qassem Soleimani in January 2020.
One wonders why they waited so long and why
the White House has chosen to publicize
these stories at this point.
And the US and NATO
are also getting involved with China’s
geopolitical policies, on a path that
Beijing is warning is extremely hypocritical
and which might lead to armed conflict. The
signs that the Chinese might be targeted by
NATO, possibly over
the Taiwan independence issue, came
following a stark warning by US Secretary of
State Tony Blinken delivered at the NATO
summit in Madrid at the end of June. Blinken
accused China of “seeking to undermine the
rules-based international order,” the same
type of critique recently leveled against
Russia and Iran. Blinken’s comment was
elaborated on by NATO Secretary General Jens
Stoltenberg, who observed how “China is
substantially building up its military
forces, including nuclear weapons, bullying
its neighbors, threatening Taiwan …
monitoring and controlling its own citizens
through advanced technology, and spreading
Russian lies and disinformation.”
Stoltenberg’s
indictment of China was followed by a NATO
issued “strategic concept”
document last that declared for the
first time that China poses a “systemic
challenge” to the alliance, alongside a
primary “threat” coming from
Russia. The document copied Blinken’s
language, citing “The deepening strategic
partnership between the People’s Republic of
China and the Russian Federation and their
mutually reinforcing attempts to undercut
the rules-based international order run
counter to our values and interests.”
Finally, the US and
British governments collaborated to condemn
China as the “biggest long-term threat to
our economic and national security.” The
declaration came in a July 6th
joint news conference in London, where
Christopher Wray, director of the FBI, and
Ken McCallum, director general of Britain’s
MI5, accused China, like Russia, of
interfering in US and UK elections. Wray
also warned the business leaders in the
audience that the Chinese government has
been “set on stealing your technology,
whatever it is that makes your industry
tick, and using it to undercut your business
and dominate your market.”
Chinese Foreign
Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian initially
responded a few days after the NATO summit,
observing that the “so-called rules-based
international order is actually a family
rule made by a handful of countries to serve
the US self-interest,” adding that
“[Washington]observes international rules
only as it sees fit.” Addressing the issue
of the role of NATO specifically, Zhao
accused Blinken of using NATO to “hype up
competition with China and stoke group
confrontation.” He added that “The history
of NATO is one about creating conflicts and
waging wars…arbitrarily launching wars and
killing innocent civilians, even to this
day. Facts have proven that it isn’t China
that poses a systemic challenge to NATO, and
instead it is NATO that brings a looming
systemic challenge to world peace and
security. Thirty years after the end of the
Cold War, [NATO] has not yet abandoned its
thinking and practice of creating ‘enemies’
… It is NATO that is creating problems
around the world.”
China has a point.
What NATO is threatening is war, as it is a
military alliance. The Chinese appear to
understand that NATO is the world’s largest
military bureaucracy which has developed
since 1991 an overriding institutional
commitment to ensuring its permanent
existence, if not expansion, even after it
has clearly outlived its own usefulness. So
Beijing might justifiably wonder, how does
China – on the other side of the globe – fit
into NATO’s historic “defensive” mission?
How are Chinese troops or missiles now
threatening Europe or the US in ways they
weren’t before? How are the Americans and
Europeans suddenly under military threat
coming from China?
The Chinese appear to
understand that if there is no threat to
“defend” against, then a threat must be
manufactured, and that is precisely what we
are seeing vis-à-vis Russia, China, Iran and
even Venezuela. Washington has become
addicted to war and NATO is the chosen tool
to give those wars the patina of legitimacy.
To launch those conflicts requires either
inventing an imaginary threat, or, as in the
case of Russia, provoking the very threat
the “defensive” bureaucracy was designed to
deter or thwart. All indications are that
NATO – now embracing 30 countries – is doing
both and the results could easily be
disastrous for all parties involved. Former
congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard
particularly abhors the cynical
recklessness of the Biden Administration
driving the process, explaining how “The
reality is, President Biden, members of
Congress, leaders in our country, the
wealthy, they will have a safe place to be
in the event of a nuclear war that they are
behind causing while the rest of us in
America and Russia, people around the world,
will be decimated from this event.”
Prize winning
journalist Chris Hedges has also defined the
unthinkable that is at stake, and it is past
time for Americans and Europeans to take
note and stop the madness. Hedges
opines that “The massive expansion of
NATO, not only in Eastern and Central Europe
but the Middle East, Latin America, Africa
and Asia, presages endless war and a
potential nuclear holocaust.” One might also
note that New Yorkers are
now being informed about what to do if
there is a nuclear attack. Yes, that is
precisely the problem – we have an
administration in Washington that should be
protecting the people living in this
country, not setting up scenarios that might
lead to their slaughter. Will someone please
point that out to Joe Biden?
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
councilforthenationalinterest.org,
address is P.O. Box 2157, Purcellville VA
20134 and its email is
inform@cnionline.org.