September 02, 2023 -
Information Clearing House
- "Gray
Zone
"
---A
veteran South African official detailed
meeting with an unprepared and “desperate”
Acting Deputy Secretary of State, Victoria
Nuland, begging for local help rolling back
the popular coup in Niger. The recent BRICS
conference might give Nuland even more to
fret about.
When US Acting Deputy Secretary of State,
Victoria Nuland, traveled to South Africa on
July 29, her reputation as a blunt
instrument of Washington’s hegemonic
interests preceded her.
According to a veteran South African
official who attended meetings with the
senior US diplomat in Pretoria, however,
Nuland and her team were demonstrably
unprepared to grapple with recent
developments on the African continent —
particularly the military coup that removed
Niger’s pro-Western government hours before
she launched her multi-stop tour of the
region.
“In over 20 years working with the
Americans, I have never seen them so
desperate,” the official told The Grayzone,
speaking on the condition of anonymity.
Pretoria was well aware of Nuland’s
hawkish reputation, but when she arrived in
Pretoria, the official described her as
“totally caught off guard” by winds of
change engulfing the region. The July putsch
that saw a popular military junta come to
power in Niger followed military coups in
Mali and Burkina Faso that were similarly
inspired by mass anti-colonial sentiment.
Though Washington has so far refused to
characterize developments in the Nigerien
capital of Niamey as a coup, the South
African source confirmed that Nuland sought
South Africa’s assistance in responding to
regional conflicts, including in Niger,
where she emphasized that Washington not
only held significant financial investments,
but also maintained 1,000 of its own troops.
For Nuland, the realization that she was
negotiating from a position of weakness was
likely a rude awakening.
Serving both parties and
advancing empire, one regime change op at a
time
Throughout the past decade and a half,
Victoria Nuland has established herself as
one of the most heavy-handed – and effective
– agents of Western-directed regime change
ops within the State Department. As the wife
of the arch-neoconservative strategist,
Robert Kagan, who advised both
Republican presidential contender, Mitt
Romney, and Democrat, Hillary Clinton,
Nuland embodied the interventionist
consensus that prevailed across both parties
in the pre-Trump era. In fact, her first
high-level job came under the watch of Vice
President Dick Cheney, when he appointed her
to serve as his deputy chief of staff.
When Nuland returned to government as a
Russia specialist in Obama’s State
Department, she spearheaded the covert
campaign to destabilize Ukraine, driving the
2014 Maidan Coup that sparked the country’s
ensuing civil conflict and, ultimately, a
Western proxy war with Russia that rages to
this day.
“Since Ukraine’s independence in 1991,
the United States has supported Ukrainians
as they build democratic skills and
institutions,” Nuland, then Assistant
Secretary of State for European Affairs,
boasted during a December 2013 talk
before the US-Ukraine Foundation in Kiev,
flanked by a promotional panel for the
Chevron corporation.
“We’ve invested over five billion dollars
to assist Ukraine in these and other goals,”
she continued, articulating Washington’s
support for what she described as Ukraine’s
“European aspirations.”
Nuland repeated the unintentionally
revealing boast during a 2014 interview with
CNN’s Christiane Amanpour.
Days before her address, she and then-US
ambassador to Ukraine, Geoffrey Pyatt,
distributed “freedom cookies” to
Ukrainians occupying Kiev’s Maidan Square in
protest of President Viktor Yanukovych’s
decision to, in Nuland’s words, “pause on
the route to Europe.”
Roughly three months later, the prolonged
campaign of riots in the Maidan successfully
dislodged Yanukovych’s government, resulting
in the installation of a decidedly pro-EU
(and openly pro-Nazi) regime in Kiev that
would promptly win the title of
“most corrupt nation in Europe.” Days
before Yanukovych’s ouster,
leaked audio revealed that Nuland and
Ambassador Pyatt were actively selecting the
opposition figures that would assume power
in Kiev in the event of Maidan’s success.
“Fuck the EU,” she infamously remarked
during the February 7 phone call, an
apparent response to European leaders
opposed to her government’s destabilization
effort in Ukraine.
Nearly a decade since Nuland’s Kiev
campaign, however, Washington’s ability to
dictate the sovereign policy of foreign
states is increasingly limited—particularly
in South Africa and the surrounding region.
In Africa, the sun sets
on the unipolar world order
The emergence of a new global order was
on bold display when heads of state from
Brazil, India, China, and South Africa
convened for the 15th annual BRICS
Presidential Summit in Johannesburg
throughout the week of August 21. While
Western media highlighted Russian President
Vladimir Putin’s absence from the summit as
evidence of deep divides within BRICS
(Foreign Minster Sergey Lavrov attended the
summit in Putin’s place), the bloc
ultimately issued a unanimous August 24
declaration that it would extend full
membership to Argentina, Egypt, Ethiopia,
Iran, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab
Emirates.
“BRICS is a diverse group of nations,”
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, who
chaired the summit, tweeted after announcing
the results of BRICS’ landmark Johannesburg
2 Declaration before a room packed with
international press. “It is an equal
partnership of countries that have differing
views but a shared vision for a better
world.”
Indeed, BRICS leaders stressed the
importance of the group’s function as a
“consensus-based” organization built on the
foundation of multilateralism and a
commitment to principles enshrined in the UN
Charter. This stands in stark contrast with
alliances like the G20, which, while
ostensibly committed to multilateral
exchange, are viewed by Washington and its
allies as a forum through which to impose
their own worldview. Western hubris was
particularly palpable upon India’s
assumption of the G20 presidency in 2023,
when US and European officials waged
a futile campaign to pressure New Delhi
into excluding Russia from group meetings
despite Moscow’s permanent member status.
“We should not go back to
a Cold War with two polarizing blocs”
On the sidelines of the BRICS summit, I
spoke with South Africa’s Minister for
Trade, Industry, and Competition, Ebrahim
Patel, about BRICS’ purpose.
“BRICS want to stand for a world in which
everybody benefits, this is not about trying
to get into a new Cold War,” Patel
commented.
“The Cold War was not a good moment for
humanity,” Patel, who chaired the BRICS
Business Forum in Johannesburg, continued
when asked whether the US and Europe could
ever accept multilateral exchange as
anything other than an attack on Western
hegemonic interests. “We should not go back
to a Cold War with two polarizing blocs, but
we do need the voices of the Global South to
be out there helping to shape the
architecture of governance and the way in
which human beings interact.”
So is BRICS an anti-Western alliance?
“There will be many instances of
misinterpretation, but we stand for a world
that is united, recognizing that countries
and firms will compete,” Patel explained.
“That’s healthy, and underpinning that
competition must be a deep collaboration and
cooperation between nations.”
Asked what makes BRICS’ commitment to
multilateralism different from blocs such as
the G20, Patel offered a window into how
BRICS truly operates.
“When the heads of state sit together,
they say, ‘okay, how can we move the dial
forward?’ Consensus building is a slow
process. It’s an uneven process. But it does
mean that the decisions that are taken have
solid support.”
After two days of deliberations in
Johannesburg, during which delegates
considered membership applications from
roughly two dozen nations, BRICS reached the
consensus to admit six states that will
drastically expand its share of the
international economy and resource market.
Following the new members’ formal induction
into the bloc next February, BRICS will
include 6 of the world’s top 10 oil
producers, 50 percent of the world’s natural
gas reserves, and 37 percent of global GDP
adjusted for purchasing power parity (PPP).
The G20’s share of global GDP currently sits
at 30 percent. With the addition of
Argentina and Saudi Arabia, BRICS will also
count six permanent G20 nations among its
own membership bloc.
“It is that slow, time consuming process
of building consensus,” Minister Patel
reflected on BRICS success. “But it’s more
solid. It lasts longer.”
Thanks to BRICS, Robert Kagan’s notorious
blueprint for the US to serve as a
“benevolent’ global hegemon may be
overtaken by the developing world’s vision
for a century that honors the political
independence, self-determination, and
territorial sovereignty of all states. Will
the generation of US officials that comes
after Nuland accept Washington’s place in
this multipolar world, or will they insist
on going down fighting?