From His Office In Cloud
Cuckoo Land
Obama Says He Is Improving
the World
He asserts: “wherever we have been involved
over the last several years, I think the
outcome has been better because of American
leadership.”
By Eric Zuesse
December 31,
2014 "ICH"
- U.S.
President Barack Obama said in a
December 30th Oval Office
interview with Steve Inskeep of National
Public Radio, that, “wherever we
have been involved over the last several
years, I think the outcome has been better
because of American leadership.” This
statement from him was part of his answer
when Inskeep asked whether the President had
regrets about “overthrowing the Gadhafi
regime” in Libya.
Obama answered:
“We are
hugely influential; we’re the one
indispensable nation. But when it comes to
nation-building, when it comes to what is
going to be a generational project in a
place like
Libya or a place
like
Syria or a place
like Iraq, we can help, but we can’t do it
for them.” In other words: the Libyan people
failed, and the Syrian people failed, and
the Iraqi people failed, according to
America’s President — but he himself and his
predecessor Bush did not fail by bombing
those countries under false pretenses as
they did.
Inskeep (who apparently
was ignorant that the people of Crimea had
always opposed the donation of Crimea from
Russia to Ukraine by Soviet leader Nikita
Khrushchev in 1954, and who was also
ignorant that Crimeans in March 2014 were
delighted to be reunited again with Russia
and had not been “taken” by Russia but
were instead saved by Russia from
the fate that befell Donbass)
interjected, there, for clarification to his
listeners, that Obama meant that Putin was
thought to be a “genius” “for taking
Crimea.” Inskeep was here trying to help
Obama by clarifying Obama’s anti-Putin
reference in his “genius” term; and, by
doing so, Inskeep falsely assumed that
Crimea had been seized, against the will of
Crimeans.
The President skillfully
built upon Inskeep’s ignorance, and
anti-Russian bias, here, by playing along
with Inskeep’s false intrinsic assumption,
and by continuing directly from it in such a
way as to present himself as being the real
“genius”; he asserted, “And he had
outmaneuvered all of us and he had, you
know, bullied and, you know, strategized his
way into expanding Russian power. And I said
at the time we don’t want war with Russia [even
though his
February 2014 anti-Russian
coup in Ukraine and
actions afterwards show
otherwise] but we can apply steady pressure
working with our European partners, being
the backbone of an international coalition
to oppose Russia’s violation of another
country’s sovereignty [as
if it weren’t the case that two recent
Gallup polls in Crimea showed an
overwhelming public support there for
leaving Ukraine and for reuniting with
Russia, and as if it weren’t the case that
America’s takeover of Ukraine on Russia’s
border hadn’t been the aggressive act here],
and that over time, this would be a
strategic mistake by Russia [when, in fact,
Obama knows quite well that the people he
installed in his February coup in Ukraine
had already been initiating the process to
kick out of Crimea, Russia’s crucial Black
Sea Fleet, which had been stationed there
since 1783, and that this reversal of
Khrushchev’s 1954 gift of Crimea to Ukraine
was crucial for Russia’s own national
security]. And today, you know, I’d sense
that at least outside of Russia [such as
among
the trusting listeners to
NPR], maybe some people are
thinking what Putin did wasn’t so smart
[when Obama knows quite well that what Putin
did by his re-absorbing Crimea back into
Russia was actually vital to Russian
national security under the circumstances of
Obama’s
February coup in Ukraine].”
Inskeep responded to Obama’s
distortions, with what he perhaps hoped his
listeners would think to be a challenging
question to the President: “Are you just
lucky that the price of oil went down and
therefore their currency collapsed or … is
it something that you did?” Inskeep was
apparently quite ignorant there that
Obama’s Secretary of State
had met in Riyadh with the Saudi King on
September 11th widely viewed as
having actually produced the King’s decision
to flood oil markets in order to drive oil
prices so low as to cripple Russia’s
economy, so that Inskeep’s question here was
assuming a non-existent polarity, in any
case (between the sanctions from Obama, vs.
the falling oil-price, which was supposedly
not from Obama).
Obama answered Inskeep’s
ignorance there by triumphantly bragging
against Putin:
“If you’ll recall, their
economy was already contracting and capital
was fleeing even before oil collapsed. And
part of our rationale in this process was
that the only thing keeping that economy
afloat was the price of oil. [Actually,
Russia’s economy under
Putin had been growing much faster than had
the U.S. economy under the George W. Bush
and Barack Obama regime.] And if,
in fact, we were steady in applying sanction
pressure, which we have been, that over time
it would make the economy of Russia
sufficiently vulnerable that if and when
there were disruptions with respect to the
price of oil — which, inevitably, there are
going to be sometime, if not this year then
next year or the year after [which also is a
lie from him because the current low oil
price is the engineered price, and even the
Saudis will have to quit doing it within a
few years] — that they’d have enormous
difficulty managing it. I say that, not to
suggest that we’ve solved Ukraine [by
producing the civil war there?], but I’m
saying that to give an indication that when
it comes to the international stage, these
problems are big, they’re difficult, they’re
messy [like
America’s coups were in
Iran 1953, Guatemala 1954, Chile 1973, etc.].
But wherever we have been involved over the
last several years, I think the outcome has
been better because of American leadership.”
So, the particular
instance in which America’s President feels
proudest of having produced an “outcome
[that] has been better because of American
leadership” was in Ukraine, where Obama’s
policy produced a takeover of the Ukrainian
Government by
racist anti-Russian
fascists, or nazis who hate Russians — nazis
who are ethnically cleansing ethnic Russians
away from Ukraine’s Donbass region,
the region that had
voted 90% for the President,
Viktor Yanukovych,
whom Obama had overthrown
with the crucial armed muscle of those nazi
snipers who carried out his coup.
(And virtually no U.S. ‘news’ medium has
reported that
the actual person whom
Obama placed in control of Ukraine is a
longstanding leader of Ukraine’s nazis.)
With ‘news’ coverage like
this, it’s clear why, as Gallup headlined on
December 29th,
“Barack
Obama, Hillary Clinton Extend Run as Most
Admired.”
That sort of thing — respect
for people who are actually war-mongers —
has become routine in the United States.
In 2001, the most-admired
man was George W. Bush, and the most-admired
woman was his wife. In 2002-2006, the
most-admired man was President Bush, and the
most-admired woman was former President Bill
Clinton’s wife. (Hillary Clinton
is
a big backer of all
invasions and coups by the U.S.)
And, without ‘news’ coverage
like that, it’s also clear why
people outside the United
States consider the U.S. to be the biggest
threat to world peace.
Internationally, Russia is way down this
list. However, America’s President won’t
need to ask those foreigners whether
to launch a nuclear attack
against Russia. All that he will
need to control is America’s press — and he
(and the aristocrats who placed him into
power) do.
Investigative historian
Eric Zuesse is the author, most
recently, of
They’re Not Even Close:
The Democratic vs. Republican Economic
Records, 1910-2010, and
of CHRIST’S
VENTRILOQUISTS: The Event that Created
Christianity.
See also -
2014 - The deadliest
year for Afghan civilians on record:
The number of civilian casualties in
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the highest since records began. UNAMA's
Georgette Gagnon tells DW the figures
reflect how civilians are bearing the brunt
of the violence.