Moscow’s Problem: Dealing
with Imbeciles and Vassals
By Finian Cunningham
February 10, 2015 "ICH"
- "SCF"-
- Russia is in a dilemma. How can it work
through a peaceful settlement over the
Ukraine conflict – and avoid a wider, more
terrible war – when it is having to
communicate with imbeciles and vassals? We
are referring to the American and European
leaders, respectively.
The problem of trying to have
a conversation with imbeciles is that they
are simply incapable of understanding
anything outside of their obtuse reality.
They suffer from cognitive dissonance and
are proud of it. In fact, the more
cognitively dysfunctional, the more the
imbecile is celebrated as being strong.
Imbeciles cannot be enlightened; their
ignorant and boorish way of looking at the
world is impervious to any different, even
more correct perspective. Indeed, they have
a visceral aversion to correction, which
only retrenches their imbecility all the
more.
The problem in dealing with
vassals is that they are powerless to change
course – even if they have a residual
ability to think independently and to
recognise an alternative perspective as
being more correct, or at least reasonable.
Thus we have the dilemma
facing Russia in its dealings with
Washington and its European allies over the
Ukraine conflict.
Russian Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov, speaking in Munich last
weekend, deplored the lack of European
independence in averting Washington’s
systematic vandalism of the international
order. Lavrov was scoffed at for daring to
speak the truth and more so because he used
logic and historical evidence to support his
argument.
The imbecilic Americans
substitute axioms and accusations for
rational dialogue. They are guided by their
own self-serving propaganda and are deluded
by every word of it. And proud of it! God
bless America!
US President Barack Obama,
who is supposed to be one of the most
thoughtful American politicians, evidently
can’t think beyond the uniform straitjacket
narrative that posits, without a scintilla
of evidence, that the conflict in Ukraine as
«all Russia’s fault».
Speaking with German
Chancellor by his side at the White House
this week, Obama said that he was
considering sending lethal weapons to the
Kiev regime «to help Ukraine bolster its
defences in the face of separatist
aggression». Obama accused Russia of
fuelling the conflict and of trying to
violate Ukraine’s territorial integrity
«down the barrel of a gun».
Reality check. Ethnic
Russians are being killed in their homes,
basements, schools and streets, by the
Western-backed Kiev regime, which launched a
gratuitous war on eastern Ukraine ten months
ago, resulting in over 5,500 dead and more
than a million people displaced – and yet
Obama condemns the violence as «separatist
aggression» and wants to send more deadly
weapons to the offenders.
From Obama on down the
political ladder, it only gets worse. The
Vice President Joe Biden told the security
conference in Munich last weekend that
«Ukrainians have the right to defend
themselves» and so the US should send
military support to ward off «Russian
aggression».
So, Mr Biden, what about the
right of ethnic Russian Ukrainians defending
themselves? Are they debarred from doing so?
Are they not Ukrainians? Or maybe because
they are ethnic Russians that makes them
inferior in your view?
America’s top diplomat John
Kerry, a supposedly urbane, multilingual
cosmopolitan, reiterates the same baseless,
brainless accusations against Russia,
claiming the latter to be the «biggest
threat to Ukraine». Kerry also wants to send
weapons to Ukraine to teach Russia a lesson.
Ditto Ashton Carter, the
incoming Defence Secretary. Ditto Michel
Flournoy, who is tipped to be Defence
Secretary if Hillary Clinton wins the 2016
presidency. Ditto Bobby Jindal who is a hot
contender for the Republican presidential
candidacy. Ditto Republican foreign policy
chief Bob Corker. Ditto the Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Martin
Dempsey. Ditto the members of America’s
foreign policy establishment at the
Brookings Institute and Atlantic Council.
Ditto the editorial boards of America’s top
media corporations, including the New York
Times and Washington Post. All of them
unblinkingly repeat the mantra that the
Ukraine conflict is due to Russian
aggression and that arming the Kiev regime
is a swell idea for peace. All of them
regurgitate a corny travesty of history
which paints Russian President Vladimir
Putin as «a mid-20th Century dictator» in
the same «expansionist» vein as Adolf Hitler
or Benito Mussolini. (Without a whit of
understanding that mid-20th Century fascism
was fomented as a covert policy of Western
capitalist powers to attack the Soviet
Union, and resulted in 30 million dead
Russians. A policy that continues today in
the form of US support for the neo-Nazi
regime in Kiev as a destabilising force
towards Russia.)
The scary thing about
American imbeciles is that they don’t have
an inkling that they might be brainwashed.
They are Orwellian clones who believe that
war is peace, slavery is freedom, and truth
is whatever you are told it is.
American politicians
attending the Munich Security Conference
derided efforts by Germany’s Merkel and
French President Francois Hollande to engage
Putin in political dialogue over the Ukraine
crisis as «bullshit».
The three leaders are
proposing to follow up lengthy discussions
held in Moscow last weekend with a further
meeting in Minsk, the Belarus capital, this
week. It’s far from certain that Putin,
Merkel and Hollande can achieve a
breakthrough to get the Kiev regime to sit
down and talk with the pro-Russian
separatists in eastern Ukraine. The uncouth
Americans are certainly trying their best to
scupper dialogue before it is even given a
chance to progress.
In contrast to the gung-ho
Americans, there is a new consensus among
the Europeans that pouring more weapons into
Ukraine is no solution, indeed is to be
avoided, and that the separatists have
reasonable grounds for political autonomy
deserving a respectful hearing.
The Europeans, at least
publicly, may still adopt the hoary
narrative that Russia is destabilising
Ukraine covertly with its troops or military
support for the separatists. Moscow flatly
denies those claims. But at least the
Europeans seem to have enough intellectual
subtlety to realise that maximalist
finger-pointing against Putin is
counterproductive and that there might be
more than one side to the story.
To her credit, Angela Merkel
has stood firm in her opposition to American
calls for increasing military involvement in
Ukraine. While in Washington this week, she
categorically ruled out supporting the idea
of sending more weapons into Ukraine.
Merkel’s opposition to US proposals has been
denounced by leading Republican Senators as
«appeasement» of Putin, with asinine
analogies to Chamberlain and Hitler at the
1938 Munich conference.
Dealing with American
imbeciles is thus impossible. They inhabit a
different mental world from most other
people. Their world is formed by ahistorical
propaganda and a boorish attitude that makes
dialogue, reciprocation, or socratic
elucidation a dim prospect. Their arrogance
and ignorant conceit are obstacles to
genuine communication and understanding.
It’s all Putin’s fault; it’s all due to
those morose Russian hordes; it’s the evil
Soviet empire making a comeback. A US-backed
regime-change illegal operation in Kiev
against an elected government? A US-backed
regime waging war on ethnic Russian people
in eastern Ukraine? Are you nuts, you
Putin-pussy-apologist?
How can you deal with such
people? You can’t.
However, the additional
problem is that the Europeans are not free
to really act on their incipient independent
thoughts. It is clear that Merkel and
Hollande, and many other European leaders,
realise that US plans to flood Ukraine with
even more lethal weapons is a woeful idea
that potentially could spark World War III.
It is clear that many Europeans think US-led
sanctions against Russia are not only
counterproductive, but actually an
unreasonable, hostile policy that is hurting
European workers, farmers and economies as
much as it is Russia’s.
The problematic fact is that
European states are vassals of America. They
are not free to act out of line from
Washington’s dictate, no matter how
ludicrous is the latter. Germany is
considered the powerhouse of Europe and the
fourth largest economy in the world. Yet, as
German political analyst Christof Lehmann
reminds us, Germany has never had genuine
political independence since the end of the
Second World War. It does not have a
constitution befitting a modern state, and
it continues to be occupied by military
forces belonging to the «victorious»
American and British allies. «Germany is a
de facto colony of the US», says Lehmann.
«At any time, under the postwar basic law,
American troops can take over the government
of Germany, which technically and legally is
an occupied state, a vassal state».
The American NSA spying on
Chancellor Merkel revealed in 2013 by Edward
Snowden is a case in point. More telling is
how Merkel did not respond to that gross
infringement of German «sovereignty» with
the political force that that American
violation merited. She meekly accepted the
intrusion as a condition of American postwar
hegemony.
Lehmann points out how any
past moves by Germany to create an
independent foreign policy, and one in
particular that involves rapprochement with
Russia, have been serially vetoed by the US
and its British ally. «We saw that under
Chancellors Willy Brandt and Gerhard
Schroeder, their efforts at adopting a more
friendly relation with Russia were sabotaged
at every step by Washington and London»,
says Lehmann.
That is why Merkel deserves
much credit for making her bold stand this
week against American militarism in Ukraine.
Her dissent is highly significant of a
potential cleavage in US-European relations.
What she is doing is challenging a
fundamental red line in Washington: namely,
that European states, and Germany
especially, cannot, must not, dare to
question American hegemony and its longterm
policy of hostility towards Russia.
Merkel and Hollande may be
finally getting the message from the
millions of ordinary EU citizens who deeply
object to American warmongering towards
Russia at Europe’s expense. But given the
tradition of European vassalage to the
imbecilic Americans, the chances of a
positive breakthrough for peaceful relations
remain elusive. European leadership is still
a captive of Washington’s clutches. But the
disgusted European masses might just be
forcing a break in the imbecilic bonds.