Sitting on the Wrong Side of History, Liberty's Flame Burns
EastFreedom nowadays is exported at the barrel of a
gun.
By Catherine Shakdam
April 19, 2015 "ICH"
- "RT"
- No longer a beacon of freedom and democracy, the United States has
fallen from its pedestal. As America has devolved into a violent and oppressive
police state, new powers are rising to challenge this toxic world order: Iran
and Russia.
In 2001, as the United States woke up to the reality of
Islamic radicalism, then-President George W. Bush argued that Al-Qaeda and all
those in collusion with extremists sought to destroy America for the ideas it
represents: freedom, liberty and democracy.
"Why do they hate us?" he
called. "They hate what they see right here in this chamber: a
democratically elected government. Their leaders are self-appointed. They hate
our freedoms: our freedom of religion, our freedom of speech, our freedom to
vote and assemble and disagree with each other," he continued on in his
address to the nation.
And while the world continues to live under the premise that
the US and its Western allies are indeed democratic beacons, the shining
examples of a democratic free world, it would appear that freedom nowadays is
being exported at the barrel of a gun.
America's raging imperialism has but destroyed the very
principles which made this once proud nation stand out from the rest of the
world, and compelled all to admire the grand idea which was America. At a time
when imperialism and absolute monarchies ruled unchallenged over the people,
America withstood the onslaught of imperial Britain, its people determined to
forge a destiny which would be theirs and manifest a nation which would be of
the people and for the people.
And though America's flame burnt bright and strong for a
while, its embers are barely giving enough light nowadays, smothered under rabid
capitalism and neo-imperialism.
We live in a brave new world indeed!
As events are currently unfolding it could well be the Middle
East will turn out to be America's grand undoing - the straw which broke the
camel's back one might even venture to say.
But if US imperialism continues to erode the fabric of the
Constitution, emptying its founding principles from their meaning for every
gunshot the American military fire in foreign lands, for every abuse US
officials commit against the rule of law in the name of national security, lady
freedom has not sung her last song yet - it is now living on new shores, east
this time, where it found a more gentle echo to its calls.
And as experts are busy anticipating the Western powers' next
move, looking to decipher the complicated maze they have drawn around us - the
overlapping-double-crossing-allianceswhich have become the new norm, it appears
a tectonic political shift is taking shape before our very eyes. No longer
democracy's champion, America is losing ground to Russia and Iran.
This axis we were sold: East versus West, autocracy versus
democracy, communism versus capitalism, just got twisted on its head to the
point where it is now America which has become the epicenter of oppression. The
land of the free rings liberty bell no longer.
The baton has now been passed east, where new powers have
risen in defiance to America's morbid capitalism and militaristic ambitions. The
historical symmetry is undeniably elegant.
If up until WWII the US was very much this force for good,
this anti-colonialist, anti-feudal, modern power which only ambition was to
empower nations and bring the world the gospel of freedom; US officials and the
capitalist oligarchy did a great job at crumbling such ideals to the ground.
In a few decades the US went from participating in the
liberation of Europe from Nazism to exporting war and backing brutal
autocracies. Void of all principles, Washington's tank runs on petrodollars and
weapons sales these days.
Howard Baskerville's American dream is
but a distant memory.
An American hero, Baskerville died in Tabriz, Iran, in 1909
standing alongside Iran's constitutionalists against the royalists. He gave his
life to a fight which wasn't his, safe from the fact that he stood for the same
principles his Iranian friends wanted to see triumph.
Hailed by Iran for his sacrifice, Baskerville's Iranian eulogy
read, "Young America, in the person of young Baskerville, gave this sacrifice to
the young Constitution of Iran. He has written his name in our hearts and in our
history" -
Sayyed
Hassan Taqizabeh.
More than just an American figure, Baskerville came to embody
the shared values that once bind Iranians to Americans, long before Washington
set on a crash course to demonize the Islamic Republic and its people as they
dared rose against the Shah and it Western patrons in 1979.
If it took an American to light Iran's democratic path, a
century after Baskerville it is Iran this time which is rising the
anti-alignment, anti-colonial superpower against its now designated nemesis -
the United States of America.
Hot on its heels another superpower is reclaiming its place in
history: Russia.
Like Iran, Russia's power lies in the strength of its ideas.
Like Iran, Russia wants to establish its nation a regional powerhouse, both a
political giant and an economic generator. And like America centuries ago, those
two nations draw strength from the construct of their respective ideologies.
Unlike the US there is real substance to their message; there is a rationale
behind their policies and logic to their alliances.
And though money attracts, and that America has ample reserves
of, ideas inspire; where Washington can buy or bully alliances, Russia and Iran
can manifest loyalties - there lies true power.
Like them or hate them, those two nations have become the new
axis of resistance against neo-imperialism at such a time when America and the
EU have become reactionary police states - there lie the attraction.
Before the suffocating hands of Washington countries in the
MENA region - Middle East and North Africa - for example would much rather
partner up with Russia and Iran then entertain an alliance with the US;
especially now that Washington rhymes political partnership with feudalism.
Only this April Pakistan denied Saudi Arabia's request for
military support in Yemen, preferring to follow Tehran's calls for diplomacy to
Riyadh-Washington's Mad Max race. Tunisia also broke away from under
Washington's thumb this April when its Foreign Minister Taieb Baccouche
announced Tunis would resume all diplomatic ties with Damascus.
Tunisia, like Iran, Russia and China before it, chose
diplomacy over war, stressing that political isolation and intransigence only
serve to promote unrest. “We do not believe that our interests are served by
cutting off relations with Syria,” said Baccouche, pointing out that
Tunisians living in Syria, including those currently in prison, had been
“greatly harmed” by the previous government’s decision to end relations.
Even
Greece is looking east toward Moscow, tired of the EU's economic diktat.
As the Middle East convulses in war, plagued by rising
extremism and political instability, Washington and its regional allies,
organized now under a NATO-like military coalition, are playing the Great Game
with fierce determination, blind to the gathering storm which is coming their
way. If conclusions are to be drawn from history, where there is oppression
resistance will grow and where a people stand in shackles, chains will be
broken.
A century after Baskerville laid down his life to see a free
Iran; the United States is sitting on the wrong side of history, its legacy in
tatters.