America as Dangerous Flailing Beast
Despite pretty talk about “democracy” and “human rights,”
U.S. leaders have become the world’s chief purveyors of chaos and death – from
Vietnam through Iraq, Libya, Syria, Ukraine and many other unfortunate nations,
a dangerous dilemma addressed by John Chuckman.
By John Chuckman
May 12, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Consortium
News"- When I think of America’s place in the
world today, the image that comes to mind is of a very large animal, perhaps a
huge bull elephant or even prehistoric mammoth, which long roamed as the
unchallenged king of its domain but has become trapped by its own missteps, as
caught in a tar pit or some quicksand, and it is violently flailing about,
making a terrifying noises in its effort to free itself and re-establish its
authority.
Any observer immediately knows the animal ultimately cannot succeed but
certainly is frightened by the noise and crashing that it can sustain for a
considerable time.I think that is the pretty accurate
metaphor for the situation of the United States today, still a terribly large
and powerful society but one finding itself trapped after a long series of its
own blunders and errors, a society certain ultimately to become diminished in
its prestige and relative power with all the difficulties which that will entail
for an arrogant people having a blind faith in their own rightness.
America simply cannot accept its mistakes or that it was ever
wrong, for Americanism much resembles a fundamentalist religion whose members
are incapable of recognizing or admitting they ever followed anything but the
divine plan.
America has made a costly series of errors over the last half
century, demonstrating to others that the America they may have been in awe of
in, say, 1950, and may have considered almost godlike and incapable of mistakes,
has now proved itself indisputably, in field after field, as often not even
capable of governing itself. The irony of a people who are seen as often unable
to govern themselves advising others how to govern themselves brings a distinct
note of absurdity to American foreign policy.
America’s establishment, feeling its old easy superiority in
the world beginning to slip away in a hundred different ways, seems determined
to show everyone it still has what it takes, determined to make others feel its
strength, determined to weaken others abroad who do not accept its natural
superiority, determined to seize by brute force and dirty tricks advantages
which no longer come to it by simply superior performance.
Rather than learn from its errors and adjust its delusional
assumptions, America is determined to push and bend people all over the world to
its will and acceptance of its leadership. But you cannot reclaim genuine
leadership once you have been exposed enough times in your bad judgment, and it
is clear you are on the decline, just as you cannot once others realize that
they can do many things as well or better than you.
In the end, policies which do not recognize scientific facts
are doomed. Policies based on wishes and ideology do not succeed over the long
run, unless, of course, you are willing to suppress everyone who disagrees with
you and demand their compliance under threat. The requirement for an imperial
state in such a situation is international behavior which resembles the internal
behavior of an autocratic leader such as Stalin, and right now that is precisely
where the United States is headed.
Stalin’s personality had a fair degree of paranoia and no
patience for the views of others. He felt constantly threatened by potential
competitors and he used systematic terror to keep everyone intimidated and
unified under him.
Stalin’s sincere belief in a faulty economic system that was
doomed from its birth put him in a position similar to that of America’s
oligarchs today. They have a world imperial system that is coming under
increasing strain and challenge because others are growing and have their own
needs and America simply does not have the flexibility to accommodate them.
America’s oligarchs are not used to listening to the views of
others. Stalin’s belief in a system that was more an ideology than a coherent
economic model is paralleled by the quasi-religious tenets of Americanism, a set
of beliefs which holds that America is especially blessed by the Creator and all
things good and great are simply its due.
Dominion over the Earth?
Americanism blurrily assumes that God’s promise in the Old
Testament that man should have dominion over the earth’s creatures applies now
uniquely to Americans. Such thinking arose during many years of easy
superiority, a superiority that was less owing to intrinsic merits of American
society than to a set of fortuitous circumstances, many of which are now gone.
In Vietnam, America squandered countless resources chasing
after a chimera its ideologues insisted was deadly important, never once
acknowledging the fatal weaknesses built right into communism from its birth.
Communism was certain eventually to fail because of economic falsehoods which
were part of its conception, much as a child born with certain genetic flaws is
destined for eventual death.
America’s mad rush to fight communism on all fronts was in
keeping with the zealotry of America’s Civic Religion, but it was a huge and
foolish practical judgment which wasted colossal resources.
In Vietnam, America ended in something close to total shame –
literally defeated on the battlefield by what seemed an inconsequential
opponent, having also cast aside traditional ethical values in murdering great
masses of people who never threatened the United States, murder on a scale (3
million) comparable to the Holocaust.
The United States used weapons and techniques of a savage
character: napalm, cluster bombs, and secret mass terror programs. The savagery
ripped into the fabric of America’s own society, dividing the nation almost as
badly as its Civil War once had. America ended reduced and depleted in many
respects and paid its huge bills with devalued currency.
Following Vietnam, it has just been one calamity after another
revealing the same destructive inability to govern, the same thought governed by
zealotry, right down to the 2008 financial collapse which was caused by ignoring
sound financial management and basically instituting a system of unlimited
greed. The entire world was jolted and hurt by this stupidity whose full
consequences are not nearly played out.
The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq were completely unnecessary,
cost vast sums, caused immense misery, and achieved nothing worth achieving. We
now know what was kept hidden, that more than one million Iraqis died in an
invasion based entirely on lies. These wars also set in motion changes whose
long-term effects have yet to be felt. Iraq, for example, has just about had its
Kurdish, oil-producing region hived off as a separate state.
Mishandling Russia
America’s primitive approach to the Soviet Union’s collapse,
its sheer triumphalism and failure to regard Russia as important enough to help
or with which to cooperate, ignored America’s own long-term interests. After
all, the Russians are a great people with many gifts, and it was inevitable that
they would come back from a post-collapse depression to claim their place in the
world.
So how do the people running the United States now deal with a
prosperous and growing Russia, a Russia which reaches out in the soundest
traditional economic fashion for cooperation and partnership in trade and
projects? Russia has embraced free trade, a concept Americans trumpeted for
years whenever it was to their advantage, but now for Russia is treated as dark
and sinister.
Here America fights the inevitable power of economic forces,
something akin to fighting the tide or the wind, and only for the sake of its
continued dominance of another continent. Americans desperately try to stop what
can only be called natural economic arrangements between Russia and Europe,
natural because both sides have many services, goods, and commodities to trade
for the benefit of all. America’s establishment wants to cut off healthy new
growth and permanently to establish its primacy in Europe even though it has
nothing new to offer.
America’s deliberately dishonest interpretation of Russia’s
measured response to an induced coup in Ukraine is used to generate an
artificial sense of crisis, but despite the pressures that America is capable of
exerting on Europe, we sense Europe only goes along to avoid a public squabble
and only for so long as the costs are not too high.
The most intelligent leaders in Europe recognize what the
United States is doing but do not want to clash openly, although the creation of
the Minsk Agreement came pretty close to a polite rejection of America’s demand
for hardline tactics.
The coup in Ukraine was intended to put a hostile government
in control of a long stretch of Russian border, a government which might
cooperate in American military matters and which would serve as an irritant to
Russia. But you don’t get good results with malicious policy.
So far the coup has served only to hurt Ukraine’s economy,
security and long-term interests. It has a government which is seen widely as
incompetent, a government which fomented unnecessary civil war, a government
which may have shot down a civilian airliner, and a government in which no one,
including in the West, has much faith.
Its finances are in turmoil, many important former economic
connections are severed, and there is no great willingness by Europe, especially
an economically-troubled Europe, to assist it. It is not an advanced or stable
enough place to join the EU because that would just mean gigantic subsidies
being directed to it from an already troubled Europe.
And the idea of its joining NATO is absolutely a non-starter
both because it can’t carry its own weight in such an organization and because
that act would cross a dangerous red line for Russia.
Kiev is having immense problems even holding the country
together as it fights autonomous right-wing outfits like the Azov Battalion in
the southeast who threaten the Minsk Agreement, as the regime tries to implement
military recruiting in western Ukraine with more people running away than
joining up, as it finds it must protect its own President with a Praetorian
Guard of Americans from some serious threats by right-wing militias unhappy with
Kiev’s failures, as it must reckon with the de facto secession of Donetsk and
the permanent loss of Crimea – all this as it struggles with huge debts and an
economy in a nosedive.
America is in no position to give serious assistance to
Ukraine, just plenty of shop-worn slogans about freedom and democracy. These
events provide a perfect example of the damage America inflicts on a people with
malicious policy intended only to use them to hurt others.
There is such a record of this kind of thing by America that I
am always surprised when there are any takers out there for the newest scheme.
One remembers Secretary of State Henry Kissinger in 1975 encouraging the Iraqi
Kurds to revolt against Saddam Hussein and then leaving them in the lurch when
the dictator launched a merciless suppression.
I also think of the scenes at the end of the Vietnam War as
American helicopters took off in cowardly fashion from the roof of the embassy
leaving their Vietnamese co-workers, tears streaming down their faces, vainly
grasping for the undercarriages of helicopters, a fitting and shameful end to a
truly brainless crusade.
Messing up Ukraine
I don’t know but I very much doubt that the present government
of Ukraine can endure, and it is always possible that it will slip into an even
more serious civil war with factions fighting on all sides, something resembling
the murderous mess America created in Libya. Of course, such a war on Russia’s
borders would come with tremendous risks.
The American aristocracy doesn’t become concerned about
disasters into which they themselves are not thrust, but a war in Ukraine could
easily do just that. In ironic fashion, heightened conflict could mark the
beginning of the end of the era of European subservience to America. Chaos in
Ukraine could provide exactly the shock Europe needs to stop supporting American
schemes before the entire continent or even the world is threatened.
I remind readers that while Russia’s economy is not as large
as America’s, it is a country with a strong history in engineering and science,
and no one on the planet shares its terrifying experiences with foreign
invasion. So it has developed and maintains a number of weapons systems that are
second to none. Each one of its new class of ballistic missile submarines, and
Russia is building a number of them, is capable of hitting 96 separate targets
with thermo-nuclear warheads, and that capability is apart from rail-mounted
ICBMs, hard-site ICBMs, truck-mounted missiles, air-launched cruise missiles,
sea-launched cruise missiles, and a variety of other fearsome weapons.
Modern Russia does not make threats with this awesome power,
and you might say Putin follows the advice of Theodore Roosevelt as he walks
softly but carries a big stick, but I do think it wise for all of us to keep
these things in mind as America taunts Russia and literally play a game of
chicken with Armageddon.
I don’t believe America has a legitimate mandate from anyone
to behave in this dangerous way. Europe’s smartest leaders, having lived at the
very center of the Cold War and survived two world wars, do understand this and
are trying very carefully not to allow things to go too far, but America has
some highly irresponsible and dangerous people working hard on the Ukraine file,
and accidents do happen when you push things too hard.
The Israel Obsession
In another sphere of now constant engagement, instead of
sponsoring and promoting fair arrangements in the Middle East, America has
carried on a bizarre relationship with Israel, a relationship which is certainly
against the America’s own long term interests, although individual American
politicians benefit with streams of special interests payments – America’s
self-imposed, utterly corrupt campaign financing system being ultimately
responsible – in exchange for blindly insisting Israel is always right, which it
most certainly is not.
An important segment of Israel’s population is American, and
they just carried over to Israel the same short-sightedness, arrogance and
belligerence which characterize America, so much so, Israel may legitimately be
viewed as an American colony in the Middle East rather than a genuinely
independent state.
Its lack of genuine independence is reflected also in its
constant dependence on huge subsidies, on its need for heavily-biased American
diplomacy to protect it in many forums including the United Nations, and on its
dependence upon American arm-twisting and bribes in any number of places,
Egypt’s generous annual American pension requiring certain behaviors being one
of the largest examples.
Here, too, inevitability has been foolishly ignored. The
Palestinians are not going anywhere, and they have demonstrated the most
remarkable endurance, yet almost every act of Israel since its inception, each
supported by America, has been an effort to make them go away through extreme
hardship and abuse and violence, looking towards the creation of Greater Israel,
a dangerous fantasy idea which cannot succeed but it will fail only after it has
taken an immense toll.
Despite America’s constant diplomatic and financial pressure
on other states to support its one-sided policy here, there are finally a number
of signs that views are turning away from the preposterous notion that Israel is
always right and that it can continue indefinitely with its savage behavior.
Recently, we have had a great last effort by America and
covert partners to secure Israel’s absolute pre-eminence in the Middle East
through a whole series of destructive intrusions in the region – the “Arab
Spring,” the reverse-revolution in Egypt, the smashing and now dismemberment of
Iraq, the smashing and effective dismemberment of Libya, and the horrible,
artificially-induced civil war in Syria which employs some of the most violent
and lunatic people on earth from outside and gives them weapons, money and
refuge in an effort to destroy a stable and relatively peaceful state.
I could go on, but I think the picture is clear: in almost
every sphere of American governance, internally and abroad, America’s poor
political institutions have yielded the poorest decisions. America has
over-extended itself on every front, has served myths rather than facts, has let
greed run its governing of almost everything, and has squandered resources on
achieving nothing of worth.
I view America’s present posture in the world – supporting
dirty wars and coups in many places at the same time and treating others as game
pieces to be moved rather than partners – as a desperate attempt to shake the
world to gain advantages it couldn’t secure through accepted means of governance
and policy.
America is that great beast, bellowing and shaking the ground,
and for that reason, it is extremely dangerous.
John Chuckman is former
chief economist for a large Canadian oil company.