June 15, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
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SCF
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In a sane
world, British Foreign
Secretary Philip Hammond
should be forced to quit
his post in disgrace as
the country’s top
diplomat, following
reckless remarks that
Britain may henceforth
site American nuclear
weapons to counter the
«threat from Russia». So
here we have an alarming
escalation of
international tensions
and militarism by both
Washington and London –
and all on the back of
unproven, prejudicial
words from the close
Anglo-American allies,
who are clearly working
in tandem.
Hammond’s
overt reversal to Cold
War mentality comes as
Washington is also
reportedly considering
the deployment of»first-strike»
nuclear missiles in
various European Union
countries. The Americans
are claiming that move
is «in response»to
Russia violating the
1987 Intermediate
Nuclear Forces Treaty
(INF). Moscow is accused
of testing land-based
cruise missiles banned
under the INF. Russia
has flatly denied this
American claim, which –
as is becoming the norm
in other contentious
matters – has not been
supported with any
evidence from
Washington.
This
slanderous attitude
toward Russia is doubly
contemptible, because
not only is it
calumnious, the
deception also serves as
a political and moral
cover that allows the
Anglo-American rulers to
take outrageous steps
toward jeopardising
international peace,
with the unprecedented
deployment of nuclear
weapons.
On the
issue of Britain siting
American nuclear
weapons, Hammond told
the rightwing Daily
Telegraph: «I think it
is right to be concerned
about the way the
Russians are developing
what they call
asymmetric warfare
doctrine… We have got to
send a clear signal to
Russia that we will not
allow them to transgress
our red lines. We would
look at the case [of
installing American
nuclear weapons on
British soil]. We work
extremely closely with
the Americans. That
would be a decision that
we would make together
if that proposition was
on the table. We would
look at all the pros and
the cons and come to a
conclusion».
For
self-serving good
measure, the British
foreign minister linked
the nuclear issue with
alleged Russian
aggression in east
Ukraine, adding: «There
have been some worrying
signs of stepping up
levels of activity both
by Russian forces and by
Russian-controlled
separatist forces».
Hammond
tried to sound
ambivalent about the
deployment of US nuclear
weapons from British
territory – in addition
to Britain’s own nuclear
arsenal – but the mere
fact that his government
is weighing the
possibility is in itself
a reckless, inflammatory
move. If Britain were to
do so, it reverses the
prohibition on such
American forces that
followed the end of the
Cold War more than 20
years ago.
Ironically, while
Hammond was this week
leading the Westminster
parliament’s push for a
referendum on Britain’s
membership of the
European Union, it may
be noted that the
British public is not
given a say on whether
their country once again
becomes part of the
United States’ nuclear
strike force.
But
perhaps the real sacking
offence for Hammond is
that he is dangerously
militarising foreign
policy based on
absolutely no reasonable
evidence; indeed, based
on outright
disinformation. Just
like his American allies
in Washington, the
Conservative Party
minister is making all
sorts of hysterical
claims against Russia,
ranging from posing a
threat to Europe, to
using»asymmetric war
doctrine», to invading
east Ukraine and
undermining the Minsk
ceasefire. (A ceasefire
that Moscow worked hard
to broker with Germany
and France back in
February, in the
significant absence of
both Washington and
London.)
Without
any credible
information, the
American and British
governments appear to be
moving incrementally
toward a pre-emptive
nuclear strike
capability against
Russia. As the
Associated Press
reported last week,
albeit using euphemistic
language: «The options
go so far as one implied
– but not stated
explicitly – that would
improve the ability of
US nuclear weapons to
destroy military targets
on Russian territory».
The
Americans, Britain or
NATO have not produced a
shred of verifiable
evidence that Russia has
violated the INF treaty,
or is subverting
Ukraine, or is
threatening any other
European country.
On the
east Ukraine conflict,
it is in fact reliably
reported by the Minsk
ceasefire monitoring
group of the
Organisation for
Security and Cooperation
in Europe (OSCE), as
well by local media
sources and
pro-separatist
officials, that the
latest surge in violence
is coming from the
Western-backed Kiev
regime. That violence
includes the shelling of
residential centres in
Donetsk City and
surrounding towns and
villages, which has
resulted in dozens of
civilian deaths over the
past week.
How the
British and American
governments can make out
that Russia is the
aggressor and is
subverting the Minsk
ceasefire is simply a
prejudicial assertion
that is based on no
facts. Moreover, such a
view is a distortion of
the facts to the point
of telling barefaced
lies.
That the
British foreign
secretary can make such
misleading and
apparently misinformed
comments about the
Ukraine conflict and
Russia in general, and
then seek to overhaul
Britain’s military
policy to install
American nuclear weapons
on British territory is
worthy of a ministerial
sacking due to gross
incompetence.
Hammond’s
embrace of nuclear
militarism in the midst
of a tense East-West
political standoff has
not gone unnoticed in
Britain. His bellicose
remarks have caused
controversy, with
several anti-war
campaign groups reviling
the reckless reversal to
Cold War mentality.
Nevertheless, it is a
worrying sign of the
mainstream malaise that
Hammond’s incompetence
has not incurred even
greater public
condemnation.
Underlying the American
and British governments’
foreign policy is just
this: a Cold War
ideology, which views
the entire world in
terms of «external
threats». Russia and
China are once again
foremost as the
perceived and portrayed
enemies.
In an
interview last week with
Italian newspaper
Corriere della Sera,
Russian President
Vladimir Putin noted:
«As for some countries’
concerns about Russia’s
possible aggressive
actions, I think that
only an insane person
and only in a dream can
imagine that Russia
would suddenly attack
NATO».
By
deduction, this kind of
reasoning categorises
people like Britain’s
Hammond as «insane». The
same goes for US
President Barack Obama
and his administration.
Addressing the recent G7
summit in Germany, Obama
exhorted: «We must face
down Russian
aggression».
It might
be asked: why do
Washington and London in
particular always
interpret the world in
terms of enemies,
threats and aggression?
Part of
the answer may be that
these powers are
themselves the biggest
practitioners of illegal
aggression to pursue
foreign policy goals.
Imperialism – the use of
military force to
underpin political and
economic objectives – is
part and parcel of how
America and Britain
operate in the world.
Aggression and
militarism are
fundamental instruments
of Anglo-American
capitalism, as much as
banking, trade and
investment deals.
There is
thus a very real sense
of «devil’s conscience»
at play in the
international relations
of Washington and
London. They both fear
retribution and revenge
because of their own
criminal conduct toward
the rest of the world.
In a word, the
Anglo-American world
view boils down to
paranoia.
The
militarisation of
foreign relations is
also an effective,
vicarious way to exert
control over nominal
allies. If external
threats can be
sufficiently talked up,
then that creates a
contrived sense of «defence»
among «allies» who then
look to dominant leaders
for «protection». Such
mind games are typical
of the way Washington
and London have promoted
NATO as the protector of
«European allies» from
«Russian aggression».
The same
mind game is at play
over Washington’s
interference in
Asia-Pacific, where the
Americans are trying to
cast China as the «evil
aggressor» toward
smaller nations, who
then turn to Washington
for «protection» – and
large amounts of money
to buy American weapons,
courtesy of the Fed’s
dollar-printing press.
On the
matter of alleged
Russian aggression,
Putin, in the interview
cited above, went on to
aptly comment: «I think
some countries are
simply taking advantage
of people’s fears with
regard to Russia… Let’s
suppose that the United
States would like to
maintain its leadership
in the Atlantic [EU]
community. It needs an
external threat, an
external enemy to ensure
this leadership. Iran is
clearly not enough –
this threat is not very
scary or big enough. Who
can be frightening? And
then suddenly this
crisis unfolds in
Ukraine. Russia is
forced to respond.
Perhaps, it was
engineered on purpose, I
don’t know. But it was
not our doing».
Speaking
to the editor of
Corriere della Sera,
Putin added: «Let me
tell you something –
there is no need to fear
Russia. The world has
changed so drastically
that people with some
common sense cannot even
imagine such a
large-scale military
conflict today. We have
other things to think
about, I assure you».
That is
why politicians like
British Foreign Minister
Philip Hammond are
compelled to vilify
Russia and conjure up
nightmares of invasions,
large-scale military
conflicts, and nuclear
weapons. Without
scaremongering, there
cannot be warmongering;
and without warmongering
Anglo-American
capitalism cannot exert
the hegemonic relations
that it requires in
order to operate.
This
Anglo-American world
view remains
regressively stuck in a
bygone era of managing
international relations
through violence and
aggression and even, if
needs be, through
instigating all-out war.
Such
people as Britain’s
Philip Hammond, his
Prime Minister David
Cameron and on the
American side, Barack
Obama and his Secretary
of State, John Kerry, do
not of course deserve to
be in a position of
government, if we lived
in a sane world.
But
that’s the kind of
politician that the
Anglo-American
capitalist system
selects, because they
promote the essentials
of the system through
their draconian
mentality of aggression
and war. The diabolical
shame is that these
insane people are
capable of bringing
cataclysm upon millions
of innocent human
beings.
Kicking
out such politicians
would be a start to
averting war. Better
still would be kicking
out the entire insane
system that anyway only
ever enriches a small
minority at the painful
expense of the majority.
That «expense» includes
enduring the perennial
risk of war and, dare we
say, annihilation.
©
Strategic Culture
Foundation