Trump or
Clinton?
If the U.S. election comes down to Hillary Clinton
v. Donald Trump, the American people will have to
decide between two candidates who could risk the
future of the planet, albeit for very different
reasons.
By Robert
Parry
June 03,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Consortium
News"
-
Hillary
Clinton made
a strong case for why handing the nuclear
codes over to a President Donald Trump would be a
scary idea, but there may be equal or even greater
reason to fear turning them over to her. In perhaps
the most likely area where nuclear war could break
out – along Russia’s borders – Clinton comes across
as the more belligerent of the two.
In
Clinton’s world view, President Vladimir Putin, who
has been elected multiple times and has approval
ratings around 80 percent, is nothing more than a
“dictator” who is engaged in “aggression” that
threatens NATO following the U.S.-backed “regime
change” in Ukraine.
“Moscow has
taken aggressive military action in Ukraine, right
on NATO’s doorstep,” she declared. But stop for a
second and think about what Clinton said: she sees
Russia responding to an unconstitutional coup in
Ukraine – which installed a virulently anti-Russian
regime on Russia’s border – as Moscow acting
aggressively “on NATO’s doorstep.”
That’s the
same NATO, whose job it was to protect Western
Europe from the Soviet Union, that — following the
Soviet Union’s collapse — added country after
country right up to Russia’s border. In other words,
NATO muscled its way into Russia’s face and has
announced plans to incorporate Ukraine as well, but
when Russia reacts, it’s the one doing the
provoking.
Clinton’s
neoconservative interpretation of what’s happening
in Eastern Europe is so upside-down and inside-out
that it could ultimately become the flashpoint for a
nuclear war between Russia and the West.
While she
sees Russia as the “aggressor” against NATO, the
Russians see NATO moving troops up to its borders
and watch the deployment of anti-ballistic-missile
systems in Romania and Poland, thus making a
first-strike nuclear attack against Russia more
feasible. Russia has made clear that it views these
military deployments, just kilometers from major
Russian cities, as an existential threat.
In
response, Russia is raising its alert levels and
upgrading its strategic forces. Yet, Hillary Clinton
believes the Russians have no reason to fear NATO’s
military encirclement and no right to resist
U.S.-supported coups in countries on Russia’s
periphery. It is just such a contradiction of
viewpoints that can turn a spark into an
uncontrollable inferno.
What might
happen, for instance, if Ukraine’s nationalist — and
even neo-Nazi — militias, which wield increasing
power over the corrupt and indecisive regime in
Kiev, received modern weaponry from a tough-talking
Clinton-45 administration and launched an offensive
to exterminate ethnic Russians in eastern Ukraine
and to reclaim Crimea, where 96 percent of the
voters opted to secede from Ukraine and rejoin
Russia?
A President
Hillary Clinton would have talked herself into a
position of supporting this “liberation” of
“Russian-occupied territory” and her clever
propagandists would surely present this “heroic
struggle” as a war of good against evil, much as
they justified bloody U.S. invasions of Iraq and
Libya which Clinton supported as U.S. senator and
Secretary of State, respectively.
What if the
Ukrainian forces then fired missiles striking
Russia’s naval base at Sevastopol in Crimea, killing
some of the 20,000 Russian troops stationed there
and inflicting damage on Russia’s Black Sea fleet?
What if Kremlin hardliners finally got their way and
unleashed the Russian army to launch a real invasion
of Ukraine, crushing its military, rumbling through
to Kiev and accomplishing their own “regime change”?
How would
President Hillary Clinton respond? Would she put
herself in the shoes of Russia’s leaders and search
for some way to de-escalate or would she get
high-and-mighty and escalate the crisis by
activating NATO military forces to counter this
“Russian aggression”?
Given what
we know about Clinton’s tough-talking persona, the
odds are good that she would opt for an escalation –
and that could set the stage for nuclear war,
possibly starting because the Russians would fear
the imminence of a NATO first strike, made more
possible by those ABM bases in Romania and Poland.
Clinton’s Non-Nuclear Wars
There are
other areas in the world where a President Hillary
Clinton would likely go to war albeit at a
sub-nuclear level. During the campaign, she has made
clear that she intends to invade Syria once she
takes office, although she frames her invasions as
humanitarian gestures, such as creating “safe zones”
and “no-fly zones.”
In other
words, although she condemns Russian
“aggression,” she advocates aggressive war herself,
seemingly incapable of recognizing her hypocrisies
and only grudgingly acknowledging her “mistakes,”
such as her support for the invasion of Iraq.
So, on
Thursday, even as she made strong points about
Trump’s mismatched temperament for becoming
Commander-in-Chief, she flashed a harsh temperament
of her own that also was unsettling, although in a
different way.
Trump
shoots from the lip and has a thin skin, while
Clinton is tightly wound and also has a thin skin.
Trump lets his emotions run wild while Clinton is
excessively controlled. Trump engages in raucous
give-and-take with his critics; Clinton tries to
hide her decision-making (and emails) from her
critics.
It’s hard
to say which set of behaviors is more dangerous. One
can imagine Trump having free-form or chaotic
diplomatic encounters with allies and adversaries
alike, while Clinton would plot and scheme,
insisting on cooperation from allies and demanding
capitulation from adversaries.
Clinton
sprinkled her speech denouncing Trump with
gratuitous insults aimed at Putin and undiplomatic
slaps at Russia, such as, “If Donald gets his way,
they’ll be celebrating in the Kremlin. We cannot let
that happen.”
In short,
there is reason to fear the election of either of
these candidates, one because of his
unpredictability and the other because of her
rigidity. How, one might wonder, did the two major
political parties reach this juncture, putting two
arguably unfit personalities within reach of the
nuclear codes?
[For more
on this topic, see Consortiumnews.com’s “Yes,
Hillary Clinton Is a Neocon” and “Would
a Clinton Win Mean More Wars?’]
Investigative reporter Robert Parry
broke many of the Iran-Contra stories for The
Associated Press and Newsweek in the 1980s. You can
buy his latest book,
America’s
Stolen Narrative,
either in print
here or as an e-book (from
Amazon and
barnesandnoble.com). |