Hillary
Clinton’s Project For A New American Century
By Dan
Wright
June 15,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Off
Guardian"
- Here
we go again. Earlier this year, some were surprised
to see
Project For
The New American Century (PNAC)
co-founder and longtime DC fixture Robert Kagan
endorse former Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton for president.
They
shouldn’t have been. As is now clear from a policy
paper [PDF]
published last month, the neoconservatives are going
all-in on Hillary Clinton being the best vessel for
American power in the years ahead.
The paper,
titled “Expanding American Power,” was published by
the
Center for a New American Security, a Democratic
Party-friendly think tank co-founded and led by
former Undersecretary of Defense Michèle Flournoy.
Flournoy served in the Obama Administration under
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and is widely
considered to be the frontrunner for the next
secretary of defense, should Hillary Clinton become
president.
The
introduction to Expanding American Power is written
by the aforementioned Robert Kagan and former
Clinton Administration State Department official
James Rubin. The paper itself was prepared in
consultation with various defense and national
security intellectuals over the course of six
dinners. Among the officials includes those who
signed on to PNAC letters calling for the overthrow
of Saddam Hussein, such as Elliot Abrams, Robert
Zoellick, Craig Kennedy, Martin Indyk, Dennis Ross,
and Flournoy herself, who
signed on to a PNAC letter in 2005
calling for more ground troops in Iraq.
The
substance of the document is about what one would
expect from an iteration of PNAC. The paper cites a
highly revisionist history of post-World War II
American policymaking, complete with a celebration
of America’s selfless motives for every action. Left
out is any mention of overthrowing democratically
elected and popular governments for US business, or
the subsequent blowback for such actions in Latin
America, the Middle East, and elsewhere.
For the
neocons and liberal interventionists at the Center
for a New American Security, the United States has
always acted for the benefit of all.
The paper
primarily focuses on the economy and defense budget,
and American security interests in Europe, Asia, and
the Middle East. Supporting the Trans-pacific
Partnership (TPP) and the Transatlantic Trade and
Investment Partnership (TTIP) are considered the
highest priority, as they will bind the main drivers
of the US-led “liberal world order”—the US and
Europe—closer together.
According
to the paper, “Even in a world of shifting economic
and political power, the transatlantic community
remains both the foundation and the core of the
liberal world order.” In other words, the West must
maintain control of the planet, for the good of all,
of course.
Part of the
European concerns are a rise in nationalist
sentiment in eastern Europe and the United Kingdom,
for which the paper blames Russia, even bizarrely
claiming that Russian funding is the cause of the
disunity within the European Union—a claim without
foundation, especially in the UK’s case.
The
revisionist history continues, as the paper makes an
astonishingly absurd claim on the US role in Asia,
stating, “U.S. leadership has been indispensable in
ensuring a stable balance of power in Asia the past
70 years.” No mention of the calamitous US war in
Vietnam or its reciprocal effects in the killing
fields of Cambodia. Nor is the US role in the
genocide in East Timor dispensed with anywhere.
Then we
come to the Middle East, where things really get
slippery. The paper breezes past the wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan with a sorry, not sorry
statement: “Despite recent American misjudgments and
failures in the Middle East, for which all recent
administrations, including the present one, bear
some responsibility, and despite the apparent
intractability of many of the problems in the
region, the United States has no choice but to
engage itself fully in a determined, multi-year
effort to find an acceptable resolution to the many
crises tearing the region apart.”
And
with that, the paper demands regime change in Syria
and that “Any such political solution must include
the departure of Bashar al-Assad (but not
necessarily all members of the ruling regime), since
it is Assad’s brutal repression of Syria’s majority
Sunni population that has created both the massive
exodus and the increase in support for jihadist
groups like ISIS.” Left out is the US role in
destabilizing Iraq and
arming jihadist rebels in Syria.
The paper
goes on to regurgitate alarmingly facile claims
about regional tensions between Iran and Saudi
Arabia that could have been written by the
government of Saudi Arabia itself, such as, “We also
reject Iran’s attempt to blame others for regional
tensions it is aggravating, as well as its public
campaign to demonize the government of Saudi
Arabia.” It also states that “the United States must
adopt as a matter of policy the goal of defeating
Iran’s determined effort to dominate the Greater
Middle East.”
If that
appears like a commitment to more reckless regime
change in the Middle East, that’s because it is.
But the
overriding concern of the entire paper, with all its
declarations about bipartisanship and universal
altruism, is a concern with the American people
being increasingly apprehensive towards the empire,
and that concern leading to further defense budget
cuts and unwillingness to support adventurism
abroad.
The authors
of the paper hope an improved economy can help
change the current situation. “Ensuring that the
domestic economy is lifting up the average American
is still the best way to ensure support for global
engagement and also contribute to a stronger, more
influential America,” they write, though they see no
end in sight, regardless of public support,
claiming, “the task of preserving a world order is
both difficult and never-ending.”
That this
is what a think tank closely associated with Hillary
Clinton is openly claiming should be concerning to
all. While such analysis and declarations no doubt
please the Center for a New American Security’s
defense contractor donors, the American people
are less-than-enthused with perpetual war for
perpetual peace.
Former
Secretary Clinton already affirmed
her belief in regime change during the campaign,
but now it looks like those waiting in the wings to
staff her government are anxious to wet their
bayonets.
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