Trading
Places: Neocons and Cockroaches
Neocons want a new Cold War – all the better to pick
the U.S. taxpayers’ pockets – but this reckless talk
and war profiteering could spark a nuclear war and
leave the world to the cockroaches.
By Robert Parry
If the human
species extinguishes itself in a flash of
thermonuclear craziness and the surviving
cockroaches later develop the intellect to assess
why humans committed this mass suicide, the
cockroach historians may conclude that it was our
failure to hold the neoconservatives accountable in
the first two decades of the Twenty-first Century
that led to our demise.
After the
disastrous U.S.-led invasion of Iraq – an aggressive
war justified under false premises – there rightly
should have been a mass purging of the people
responsible for the death, destruction and lies.
Instead the culprits were largely left in place,
indeed they were allowed to consolidate their
control of the major Western news media and the
foreign-policy establishments of the United States
and its key allies.
Despite the
Iraq catastrophe which destabilized the Middle East
and eventually Europe, the neocons and their liberal
interventionist chums still filled the opinion
columns of The New York Times, The Washington Post,
The Wall Street Journal and virtually every other
mainstream outlet. Across the American and European
political systems and “think tanks,” the neocons and
the liberal hawks stayed dominant, too, continuing
to spin their war plans while facing no significant
peace movement.
The
cockroach historians might be amazed that at such a
critical moment of existential danger, the human
species – at least in the most advanced nations of
the West – offered no significant critique of the
forces leading mankind to its doom. It was as if the
human species was unable to learn even the most
obvious lessons needed for its own survival.
Despite the
falsehoods of the Iraq War, the U.S. government was
still widely believed whenever it came out with a
new propaganda theme. Whether it was the
sarin gas attack in Syria in 2013 or the
Malaysia Airlines Flight 17
shoot-down over eastern Ukraine in 2014, U.S.
government assertions blaming the Syrian government
and the Russian government, respectively, were
widely accepted without meaningful skepticism or
simple demands for basic evidence.
Swallowing Propaganda
Just as
with the Iraqi WMD case, the major Western media
made no demands for proof. They just fell in line
and marched closer to the edge of global war.
Indeed, the learned cockroaches might observe that
the supposed watchdogs in the American press had
willingly leashed themselves to the U.S. government
as the two institutions moved in unison toward
catastrophe.
The few
humans in the media who did express skepticism –
largely found on something called the Internet –
were dismissed as fill-in-the-blank “apologists,”
much as occurred with the doubters against the Iraqi
WMD case in 2002-2003. The people demanding real
evidence were marginalized and those who accepted
whatever the powerful said were elevated to
positions of ever-greater influence.
If the
cockroach historians could burrow deep enough into
the radioactive ashes, they might discover that – on
an individual level – people such as Washington Post
editorial page editor Fred Hiatt wasn’t fired after
swallowing the WMD lies whole and regurgitating them
on the Post’s readership; that New York Times
columnist Roger Cohen and dozens of similar
opinion-leaders were not unceremoniously replaced;
that
Hillary Clinton, a neocon in the supposedly
“liberal” Democratic Party, was rewarded with the
party’s presidential nomination in 2016; and that
the likes of Iraq War architect Robert Kagan
remained the toast of the American capital with his
opinions sought after and valued.
The
cockroaches might observe that humans showed little
ability to adapt amid very dangerous conditions,
i.e., the bristling nuclear arsenals of eight or so
countries. Instead, the humans pressed toward their
own doom, tagging along after guides who had proven
incompetent over and over again but were still
followed toward a civilization-ending precipice.
These
guides casually urged the masses toward the edge
with sweet-sounding phrases like “democracy
promotion,” “responsibility to protect,” and
“humanitarian wars.” The same guides, who had
sounded so confident about the wisdom of “shock and
awe” in Iraq and then the “regime change” in Libya,
pitched plans for a U.S. invasion of Syria, albeit
presented as the establishment of “safe zones” and
“no-fly zones.”
After
orchestrating
a coup in Russia’s neighbor Ukraine,
overthrowing the elected president and then
sponsoring an “anti-terrorism operation” to kill
ethnic Russian Ukrainians who objected to the coup,
Western politicians and policymakers saw only
“Russian aggression” when Moscow gave these
embattled people some assistance. When citizens in
Crimea voted 96 percent to separate from Ukraine and
rejoin Russia, the West denounced the referendum as
a “sham” and called it a “Russian invasion.” It
didn’t matter that opinion polls repeatedly found
similar overwhelming support among the Crimean
people for the change. The false narrative,
insisting that Russia had instigated the Ukraine
crisis, was accepted with near-universal gullibility
across the West.
A
Moscow ‘Regime Change’
Behind this
fog of propaganda, U.S. and other Western officials
mounted a significant NATO military build-up on
Russia’s border, complete with large-scale military
exercises practicing the seizure of Russian
territory.
Russian
warnings against these operations were dismissed as
hysterical and as further proof for the need to
engineer another “regime change,” this time in
Moscow. But first the Russian government had to be
destabilized by making the economy scream. Then, the
plan was for political disruptions and eventually a
Ukraine-style coup to remove the thrice-elected
President Vladimir Putin.
The wisdom
of throwing a nuclear power into economic, political
and social disorder – and risking that the nuclear
codes might end up in truly dangerous hands – was
barely discussed.
Even before
the desired coup, the West’s neoconservatives
advocated giving the Russians a bloody nose in Syria
where Moscow’s forces had intervened at the Syrian
government’s request to turn back Islamic jihadists
who were fighting alongside Western-backed
“moderate” rebels.
The neocon/liberal-hawk
plans for “no-fly zones” and “safe zones” inside
Syria required the U.S. military’s devastation of
Syrian government forces and presumably the Russian
air force personnel inside Syria with the Russians
expected to simply take their beating and keep
quiet.
The
cockroach historians also might note that once the
neocons and their liberal interventionist sidekicks
decided on one of their strategic plans at some
“think-tank” conference – or wrote it down in a
report or an op-ed – they were single-minded in
implementing it regardless of its impracticality or
recklessness.
These hawks
were highly skilled at spinning new propaganda
themes to justify what they had decided to do. Since
they dominated the major media outlets, that was
fairly easy without anyone of note taking note that
the talking points were simply word games. But the
neocons and liberal hawks were very good at word
games. Plus, these widely admired interventionists
were never troubled with self-doubt whatever mayhem
and death followed in their wake.
So, when
the decision was made to invade Iraq, Libya and
Syria or to stage a coup in Ukraine or to
destabilize nuclear-armed Russia, the neocons and
their friends never countenanced the possibility
that something could go wrong.
And when
setbacks and even catastrophes resulted, the messes
were excused away as the failure of some politician
to implement the neocon/liberal-hawk scheme to the
precise letter. If only more force had been used, if
only people on the ground were more competent, if
only the few critics were silenced and prevented
from sowing doubts about the wisdom of the plan,
then it would have succeeded. It was never their
fault.
As the
West’s new foreign-policy establishment, the neocons
and their liberal helpers validated their own
thoughts as brilliant and infallible. And who was
there to doubt them? Who had the necessary access to
the West’s mass media and who had the courage to
counter their clever arguments and suffer the
predictable ridicule, insults and slurs? After all,
there were so many esteemed people and prestigious
institutions that stamped the neocon/liberal-hawk
plans with gilded seals of approval.
Still, the
cockroach historians might yet be puzzled by how
thoroughly the world’s leadership failed the human
species, particularly in the West, which prided
itself in freedom of thought and diversity of
opinion.
So, the
pressures kept building, unchecked, until – perhaps
accidentally amid excessive tensions or after some
extreme nationalist had exploited Russia’s “regime
change” chaos to seize power – the final line was
crossed.
‘Extending American Power’
Though much
of human information would likely have been lost in
the nuclear firestorms that were unleashed, the
cockroach historians could learn much if they could
get their antennae around a 2016 report by a group
called the Center for a New American Security,
consisting of prominent neocons and liberal
interventionists, including some expected to play
high-level roles in a Hillary Clinton
administration.
These
“experts” included foreign-policy stars such as
Robert Kagan (formerly of the Reagan
administration’s State Department, a co-founder of
the Project for the New American Century – an early
advocate for the Iraq War – and later a scholar at
the Brookings Institution and a Washington Post
columnist), James P. Rubin (who served in Bill
Clinton’s State Department and made a name for
himself as a TV commentator), Michele Flournoy (the
Under Secretary of Defense for Policy during Barack
Obama’s first term and touted as Hillary Clinton’s
favorite to be Secretary of Defense), Eric Edelman
(who preceded Flournoy in her Obama job except he
served under George W. Bush), Stephen J. Hadley
(George W. Bush’s second-term national security
advisor), and James Steinberg (a deputy national
security advisor under Bill Clinton and Deputy
Secretary of State under Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton).
In other
words, this group, which included many other big
names as well, was a who’s who of who’s important in
Washington’s foreign-policy establishment. Their
report was brazenly entitled “Extending American
Power” and painted an idyllic picture of the world
population living happily under U.S. domination in
the seven decades since World War II.
“The world
order created in the aftermath of World War II has
produced immense benefits for peoples across the
planet,” the report asserted, ignoring periodic
slaughters carried out across the Third World, from
Vietnam to Latin America to Africa to the Middle
East, often inflicted by the massive application of
U.S. firepower and other times by tribal or
religious hatreds and rivalries exacerbated by
big-power interference.
Also
downplayed was the environmental devastation that
has come with the progress of hyper-capitalism,
threatening the long-term survival of human
civilization via “global warming” – assuming that
“nuclear winter” doesn’t intervene first.
Even though
many of these benighted “experts” were complicit in
gross violations of international law – including
aggressive war in Iraq, Libya and elsewhere; lethal
drone strikes in multiple countries; torture of “war
on terror” detainees; and subversion of
internationally recognized governments – they
deluded themselves into believing that they stood
for some legalistic global structure, declaring:
“United
States still has the military, economic, and
political power to play the leading role in
protecting a stable rules-based international
order.” Exactly what stability and what rules were
left fuzzy.
In line
with their underlying delusions, these “experts”
called for feeding more money into the maw of the
Military-Industrial Complex and flexing American
military muscle: “An urgent first step is to
significantly increase U.S. national security and
defense spending and eliminate the budgetary
strait-jacket of the Budget Control Act. A second
and related step is to formulate policies that take
advantage of the substantial military, economic, and
diplomatic power Washington has available but has
been reluctant to deploy in recent years.”
Battling Russia over Ukraine
The
bipartisan group – representing what might be called
Official Washington’s consensus – also urged a tough
stand against Russia regarding Ukraine, including
military assistance to help the post-coup Ukrainian
regime crush ethnic Russian resistance in the east.
“The United
States must provide Ukrainian armed forces with the
training and equipment necessary to resist
Russian-backed forces and Russian forces operating
on Ukrainian territory,” the report said, adding as
a recommendation: “Underwrite credible
security guarantees to NATO allies on the frontlines
with Russia. Given recent Russian behavior,
it is no longer possible to ignore the possible
challenge to NATO countries that border Russia. The
Baltics in particular are vulnerable to both direct
attack and the more complicated ‘hybrid’ warfare
that Russia has displayed in Ukraine.
“To provide
reassurance to U.S. allies and also to deter Russian
efforts to destabilize these nations, it is
necessary to build upon the European Reassurance
Initiative and establish a more robust U.S. force
presence in appropriate central and eastern Europe
countries, which should include a mix of permanently
stationed forces, rotationally deployed forces,
prepositioned equipment, access arrangements and a
more robust schedule of military training and
exercises. …
“The United
States should also work with both NATO and the EU to
counter Russian influence-peddling and subversion
using corruption and illegal financial
manipulation.”
Apparently
that last point about “influence-peddling” was a
reference to the need to silence dissident voices in
the West that object to the new Cold War and dispute
U.S. propaganda aimed at justifying the increased
tensions with Russia. The report’s Washington
insiders clearly understand that their future career
prospects are advanced by taking a belligerent
approach toward Russia.
Regarding
Syria, the bipartisan group of neocons and liberal
hawks urged a U.S. military invasion with the goal
of establishing a “no-fly zone” while building up
insurgent forces capable of compelling “regime
change” in Damascus, a strategy similar to those
followed in Iraq and Libya to disastrous results.
“In our
view, there can be no political solution to the
Syrian civil war so long as the military balance
continues to convince [Syrian President Bashar al-]
Assad he can remain in power. And as a result of
Iran’s shock troops and military equipment deployed
to Syria, and the modern aircraft and other
conventional forces Russia has now deployed, the
military balance tilts heavily in favor of the Assad
regime,” the report said.
“At a
minimum, the inadequate efforts hitherto to arm,
train, and protect a substantial Syrian opposition
force must be completely overhauled and made a much
higher priority. In the meantime, and in light of
this grim reality, the United States, together with
France and other allies, must employ the necessary
military power, including an appropriately designed
no-fly zone, to create a safe space in which Syrians
can relocate without fear of being killed by Assad’s
forces and where moderate opposition militias can
arm, train, and organize.”
How a
U.S.-led invasion of a sovereign country and the
arming of a military force to overthrow the
government fit with the group’s enthusiasm for “a
rule-based international order” is not explained.
Clearly, the prescribed actions are in violation of
the United Nations Charter and other international
legal standards, but apparently the only real
“rules” the group believes in are those that serve
its purposes and change depending on the needs for
“extending American power.”
Similar
hypocrisy pervaded the group’s other
recommendations, but the blind obedience to these
double standards – indeed the inability to see or
acknowledge the blatant contradictions – might be of
interest to the cockroach historians because it
could help them understand how the U.S. foreign
policy establishment lost its mind and blundered
into unnecessary conflicts that could easily
escalate into strategic warfare, even thermonuclear
conflagration.
A
Steady Drumbeat
But this
collection of neocons and liberal hawks wasn’t just
an odd group of careerist “thinkers” trying to
impress Hillary Clinton. Their double-thinking
“group think” extended throughout the American
establishment in the second decade of the
Twenty-first Century.
For
instance, The New York Times and other major
publications were dominated by both neocon and
liberal-hawk commentators, writers like Roger Cohen,
who was one of the many pundits who swallowed the
Iraq War lies whole and — despite the disaster —
avoided any negative career consequences. So, in
2016, that left Cohen and his fellow Iraq War
cheerleaders still pressing political leaders to
expand the war in Syria and ratchet up tensions with
Russia at every opportunity.
In
a column about the mass shooting at a gay night
club in Orlando, Florida, on June 12 – in which the
shooter was reported to have claimed allegiance to
ISIS – Cohen tacked on a typically distorted account
of President Obama’s approach to the Syrian
conflict. Ignoring that Obama had the CIA and the
Pentagon covertly train and arm rebel groups seeking
to overthrow the Syrian government, Cohen wrote:
“Yes, to
have actively done nothing in Syria over more than
five years of war — so allowing part of the country
to become an ISIS stronghold, contributing to a
massive refugee crisis in Europe, acquiescing to
slaughter and displacement on a devastating scale,
undermining America’s word in the world, and
granting open season for President Vladimir Putin to
strut his stuff — amounts to the greatest foreign
policy failure of the Obama administration. It has
made the world far more dangerous.”
But Cohen
did not acknowledge his own role as a brash
supporter of the Iraq War in sparking the creation
of Al Qaeda in Iraq, which later morphed into the
Islamic State or ISIS. Nor did he address the fact
that the United States and its allies, such as
Turkey and Saudi Arabia, have essentially kept the
Syrian civil war going, a point even acknowledged by
some supporters of Syrian “regime change.”
For
instance, Thanassis Cambanis of the “progressive”
Century Foundation produced a
report entitled “The Case for a More Robust U.S.
Intervention in Syria,” which acknowledged
that “most of the armed opposition has survived only
because of foreign intervention.” In other words,
much of the death and destruction in Syria, which
also has fueled political instability in Europe
because of the massive refugee flow, resulted from
intervention from the United States and its allies.
So, the
cure to the mess created by these
not-thought-through interventions, at least in the
view of Cohen and other eager interventionists, is
more intervention. It was just such obsessive and
irrational thinking – embraced as Official
Washington’s “conventional wisdom” – that pushed the
world toward the eve of destruction in 2016.
Contemplating all this human foolishness, the
cockroach historians might be left using one of
their six legs to scratch their heads.
[For
more on these topics, see Consortiumnews.com’s “A
Family Business of Perpetual War“; “Neocons
and Neolibs: How Dead Ideas Kill“; and “The
State Department’s Collective Madness.”]
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). |