General
Breedlove and the Russophobes
They’re determined to start World War III
By Justin Raimondo
July 06, 2016
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The Roman republic began its descent into empire as
victorious generals – starting with one Julius
Caesar – returned to claim the fruits of their
victories, their final conquest being the republic
itself. “Crossing the Rubicon” has today become a
phrase meaning an event that cannot be undone,
usually of ominous portent, and surely this applies
to the machinations of one General Philip Breedlove,
former Supreme Commander of NATO.
Revealed by
hackers who broke into
his email accounts, Breedlove’s plot to start
World War III with Russia recalls the recklessness
of
Dr. Strangelove in a movie of the same name –
except this isn’t a movie, it’s reality.
Coordinating with sympathetic retired military
personnel, such as Wesley Clark, former Secretary of
State Colin Powell, and Harlan Ullman, a top
official of the Atlantic Council, the idea was – as
Ullman put it – to “leverage, cajole, convince or
coerce the U.S. to react” to an alleged Russian
threat in Europe. Another academic contact, one
Phillip Karber, head of the neoconservative Potomac
Foundation, was involved in disseminating a crude
forgery supposed to have depicted Russian tanks in
Ukraine. Naturally, the Washington Free Beacon
fell for it, as did Sen. James Inhofe.
Confirmation bias is pandemic in these circles.
Breedlove
has himself been at the center of similar hoaxes,
claiming that tens of thousands of Russian troops
are present in Ukraine, armed to the teeth with the
latest advanced weaponry: this was an outright lie,
as the German intelligence agency, the BND,
pointed out.
Another
retired general in this network, Wesley Clark, acted
as an intermediary between Washington officials and
the Kiev regime: he lobbied the Obama
administration through neoconservative Victoria
Nuland to send advanced offensive weaponry to
Ukraine. Gen. Clark,, you’ll recall, tried to start
World War III by ordering an attack on a Russian
military contingent in Pristina during the Kosovo
war, and was prevented from doing so by the British
refusal to go along with it.
Testifying
before Congress, Breedlove directly contradicted
both the administration and our NATO allies,
declaring that Russia was getting ready to invade
Ukraine with a force of 80,000 troops. The Ukrainian
regime took up the cry, with President Poroshenko
declaring martial law – a ready excuse to shut down
his political opponents and institute conscription –
and demanding that the West come to his aid. Of
course, there was no such invasion, but that didn’t
matter – the propaganda blitz, with the help of the
Russophobic “liberal” media, had accomplished its
purpose of establishing the Russian Threat. Cold War
II was launched.
Speaking of
the media, the more “liberal” precincts of the
Fourth Estate have been ablaze with calls to arms
against the Russkies, especially since Donald Trump
has declared his willingness to get along with
Vladimir Putin. Jonathan Chait,
writing in New York magazine, declares
that Trump is “Putin’s patsy.” Trump’s sin? Like
Obama, he’s unwilling to get the US involved in
Ukraine. Comparing Trump’s rhetoric on Russia with
his China-bashing, he wonders why Trump is soft on
the “misogynistic” Putin while he would “stand up”
to China in the South China Sea. The answer is
glaringly obvious: Trump, like most Americans,
thinks we have no business in Ukraine. On the other
hand, China, in the Trumpian calculus, is running a
huge trade deficit with the US.
Franklin
Foer, whose tenure at The New Republic was
famously cut short by a change in ownership and a
chorus of neocon blubbering and caterwauling, enters
the Cold War II sweepstakes with his own rhyming
indictment of Trump as a Manchurian candidate: “Putin’s
Puppet.” In a trope that must have delighted his
old neocon warhorses at TNR, Foer compares
Trump’s White House bid to the
“Communist-infiltrated” campaign of former Vice
President Henry Wallace, the Progressive Party
candidate in the 1948 presidential election He even
strongly implies that Trump is on the receiving end
of Kremlin gold: “Why wouldn’t the
Russians offer him the same furtive assistance
they’ve lavished on Le Pen, Berlusconi, and the
rest?” Evidence? Foer and his fellow
neo-McCarthyites can’t be bothered with such mundane
details.
Reading
this nonsense is like going back in a time machine
to those glory days of the 1950s, when every
patriotic American had a bomb shelter in his
backyard and was busy looking for a commie under
every bed. Except for one big difference: communism
is extinct, except for the faculty lounges of a few
elite universities. Russia has come out of the long
nightmare of totalitarianism, however inconsistently
and hesitantly, its ramshackle economy sputtering
and coughing, the sick man of Europe considerably
shrunken in size, influence, and military prowess.
And yet still the Cold Warriors are manning their
battle-stations, more determined than ever to bring
the Kremlin to its knees – with billionaires like
George Soros lurking in the background, hoping to
recoup his
lost investments in Russia and
acquire the defeated nation’s remaining assets.
Speaking of
Soros, he’s a
major contributor to Foer’s new employer, the
New America think tank: his son, Jonathan, sits on
the New America
board. (Thirty
percent of New America’s funding comes from the
US government, including the State Department.)
New America
is the premier Democratic party thinktank, where a
great deal of the top Obama administration officials
came out of and where Hillary Clinton is bound to
draw much of her staffing should she win the White
House. And of course Hillary famously
compared Putin to Hitler, and is eager to
restart the “war of civilizations” against the Slavs
begun by her husband.
New America
is also where the corporate liberals meet the
neocons: on the board alongside the Soros gang and
such blue chip liberals as James Fallows are neocon
David Brooks, “reformocon” Reihan Salam (executive
editor of National Review), and Walter
Russell Meade of The American Interest, a
neocon outlet.
What we
have here is a grand alliance of Russophobes,
stretching from the neocon right to the “liberal’
left, and also including a substantial military
element, i.e., the US Army, which is lobbying for
more funding. In order to win that funding, they are
competing with the other services for scarce
resources and must convince lawmakers that the
“threat” from ramshackle Russia is so great that we
must prepare to fight a land war with the Russkies
in Poland and the Baltics.
Trump is
right that we have common interests with Russia,
that NATO is obsolete, and that we have nothing to
gain by antagonizing the Russian bear. While Russia
takes on ISIS in Syria, and is battling terrorists
on its own territory, an unsavory amalgam of
Clintonistas, rebellious generals, and warmongering
neocons is plotting to restart the Cold War. Is it a
coincidence that these are the same people who hate
Trump, bemoan Brexit, and supported the Iraq war?
I don’t
think so.
Justin
Raimondo is the editorial director of Antiwar.com,
and a senior fellow at the Randolph Bourne
Institute. He is a contributing editor at
The American Conservative, and writes a
monthly column for Chronicles. He is
the author of Reclaiming the American Right:
The Lost Legacy of the Conservative Movement
[Center for Libertarian Studies, 1993;
Intercollegiate Studies Institute, 2000], and
An Enemy of the State: The Life of Murray N.
Rothbard [Prometheus Books, 2000].
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