Might The
Donald Be Good for Peace?
By Brian
Cloughley
July 29,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- Donald Trump is erratic. We all know that. It is
insulting to assert, in the
words of Britain’s new Foreign Secretary, the
erratic Boris Johnson, that he is “frankly unfit to
hold the office of President of the United States,”
but he’s certainly unpredictable and says some
things that are, to put it mildly, intriguing. Lots
of people agree with buffoon Boris, but the fact
remains that The Donald could indeed be next
president of the United States, which makes it
important to look at what he might do if that comes
about, especially in the light of America’s military
catastrophes so far this century.
Obama
followed his predecessors in brandishing America’s
iron fist as self-appointed global policeman. He
vastly increased the US military presence around the
world and intensified the Pentagon’s aggressive
confrontations with China and Russia, in which he
was energetically assisted, from 2009 to 2013, by
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
In China’s
case this has been effected by
sending US Naval E-P3 electronic surveillance
aircraft on missions close to the mainland,
deploying EA-18G Growler electronic attack
aircraft to Clark Air Base in the Philippines,
ordering B-52 nuclear bombers
to overfly the South China Sea where the US Navy
also carries out extended
maneuvers by massive strike groups of
nuclear-armed aircraft carriers and guided missile
cruisers. All this in a region where the US has not
the slightest territorial interest or claim. China’s
Sea is 7,000 miles, 12,000 kilometers, from the
American mainland, yet Washington considers it the
sacred right and duty of the United States to act as
a global gendarme and give orders to China about its
posture in its own back yard, where there has not
been one instance of interference with commercial
shipping passing through that region.
As to
confrontation with Russia, Washington has ensured
that its Brussels sub-office, the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization, will go on playing its
toy-soldier games right up to Russia’s borders. The
official
statement after NATO’s war drum-thumping
conclave in Warsaw on July 8-9 is indicative of its
determination to continue its attempts to menace
Russia, which has not made the slightest move to
threaten a single NATO member. It is absurd to
claim that “the security situation has deteriorated”
in the Black Sea and the Baltic because of Russian
action.
These
regions would be perfectly calm if it were not for
constant provocations by US-NATO warships and combat
and electronic warfare aircraft which deliberately
trail their coats in attempts to incite reaction by
Russian forces. NATO’s Warsaw Declaration is a
farrago of contrived accusations compiled to justify
the existence of the farcical grouping that
destroyed Libya and proved
incapable of overcoming a few thousand raggy
baggy insurgents in Afghanistan. So the military
alliance is spending vast sums to deploy soldiers,
aircraft, ships and missiles right up to Russia’s
borders in deliberate confrontation. As Russian
spokesman Dmitry Peskov
explained “Russia is not looking [for an enemy]
but it actually sees it happening. When NATO
soldiers march along our border and NATO jets fly
by, it’s not us who are moving closer to NATO’s
borders.”
There’s no
answer to that, but the Obama-Pentagon
administration is not going to relax its anti-China
and anti-Russia attitude, and if Hillary Clinton
becomes president — she of the infamous “We came; We
saw; He died”
giggling interview in which she rejoiced in the
savage murder of President Gaddafi of Libya — there
will be more of the same. In fact, probably a lot
more of the same, only harder, faster and of more
financial benefit to US manufacturers of weapons
systems who are doing very well, with record
sales totaling 10.5 billion dollars last year,
and lots more to come.
The writer
Conor Friedersdorf put it very well in The
Atlantic when he
noted that there was a grisly similarity between
Clinton and the egregious Dick Cheney, in that
“Using
contested intelligence, a powerful adviser urges
a president to wage a war of choice against a
dictator; makes
a bellicose joke when he is killed; declares
the operation a success; fails to plan for a
power vacuum; and watches Islamists gain power.
That describes Dick Cheney and the Iraq War —
and Hillary Clinton and the war in Libya.”
She
described President Putin, who just might be
reflecting on
“We came; We saw; He died”, as “someone that you
have to continuously stand up to because, like many
bullies, he is somebody who will take as much as he
possibly can unless you do. And we need to get the
Europeans to be more willing to stand up.” She is
uncompromisingly confrontational.
Might The
Donald be different?
He’s
arrogant and impulsive, but although the Republican
stance on China is predictably
belligerent, it isn’t likely that The Donald
will support confrontation by the nuclear-armed
armadas that plow so aggressively around China’s
shores. And he isn’t likely to endorse the
Pentagon’s happy fandangos concerning Russia,
either.
His
comments about the US-contrived shambles in
Ukraine are illuminating, in that he says “we’re the
ones always fighting [figuratively] on the Ukraine.
I never hear any other countries even mentioned and
we’re fighting constantly. We’re talking about
Ukraine, get out, do this, do that. And I mean
Ukraine is very far away from us. How come the
countries near the Ukraine, surrounding the Ukraine,
how come they’re not opening up and they’re not at
least protesting? I never hear anything from
anybody except the United States.”
They’re not
protesting because they have to bow the knee to the
Pentagon and its palatial branch office in Brussels
(recently built at a cost of about two billion
dollars) — but The Donald made a good point : Why
on earth does the US meddle in Ukraine? Has either
country benefited economically, politically,
socially or culturally from Washington’s flagrant
interference? (Remember the revealing
“Yats is the guy”) As
observed by James Carden, “One Democratic US
senator lamented to a roomful of well-heeled donors
and foreign policy experts on [July 25] that the US
had “lost” Ukraine. Lost? Was it ever America’s to
begin with?”
Not only
that, but The Donald
says that the United States has to “fix our own
mess” before “lecturing” other nations on how to
behave.
No matter
how extreme he may be in some of his statements,
that one strikes a truly sensible note. Why does
America consider that it has the right to hector and
lecture China and Russia and so many other
countries? It is, of course, because, as Obama
announced, America considers itself the “one
indispensable nation in world affairs.”
What crass
conceit. And then Obama labored the point by
declaring that “I see an American century because no
other nation seeks the role that we play in global
affairs, and no other nation can play the role that
we play in global affairs.” — This comes from the
president of the country that destroyed Iraq and
Libya, and is now itself in chaos caused by
deliberate killing of black people by police and a
surge in black protests against such slaughter.
Certainly
The Donald shouts that he wants to “Make America
Great Again” and such xenophobic boloney — but
that’s for the sake of vote-catching. As he
rightly said, “When the world sees how bad the
United States is and we start talking about civil
liberties, I don’t think we are a very good
messenger.”
Then The
Donald went further in common sense and
suggested that as president he might close some
of the hundreds of US military bases abroad because
“if we decide we have to defend the United States,
we can always deploy” from American soil, which
would be “a lot less expensive.” How very
sensible. It would save a fortune in addition to
benefitting many communities Stateside.
Hillary
came back with the predictable rejoinder that
the president of the United States “is supposed to
be the leader of the Free World. Donald Trump
apparently doesn’t even believe in the Free World.”
This is straight out of the Cold War vocabulary of
divisive confrontation — and if she becomes
president, there will be even more pugnacious
patronizing baloney about “leadership of the Free
World” and “the one indispensable nation.” As The
Donald
said in April — “How are we going to lecture
when you see the riots and the horror going on in
our own country.”
So might
there be hope for the future if The Donald drops his
more outlandish ideas about Muslims and Mexicans and
institutes a policy of rapprochement and
live-and-let-live with China and Russia? He’s a
better bet on that score than confrontational
Hillary, who may well lead the world to war. If
only he wasn’t off the planet in so many other ways
. . .
Brian
Cloughley, British and Australian armies’ veteran,
former deputy head of the UN military mission in
Kashmir and Australian defense attaché in Pakistan |