The Danger
of Excessive Trump Bashing
The
prospect of Donald Trump in the White
House alarms many people but bashing him over
his contrarian views on NATO and U.S.-Russian
relations could set the stage for disasters
under President Hillary Clinton, writes Robert
Parry.
By Robert
Parry
August 04,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Consortium
News"
-
The widespread
disdain for Donald Trump and the fear of what his
presidency might mean have led to an abandonment of
any sense of objectivity by many Trump opponents
and, most notably, the mainstream U.S. news media.
If Trump is for something, it must be bad and must
be transformed into one more club to use for
hobbling his candidacy.
While that
attitude may be understandable given Trump’s
frequently feckless and often offensive behavior –
he seems not to know basic facts and insults large
swaths of the world’s population – this Trump
bashing also has dangerous implications because some
of his ideas deserve serious debate rather than
blanket dismissal.
Amid
his incoherence and insults, Trump has raised
valid points on several important questions, such as
the risks involved in the voracious expansion of
NATO up to Russia’s borders and the wisdom of
demonizing Russia and its internally popular
President Vladimir Putin.
Over the
past several years, Washington’s neocon-dominated
foreign policy establishment has pushed a stunning
policy of destabilizing nuclear-armed Russia in
pursuit of a “regime change” in Moscow. This
existentially risky strategy has taken shape with
minimal substantive debate behind a “group think”
driven by anti-Russian and anti-Putin propaganda.
(All we hear is what’s wrong with Putin and Russia:
He doesn’t wear a shirt! He’s the new Hitler! Putin
and Trump have a bro-mance! Russian aggression!
Their athletes cheat!)
Much as
happened in the run-up to the disastrous Iraq War in
2002-2003, the neocons and their “liberal
interventionist” allies bully from the public square
anyone who doesn’t share these views. Any effort to
put Russia’s behavior in context makes you a “Putin
apologist,” just like questioning the Iraq-WMD
certainty of last decade made you a “Saddam
apologist.”
But this
new mindlessness – now justified in part to block
Trump’s path to the White House – could very well
set the stage for a catastrophic escalation of
big-power tensions under a Hillary Clinton
presidency. Former Secretary of State Clinton has
already
surrounded herself with neocons and liberal hawks
who favor expanding the war against Syria’s
government, want to ratchet up tensions with Iran,
and favor shipping arms to the right-wing and
virulently anti-Russian regime in Ukraine, which
came to power in a 2014 coup supported by U.S.
policymakers and money.
By lumping
Trump’s few reasonable points together with his
nonsensical comments – and making anti-Russian
propaganda the only basis for any public debate –
Democrats and the anti-Trump press are pushing the
United States toward a conflict with Russia.
And, for a
U.S. press corps that prides itself on its
“objectivity,” this blatantly biased approach toward
a nominee of a major political party is remarkably
unprofessional. But the principle of objectivity has
been long since abandoned as the mainstream U.S.
media transformed itself into little more than an
outlet for U.S. government foreign-policy
narratives, no matter how dishonest or implausible.
Losing History
To conform
with the neocon-driven narratives, much recent
history has been lost. For instance, few Americans
realize that some of President Barack Obama’s most
notable foreign policy achievements resulted from
cooperation with Putin and Russia, arguably more so
than any other “friendly” leader or “allied” nation.
For
instance, in summer 2013, Obama was under intense
neocon/liberal-hawk pressure to bomb the Syrian
military supposedly for crossing his “red line”
against the use of chemical weapons after a
mysterious sarin gas attack outside Damascus on Aug.
21, 2103.
Yet,
hearing doubts from the U.S. intelligence community
about the Assad regime’s guilt, Obama balked at a
military strike that – we now know – would have
played into the hands of Syrian jihadists who some
intelligence analysts believe were the ones behind
the false-flag sarin attack to trick the United
States into directly intervening in the civil war on
their side.
But Obama
still needed a path out of the corner that he had
painted himself into and it was provided by Putin
and Russia pressuring Assad to surrender all his
chemical weapons, a clear victory for Obama
regardless of who was behind the sarin attack.
Putin and
Russia helped Obama again in convincing Iran to
accept tight restraints on its nuclear program, an
agreement that may mark Obama’s most significant
foreign policy success. Those negotiations came to
life in 2013 (not coincidentally after Secretary of
State Clinton, who allied herself more with the
bomb-bomb-bomb Iran faction led by Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, had resigned and was
replaced by John Kerry).
As the
negotiating process evolved, Russia played a key
role in bringing Iran along, offering ways for Iran
to rid itself of its processed nuclear stockpiles
and get the medical research materials it needed.
Without the assistance of Putin and his Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov, the landmark Iranian nuclear
deal might never have happened.
Obama
recognized the value of this Russian help but he
also understood the political price that he would
pay if he were closely associated with Putin, who
was already undergoing a thorough demonization in
the U.S. and European mainstream media. So, Obama
mostly worked with Putin under the table while
joining in the ostracism of Putin above the table.
Checking Obama
But
Washington’s neocon-dominated foreign policy
establishment – and its allied mainstream media –
check-mated Obama’s double-talking game in 2013 by
aggressively supporting a regime-change strategy in
Ukraine where pro-Russian elected President Viktor
Yanukovych was under mounting pressure from western
Ukrainians who wanted closer ties to Europe and who
hated Russia.
Leading
neocon thinkers unveiled their new Ukraine strategy
shortly after Putin helped scuttle their dreams for
a major bombing campaign against Assad’s regime in
Syria. Since the 1990s, the neocons had targeted the
Assad dynasty – along with Saddam Hussein’s
government in Iraq and the Shiite-controlled
government in Iran – for “regime change.” The
neocons got their way in Iraq in 2003 but their
program stalled because of the disastrous Iraq War.
However, in
2013, the neocons saw their path forward open again
in Syria, especially after the sarin attack, which
killed hundreds of civilians and was blamed on Assad
in a media-driven rush to judgment. Obama’s
hesitancy to strike and then Putin’s assistance in
giving Obama a way out left the neocons furious.
They began to recognize the need to remove Putin if
they were to proceed with their Mideast “regime
change” dreams.
In late
September 2013 – a month after Obama ditched the
plans to bomb Syria – neocon National Endowment for
Democracy president Carl Gershman
wrote in The Washington Post that Ukraine
was now “the biggest prize” but also was a
steppingstone toward the even bigger “regime change”
prize in Moscow. Gershman, whose NED is funded by
Congress, wrote:
“Ukraine’s
choice to join Europe will accelerate the demise of
the ideology of Russian imperialism that Putin
represents. Russians, too, face a choice, and Putin
may find himself on the losing end not just in the
near abroad but within Russia itself.”
By late
2013 and early 2014, with Gershman’s NED financing
Ukraine’s anti-government activists and journalists
and with the open encouragement of neocon Assistant
Secretary of State for European Affairs Victoria
Nuland and Sen. John McCain, the prospects for
“regime change” in Ukraine were brightening. With
neo-Nazi and other Ukrainian ultra-nationalists
firebombing police, the political crisis in Kiev
deepened.
Meanwhile,
Putin was focused on the Sochi Winter Olympics and
the threat that the games could be disrupted by
terrorism. So, with the Kremlin distracted,
Ukraine’s Yanukovych tried to fend off his
political crisis while limiting the violence.
However, on
Feb. 20, 2014, snipers fired on both police and
protesters in the Maidan square and the Western
media jumped to the conclusion that Yanukovych was
responsible (even though later investigations have
indicated that the sniper attack was more likely
carried out by neo-Nazi groups to provoke the chaos
that followed).
A
Successful Coup
On Feb. 21,
a shaken Yanukovych agreed to a European-brokered
deal in which he surrendered some of his powers and
agreed to early elections. He also succumbed to
Western pressure that he pull back his police.
However, on Feb. 22, the neo-Nazis and other
militants seized on that opening to take
over government buildings and force Yanukovych and
other officials to flee for their lives.
The U.S.
State Department and its Western allies quickly
recognized the coup regime as the “legitimate”
government of Ukraine. But the coup provoked
resistance from the ethnic Russian populations in
Crimea and eastern Ukraine, political uprisings that
the new Kiev regime denounced as “terrorist” and
countered with an “Anti-Terrorism Operation” or ATO.
When
Russian troops – already in Crimea as part of the
Sevastopol naval basing agreement – protected the
people on the peninsula from attacks by the
Ukrainian ultra-nationalists, the intervention was
denounced in the West as a “Russian invasion.”
Crimean authorities also organized a referendum in
which more than 80 percent of the voters
participated and favored leaving Ukraine and
rejoining Russia by a 96 percent margin. When Moscow
agreed, that became “Russian aggression.”
Although
the Kremlin refused appeals from eastern Ukraine for
a similar arrangement, Russia provided some
assistance to the rebels resisting the new
authorities in Ukraine. Those rebels then declared
their own autonomous republics.
Although
this historical reality – if understood by the
American people – would put the Ukrainian crisis in
a very different context, it has been effectively
blacked out of what the American public is allowed
to hear. All the mainstream media talks about is
“Russian aggression” and how Putin provoked the
Ukraine crisis as part of some Hitlerian plan to
conquer Europe.
Trump, in
his bumbling way, tries to reference the real
history to explain his contrarian views regarding
Russia, Ukraine and NATO, but he is confronted by a
solid wall of “group think” asserting only one
acceptable way to see this complex crisis. Rather
than allow a serious debate on these very serious
issues, the mainstream U.S. media simply laughs at
Trump’s supposed ignorance.
The grave
danger from this media behavior is that it will
empower the neocons and liberal hawks already
nesting inside Hillary Clinton’s campaign to prepare
for a new series of geopolitical provocations once
Clinton takes office. By opportunistically buying
into this neocon pro-war narrative now, Democrats
may find themselves with buyer’s remorse as they
become the war party of 2017.
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). |