Prophets of Doom: Kissinger and the
‘Intellectual’ Decline of the West
By Ramzy Baroud
May 30,
2023:
Information Clearing House
-- It is unclear why
100-year-old Henry Kissinger has been elevated
by the Western intelligentsia to serve the role
of the visionary in how the West should behave
in response to the Russia-Ukraine war.
But does
the centenarian politician have the answers?
Every
major global conflict that involved the US and
its NATO allies in the past had its own
state-sanctioned intellectuals. These are the
people who usually explain, justify and promote
the West’s position to their own countrymen
first, then internationally.
They are
not ‘intellectuals’ in the strict definition of
the term, as they rarely use critical thinking
to reach conclusions that may or may not be
consistent with the official position or
interests of Western governments. Instead, they
advocate and champion stances that are dominant
within the various strands of power.
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Quite often, these
intellectuals have the privilege of time. In the
case of Iraq, for example, neoconservative
intellectuals, the likes of Bernard Lewis,
worked tirelessly to promote war, which ended in
the
invasion of
Iraq in March 2003.
Though the
neocons continued to strongly support greater
involvement in Iraq and the Middle East through
military surges and the like, they were
eventually – though not permanently – sidelined
by a different group of intellectuals, who
supported a stronger American military presence
in the Asia-pacific region.
The West also had
its own intellectuals who dominated news
headlines during the so-called ‘Arab
Spring.’ The
likes of French philosopher Bernard-Henri Levy
played a disruptive role in Libya and labored to
shape political outcomes in the whole Middle
East, posing as a dissident intellectual and a
great advocate of human rights and democracy.
From
Lewis, to Levy, to others, the powerful Western
intellectual practiced more than mere
intellectualism. They have traditionally served
a fundamental role in politics without being
politicians per se, elected or otherwise.
Kissinger,
however, is an interesting and a somewhat
different phenomenon.
He is the
quintessential US-western politician, who
defined a whole era of realpolitik. Such notions
as human rights, democracy and other moral
considerations were rarely factors in his
hawkish approach to politics throughout his
stints as a
Secretary of State,
National Security Advisor,
and other official or non-official political
roles.
For
Kissinger, what ultimately matters is Western
hegemony, particularly the sustaining of the
current power paradigm of Western global
dominance at any cost.
Thus,
Kissinger’s intellect is the outcome of
real-life experiences related to his long
expertise in US diplomacy, the Cold War and
other conflicts involving mainly the US, Russia,
China, the Middle East and a host of NATO
members.
Another
difference between Kissinger and other
state-sponsored intellectuals is that the man’s
wisdom is now being sought regarding an event
that has not, per the West’s own claims, been
instigated by US-NATO actions. Indeed, many
Western countries believe that they are in a
state of self-defense.
Usually,
this is not the case. Western foreign policy
intellectuals typically shape policies in
advance, promote and justify them while these
policies are being carried out.
In the
case of Kissinger, Western intelligentsia sought
his wisdom as a result of their palpable
desperation, reflecting their own failure to
read and respond to events in Ukraine, in a
unified and strategic manner.
It is as if Henry
Kissinger is a 100-year oracle, whose prophecy
can save the West from the supposed invasion of
the hordes coming from the East. This claim is
substantiated by the infamous statement made by
the EU Foreign Policy Chief, Josep Borrell, when
he
said that
“Europe is a garden … (but) most of the rest of
the world is a jungle.”
The
problem, however, is that the oracle does not
seem to make up its mind regarding the proper
course of action.
In a recent
interview with the Economist, Kissinger sharply
contradicted
earlier comments he made last September at a
forum organized by the Council on Foreign
Relations.
Back then,
Kissinger
stated that the
“expansion of NATO beyond its present context
seemed to me an unwise measure.”
Relative
to Kissinger’s legacy, that position seemed
sensible enough as a starting point for future
dialogue. The response to Kissinger’s comment
from Western analysts and ideologues, however,
forced him to alter his position.
In an
article in The
Spectator in December, Kissinger articulated his
own peace plan, one that ensures the “freedom of
Ukraine” within a new “international structure”,
one that would allow Russia to “find a place in
such an order.”
As for
Ukraine and NATO, Kissinger proposed that some
kind of a “peace process should link Ukraine to
NATO, however expressed.”
That too
was rejected, and loudly so, by many.
Almost a
year after the start of the war, Kissinger
shifted further away from his original position,
by declaring that Ukrainian membership in NATO
was the “appropriate outcome” of the war.
And, finally, in
his long interview with the Economist, Kissinger
linked
Ukraine’s membership in NATO to the very “safety
of Europe”.
It would
be convenient to claim that the apparent
inconsistencies in Kissinger’s position were
necessitated by new events on the ground. But
little has changed on the ground since Kissinger
made his first statement. And the possibility of
a global, even nuclear war, remains a real one.
The
problem, of course, is not Kissinger himself.
The crisis is twofold: The West is unwilling to
accept that war, for once, will not solve its
problems; but it also has no alternative to
ending conflict, except through the triggering
of yet more conflicts.
This time
around, Kissinger does not have the answer.
Ramzy
Baroud is a journalist and the Editor of The
Palestine Chronicle. He is the author of six
books. His latest book, co-edited with Ilan
Pappé, is “Our Vision for Liberation: Engaged
Palestinian Leaders and Intellectuals Speak
out”. Dr. Baroud is a Non-resident Senior
Research Fellow at the Center for Islam and
Global Affairs (CIGA). His website is
www.ramzybaroud.net
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