by Justin Raimondo
A Russian general has threatened military action if the US and its NATO
allies go ahead and build a “missile shield” in Eastern Europe: “A decision to
use destructive force preemptively will be taken if the situation worsens,” say
Russian chief of staff Nikolai Makarov. That the “shield” is of dubious effectiveness, and is mainly a cash cow for US defense
companies, are not factors the Russkies are willing to take into consideration:
their main beef seems to be the implied insult of Washington claiming the
shield isn’t designed to protect against future aggression emanating from
Moscow, but against an alleged Iranian missile threat to Europe. Hey, they
seem to be saying: what about us? Aren’t we a
threat, too?
Well, no – they aren’t. Russia’s population is falling rapidly, and their economy isn’t doing too hot, either. What the oligarchs didn’t loot and spirit out of the country has been either seized and mismanaged by the state, or else is part of the burgeoning black market. The last thing Moscow needs is an empire: they can barely manage what they already have. That hasn’t stopped Washington from manufacturing a phony narrative that imagines a “resurgent Russia” motivated by revanchism and a desire to refight the cold war.
So here we have the spectacle
of a phony threat being uttered as a response to yet another phony threat: the
Russians aren’t going to preemptively attack Poland, and neither they nor the Iranians represent a real danger
to the West. Yet the actors in this little drama are intent on playing out
their roles to the end, no matter how disconnected from reality their actions
and pronouncements may seem.
Welcome to the foreign policy
Theater of the Absurd.
While this absurdist trend has
long dominated our domestic politics, it is lately taking over the
foreign policy realm: just look at the machinations over
Chen Guangchen, the blind Chinese dissident who can’t seem to make up his mind
about where he wants to live. First he escapes from house arrest and travels hundreds of miles to the US embassy in Beijing,
where he claims asylum. Then he leaves the embassy, saying he doesn’t want to
live in exile – but changes his mind almost as soon as he’s
out the door, demanding from his hospital bed to be flown “in Hillary Clinton’s plane” to the US with his family.
His latest stunt: phoning his demands in to US congressional
hearings, with Republican legislators at the other end of the line. This has
our State Department in the uncomfortable position of negotiating not only with
the Chinese authorities but also with Chen, hoping he will shut up long enough
for the public to forget how they allowed themselves to become his captive.
In Syria, Damascus has
responded to the international outcry over thousands of deaths reported in
the government’s crackdown on armed rebel groups by calling parliamentary elections: over 20 parties, half of
them pro-government, are fielding candidates. The opposition has responded with more violence, fueled by arms coming to the
rebels from Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and the Gulf sheikdoms, and the US has preemptively
declared the UN-brokered peace talks a “failure” even before the elections
are held.
Intent on “regime change,” Washington will not be
satisfied with anything short of ousting dictator Bashar al-Assad and his Baath
Party. The Syrians realize this, of course, but are pretending to go along with
their “reform” program for the sake of delaying an all-out military effort by
the US and its allies. Both sides claim to want “peace” – and are preparing for
war.
Meanwhile, in an election year
trip to Kabul, President Obama had his “mission accomplished” moment, minus the banner in
the background, declaring the Taliban all but defeated and the Afghans ready to
“step up” and take the burden off our shoulders. He did this after having
negotiated a preliminary agreement with the government of Hamid Karzai that
would bind the US to Afghanistan’s defense for the next 12 years. As Antiwar.com’s John Glaser pointed out, the Taliban, far from being
defeated, has effective control of most of the country outside the capital city
of Kabul. As for the Afghan security forces: when they aren’t cutting and
running, they are shooting at us.
Here at home, discussion of
foreign policy in an election year faithfully reflects this absurdist
leitmotif: all but certain GOP candidate Mitt Romney criticizes the regime-changing drone-launching Obama for not being
aggressive enough, albeit without coming through with any policy
recommendations of his own. After a decade of war, the American people are
opposed to more military adventurism, but neither of the major candidates
embraces this reluctance: instead, they are competing with each other to see
who is the most war-like.
Isn’t “democracy” wonderful?
Over in Israel, Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu is gearing up for early elections in September, which (he
hopes) will give him a mandate to provoke a war with Iran just before Americans
go to the polls. However, anyone who so much as suggests
the Israelis and their energetic amen corner in the US are trying to get Uncle
Sam to fight their battles for them is promptly labeled an “anti-Semite,” and marginalized. An
absurdist foreign policy requires absurdist domination of domestic politics.
The US has been inveighing for
years against Iranian unwillingness to negotiate over its
nuclear program: however, now that Tehran had taken the plunge it’s the
Americans who seem downright cranky, while the Iranian perspective is described
as “sunny.” The formerly glowering
ayatollahs, who once reveled in their intransigence against the “Great Satan,”
are now issuing fatwas against nukes and
declaring theirwillingness to suspend uranium
enrichment, while the Americans are refusing to consider lifting sanctions and
are darkly pessimistic in their public
comments.
The whole issue is moot, in
any case, since there is absolutely no evidence Tehran is pursuing the
acquisition of a nuclear weapons arsenal, an effort our own intelligence
agencies are telling us was abandoned in 2003 and not restarted. Obama
campaigned for the presidency on the basis of his willingness to meet with the
Iranian leaders and negotiate an end to the crisis, but now that they have
taken him up on his pledge Washington is suddenly playing hard to get.
Inexplicable, eh? When you
think about it, however, it makes a kind of Bizarro World“sense”: after all, it’s only
appropriate that the central ring of our multi-ring circus foreign policy
features a nonexistent effort at “engaging” the Iranians over their nonexistent
nukes.
The ultimate absurdity, of
course, is the spectacle of a bankrupt “superpower” trying to
lord it over the rest of the world, while their creditors close in for the
kill. With the workforce rapidly shrinking, and the national debt expanding at an exponential rate,
foreclosures are once again on the upswing, the housing market may be
doomed to sink for the next decade or so, and the American middle class is
disappearing. Perhaps another war will distract most people from noticing their
descent into penury, but one wonders how long that old trick will work.
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