July 31, 2016
https://consortiumnews.com/2016/07/31/lurching-toward-world-war-iii/
Anti-Russian hysteria has
reached extraordinary levels in Official Washington with heated
allegations about Russia hacking Democratic Party emails, but
this over-the-top “group think” threatens the world’s future, explains
John Chuckman.
By John Chuckman
When did America’s
establishment ever discuss, in elections or at other times, issues of war and
peace for the people’s understanding and consent? Virtually never. There was no
mandate for Vietnam, Cambodia, Iraq, Libya, Syria, or a dozen other conflicts.
Of course, once a war gets
going, there is a tendency for Americans to close ranks with flags and ribbons
and slogans such as “Support our troops” and “Love it or leave it.” The senior
leaders know this psychological pattern, and they count on it, every time.
The fundamental problem in
America’s government is an elaborate political structure much resembling
democracy but with actual rule by a powerful establishment and a set of special
interests – all supported by a monstrous security apparatus and a huge,
lumbering military, which wouldn’t even know what to do with itself in peace.
Unfortunately, I don’t think there is any apparent solution to this horrible
political reality, and, while once it affected primarily Americans themselves,
today it affects the planet.
There is an intense new
element that has been added to America’s governing establishment: the drive of
the neocons for American supremacy everywhere, for complete global dominance,
and it is something which is frighteningly similar to past drives by fascist
governments which brought only human misery on a vast scale.
The neocons’ underlying
motive, I believe, is absolute security for America’s colony in the Middle
East, Israel – put another way, their concern is for Israel’s hegemony over its
entire region with no room for anyone else to act in their own interests. It is
only if the United States is deeply engaged all over the planet that Israel can
constantly benefit from its strange relationship with America.
It did not require the neocons
to interest America’s establishment with interfering in other people’s affairs.
America has a long history of doing so, stretching back to the Mexican War, the
Spanish-American War, the Philippine-American War, the brazen seizure of Hawaii
from its people and going right up to the pointless War in Vietnam and Cambodia
in the hope of keeping the Pacific Ocean effectively an American lake. But the
neocons have added a new force, a new impulse to something which would be
better left alone, and they are very influential in American affairs.
Ordinary Americans are not
interested in world affairs, and there is a great deal of evidence to support
that statement. American Imperialists of earlier times disparaged this tendency
to just want peace at home with the pejorative name, isolationism, and avoiding
isolationism became an excuse for a whole series of wars and interventions.
So, Americans today cannot be
allowed to fall back into their natural tendency of not caring. Thus we have
the drive of the neocons and, tragically, thus we have America being driven
into direct confrontation with Russia. And with China, too, of course, but
Russia is my focus since Russia is the only country in the world literally
capable of obliterating the United States. There is unquestionably a sense here
of Rome wanting to go after Carthage, although cavalry, swords, spears and
catapults no longer can settle such conflicts.
The situation is compounded by
the American establishment’s dawning realization that its days of largely
unquestioned supremacy in the world are fading into memory, as other countries
grow and develop and have important interests in world affairs.
In many respects, it has been
a long downhill slide for the average American since the economic heyday of the
1950s. Decline in real incomes, decline in good job opportunities at home, the
export of American industries abroad to areas of less costly labor, and the
virtual collapse of American towns and cities in many places, Detroit being
perhaps the most sorrowful case of many – all these are evident year-in and
year-out.
Lost Perspective
I do think the American
establishment simply does not know how to handle its role in a brave new world,
but do something it clearly thinks it must, and that is an extremely dangerous
state of mind. It is armed with vast armies and terrible weapons so that it
retains a sense of being able to act in some way to permanently reclaim its
place, an illusion if ever there was one.
We know from scholars of the
past the role that the mere existence of terrible military power can play in
disaster. Huge standing armies were one of the major underlying causes of the
First World War, a conflict in which 20 million people perished. Germany
repeated the effort with Hitler’s government working tirelessly to create what
was to become the finest and most advanced army the world had ever seen until
that time, but it, too, ended in disaster, and of even greater proportions.
America has not discovered the
secret to making itself invulnerable, although I fear that its establishment
believes that it can do so, and that represents the most dangerous possible
thinking.
Contrary to political
speeches, America’s establishment has never shown great concern over the
welfare of ordinary Americans, and today its lack of concern is almost
palpable. Washington’s white-maned, over-fed, crinkly-faced senators spend virtually
every ounce of effort in two activities: raising funds from special interests
for re-election (estimated at two-thirds of an average Senator’s time) and
conspiring on how to keep America dominant in the world. Anything else is just
piffle.
America’s unique place in the
world of 1950 took care of ordinary Americans, not any effort by government.
Again, the utter contempt for ordinary Americans perhaps offers a dark element
in the thinking of America’s establishment when it comes to possible nuclear
war.
Russia is not, of course, a
direct threat to neocon interests, except when it comes to matters like Syria,
a deliberately-engineered horror to bring down the last independent-minded
leader in the Middle East and to smash and Balkanize his country, parts of
which, Israel has always lusted after in its vision of Greater Israel.
The coup in Ukraine, which
borders along a great stretch of Russia, represented a direct challenge to
Russia’s security, offering a place ultimately to be filled with hostile forces
and missiles and American advisors – all of which was expected to silence
Russia’s independent voice in the world and its ability to in any way thwart
neocon adventures, if not, in the longer-range, savage dreams of some, to
provide a platform for the ultimate destruction or overthrow of Russia herself.
Russia’s effective countering
with skillful moves in its own interests both in Syria and Ukraine has driven
some of America’s establishment to the edge of madness, and that madness is
what we see and hear in Europe, which is once again being turned into a vast
armed camp. Europe is now seething with anti-Russian rhetoric, threats and
activities such as huge war games, the largest of which occurred around the
anniversary of Hitler’s invasion of Russia, the single most destructive event
in all of human history.
America has created
deliberately a situation almost as dangerous as the days of the Cuban missile
crisis, which itself arose from the American establishment’s belief that it had
every right to interfere in Cuba’s affairs.
Nuclear Threats
We have another element, now
compounding the danger, in a far greater variety and level of sophistication of
weapons, including some nuclear weapons whose controlled yields are regarded by
America’s military as being perhaps “usable” in a theater like Europe.
The installation of
anti-missile systems near Russia is very much part of this threat since these
systems not only are intended to neutralize Russia’s capacity for response to a
sudden, massive attack but to provide a cover for future covert, easily-done
substitution of other kinds of missiles into the launchers, faster-arriving,
nuclear-armed missiles which would indeed be an element in such an attack.
Russia, a country twice
invaded with all the might of Germany and before that by Napoleon’s Grande
Armeé, cannot be expected just to sit and do nothing. It won’t. It cannot.
The world must not forget that
America’s military, a number of times in the past, created complete plans for a
massive, surprise nuclear attack on what was then the Soviet Union, the last of
which I am aware was in the early 1960s, and it was presented as being feasible
to President Kennedy, who is said to have left the Pentagon briefing sick to
his stomach.
Nuclear war, just as with any
other kind of war, can happen almost by accident through blunders and careless
acts and overly-aggressive postures. Just let the blood of two sides get up
enough, and an utter disaster could quickly overtake us.
Constantly decreasing the
possibilities for accidents and misunderstandings is a prime responsibility of
every major world leader, and right now the United States is pretty close to
having completely abdicated its responsibility.
John Chuckman is former chief
economist for a large Canadian oil company.
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