Tag Archives: Middle East

Just Politics: Iran, Like the Rest, Is Not Blameless, by Ramzy Baroud

The truth is generally a messy thing, especially on complex matters like international relations, politics, and war, and seldom conforms to anyone’s preconceptions. Here’s a good article from Ramzy Baroud that is so straightforward and logical it will be ignored by all sides of the Middle East imbroglio. From Baroud at antiwar.com:

When the United States government declared its war on Afghanistan in October 2001, thus taking the first step in its so-called “war on terror,” following the devastating attacks of September 11 earlier that year, Iran jumped on board.

Then Iranian President Mohammed Khatami, dubbed a reformist, provided substantial assistance in the US effort aimed at defeating the Taliban, an ardent enemy of Iran and Afghan Shia. Indeed, the Taliban’s aggressive policies included an anti-Shia drive, which resulted in a massive refugee problem. Tens of thousands of Afghan Shia sought refuge in Iran.

Khatami’s “friendly” gesture towards the anti-terror crusade lead by George W. Bush was not by any means an Iranian departure from a supposed policy of nonintervention in the region. Iran is a country with porous borders, political and strategic interests, serious and legitimate fears, but also unquestionable ambitions.

Iran’s intervention in Afghanistan never ceased since then, and is likely to continue, especially following the US withdrawal, whenever it takes place. Iran’s earlier role in Afghanistan ranged from the arrest of al-Qaeda suspects, sought by Washington, to training Afghan soldiers, to direct intervention in the country’s politics so as to ensure that the country’s politics are aligned to meet Iranian expectations.

None of this should come as a surprise. Iran has been under massive scrutiny since the Iranian revolution in 1979. It has been threatened, sanctioned, punished, and for nearly a decade fought a massive war with Iraq. Nearly half a million soldiers, and an estimated equal number of civilians perished in the “long war” when Iraq and Iran, using World War II tactics, sparred over territories, waterways access, resources, regional dominance and more. Both parties used conventional and non-conventional weapons to win the ugly conflict. Neither did.

But regardless of the thinking behind Iran’s current regional ambitions, one cannot pretend that Iran is an innocent force in the Middle East, solely aimed at self-preservation. This reading is as incorrect as that, championed by Israel and its remaining neoconservative friends in Washington, which see Iran as a threat that must be eradicated for the Middle East to achieve peace and stability.

http://original.antiwar.com/ramzy-baroud/2015/06/17/just-politics-iran-like-the-rest-is-not-blameless/

To continue reading: Iran is not Blameless

Obama’s Big Lie on Syria, by Daniel Lazare

What a tangled web they weave. President Obama and his cohorts have lied, misled, and bent policy into a pretzel in the Middle East. From Daniel Lazare, at consortiumnews.com:

Exclusive: Despite the risk that Syria’s Christians, Alawites and Shiites will be slaughtered by Sunni extremists, the Obama administration is backing the Saudi-Israeli demand for “regime change” in Damascus, including tweeting bogus accusations linking Syria’s secular regime to ISIS, writes Daniel Lazare.

Although its doors have been closed since 2012, the U.S. embassy in Damascus has recently sent out a round of pugnacious tweets charging Syrian President Bashar al-Assad with giving Islamic State fighters a free pass while bombing U.S.-aligned Free Syrian Army (FSA) units holed up in the city of Aleppo.

By bombing one side in an intra-rebel war and not the other, the embassy says, Damascus is making its preference clear, i.e., in favor of the hyper-brutal Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL. “Reports indicate,” declared an embassy tweet on June 1, “that the regime is making air-strikes in support of ISIL’s advance on Aleppo, aiding extremists against Syrian population.”

“We have long seen that the Assad regime avoids ISIL lines,” said another, “in complete contradiction to the regime’s claims to be fighting ISIL.” Added a third: “Assad is not only avoiding ISIL lines, but actively seeking to bolster their position.”

But this picture is complicated by the fact that the FSA also faults the U.S. for not bombing ISIS and that Shi‘ite forces across the border in Iraq actually accuse America of providing ISIS with military aid. The Islamic State is America’s “creation,” declared Akram al-Kabi, leader of the powerful Nujabaa Brigade, while Iraqi forces recently fired on a U.S. helicopter that they believed was ferrying aid to the other side.

“We have a continuous problem in effectively countering the narrative,” observes Brigadier General Kurt Crytzer, deputy commander for Special Operations Command Central. The story that the U.S. is secretly supporting ISIS is “easily believed by many … not just the poor and uneducated.”

For The New York Times’ Anne Barnard, this swirl of charges and counter-charges demonstrates “the complexity of the battlefield in Syria’s multifaceted war and the challenges it poses for United States policy.” But Barnard is wrong in her analysis. It’s not the Syrian battlefield that’s complex, but the predicament that the U.S. finds itself in.

What has caused Saudi Arabia and other Sunni states to ratchet up their support for radical Islamists fighting in Syria and Iraq is the impending nuclear accord with Iran, which has infuriated Sunni states and Israel and is leading the U.S. to assure its allies that it will redouble its efforts to roll back Iranian influence in other countries.

This means a stepped-up effort to topple the Iranian-backed government in Syria and to oppose pro-Iranian forces in Iraq, Bahrain, Yemen and inside Saudi Arabia. The Obama administration wants to have a peaceful agreement with Iran over nuclear issues but the price is to double down on a proxy war against Iranian (and Shi’ite) interests across the Middle East.

The upshot is a policy that has everyone in the Middle East shaking their head in confusion, which is why charges of back-stabbing and double-dealing are proliferating. A vastly overextended U.S. has no alternative but to scale back. But the more it does, the more nervous its partners grow and the more promises it makes that it can’t possibly keep.

https://consortiumnews.com/2015/06/05/obamas-big-lie-on-syria/

To continue reading: Obama’s Big Lie on Syria

Salafists Gaining Ground, by Dan Sanchez

The first two sentences of this article pretty well sum it up: “The main impact of US intervention in the Middle East has been to destabilize, polarize, and radicalize the region. Especially, it has fomented a vast, multi-country, new sectarian civil war between Sunni and Shiite Muslims.” From Dan Sanchez at antiwar.com:

The main impact of US intervention in the Middle East has been to destabilize, polarize, and radicalize the region. Especially, it has fomented a vast, multi-country, new sectarian civil war between Sunni and Shiite Muslims. On each side, the most sectarian forces have gained from the conflict. And benefiting the most have been fanatically intolerant and murderous Salafist groups like Al Qaeda and the Islamic State. Recent events show this pattern continuing apace.

In Iraq, the town of Ramadi, capital of Anbar Province, fell to the Islamic State in mid-May.

In Syria, the last government-held town in Idlib province fell to that country’s branch of Al Qaeda (Jabhat al-Nusra) on Friday.

In Libya, the town of Misurata, plus the bombed-out Gardabya air base, were abandoned to the Islamic State after a deadly suicide bombing, as it was revealed on Sunday.

In Yemen, Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) seized an airport and an oil refinery in April.

Even in Saudi Arabia, the Islamic State suicide bombed a Shiite mosque on Friday (the second such deadly attack in recent weeks).

It is important to remember how we got to this point.

The 2003 US invasion of Iraq and complete dismantling of the Iraqi government completely destabilized the country, leading to a civil war between the Sunnis and Shiites. The US entirely took the Shiite side, and in particular backed the most sectarian and pro-Iran Shiite factions, which were then installed as the new government, following the ethnic cleansing of Sunnis in Baghdad.

The war raised the prestige and expanded the operations of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi’s organization, which later became Al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI), and ultimately the Islamic State. The Sunni tribes were only willing to ally with AQI because the brutal US forces and the virulently anti-Sunni Shiite brigades had proven to be an even worse threat. However, in 2006 the Sunni tribes turned on AQI, which then became marginalized.

However, the very next year the US, the Saudis, and their regional allies launched the “Redirection,” a strategic shift toward Sunni insurgents to counter the perceived “Shia Crescent” stretching from Iran to Syria that the US-installed Shiite government in Baghdad had filled in. This was largely at the behest of the Sunni Saudis and Israel, both of whom hate Iran.

http://original.antiwar.com/dan_sanchez/2015/06/01/salafists-gaining-ground/

To continue reading: Salafists Gaining Ground

He Said That? 5/12/15

Excerpts from a Keynote Address to the Annual Conference of the Financial West Group, New Orleans, May 7, 2015, “War Threat Rises As Economy Declines,” by Paul Craig Roberts. There is a link at the bottom for the entire speech.

The defining events of our time are the collapse of the Soviet Union, 9/11, jobs offshoring, and financial deregulation. In these events we find the basis of our foreign policy problems and our economic problems.

The United States has always had a good opinion of itself, but with the Soviet collapse self-satisfaction reached new heights. We became the exceptional people, the indispensable people, the country chosen by history to exercise hegemony over the world. This neoconservative doctrine releases the US government from constraints of international law and allows Washington to use coercion against sovereign states in order to remake the world in its own image.

To protect Washington’s unique Uni-power status that resulted from the Soviet collapse, Paul Wolfowitz in 1992 penned what is known as the Wolfowitz Doctrine. This doctrine is the basis for Washington’s foreign policy. The doctrine states:

“Our first objective is to prevent the re-emergence of a new rival, either on the territory of the former Soviet Union or elsewhere, that poses a threat on the order of that posed formerly by the Soviet Union. This is a dominant consideration underlying the new regional defense strategy and requires that we endeavor to prevent any hostile power from dominating a region whose resources would, under consolidated control, be sufficient to generate global power.”

In March of this year the Council on Foreign Relations extended this doctrine to China.

Washington is now committed to blocking the rise of two large nuclear-armed countries. This commitment is the reason for the crisis that Washington has created in Ukraine and for its use as anti-Russian propaganda. China is now confronted with the Pivot to Asia and the construction of new US naval and air bases to ensure Washington’s control of the South China Sea, now defined as an area of American National Interests.

9/11 served to launch the neoconservatives’ war for hegemony in the Middle East. 9/11 also served to launch the domestic police state. While civil liberties have shriveled at home, the US has been at war for almost the entirety of the 21st century, wars that have cost us, according to Joseph Stiglitz and Linda Bilmes, at least $6 trillion dollars. These wars have gone very badly. They have destabilized governments in an important energy producing area. And the wars have vastly multiplied the “terrorists,” the quelling of which was the official reason for the wars.

Just as the Soviet collapse unleashed US hegemony, it gave rise to jobs offshoring. The Soviet collapse convinced China and India to open their massive underutilized labor markets to US capital. US corporations, with any reluctant ones pushed by large retailers and Wall Street’s threat of financing takeovers, moved manufacturing, industrial, and tradable professional service jobs, such as software engineering, abroad.

This decimated the American middle class and removed ladders of upward mobility. US GDP and tax base moved with the jobs to China and India. US real median family incomes ceased to grow and declined. Without income growth to drive the economy, Alan Greenspan resorted to an expansion of consumer debt, which has run its course. Currently there is nothing to drive the economy….

When Russia blocked the Obama regime’s planned invasion of Syria and intended bombing of Iran, the neoconservatives realized that while they had been preoccupied with their wars in the Middle East and Africa for a decade, Putin had restored the Russian economy and military.

The first objective of the Wolfowitz doctrine–to prevent the re-emergence of a new rival–had been breached. Here was Russia telling the US “No.” The British Parliament joined in by vetoing UK participation in a US invasion of Syria. The Uni-Power status was shaken.

This redirected the attention of the neoconservatives from the Middle East to Russia. Over the previous decade Washington had invested $5 billion in financing up-and-coming politicians in Ukraine and non-governmental organizations that could be sent into the streets in protests.

When the president of Ukraine did a cost-benefit analysis of the proposed association of Ukraine with the EU, he saw that it didn’t pay and rejected it. At that point Washington called the NGOs into the streets. The neo-nazis added the violence and the government unprepared for violence collapsed.

Victoria Nuland and Geoffrey Pyatt chose the new Ukrainian government and established a vassal regime in Ukraine.

Washington hoped to use the coup to evict Russia from its Black Sea naval base, Russia’s only warm water port. However, Crimea, for centuries a part of Russia, elected to return to Russia. Washington was frustrated, but recovered from disappointment and described Crimean self-determination as Russian invasion and annexation. Washington used this propaganda to break up Europe’s economic and political relationships with Russia by pressuring Europe into sanctions against Russia.

The sanctions have had adverse impacts on Europe. Additionally, Europeans are concerned with Washington’s growing belligerence. Europe has nothing to gain from conflict with Russia and fears being pushed into war. There are indications that some European governments are considering a foreign policy independent of Washington’s.

The virulent anti-Russian propaganda and demonization of Putin has destroyed Russian confidence in the West. With the NATO commander Breedlove demanding more money, more troops, more bases on Russia’s borders, the situation is dangerous. In a direct military challenge to Moscow, Washington is seeking to incorporate both Ukraine and Georgia, two former Russian provinces, into NATO.

On the economic scene the dollar as reserve currency is a problem for the entire world. Sanctions and other forms of American financial imperialism are causing countries, including very large ones, to leave the dollar payments system. As foreign trade is increasingly conducted without recourse to the US dollar, the demand for dollars drops, but the supply has been greatly expanded as a result of Quantitative Easing. Because of offshored production and US dependence on imports, a drop in the dollar’s exchange value would result in domestic inflation, further lowering US living standards and threatening the rigged, stock, bond, and precious metal markets.

The real reason for Quantitative Easing is to support the banks’ balance sheets. However, the official reason is to stimulate the economy and sustain economic recovery. The only sign of recovery is real GDP which shows up as positive only because the deflator is understated.

The evidence is clear that there has been no economic recovery. With the first quarter GDP negative and the second quarter likely to be negative as well, the second-leg of the long downturn could begin this summer….

On the foreign policy front, the hubris and arrogance of America’s self-image as the “exceptional, indispensable” country with hegemonic rights over other countries means that the world is primed for war. Neither Russia nor China will accept the vassalage status accepted by the UK, Germany, France and the rest of Europe, Canada, Japan and Australia. The Wolfowitz Doctrine makes it clear that the price of world peace is the world’s acceptance of Washington’s hegemony.

Therefore, unless the dollar and with it US power collapses or Europe finds the courage to break with Washington and to pursue an independent foreign policy, saying good-bye to NATO, nuclear war is our likely future.

Washington’s aggression and blatant propaganda have convinced Russia and China that Washington intends war, and this realization has drawn the two countries into a strategic alliance. Russia’s May 9 Victory Day celebration of the defeat of Hitler is a historical turning point. Western governments boycotted the celebration, and the Chinese were there in their place. For the first time Chinese soldiers marched in the parade with Russian soldiers, and the president of China sat next to the president of Russia.

The Saker’s report on the Moscow celebration is interesting. http://thesaker.is/todays-victory-day-celebrations-in-moscow-mark-a-turning-point-in-russian-history/ Especially note the chart of World War II casualties. Russian casualties compared to the combined casualties of the US, UK, and France make it completely clear that it was Russia that defeated Hitler. In the Orwellian West, the latest rewriting of history leaves out of the story the Red Army’s destruction of the Wehrmacht. In line with the rewritten history, Obama’s remarks on the 70th anniversary of Germany’s surrender mentioned only US forces. In contrast Putin expressed gratitude to “the peoples of Great Britain, France and the United States of America for their contribution to the victory.” http://thesaker.is/15865/

For many years now the President of Russia has made the point publicly that the West does not listen to Russia. Washington and its vassal states in Europe, Canada, Australia, and Japan do not hear when Russia says “don’t push us this hard, we are not
your enemy. We want to be your partners.”

As the years have passed without Washington hearing, Russia and China have finally realized that their choice is vassalage or war. Had there been any intelligent, qualified people in the National Security Council, the State Department, or the Pentagon, Washington would have been warned away from the neocon policy of sowing distrust. But with only neocon hubris present in the government, Washington made the mistake that could be fateful for humanity.

http://www.paulcraigroberts.org/2015/05/11/war-threat-rises-economy-declines-paul-craig-roberts/

Washington’s Mindless Interventionism–The Scorecard Of Middle East Friends And Enemies Is A Monumental Muddle, by Daniel Lazare

You can’t tell the players without a scorecard, and even with a scorecard it’s impossible to tell who’s winning and who’s losing, except for the US, which is definitely losing. From Daniel Lazare, via davidstockmanscontracorner.com:

“The enemy of your enemy is your enemy,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told Congress earlier this month. But it’s not so simple. In today’s Middle East, a country can be another country’s enemy one day, its friend the next, and both simultaneously on the third.

Netanyahu is as good an example as any. His come-from-behind triumph in Tuesday’s election places him at the head of a grand anti-Iranian coalition that includes the Republicans on Capitol Hill, the Wahhabis in Saudi Arabia, and ISIS militants battling Iranian-backed forces in Syria and Iraq. But Netanyahu clinched his victory by rejecting Palestinian statehood and issuing racist warnings that Israeli Arabs were going to the polls “in droves” to vote to unseat his Likud government – all examples of the pugnacious nationalism that has made him persona non grata in Sunni capitals that otherwise approve of his pro-Iranian stance.

So is Netanyahu a friend of the Sunnis, an enemy, neither, or both?

Or take Saudi Arabia. It has reportedly told Israel that it will allow its warplanes to fly over its territory to save fuel while attacking Iranian nuclear sites – provided that is, Israel makes progress in its negotiations with the Palestinians. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Saudis Said to Aid Israeli Plan to Bomb Iran.”]

But now that negotiations appear to be kaput, will the Saudis withdraw their offer or decide that bombing Iran trumps solidarity with Sunnis in Gaza and the West Bank?

http://davidstockmanscontracorner.com/washingtons-mindless-interventionism-the-scorecard-of-middle-east-friends-and-enemies-is-a-monumental-muddle/

To continue reading: Washington’s Mindless Interventionism

The Middle East–Telling Fact from Twaddle, by Fred Reed

Fred Reed nails it on theburningplatform.com:

Many Americans wonder why the US military has such a dismal record of failure in its wars in Moslem territories. Do we not have the most modern forces in the world? How can a force armed with fighter-bombers, B1s, night-vision goggles, helicopter gunships, heavy armor, and advanced remotely-piloted vehicles lose routinely to lightly-armed goatherds?

Journalistic old-hands in the regions, men who have spent decades following the wars and the complex and shifting alliances, say quietly that the cause is American ignorance of both the lands and the people. Virtually no one in the United States has any notion of the region, they say, though all seem to have strong opinions. Policy thus rests on self-assurance buttressed by factual vacuum.

Journalism being what it is today, reporters cannot say openly that the US, from the White House to the Pentagon to the public, is (as an acquaintance of mine put it inelegantly) “pig ignorant,” and that, with reference to Afghanis, the average citizen “couldn’t find his ass with a flashlight and both hands to grope with.” Coverage is often utter nonsense, they say, but no one notices.

http://www.theburningplatform.com/2015/01/31/the-middle-east/

To continue reading: Telling Fact from Twaddle

As SLL said in “Listen,” (1/26/15), “The US, epitomized by its government, doesn’t listen, it commands and controls, and woe to those who don’t listen and comply.” Nowhere, as the article by Mr. Reed documents, is this phenomenon more apparent, and costly, than in the Middle East.

The Middle Eastern Paradox, by Robert Gore

You don’t fight for your country, you fight for your government.”

Robert Gore, The Golden Pinnacle

Here’s the unresolvable paradox of the US government’s Middle Eastern policy. Give those promoting US intervention exactly what they wish for, a region made up of US-promoted, western-style secularist democracies that respect pluralism and individual “rights” (set aside the contradictory nature of the rights now respected in the west, such as the “right” of some people to compel other people to pay for their sustenance). The key words are secular and democracy—most inhabitants of the region will not freely choose the western model. They will choose some variant of Islamic-based government. Further complicating the issue, the government deck will be stacked in favor of whatever Islamic sect—Sunni or Shiite—comprises a majority of the population.

So, as Pat Buchanan points out in a recent column (“Against Terrorism—But for What?” 1/23/15, buchanan.org.), when Hamas wins an election in the Palestinian territories, Hezbollah in Lebanon, and Mohammad Morsi in Egypt, the US government says, “That’s not what we meant by democracy.” What the US government means by democracy is not a government acceptable to a majority of it citizens, but rather a government acceptable to the US government. Thus, we have recent US-prompted regime changes of democratically elected governments in Iraq and, outside the Middle East, in Ukraine. What the US government actually approves of can be miles away from democracy. Who elected the Saudi monarchy, a US ally and one of the most dictatorial and repressive regimes on the planet?

To impose the governments the US government wants in the Middle East requires US force of arms and, as it discovered in Afghanistan and Iraq, a continuing military presence to maintain it. Many of the locals like our presence even less than the US electorate likes maintaining it, and express their antipathy in a variety of ways, often violent. They are fighting against American occupation and for their religion. Our Chris Kyles ostensibly fight for secular, pluralistic democracy, but actually for the installation or maintenance of US-sponsored governments. In the long run, the smart money bet is on the locals.

If the manifest hypocrisies are ignored and the ostensible goal of secular democracy promotion is accepted at face value, it will be unacceptable to most of the indigenous population. Even many so-called moderate Moslems regard secular western society as an abomination, utterly decadent. If freedom and civil liberties means they must sit still for blasphemous portrayals of their prophet, they want no part of it. If they have to accept, in the name of “lifestyle freedom,” western-style licentious and promiscuity, forget it. And while they may tolerate apostasy and non-believers in their midst, why should such infidels have the same rights and privileges as the Islamic chosen?

The choice in the Middle East is simple and stark. The US government can continue trying to impose and maintain the governments there that it wants, opposed by local populations and by a majority of the US electorate. Or it can get out, and the Middle East will be carved up, often violently, into countries with governments that will be religiously oriented and in no sense secular, civil-liberties respecting democracies. Unfortunately, the choice is never presented in this way to the US public by those promoting continuing US interventionism. If it were, someone might ask: After 14 years of the former, don’t we have the latter? Our intervention has in no sense improved the Middle East, and has in many ways made it more hellish. Among the quite foreseeable consequences: blowback terrorism around the globe and a tidal wave of refugees from the most brutal hell holes “infiltrating” the US and Europe. More of the same will produce more of the same.

Trust Us, by Robert Gore

No belief has been more costly and deadly than a belief in governments’ veracity. Trusting their governments, people have marched off to die in useless and hopeless slaughter, sunk their savings into depreciating and worthless currencies, consigned their children to propaganda masquerading as education, funded wasteful and counterproductive spending, and looked to their leaders for security they couldn’t provide and expertise they didn’t have. To detail the duplicitous depredations of just our own government would require multiple volumes. However, since 9/11 official mendacity has broken out to the upside. It now poses a deadly threat as the government employs it not just to justify involvement in the Middle East, but to set the stage for confrontation with Russia.

Foreign policy has always been relatively ignored by most Americans, compared to the attention paid to domestic issues. Straight Line Logic articles on foreign policy invariably garner fewer hits than domestic pieces and this one probably will, too. However, ignoring the topic, the American people have ceded foreign policy to an elite with a common mindset and goals. If stated explicitly to them, most Americans would reject both the mindset and the goals, which is where the lies come in. Furthermore, foreign policy has been and will continue to be far more consequential than many of the issues that command Americans’ attention.

The end of World War II found the US in a historically unique position. It had been the head of victorious alliance and its military had suffered far fewer losses than its allies or enemies. It had invented and used the atomic bomb. Of the world’s major nations, it was the only one whose industrial infrastructure was intact. The Bretton Woods’ monetary order had made the dollar the reserve currency. The US was the world’s unchallengeable sole superpower. That changed when the USSR detonated an atomic bomb in 1949, but within its Cold War bloc, the US was the dominant force. US leaders quite naturally came to believe that it was best for both the US and the world that the nations within the US bloc comply with US dictates, and that the bloc itself should continuously confront and challenge the Soviet bloc.

The belief in American superiority was fueled not just by US strength, but by “The Best and the Brightest” hubris of the American elite, analyzed by David Halberstam in his book of that name. The greatest nation on earth was being managed by its smartest, most accomplished people, titans from government, industry, Wall Street, and academia, primarily the Ivy League. The rest of America on the whole accepted both the elite’s characterization of itself and its control of US foreign, military, and intelligence policy. They didn’t have much choice. Most of the available information about foreign affairs—and much propaganda—came from the government, and all the major media organs parroted the party line. There was little difference between the two major political parties on foreign policy.

Vietnam was a watershed. Because it became an unpopular war and a US defeat, it has been shoved down the American memory hole, which is a mistake. One learns more from one’s failures than one’s successes. Vietnam demands far greater scrutiny and analysis than it has been given, and the US has paid a steep price for this analytical neglect. The government wove a web of lies to cover shifts in the landscape that might have, if generally recognized, led to a critical and fruitful reexamination of the US’s role in the world.

At first the US presence in Vietnam fit the Hollywood template: the US was helping beleaguered South Vietnam fight off communist North Vietnam so the South Vietnamese could enjoy the fruits of democracy and liberty. In its hubris, the US government refused to recognize or acknowledge a key reality: like the North Vietnamese government, many in South Vietnam regarded the US not as liberators, but as the latest in a long line of imperial occupiers of the country, strolling to the plate from the on-deck circle after the French had struck out. The North Vietnamese never would have achieved its widespread infiltration of South Vietnam if a large number of inhabitants had not shared its animus towards a foreign power. Hostility increased as the US supported, then assassinated, South Vietnam’s president Ngo Dinh Diem. It peaked when the US military and the CIA essentially took over running South Vietnam and the ever-escalating war destroyed villages and towns, sizable areas of the countryside, including farmland, and much of the infrastructure there.

Also unacknowledged or denied was the difficulty of fighting a guerrilla war on the guerrillas’ home turf. The story from the military and Washington was that victory was just around the corner, always only a few brigades and a little more funding away. By all conventional metrics North Vietnam suffered horrendous losses. However, it waged an unconventional and ultimately successful war both militarily and politically, gaining, with carrots and sticks, South Vietnamese support, banking on eventual American exhaustion. As US support for the war waned, the rhetoric about winning continued, but the actual strategy became a military and diplomatic effort to find a face-saving way out. By that time, enough of the mainstream media had gone off the reservation on Vietnam that the government’s ability to lie about it had been severely compromised. Alternative “facts,” analyses, and interpretations were widely available and fed the increasing skepticism.

The government also misled on the financial dimension of the war. Enamored of America’s wealth and power, the Kennedy and Johnson administrations believed the US could have it all: Vietnam and a dramatic expansion of the welfare state. However, raising taxes would have increased public opposition to one or the other or both. Deficit financing maintained the have-it-all fiction. As with Vietnam, it was left for Richard Nixon to deal with the consequences.

Nixon’s closing of the gold window in August of 1971 should have initiated a long overdue reexamination of the assumption of American omnipotence. The US would no longer exchange gold for its reserve currency. How could it insist that the world dance to its tune after it had broken this most fundamental of promises? The fall of South Vietnam four years later knocked away the US’s other prop, its military. How was it going to guarantee US bloc nations’ security when it couldn’t defeat North Vietnam?

Neither event shook the elite’s belief in American omnipotence, and the right of the US government to order the world as it saw fit. The fall of the USSR in 1991 increased its hubris but presented a problem: no more enemy against which to rally the US bloc. Ordinary Americans asked why Cold War swollen defense and intelligence budgets couldn’t be slashed, and why it was necessary for the US to maintain military bases and commitments around the world. Perhaps the money saved could be used to pay down debt or reduce taxes. The last balanced budget was achieved during the Clinton administration, in part due to a peace dividend that soon vanished.

For the elite, 9/11 was a godsend. However, to justify the subsequent renewal of US global interventionism and a dramatic curtailment of civil liberties, the American people would have to be fed the whopper of all whoppers: that Islamic extremism presented an existential threat on par and maybe even more dangerous than the Communist threat. Of all the world’s Islamic nations, only one, Pakistan, has nuclear weapons, and that is only a handful. The most terrifying weapons non-governmental Islamic extremists have are YouTube beheadings and their ability to brainwash some adherents into blowing themselves up. The religion is riven by a schism between its Sunni and Shiite sects and centuries of intrigue, rivalry, and conflict. If fundamentalists had their way, Islamic governments would return their peoples to economic and social practices putting them more than a millennium behind the developed world. The freedom responsible for mankind’s progress is anathema to them (as was again demonstrated in Paris). Yet, somehow, these retrograde nuts are a threat to conquer the planet.

So on dubious pretexts the elite jumped into the Middle Eastern hornets nest, and not surprisingly the US has been stung, repeatedly, at a cost of trillions of dollars and thousands of civilian and military deaths and severe injuries. Nobody has yet demonstrated what vital US interest was furthered by its invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, because there was none. The neoconservative vision of remaking the Middle East, a pipe dream from the beginning, is now nothing more than a hollow joke.

Some opponents of the invasions have said they were all about oil, but the Middle East is full of oil and nations would have kept selling it to us had we never set foot in the area. Like the South Vietnamese earlier, there are many in the Middle East who are not overjoyed with the foreign presence. Having gone to school on the North Vietnamese, they have proven adept at waging defensive guerrilla war, and at outlasting domestic US support for its government’s involvements.

As the embarrassing Syrian “red line” contretemps demonstrated, the majority of Americans have grown wary of further Middle Eastern forays. Their suspicions are fueled by the internet, where bloggers, alternative media, and videos often reveal “truth” inconsistent with the government-mainstream media approved version. Not even the YouTube beheadings were enough to garner support for sending the military to fight ISIS. Obama had to promise that US troops would not take a combat role, a promise that is surreptitiously being broken.

Nothing, certainly not repeated failure or lack of public support, stops a determined US interventionist from trying again, or even doubling down. It is one thing to wage wars, unsuccessful ones at that, in backward countries in the Middle East. It is another matter altogether to tee one up against Russia. Give the interventionists their best case. Assume that Russia has been actively aiding and abetting rebels in eastern Ukraine, who wantonly shot down Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 with Russian assistance. Assume that Russia annexed the Crimea against the will of a majority of the Crimean people, who wished to remain a part of Ukraine, to which it rightfully belongs. Stretch things even farther and assume that Russia is trying to resurrect the old USSR empire, and is conducting or will conduct campaigns of subversion and overt military action in old Warsaw pact nations and the Baltic states. All of these assumptions are open to serious question, but even if taken as correct, cautionary portents abound.

The current US campaign against Russia uses economic sanctions. If the situation deteriorates into a military confrontation, a US victory is problematic. The results could be catastrophic, including the use of nuclear weapons. Russia’s massive size would give it a massive home field advantage, as Napoleon and Hitler discovered. They would probably ally with neighbor China. Both countries are increasingly resisting the American elite’s vision of global domination. The last year the news has been filled with stories of new cooperative ventures—political, economic, and military—between the two nations. Both are attempting to strengthen ties with their less powerful neighbors, offering various carrots in exchange for closer cooperation. The goal is the formation of a Euro-Asian axis strong enough to rival the US-European axis. The ultimate countermove to US domination has been strategies to develop trade, particularly trade in oil, denominated in rubles and yuan rather than dollars.

Cursory examinations of a globe and the world almanac support the conclusion that the envisioned Euro-Asian axis is no pipe dream. Russia and China, and the nations contiguous to them, contain a significant percentage, in many cases a majority, of the world’s population, resources, and land mass. This Soviet-Chinese bloc also borders the Middle East, giving it a huge advantage in any future conflict in the area, if it choses to get involved. (Which it probably won’t unless absolutely forced to do so. The Russians and Chinese have stayed out of overt military involvement in the Middle East, wisely choosing to let the US waste its time, money, soldiers’ lives, credibility, and military might in the region.)

The precipitous decline in the price of oil may just be the unhindered workings of the price mechanism in a market with a glut of supply, dwindling demand, and many producers who must keep producing even though in the long-term it is uneconomic after all costs are accounted for. This remains the most plausible explanation, but there are also a plethora of theories that “explain” the decline in terms of non-market forces. The most credible so far is that the US and Saudi Arabia are teaming up to put Russia out of business and drive Putin from power. That theory was propounded by Mike Whitney in a piece, “Is Putin Creating a New World Order? Oil Price Blowback,” which first appeared on counterpunch.org and was featured on SLL (and has been denied by Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal).

Putin has been the spearhead of Euro-Asia, including the moves against the dollar. He is a formidable challenger to an US-centered world order, especially since he’s teamed up with China. He has outplayed the US government at every turn and has embarrassed an obviously overmatched Obama. It is not too much of a stretch to suggest that Obama would sacrifice US fracking industry, which he doesn’t like, and that the Saudis would bear a temporary financial hit, to get rid of Putin, who is allied with Saudi enemies Iran and Syria.

Whether or not that is the case, official US antipathy towards Putin, and a desire to see him driven from power, are unmistakable. Which means the government’s pounding drums on Ukraine, faithfully amplified by the mainstream media, are, in all likelihood, pretexts. In other words, the elite are again lying to sell the public on yet another foreign intervention, this one far more fraught with danger than previous failures.

Let’s drop the earlier, favorable-to-the-interventionists assumptions. The US’s fingerprints are all over the coup that ousted democratically elected president Victor Yanuyovch, after he veered from joining the US-EU orbit and instead accepted an offer of various commercial and financial benefits from Russia. There are ample indications of significant neo-Nazi elements within the movement that took control of the Ukraine government. That government is now nothing more than a US puppet, beholden to the US and other western governments for financial life support for its withering economy. The proof offered that Ukrainian separatists shot down Flight 17 is not conclusive, and the Russians have counterclaimed that the Ukrainian government shot it down, though that claim also requires a dose of salt. Satellites can read and photograph license plates from thousands of feet above the earth, but the photographic proof for the US claim that Russia has moved troops and military equipment into eastern Ukraine has been scant.

So the justifications for what could become the most consequential war the US has ever fought are among the flimsiest ever offered. The policy-making elite has envisioned a US-dominated world since the US assumed the pinnacle of power after WWII, and probably even before then. The post-WWII preeminence upon which that vision rested was never going to last. It was called into question with the Soviet acquisition of the atomic bomb and completely discredited decades ago when Nixon closed the gold window and the US withdrew from Vietnam. There is no reason the American bloc and the emerging Russo-Sino bloc could not come to a modus vivendi, perhaps even to their mutual benefit (idealism never completely dies). However, that would require abandonment of the elite’s untenable vision, and that won’t happen until after at least one more disastrous US intervention, if not in Russia, then somewhere else.

ONCE UPON A TIME AMERICA MINDED ITS OWN BUSINESS

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A Clear and Concise Guide to U.S. Policy in the Middle East, by Robert Gore

The one simple thing about the Middle East is that there are two main sects of the dominant Islamic religion: the Shi’a, or Shiites, and the Sunnis. This split reflects differing interpretations over who was the rightful successor to Mohammad, the founder of Islam. Sunnis are in the majority, about 85 to 90 percent of Islam. Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Turkey, Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait, Jordan the United Arab Emirates, and the Islamic State are Sunni. Iran, Iraq, and Syria are Shiite.

In Syria, the US considers both Shiite Bashar al-Assad’s government and the Sunni Islamic State to be enemies. Our Sunni allies in the fight against Sunni Islamic State, notably Sunni Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Turkey, have pinky sworn to help us fight them, but would really like us to take out Shiite Bashar Assad. Our Shiite ally in the fight against the Sunni Islamic State, Iraq, wants us to take out the Islamic State, but leave Shiite Assad alone. However, Iraq has a large Sunni population in central Iraq that did not put up much of a fight when the Sunni Islamic State rolled over it. Shiite Iran is Best Friends Forever with Shiite Iraq and Shiite Syria, and used to be our worst enemy. However, now that Shiite Iran has joined the fight against the Sunni Islamic State, it is more like a frenemy, especially since it actually puts boots on the ground in the conflict, unlike our Sunni allies Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Turkey.

With whom do we fight in Syria if both Shiite Assad and the Sunni Islamic State are our enemy? John McCain and the Wall Street Journal editorial page have spotted a band of heroes called Syrian moderates. In real life, these moderates, mostly Sunni, have shown a distressing tendency to switch sides and join the Sunni Islamic State forces (now allied with Sunni Al-Qaeda), taking their US supplied weapons and materials with them. So as we escalate our involvement, we are making those brave Sunni Syrian moderates swear on a stack of Korans that they will not go over to the Sunni enemy. We will then train and arm them, which will take months, if not years. The current plan is that the brave Syrian Sunni moderates will take out the Sunni Islamic State and Al-Qaeda, then take out Shiite Assad, unless it’s the other way around. Unimportant details like that are still being worked out, but right now we’re dropping bombs and killing combatants on all sides.

If the Sunni Syrian moderates, Kurds (who practice a variety of religions), and the Shiite Iraqis defeat the Sunni Islamic State, our Sunni allies Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Turkey will insist we depose Shiite Assad. If we start with Assad, it will noticeably diminish Shiite Iraq and Shiite Iran’s enthusiasm for war against the Sunni Islamic State. How does the US define victory when it is on both sides of a centuries-old sectarian war? It doesn’t; although they’ve hinted of a thirty-year war, neither the Obama administration nor the Republicans and generals promoting deeper US involvement in the Middle East have bothered to tell us how we will know when we’ve won, because they can’t. Defeat will be easier to pinpoint; we’ve seen it before. The US will shell out at least a trillion dollars; US public opinion will turn decidedly against the morass of another inconclusive war; there will be thousands more dead, wounded, and shattered US soldiers; legions of new terrorists will prompt further expansion of the national security state, and Shiites and Sunnis will be locked in brutal combat for another thousand years or so.

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Guess The Headline by Robert Gore

Guess which of the following was an actual headline in today’s Wall Street Journal:

A) Islamic State Sentences a Shiite Cleric to Death

B) Iran Sentences a Sunni Cleric to Death

C) Saudi Arabia Sentences a Shiite Cleric to Death

D) Taliban Sentences a Sunni Cleric to Death

Kudos if you guessed C. That’s right, our coalition partner and BFF in the Middle East sentenced the cleric to death for “his sermons criticizing the kingdom’s government and for his support of political protests in the country’s oil-rich Eastern province.” The article did not mention how the cleric would be executed, but beheading is a popular option. Don’t feel bad if you guessed wrong. It’s difficult to tell one repressive, minority-persecuting, terrorism-fomenting, Islamic fundamentalist regime from another over there, but one of them is our ally and the other three are not.