Bush, aka Gee Dumbya, ca. 2007-08
It ought to go without saying that instead of bad mouthing or threatening Vladimir Putin, Obama and his White House ought to be glad-handing him for running interference the past two years - and keeping the U.S. out of two more unnecessary occupations - and thousands more deaths. That refers to Mr. Putin stepping in with the Iran crisis, and then the Syrian crisis. While neocons had boners to bomb Iranian nuclear sites, and later firing thousands of cruise missiles into Damascus - likely triggering a massive war in either case, Putin's solutions helped put those on the back burner and avert calamity.
In any case, it was incredible to me that a nation that still had 44 million uninsured, and 27 million under -employed or unemployed, with 15.6 million kids who go to bed hungry every night, and a massively crumbling infrastructure, could remotely contemplate getting involved in two more "wars"-occupations. Had we not had enough, what with 12 year (going on 13) in Afghanistan and ten years in Iraq? No, not by a long shot, not according to the Bushite Neocons. Not according to "National Endowment of Democracy" weasels and their honchos like Robert Kagan.
They and their cheerleaders have incessantly demanded "regime change" in assorted nations as part of national policy, never mind the costs in blood and treasure. They started with Iraq, and have wanted Syria and Iran to be included too. Putin's "interference" upended their ambitions and they got pissed, then concocted a way to get even - inciting instability right on Putin's doorstep - in the Ukraine. Kagan's wife Victoria Nuland, along with other 'cons, egged on Ukrainian nationalists who took matters into their own hands, to arouse public anger and even fueled it further by using snipers to shoot over two dozen of the protestors themselves. See e.g.
http://smirkingchimp.com/thread/walter-c-uhler/54626/did-right-wing-protesters-hire-snipers-to-kill-protesters-and-police-at-maidan
Other commentators (e.g. Patrick Smith on salon.com, Robert Parry on smirkingchimp.com) have noted Obama’s weakness in his willingness to assemble a “team of rivals” but who are mainly neocons who’ve taken over his foreign policy. But there is more to it than that.
Robert Parry in a recent blog (‘How Looking Forward Tripped Up Obama’ ) observed:
“A similar question arises over the Ukraine crisis in which neoconservative
holdovers, such as Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs Victoria
Nuland, and the U.S.-funded National Endowment for Democracy were allowed to
spur on the violent coup that overthrew democratically elected President Viktor
Yanukovych and precipitated a dangerous confrontation with Russia .
This
Nuland’s husband, former Reagan administration official Robert Kagan, was a co-founder of the Project for the New American Century, which in 1998 called for the first step in this “regime change” strategy by seeking a
Barack Obama’s election in 2008 was, in part,
driven by public revulsion over the bloody conflict in Iraq and
revelations about the torture of detainees and other crimes that surrounded
Bush’s post-9/11 “war on terror.” Yet, after winning the White House, Obama
shied away from a clean break from Bush’s policies.
Parry goes on to conjecture it was likely Obama’s
“timidity” that prevented him from cleaning house and getting rid of the Bushie
Neocons. (Parry suspects he was loathe to be blamed for any attacks that might
come on his watch and if he ditched the cons this would more likely happen)
Going back through files the past two years some answers appear to emerge. It seems that in fact - incredible as it sounds - Kagan and his neocon cohort had Obama's ear almost from the time he entered office.
As long as two years ago, salon.com sources observed that “as a living embodiment of
“He pulled off the neat trick of impressing the
only two men on the planet who have a realistic chance of serving as president
of the United States
any time soon.”
In
a much-noted passage in his State of the Union address in 2012, Obama echoed
Kagan’s daft argument that America ,
despite a decade of war and a near-bankrupt economy, was not a declining or
foolish power but the world’s indispensable nation.
“Anybody
who says America
is in decline doesn’t know what they’re talking about,”
Of
course, this is abject nonsense, and as I pointed out last year, it is Obama who doesn’t know what he’s
talking about. "Indispensable" nation? Horse manure! NO nation is, since any nation can be wiped off the map in a nuclear war- so no nation wins! Hence, none persists, so none is "indispensable". This nation IS in decline and has been so since the end of the
Reagan years – with over $2.1 trillion squandered on specious defense projects (like 'Star Wars') turning us into a
first class debtor with most of our bonds now owned by China . If Obama
didn’t know this, one wonders how he ever became President. See e.g.
Make no mistake, it is one thing to assert a falsehood, it is another to believe it, so one must question why Obama evidently believes Kagan's codswallop. More worrisome:
Obama
declared, after letting Foreign Policy’s Josh Rogin know he had recommended Kagan’s thesis
(as excerpted in the mesage) to his advisors. Kagan also served on Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton’s Foreign Affairs Policy Board, whose agenda is
“shaped by the questions and concerns of the Secretary.”
We also know there's no excuse for any ignorance!
At the
same time that Obama commended Kagan's thesis to his advisors, Kagan’s bona fides as a Republican hawk were indisputable. Only a bozo, a hollow man with no compass or center, or a historically ignorant person couldn't be aware of them. We know Kagan got his
start in the State Department under Reagan and wrote with Bill Kristol in 1996
“Toward a Neo-Reaganite Foreign Policy,” the
foundational document of modern Republican foreign policy. Unsurprisingly, he
was an enthusiastic supporter of the Bush administration’s invasion of Iraq in 2003.
He serves on the board of directors of the Foreign Policy Initiative, a
conservative think tank that routinely finds fault with Obama’s leadership.
(Kagan advised Romney, saying he had met regularly with the candidate over
the years, and doubtless had Romney been elected in 2012, we'd have had to add Syrian and Iranian conflicts to the list at an added cost of trillions. Still Kagan's influence persists, as the Ukraine coup discloses.)
Most interesting, in an interview with Salon in 2012, we learned from Kagan:
“I
actually believe in a bipartisan foreign policy, not for its own sake, but because I think there actually is a bipartisan consensus
on foreign policy. There are plenty of neoconservatives in the Obama
administration and there were plenty in the Clinton administration, if you would define
‘neoconservative’ as I would. What’s lost on people not in Washington is how close this community
really is.”
Really? How close they really are? Shit, no wonder wars, invasions, occupations, and attacks accompany each new administration, whether Dem or Repuke. It makes no difference! Both are eating from the same poisoned trough - of the Neocons. So now we know that Obama allowed these vermin into his administration. He didn't need to have his arms twisted. He did it knowingly and willingly, even passing Kagan's absurd essay on the myth of American decline to advisors! Therefore, he ought to have known that they'd stage a coup at some point as they have in Ukraine, under the cloak of "fighting for freedom". (Funny, because the same freedom- bloviating scumballs have no problem using voter suppression and gerrymandering in the U.S. whenever they desire, especially for black folks!)
Kagan in the same interview confirmed this, noting that
military
interventions have occurred “under Democratic presidents, Republican
presidents, idealist realists, you name it,”
WTF! WHY?
So, in other words, the toss away terms "hope and change" were always a crock of shit. Pabulum for the masses. Tell 'em anything! As Kagan went on to say:
“America keeps
returning to these policies. People may be sick of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan , but polls show support is high for an attack on Iran ."
In Robert Kagan’s reading of U.S. foreign policy, the anti-interventionist tradition is, by definition, outside of the “mainstream” even when, as is the case of Iraq, the mainstream itself came to repudiate the war.
Not even a fiasco of an
invasion launched on a false premise (that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass
destruction) can disturb his comforting notion that military intervention is an
expression of America ’s
essential benevolence.
Even when
This way insanity lies. And moreover, this is the wall that the Neocons (and Obama if he buys into their horse shit) dare not cross. Because unlike Iraq, Iran or Syria, the Russians will employ every last nuke they have before they let the U.S. Neocons drive them out of the Crimea, OR - attempt to deny them exercise of their legitimate interests in the Ukraine - especially after a coup.
Beware what you say, Obama, and how you say it and the threats that you make to Putin. And please ....put a muzzle on that spayed Pekingese, Kerry!
See also:
http://smirkingchimp.com/thread/robert-parry/54785/neocons-have-weathered-the-storm
http://smirkingchimp.com/thread/david-swanson/54758/world-has-no-idea-how-u-s-decides-on-wars
http://smirkingchimp.com/thread/walter-c-uhler/54786/the-hypocritical-united-states-of-amnesia-and-russia
http://smirkingchimp.com/thread/robert-parry/54745/how-looking-forward-tripped-up-Obama
See also:
http://smirkingchimp.com/thread/robert-parry/54785/neocons-have-weathered-the-storm
http://smirkingchimp.com/thread/david-swanson/54758/world-has-no-idea-how-u-s-decides-on-wars
http://smirkingchimp.com/thread/walter-c-uhler/54786/the-hypocritical-united-states-of-amnesia-and-russia
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