Friday, January 3, 2020

Trump Resorts To Reckless Risk Of War Ploy To Distract From Impeachment Trial

Related image“We are near you, where you can’t even imagine,” Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani once warned the United States.
"I am gonna start a war with Iran before I face a real Senate trial to remove me!"

"I think we've now ended any hope of keeping Iraq out of Iran's arms. I think we're going to see the Iraqi parliament, possibly as early as today, send all American troops home. Yes, it's good that he's gone but it comes at an extraordinarily high price, which is why the Bush and Obama administrations chose not to do something like this."  - Former CIA specialist Michael Morrell, this morning on CBS.

"However you want to put it  the doomsday clock has now moved another tick toward midnight." -   Journalist Cal Perry last night on MSNBC.

"There is absolutely no reason for anyone in the U.S. to credit anything the president or his administration says about matters of life and death, or war and peace, until it is demonstrably verified."   - Chris Hayes last night on 'All In'

Before the new year even began - with the glittering ball dropping in NYC-  Janice warned that Trump was going to try to distract from attention on the upcoming Senate trial (and the increasing evidence of his crimes) by starting a war with Iran. Well, it looks like that prediction and event is well underway, this after we learned last night Trump ordered an assassination hit on a top Iranian general.  And coincidentally, that order coming soon after a tranche of documents - mainly unredacted emails- was released showing clearly how Trump broke the law (the  Impoundment Control Act of 1974).   That is, holding up money (to Ukraine)  appropriated by congress, to try to achieve a political benefit for himself.  But this is the nature of the turd he is, a walking two bit traitor turd with no honor and not enough gumption to just resign like Nixon did..

Here's basically what we learned:  Trump ordered an air strike that killed powerful Iranian general Qassem Suleimani in Baghdad in the early hours of Friday, in a dramatic escalation of an already bloody struggle between Washington and Tehran for influence across the region.

Suleimani, who ran Iranian military operations in Iraq and Syria, was targeted while being driven from Baghdad airport by local allies from the Popular Mobilization Units (PMU). The deputy head of the PMU, Abu Mahdi al-Muhandes, a close Suleimani associate, was also killed in the attack.  (Note: Iran confirmed Suleimani’s death, saying the US would be responsible for the consequences.)
According to a released Pentagon statement:

General Suleimani was actively developing plans to attack American diplomats and service members in Iraq and throughout the region.  This strike was aimed at deterring future Iranian attack plans. The United States will continue to take all necessary action to protect our people and our interests wherever they are around the world.”
Of course, this is classic subterfuge and in any case, a reckless provocation which risks dramatically escalating conflict.  This was pointed out yesterday a.m. on CBS morning show by former CIA specialist Michael Morrell.  (This was after the initial U.S.  strike targeting Iranian militants). Morrell also warned that such an aggressive move - and any more like it (such as the assassinations last night)  risked  Iraq demanding the entire U.S. presence leave.  That may now be coming sooner rather than later.
Minutes before the statement Trump tweeted a U.S. flag without comment. Later, the White House put out a statement saying the strike was a “decisive defensive action” carried out “at the direction of the president”.  Trump himself had the absolute audacity to blab the purpose of the assassination strike was "to stop a war" - right out of the pages of Orwell's '1984'.
So no surprise most of us with sense regard this propaganda blather as just that, or ripe PR  horse manure.  The actual act was a clear 'wag the dog' tactic to deflect attention from his impeachment travails - especially given GOP Senators are beginning to break ranks with Moscow Mitch and demand a proper Senate trial (with documents, witnesses).   In other words it was a decisive defensive action on behalf of Trump.  Because this orange asswipe cares no more about protecting this nation, or defending it, than he cared about defending Ukraine from Russian incursions in the Donbass region.  Opting to withhold critical military aid unless Zelenskiy rolled over and did his bidding on the Bidens. Par for the course actions for a narcissist weasel grifter and confirmed traitor.
 All of which is plain as day to anyone with an IQ over room temperature digits.  It is also self-evident to anyone who has followed Trump's behavior and  the timelines of his decisions for the past three years.

The rogue preemptive action also was a blatant violation of  Principle IV against such aggression under the Nuremberg Laws, e.g.:

"The crimes hereinafter set out are punishable as crimes under international law: (a) Crimes against peace: (i) Planning, preparation, initiation or waging of a war of aggression or a war in violation of international treaties, agreements or assurances; (ii) Participation in a common plan or conspiracy for the accomplishment of any of the acts mentioned under (i). "
Suleimani was commander of the Quds Force, the elite, external wing the Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), which the Trump administration designated as a terror organization in April last year. The Pentagon statement claiming responsibility for the strike accused the Quds Force of being responsible for the deaths of hundreds of U.S. service members and  wounding thousands more.
Many consider Suleimani to have been the second most powerful person in Iran, behind the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamanei, and arguably more powerful than President Hassan Rouhani. Through a mix of security operations and diplomatic coercion, Suleimani has certainly been more responsible than anyone else for projecting Iran’s influence in the region.
The cowardly assassination strike to deflect from Trump's impeachment turmoil  comes at a time when Iraq is already on the brink of an all-out proxy war.  Also,  hours after a two-day siege of the US embassy in Baghdad by a mob of PMF militants and their supporters. The Pentagon accused Suleimani of having masterminded the mob attack, but again with no proof at all.  Why should anyone believe the Pentagon anymore when it's clearly fallen under the control and sway of the most pathologically mendacious liar the planet has ever known? (15, 413 "false or misleading claims in the past 1,033 days", according to The Washington Post's running tally.)
Meanwhile, it's clear to all except the most intellectually-challenged that Trump is even prepared to start a war with Iran to take the heat off his political tribulations. This is how far gone, how massively deranged he is.  We know, for example, the U.S. has deployed 750 airborne troops to Kuwait as a rapid reaction force available for use in Iraq, and officials has said up to 3,000 could be sent in the coming days. The defense secretary, Mark Esper  (the same guy who once told interviewer Margaret Brennan the Kurds were "on their own" after the U.S. left them in the lurch)  said on Thursday that more militia attacks were expected and the U.S. reserved the right to take preemptive action to stop them.
Translation: Esper and fellow Pentagon toadies reserved the right to use whatever flim flam and pretexts - even if they meant war-  to protect traitor Trump in his distraction ploys..
Esper - recreating his cowardly stance with the Kurds - said:

There are some indications out there that they may be planning additional attacks. If we get word of attacks, we will take pre-emptive action as well to protect American forces, protect American lives."
What Esper really means is that he will take preemptive action to protect Trump at any cost, if it means keeping Americans' weary eyes off a future impeachment trial. 
Another aspect Esper doesn't grasp - but Senator Chris Murphy surely  does-  as Murphy said on Twitter:
"One reason we don’t generally assassinate foreign political officials is the belief that such action will get more, not less, Americans killed."  
Also, not mentioned, is that we refrain from assassinating foreign officials  because we don't wish to have other nations assassinating our officials!

One last thing: As Andrea Mitchell noted last night, "Iran is not Iraq and there is no Saddam Hussein" -  or a weak military to subdue.  In other words, whatever conflict Trump gets us into - to try and salvage his orange hide - won't be a cakewalk like Iraq was alleged to be for Bush II.

2 comments:

  1. Trump doesn't need to distract from the not-yet-scheduled Impeachment trial, as he's winning politically with the issue.

    Trump has exhibited extreme restraint with Iran in the past year. Iran killing and American contractor and attacking the US Embassy was a step too far, and Iran paid a heavy price for it.

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  2. You're being facetious here, right? You clearly can't be serious after Trump basically ripped to shreds the Iran nuclear deal that so many nations worked their asses off to constrain Iran's nuke program - and which was working.

    Besides which, killing a person like Suleimani - a pivotal official venerated across the board - was emphatically not an indicator of "restraint". What it effectively did is alter the situation from one in which the regime was getting pushback from Iranians (especially the young) to one in which now nearly all Iranians are united in their hatred for the U.S. A very dumb move, I'd say. To have unified a country which was on the cusp of fracturing, by one reckless assassination strike from Trump. Restraint? Get real.

    In addition, there has been NO proven intel to show Suleimani was the terror threat portrayed by Repukes & Trump. (Even the military aids that presented the response options were stunned that Dotard picked the most extreme)

    As for "winning politically" - any president who finds it necessary to use a 'wag the dog' ploy to try to deflect the news cycle off impeachment and Senate trial reporting isn't winning at anything, far less politically. Note here I said REPORTING - not that the trial was already underway.

    The dumb move to upset the news cycle then disclosed a reckless move, not one of restraint. I am afraid you are living in FOX fantasy land my friend.

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