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Exorcising America’s Diplomatic Demons
This week the Chinese Communists celebrate their 60th year in power, an event that the make-war-not-peace crowd, now bloviating over Iran and Afghanistan, might benefit from contemplating. They might also recall a time when the mere suggestion of peaceful coexistence with the Red Menace of China was a career-ender for high school teachers and State Department officials alike. Now the danger from the Chinese Reds is that, being more prudent capitalists than Americans, they might be unwilling to continue carrying our rapidly growing debt.
According to the demonology that has long driven U.S. foreign policy, no country has ever cast a larger shadow as evil incarnate than Communist China. All communists in the Cold War era, like all Islamic radicals today, were assumed to be part of a unified internationalist movement bent on world conquest. And the Chinese, as the Iranians now, were thought to be the worst of the pack. Incapable of change and therefore the fit object of unrelenting hostility, they needed to be confronted militarily, up to the point of nuclear annihilation if that's what it took, as the taped musings of various U.S. presidents attest. This was also a prospect for Iran that Hillary Clinton contemplated as a presidential candidate.
Communism once was, as the Islamic terrorist threat is today, presented as an undifferentiated revolutionary impulse that could never be diplomatically accommodated without sacrificing our own security or, indeed, our freedom. The various communist nations and movements, like those currently led by a polyglot collection of Islamist radicals, were stripped of any complexity, be it in their national identity or ideology.
That mentality prevailed until the day that President Richard Nixon suddenly decided that we could do business with Mao Zedong, the most fervently revolutionary communist of them all. What Nixon recognized was that the Chinese Communists were, like their Soviet counterparts, nationalists first and foremost. Any notion of an international communist conspiracy with a timetable for the takeover of the world (the correct answer on more than one social studies test I took as a kid) was rendered absurd by the fervent, even xenophobic, nationalism of a Tito, Castro or Ho Chi Minh. All of them made their revolutions, as did the Chinese, without significant outside help and were hostile to any foreign interference, no matter the source. Ho, who had successfully battled French colonialists, hardly wanted to exchange them for the Chinese overlords who had governed his country for a thousand years.
Yet that obvious fact did not stop Nixon from continuing to kill millions more in Vietnam and Cambodia in the name of combating international communism-even after he went to Beijing to toast Mao. Fast-forward to last weekend, when John McCain, as his way of justifying an escalation in Afghanistan, was on talk shows bemoaning our failure to win the Vietnam War. Nobody asked him what national security purpose a U.S. victory in Afghanistan would serve. Our defeat in Vietnam led not to dominos falling all the way to San Diego, as was predicted, but rather to Communist Vietnam and Communist China going to war against each other. Today those still-communist powers are battling for shelf space in Wal-Mart and Costco. This would have happened without sacrificing almost 59,000 American soldiers and the 3.4 million locals who died in a war that Defense Secretary Robert McNamara said he could never honestly justify.
The limits of demonology as a substitute for thoughtful foreign policy are amply on display in the approach to Iran as the purported leading agent of Islamic terrorism. Once again we are the self-defined white hats blithely ignoring our long history of affronting Iranian national integrity. That assault began with the CIA-engineered overthrow of Mohammed Mosaddeq, the last secular elected leader of his country, and continued with our support of Iraq's Saddam Hussein in his war against Iran. By ultimately overthrowing Saddam, the U.S. vastly increased the power of Iran's religious hard-liners by installing their disciples in power in Iraq. By supporting the Islamic radicals in Afghanistan, whom Ronald Reagan called "freedom fighters," the U.S. introduced al-Qaida to that country. Blowback is the inevitable outcome of a dangerous game that must be stopped.
What we need is for Barack Obama to pull a Nixon and attempt to cut a deal with Tehran as well as with competing forces in Afghanistan that meets their nationalist aspirations and our security interests. That won't be easy, since he is a Democrat and the Republican hard-liners will not allow him the slack given to Nixon. It is also true that the Iranian leadership can veer into outrageous behavior, making the international pursuit of peace extremely difficult. But does anyone believe that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad can hold a candle to Mao when it comes to provocative rhetoric?
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9 Comments so far
Show AllWhy does America cast about, looking for “monsters” to “destroy”? Because of the military-industrial complex and the US foreign policy of interventionism and imperialism (a “soft” imperialism, but imperialism nevertheless); they are self-perpetuating. Things won’t change until the MI complex collapses and this country is forced to abandon interventionism/imperialism as its foreign policy; and by that time (IF imperial overstretch causes that collapse and that abandonment), it may be too late. But if this country cannot bring the MI complex and its imperialist bent to an end voluntarily, events will force it to. All empires fall of their own weight and size, sooner or later; the American Empire will be no different.
The comparison of Nixon and Obama is appropriate. The main differences between the two are mostly a matter of composure while speaking.
You can't have it both ways -
Obama is either a brilliant politician and rose to the presidency through, what is now, obvious deception and debased (pun) collusion
or
he is just a somewhat above average man who has been stripped of decency by the beast.
Either way, there is a pathetic lack of greatness.
You are flying today.
This article makes a common mistake. Mr. Sheer writes: "According to the demonology that has long driven U.S. foreign policy". Consider for example, what would happen if China or the OPEC nations were to trade dollars for gold, in the short term and by the trillions. The supply of dollars on the world currency markets would of course cause the value of the dollar to plummet and gold would of course spike due to demand. This is just a simple example of just how easy is it to manipulate markets when vast amounts of money are involved but critical to understand if foreign policy is to be understood.
This is in no way meant to advocate militarism. But it is a mistake not to recognize that the U.S. military is an integral part of a very complicated puzzle that has global implications, and benefits that affect all economic issues. For example, the Chinese recently sold tens of billions of dollar related assets and the U.K. bought a simular amount. This though makes little sence because the U.K. is not in a position to lend money to the U.S., especially when the Fed could simply print currency and buy these assets due to the deflationary state of the U.S. economy, but then so is the U.K.'s economy in a simular state, so a choice based on several factors was agreed upon, and all things considered, it was decided that the U.K. should buy the assets. This was all done "quitely" and so I can only assume that the main concern was giving the appearance that demand for the dollar was stable. The important thing here though is to understand that fiat currencies can allow wealth to be created or lost and whether this delicate balance might be maintained without militaristic influence, is doubtful at best.
Then why won't the oligarchs give us your economic rationales instead of simplistic propaganda about why we should fear their latest demon?
BTW, what's a derivative?
Because simplistic propaganda is so much easier to understand and "protecting our freedoms" as a slogan is so much easier to rally around than "protecting the value of our dollar".
Might that not more precisely be "because simplistic propaganda is so much easier to misunderstand"?
"Protecting the value of the dollar" is so much clearer!
I was not sure where to reply here so I am putting this at the end this "mini-thread".
I think the broad answer is that fear is a better motivator than money, that is of course assuming that recruitment is targeted at the poor. Perhaps if we could somehow shame the rich into doing some infantry duty we could be more honest. But then there might still be concern for causing economic panics. A good many economic truths are "left unsaid". The U.S. poverty rate was 71% in 1929 for example, before the crash. But that leads to the conclusion that the Great Depression was caused by exploitation. Lots of lies.
When Zelaya gets back into power in Honduras, with the help of the other OAS countries, he should expose the US backing to the Coup. None of this "let's just look forward, not backward" crap like Obama wants to do with the Bush crimes.
Round up the criminal usurpers, treat them like Mafia RICO criminals, enhance the interrogation until they reveal the precise info on how the CIA or GOP thugs supported, advised and funded their coup.
Get it out in the open, all over the South American press.
Then, the 20% of Americans that actually read can find out all about it in the translated European press.
Expose the US dirty tricks to sunlight, and it will be that much harder to steal the next election in Mexico, or threaten the next democratically elected President in some South American nation. In the Age of the Web, covert operations will be harder and harder to pull off.
http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/news/4828