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The American Century Is So Over: Obama’s Rudderless Foreign Policy Underscores America’s Waning Power
Irrespective of their politics, flawed leaders share a common trait. They generally remain remarkably oblivious to the harm they do to the nation they lead. George W. Bush is a salient recent example, as is former British Prime Minister Tony Blair. When it comes to foreign policy, we are now witnessing a similar phenomenon at the Obama White House.
Here is the Obama pattern: Choose a foreign leader to pressure. Threaten him with dire consequences if he does not bend to Washington's will. When he refuses to submit and instead responds vigorously, back off quickly and overcompensate for failure by switching into a placatory mode.
In his first year-plus in office, Barack Obama has provided us with enough examples to summarize his leadership style. The American president fails to objectively evaluate the strength of the cards that a targeted leader holds and his resolve to play them.
Obama's propensity to retreat at the first sign of resistance shows that he lacks both guts and the strong convictions that are essential elements distinguishing statesmen from politicians. By pursuing a rudderless course in his foreign policy, by flip-flopping in his approach to other leaders, he is also inadvertently furnishing hard evidence to those who argue that American power is on the decline -- and that the downward slide of the globe's former "sole superpower" is irreversible.
Those who have refused to buckle under Obama's initial threats and hardball tactics (and so the impact of American power) include not just the presidents of China, a first-tier mega-nation, and Brazil, a rising major power, but also the leaders of Israel, a regional power heavily dependent on Washington for its sustenance, and Afghanistan, a client state -- not to mention the military junta of Honduras, a minor entity, which stood up to the Obama administration as if it were the Politburo of former Soviet Union.
Flip-Flop on Honduras
By overthrowing the civilian government of President Manuel Zelaya in June 2009, the Honduran generals acquired the odious distinction of carrying out the first military coup in Central America in the post-Cold War era. What drove them to it? The precipitating factor was Zelaya's decision to have a non-binding survey on holding a referendum that November about convening a Constituent Assembly to redraft the constitution.
Denouncing the coup as a "terrible precedent" for the region and demanding its reversal, President Obama initially insisted: "We do not want to go back to a dark past. We always want to stand with democracy."
Those words should have been followed by deeds like recalling his ambassador in Tegucigalpa (just as Bolivia, Brazil, Cuba, Ecuador, Nicaragua, and Venezuela did) and an immediate suspension of the American aid on which the country depends. Instead, what followed was a statement by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton that the administration would not formally designate the ouster as a military coup "for now" -- even though the United Nations, the Organization of American States, and the European Union had already done so.
This backtracking encouraged the Honduran generals and their Republican supporters in Congress. They began to stonewall, while a top notch public relations firm in Washington, hired by the de facto government of the military's puppet president Roberto Micheletti, went to work.
These moves proved enough to weaken the "democratic" resolve of a president who makes lofty speeches, but lacks strong convictions when it comes to foreign policy. Secretary of State Clinton then began talking of reconciling the ousted president and the Micheletti government, treating the legitimate and illegitimate camps as equals.
Having realized that a hard line stance vis-à-vis Washington was paying dividends, the Honduran generals remained unbending. Only when Clinton insisted that the State Department would not recognize the November presidential election result because of doubts about it being free, fair, and transparent did they agree to a compromise a month before the poll. They would let Zelaya return to the presidential palace to finish his term in office.
That was when rightwing Republican Senator Jim DeMint, a fanatical supporter of the Honduran generals, swung into action. He would give Republican consent to White House nominees for important posts in Latin America only if Clinton agreed to recognize the election results, irrespective of what happened to Zelaya. Clinton buckled.
As a result, Obama became one of only two leaders -- the other being Panama's president -- in the 34-member Organization of American States to lend his support to the Honduran presidential poll. What probably appeared as a routine trade-off in domestic politics on Capitol Hill was seen by the international community as a humiliating retreat by Obama when challenged by a group of Honduran generals. Other leaders undoubtedly took note.
A far more dramatic reversal awaited Obama when he locked horns with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Wily Netanyahu Trumps Naïve Obama
On taking office, the Obama White House announced with much fanfare that it would take on the intractable Israeli-Palestinian dispute right away. On examining the 2003 "road map" to peace backed by the United Nations, the United States, Russia, and the European Union, it discovered Israel's promise to cease all settlement-building activity.
In his first meeting with Netanyahu in mid-May 2009, Obama demanded a halt to the expansion of Jewish settlements in the West Bank and occupied East Jerusalem, already housing nearly 500,000 Jews. He argued that they were a major obstacle to the establishment of an independent Palestinian state. Netanyahu balked -- and changed tack by stressing the existential threat that Iran's nuclear program posed to Israel.
Obama slipped into the Israeli leader's trap. At their joint press conference, he linked the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks with the Iranian nuclear threat. Then, to Netanyahu's delight, he gave Tehran "until the end of the year" to respond to his diplomatic overtures. In this way, the wily prime minister got the American president to accept his linkage of two unrelated issues while offering nothing in return.
Later, Netanyahu would differentiate between the ongoing expansion of present Jewish settlements and the creation of new ones, with no compromise on the former. He would also draw a clear distinction between the West Bank and East Jerusalem which, he would insist, was an integral part of the "indivisible, eternal capital of Israel," and therefore exempt from any restrictions on Jewish settlements.
Reflecting the Obama administration's style, Clinton offered a strong verbal riposte: "No exceptions to Israeli settlement freeze". These would prove empty words that changed nothing on the ground.
When Netanyahu publicly rejected Obama's demand for a halt to settlement construction in the West Bank, Obama raised the stakes, suggesting that Israeli intransigence endangered American security.
On October 15th, after much back-channel communication between the two governments, Netanyahu announced that he had terminated the settlements talks with Washington. Having said this, he offered to curb some settlement construction during a later meeting with Clinton. This won him the secretary of state's effusive praise for an "unprecedented" gesture, and a call for the unconditional resumption of the Palestinian-Israeli peace talks.
The Palestinians were flabbergasted by this American volte-face. "I believe that the U.S. condones continued settlement expansion," said stunned Palestinian government spokesman Ghassan Khatib. "Negotiations are about ending the occupation and settlement expansion is about entrenching the occupation."
In December, Netanyahu agreed to a 10-month moratorium on settlement building, but only after his government had given permission for the construction of 3,000 new apartments in the occupied West Bank. Sticking to their original position, the Palestinians refused to revive peace talks until there was a total freeze on settlement activity.
On March 9, 2010, just as Vice-President Joe Biden arrived in Jerusalem as part of Washington's campaign to kick-start the peace process, the Israeli authorities announced the approval of yet more building -- 1,600 new homes in East Jerusalem. This audacious move, meant to underline Israel's defiance of Washington, left Biden -- as well as Obama -- fuming.
With the House of Representatives adopting his health reform bill on March 24th, Obama was on a domestic roll when he met Netanyahu in Washington the next day. He reportedly laid out three conditions for defusing the crisis: an extension of the freeze on Jewish settlement expansion beyond September 2010; an end to further Jewish settlement projects in East Jerusalem; and withdrawal of the Israeli forces to the positions held before the Second Intifada in September 2000. He then left Netanyahu at the White House to consult with his advisers and get back to him if "there is anything new." Again, however, as with the Honduran generals Obama's tough talk remained just that: talk.
The purpose of all this activity was to get the Palestinians to resume peace negotiations with Israel, which they had broken off when that country attacked the Gaza Strip in December 2008. Netanyahu was prepared to talk as long as no preconditions were set by the Palestinians.
In the end, he got what he wanted. He met neither Palestinian preconditions nor those of the Obama administration. Simply put, it was Obama who bent to Netanyahu's will. The tail wagged the dog.
The hapless officials of the Palestinian Authority read the writing on the wall. After some ritual huffing and puffing, they agreed to participate in "proximity talks" with the Netanyahu government in which Washington's Middle East envoy, George Mitchell, would shuttle back and forth between the two sides. These started on May 9th. Over the next four months, Mitchell's tough task will be to try to narrow the yawning differences on the terms of Palestinian statehood -- when both sides now know that Obama will shy away from pressuring Israel where it hurts.
Spat With China, Then a Sudden Thaw
Obama's problems with the People's Republic of China (PRC) began in November 2009 when, to his disappointment, the Chinese government failed to accord him the royal treatment he had expected on his first visit to the country.
Washington-Beijing relations cooled further when the Obama administration greenlighted the sale of $6.4 billion worth of advanced weaponry to Taiwan, including anti-missile missiles, and Obama met the Dalai Lama, Tibet's spiritual leader, at the White House. The PRC regards Taiwan as a breakaway province and Tibet as an integral part of the republic.
Senior U.S. officials described the moves as part of Obama's concerted drive to "push back" at China which, in his view, was punching above its weight. Along with these moves went unrelenting pressure on Beijing, in private and in public, to revalue its currency, the yuan. The administration repeatedly highlighted a legal provision requiring the Treasury Department to report twice a year on any country that has been manipulating the rate of exchange between its currency and the American dollar to gain unfair advantage in international trade. That the next due date for such a report -- a preamble to possible sanctions -- was April 15th was repeated by U.S. officials ad nauseam.
In mid-April, Obama was convening an international summit on nuclear security in Washington. He was eager to have as many heads of state as possible attend. At the very least, he wanted the leaders of the four nuclear powers with U.N. Security Council vetoes -- Britain, France, Russia, and China -- present.
That provided Chinese President Hu Jintao with a powerful card to play at a moment when a White House threat to name his country as a currency manipulator hung over his head. He refused to attend the Washington nuclear summit. Obama blinked. He postponed the Treasury Department's judgment day. In return, Hu came and met Obama at the White House.
That tensions existed between Beijing and Washington did not surprise China's leaders, a collective of hard-nosed realists. Their attitude was reflected in an editorial in the official newspaper, the China Daily, soon after Obama's inauguration. "U.S. leaders have never been shy about talking about their country's ambition," it said. "For them, it is divinely granted destiny no matter what other nations think." The editorial went on to predict that "Obama's defense of U.S. interests will inevitably clash with those of other nations." And so they have, repeatedly.
Such realism contrasted starkly with the mood prevalent at the White House where it was naively believed that a few well scripted speeches in foreign capitals by the eloquent new president would restore U.S. prestige left in tatters by George W. Bush's policies. What the president and his coterie seem not to have noticed, however, was an important Pew Research Center poll. It showed that, following Obama's public diplomacy campaign, while the image of the U.S. had indeed risen sharply in Europe, Mexico, and Brazil, any improvement was minor in India and China, marginal in the Arab Middle East, and nonexistent in Russia, Pakistan, and Turkey.
Stuck in its self-congratulatory mode, the Obama team paid scant attention to the full range of options that other powers had for retaliating to its pressure. For instance, it did not foresee Beijing threatening sanctions against major American companies supplying weapons to Taiwan, nor did it anticipate the stiff resistance the PRC would offer to revaluing the yuan.
Some attributed Beijing's behavior to a rising Chinese nationalism and the fears of its leaders that bending under pressure from "foreigners" would play poorly at home. But the real reasons for Chinese resistance had more to do with hard economics than popular sentiment. In the wake of the Great Recession of 2008-09, symbolized by the collapse of the gigantic Lehman Brothers investment bank, China's leaders noted tectonic changes occurring in the international economic balance of power -- at the expense of the hitherto "sole superpower."
While the U.S. and European economies contracted, Beijing quickly adopted policies aimed at boosting domestic demand and infrastructure investment. This resulted in impressive expansion: 9% growth in the gross domestic product in 2009 with a prediction of 12% in the current year. This led Goldman Sachs' analysts to advance their forecast of the year when China would become the globe's number one economy from 2050 to 2027.
For the first time since World War II, it was not the United States that pulled the rest of the world out of negative growth, but China. The U.S. has emerged from the financial carnage as the most heavily indebted nation on Earth, and China as its leading creditor with an unprecedented $2.4 trillion in foreign reserves.
Its cash-rich corporations are now buying companies and future natural resources from Australia to Peru, Canada to Afghanistan where, last year, the Congjiang Copper Group, a Chinese corporation, offered $3.4 billion -- $1 billion more than the highest bid by a Western metallurgy company -- to secure the right to mine copper from one of the richest deposits on the planet.
Karzai the Menace Becomes Karzai the Indispensable
On assuming the presidency, Obama made no secret of his dislike for his Afghan counterpart, Hamid Karzai. To circumvent his central government's pervasive corruption, senior American officials came up with the idea of dealing directly with Afghan provincial and district governors. In the presidential election of August 2009, their preference for Abdullah Abdullah, a serious rival to Karzai, was widely known.
When Karzai resorted to massive vote rigging to ensure his reelection and turned a deaf ear to Washington's exhortations to clean up his administration, Obama decided to use a stick to bring Washington's latest client regime in line. In a dramatic gesture, he undertook an air journey of 26 hours -- from Washington to Kabul -- over the last weekend in March to deliver a 26-minute lecture to Karzai on the corruption and administrative ineptitude of his government. The Afghan leader had few options but to listen in stony silence.
When, however, Karzai read a news story in which an unnamed senior American military official suggested that his younger half-brother, Ahmed Wali, the power broker in the southern province of Kandahar, deserved to be put on the Pentagon's current list of drug barons to be killed or captured, his patience snapped.
An incensed Afghan president responded by claiming that the U.S. was deliberately intensifying and widening the war in Afghanistan in order to stay in the region and dominate it. He added that, if Washington's pressure continued, he might join the Taliban. (He had, in fact, been a significant fundraiser for the Taliban after they captured Kabul in September 1996.)
Obama reacted as he had done in the past. When facing a serious challenge, he retreated. From being a stick wielder he morphed into a carrier of carrots during a Karzai visit to Washington early this month (that, in March, administration officials were threatening to postpone indefinitely).
The high point of the wooing of Karzai -- worthy of being included in a modern version of Alice in Wonderland -- was a dinner Vice-President Joe Biden gave for the Afghan dignitary at his residence. At the very least Karzai must have been bemused. In February, Biden had staged a dramatic walk-out halfway through a dinner at the Afghan president's palace after Karzai denied that his government was corrupt or that, if it was, he was at fault.
Despite the Obama administration's "red carpet treatment" and "charm offensive," Karzai was boldly honest at a joint press conference with Obama when he described Iran as "our bother country, our friend."
The same sentiments would soon be expressed by another leader -- in Brazil.
President da Silva Thumbs His Nose at Obama
Ever since assuming the presidency of Brazil in 2003, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has, when necessary, not hesitated to challenge U.S. policy moves. He has clashed with Washington on world trade (the Doha round), global warming, and continuing U.S. sanctions against Cuba.
In December 2008, he chaired a meeting of 31 Latin American and Caribbean countries, which excluded the United States, at the Brazilian tourist resort of Sauipe. The next month, instead of going to the World Economic Forum at Davos, Switzerland, da Silva attended the Eighth World Social Forum at Belem at the mouth of the Amazon River.
He was critical of the way Obama compromised democracy in Honduras, and, despite the Obama administration's dismay and opposition, he invited Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to Brasilia in November 2009 for talks on the Iranian nuclear program, his first attempt at high-profile international diplomacy. (A week earlier he had warmly received Israeli president Shimon Peres in the Brazilian capital.) Six months later, he paid a return visit to Tehran -- and made history, much to the chagrin of Washington.
Acting in tandem with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, da Silva revived a putative October 2009 nuclear agreement and brokered an unexpected deal with Ahmadinejad. Iran agreed to ship 1,200 kilograms of its low-enriched uranium to Turkey; in return, Russia and France would provide 120 kilograms of 20% enriched uranium for a medical research reactor in Tehran.
Taken by surprise and rattled by the success of Brazil and Turkey in the face of American disapproval, the Obama administration reverted to the stance of the Bush White House and demanded that Iran suspend its program to enrich nuclear fuel. It then moved to push an agreement on further U.N. sanctions against Iran, as if the Brazilians and Turks had accomplished nothing.
This refusal to register reality was myopic at best. The blinkered view of the present White House ignores salient global facts. The influence of mid-level powers on the world stage is on the rise. Their leaders feel -- rightly -- that they can ignore or bypass the Obama administration's demands. And, on the positive side, they can come together on certain international issues and take diplomatic initiatives of their own with a fair chance of success.
By now, from Afghanistan to Honduras, Brazil to China, global leaders large and small increasingly sense that the Obama administration's bark is worse than its bite, and though the U.S. remains a major power, it is no longer the determinative one. The waning of the truncated American Century is by now irreversible.




100 Comments so far
Show AllAmericans in general tend to be astonishingly uninformed and misinformed about genuine history and the real consequences of American foreign policy-- thanks in large part to its disingenuous mass media and the co-opted public education industry. For all the popular rhetoric about America's National pride, honor and sense of values, and championing the causes of freedom, peace and justice, to a very large extent the American public is clueless about how hypocritical and self-serving the US has been, and how complicit they are by not holding their leaders and policymakers accountable for America's devastating Imperialist pretensions.
The United States is arguably the only country on the planet whose national personality and self-image is rooted in centuries of unremitting expansion through race war punctuated by massacre. There have always been “free-fire zones” all along the coveted, ever moving peripheries of white American power, from the “Indian country” surrounding the settler beachheads of Plymouth Rock and Jamestown to the “Sunni Triangle” of Iraq and the mountains of Afghanistan. Whole peoples – millions – have been erased in the glorious march of American Manifest Destiny.
What gets to me is people thinking America was once a great country with a moral compass? When was that? I must have missed that part of history. From the massacres of Indians, to slavery, to Hiroshima, Vietnam, to its policies in Latin America, to its support for the creation of the terrorist state of Israel, to supporting the Shah of Iran, to supporting Saddam with intelligence and chemical weapons against the Iranian people, to these modern day Middle East debacles, America has by far the worst track record. They just have a very powerful propaganda machine to show they are the land of the free.
"THE USA" stole half of Mexico by armed force -- the nice parts with rich deposits of gold and silver (and, as it turned out, oil -- though "we" didn't actually recognize that at the time.)
"The USA" made sure that "our" influence over Latin America was such that wealth would be steadily transferred from their countries to ours. "We" sent the Marines to Nicaragua, Haiti, & Guatemala often enough to insure that life in those countries would be a permanent living hell for most of the inhabitants. "We" imposed military dictatorships in almost every Central & South American country, stunting the aspirations of their people, & imposing conditions from which some of those countries will never recover. (So if some of the people want to escape from the living conditions in those countries, "The USA" had very much to do with creating those conditions.)
Interestingly, "The USA" started doing all this at the same time that "The USA" was exterminating the indigenous people here, AND using black slaves from Africa. What a loveable, righteous people "we" are, here in the "Land of the Free"!!
"The USAians" came here somewhere in the early 1600s. "The USAians" found this Promised Land, rich beyond imagination with fresh water and fertile earth and abundant game and timber for the felling. And to "our" further delight, it was largely uninhabited--if "we" didn't count the Red Ones.
"USAians" didn't see too many of them at first; they avoided our noise and the smoke from our fires, which were always too big. But soon enough, "The USA" was here in such numbers that they couldn't go around us anymore.
"The USAians" were shocked--SHOCKED, I tell ya--that there were Savages in "their" Promised Land! So "they" set about exterminating them. "The USAians" killed them whenever "The USAians" saw them, "they" drove them from their land and their homes, "they" slaughtered their food supply and left the buffalo bodies to rot in the sun by the hundreds of acres. "The USA" gave them blankets full of smallpox, murdered their children and raped their women before "they" murdered them as well. "They" rounded them up into concentration camps and ate their food while they starved. "The USAians" made them cut their hair, wear britches and beat them to death if they wouldn't speak "their" language.
"The USA" stole a whole continent from them and paid them in Genocide.
I guess you don't like us much do u? Tell me then friend what other country on Earth doesn't have a bloody past? America might be wallowing in blood but so is everyone else. The truth is that LAND all LAND on this planet has been fought over from the beginning of time. Look at the bloody miserable history of countries like China or India or Russia, Germany, and don't tell me the Arab countries are any better because thats BS. So, go ahead and beat up on us who cares? We have plenty of things that are wrong in our past and plenty that are wrong even today but once again name one place on earth including Sweden that hasn't a long bloody past?
Sioux Rose
SEAGLASS: The point is that something should have been learned from this bloody historical record. You use it as an EXCUSE for more of same. HIS-story repeats because the same mindsets that caused the problem(s) are still in operation, and chief among them are ideas like: war solves problems, those who kill others are heros, and that other human beings living their lives peacefully in other lands qualify as our enemies.
The price being paid in modern warfare (90% of which is rendered in costs to innocents, imperviously dismissed as "collateral damage") is so great that it behooves all so-called civilized nations to make a greater investment in the nearly lost art of diplomacy. Compromise is the name of the game when each nation is part of a world of others. Sharing is part and parcel to the human soul. In contrast, our nation has invested the lion's share of its treasure and inventiveness in a galaxy of weapons that it uses to bludgeon other lands into assenting to its will. The United States is the chief purveyor of violence in the world today. It was true when Martin Luther King uttered this remark decades ago, and it is truer now. The US sells 49% of all weapons that go to foreign lands. One day the fruit of that "investment" will impact our shores as karmic blowback.
Your idea of patriotism, my nation right or wrong, is self-destructive. If you had a friend who was destroying his life through his actions, do you think it would be a greater act of friendship to say nothing? Would you justify what he's doing to himself, or find the greater love (and courage) to tell him the truth... thereby potentially catalyzing a change in his behavior that might lead to healthier outcomes in the long run?
P.S. MCOYOTE: Powerful post. Many cannot handle the truth of this nation's history. And while there were also many GOOD acts, the dark cannot be ignored, either.
SEAGLASS said "name one place on earth including Sweden that hasn't a long bloody past?"
I think the point of mcoyote's post, was not that the USA is exceptionally bad or the worst that ever was, but that we of the USA, are always forgetting that we are at least as bad as everyone else. It's that sense of self-righteousness, and the self-delusional idea that once we were the good guys but we've strayed from our earlier and better path, that needs to be kept in mind. That everyone else is/was doing it, seems to be a rather feeble rejoinder to the important reminder that was given.
Sioux Rose -- Of course, you and mcoyote are right. It can't be denied and has to be recognized fully. Being a romantic (this late in life there is no denying it), however, I would urge everyone with a heart to work toward solidarity not only with our living comrades but with compatriots who were not part of what used to be called the "consensus history". The dissenters, the utopians, the freethinkers, the cynics, Communists, pacifists...a myriad of folks who said, "No, this is not the way to live."
In other words, don't break the chain of non-consensus history; and continue, against all odds, to nourish and strengthen it with our own experience and knowledge (and that of people worldwide.) We owe it to the lives of the folks who have been treated badly by the propagandists of consensus history as well as to ourselves.
"Your idea of patriotism, my nation right or wrong, is self-destructive. " Don't put words in my mouth. Go back and read what I said, don't you dare just spout assumptions from that about what I feel or think about War and sharing etc. I was merely stating the FACTS of history is all. I was NOT justifying any of it. It sucks all of it and yes some actors ( nations ) are worse in the record then others but HUMAN history as a whole is a ragged bloody flag no matter what you think about it. That doesn't excuse anyone's actions.
Thank you Sioux Rose for that beautiful response to SEAGLASS. You represent the best of humankind, the better angels of our nature. I am always amazed with your clarity of thought and the stamina to hang in with your wise postings on CD.
BLOW BACK
Try ONE SILO. One. Just One.
200 ICBM
Seven stories underground
Ten Nuclear Warheads on each
once Lauched cannot be stopped
per Pentagon
Secretary of Defense went into it and came out Aghast.Trembling.
50 States
4 per state
each destroys directly 100-200 mile radius
radiation takes care of balance
RUSSIA--SWOOSH--IN AMERICA IN TWO HOURS
ISRAEL BOMBS IRAN TWO AWAIT THEM
olduglymeanhonest
It is because the destructive part of the human psyche has gained control of civilization? That means all who live from and within it are 'guilty.' The difference is the means and ability to steal and destroy. If they were in possession of our resources they would, in one way or another, do the same. Exploitation or the tendency to exploit is part of this destructive part. When a few through the centuries tried to explain this, we either crucified or ignored them, but it was always at our own peril, and with the great advances in technology the world has become a much more perilous place. Everyone and everything, we say, is to blame but ourselves, right? People talk about cognitive dissonance and/or a disconnect, but this may be the biggest one of all.
Chessgames56: You are right on....."It is because the destructive part of the human psyche has gained control of civilization?"
It is the dysfunction of the human ego and capitalism preys on the human ego. This is why unchecked capitalism leads to a dysfunctional society. Only a contemplative mind that seeks honest spiritual discernment can best overcome the human ego. The dysfunction of the human ego goes to the core teachings of all the great mystics, but unfortunately Christianity after Constantine has taken the path of power and wealth.
That is why I consider how Eckhart Tolle's book "New Earth" has done so much for raising a higher awareness of the dysfunction of the human ego and thanks to the book's promotion by Oprah Winfrey.
Yes, I was just reading that book, Stephan, and that was exactly the point I was trying to make. Many seem to think that Tolle is just part of the eccentric 'New Age' pablum, but he is not. As far as Oprah goes, I'm not sure if she is serious about this stuff or just playing with a lot of different ideas. Nevertheless, It's good she's given Tolle some exposure. You may also enjoy the works of Guy Finley: www.guyfinley.com
Thanks for your comment. :-)
RILEY
Thanks. I needed that
"name one place on earth including Sweden that hasn't a long bloody past?"
How bout 2? Canada and Antarctica.
"Land of the free"...IF you are white and privileged; or of color, but white inside..ta da...obomber !
"What gets to me is people thinking America was once a great country with a moral compass? When was that?"
Sadly, realistically – never.
But, if you have to choose a particular period, the "golden age" of television probably embedded the lie more deeply than at any other time in our history. Only with the internet is our real meaning exposed.
History, for better or worse, is largely interpretation; even well-meaning historians color their accounts with personal perspective. Thus, the present moment is what matters most, no? Granted, it is likely that our ancestors were brutal and ruthless, but must we be like them? And then there's the issue of responsibility: if my father commits a crime, is it right to make me serve 'jail time' for it? That's what a lot of posters seem to be implying here. In my view this is counter productive and needlessly binds one to the past. That said, all of us SHOULD presently see if we're obeying and contributing to that which is clearly immoral. If we STOP being greedy and brutal in the present that will be enough. True, there may be times where it is appropriate to make amends (i.e., if and when we find ourselves in possession of booty from a recent heist, such as that of the banksters). In all other cases it amounts to a penalty or punishment, which is really only a subtle form of revenge. A clue to this is when others angrily demand 'justice.' What they really want to see is payback--and that's what keeps the circle of ignorance and viciousness going. This attitude, of course, automatically disqualifies whatever demand is being made. I heard it once said that 'good' is not the opposite of 'evil,' it is the Absence of it.
mcoyote,
While I find it especially difficult to defend the US at this time, I will do so--not out of patriotism but to provide balance to the history that you cite in your post. You need to recognize these positive points about our past:
1. The idea of constitutional government was begun here.
2. Separation of church and state was enunciated clearly here in the eighteenth century.
3. This country was a place to which the oppressed could flee: Pilgrims, Amish, Methodists, and more and more.
4. The people of the United States are creative and innovative. How else can you explain the numbers of Nobel Prize winners in the twentieth century?
5. Though resources were plundered here from the start, ideas of environmental protection flourished here. We did make enormous progress since the sixties in cleaning the air and water.
6. At times the United States has been beneficent. The Marshall Plan did help Europe to get on its feet after WWII.
7. While racism exists here for sure, the US has made great strides in treating different races and ethnicities with fairness. You can point to our shortcomings, but if you look at the whole world and see what others are doing, we aren't doing that bad.
8. The position of women in the United States is much higher than in most countries of the world.
9. This "give me your poor,...your huddled masses yearning to breathe free" is not just empty verbiage. Many, many people came here to make better lives for themselves. They were running from class-based societies in Europe and other places.
10. The cultural contributions of the US from music to literature to films to dance are recognized by all throughout the world.
Ten points--ten fingers! There is a relationship most likely.
Your anger at whites killing Indians has been expressed at this blog many, many times. Given the same technology, any group of people would have done the same thing. That doesn't excuse it, but it does place the blame more on humanity as a whole rather than one particular race. As for "stealing land", I have never been able to understand that argument. Who gave indigenous people the deed? Do you accept the idea of ownership of land, an idea that was foreign to Native People? Tribes had areas they would hunt and fish, but they did not buy and sell land among themselves. That is a European notion. With your admiration for Native American culture, why do you adopt the European concept of land ownership? Look--some whites did want to exterminate all Indians, some did not. Disease killed many. That distressed many whites of the time as well as Indians. You cannot paint one race with the same brush.
Frankly, at this point, I hate the government of the United States, but not all Americans. They are so diverse it is impossible to hate them all--and pointless, too. The American story is full of terrible events, but also many that make us proud. You should search out some of the positive things.
Sounds like you drank the kool-aid.
Every single one of your ten points is nothing more than propaganda.
Why do you not know this?
Ask yourself that question. That's step one.
What do we do with those positive things? Think positively? Besides, every one of your ten points of light are argumentative, not incontrovertible facts. And some of them are up for grabs. Just let the Limbaugh/Beck/Hannity contingent get more power among the tea baggers. Then all those glorious attributes you cite will be turned on their hoary heads. And you really think that what the white Anglo-Saxons did to the American Indians was what anyone could expect from any race anywhere, "given the technology"? So the whole human race is responsible is for the genocide whites enacted on American Indians? Get real. What we did to the Indians then is roughly equivalent to what we're doing now to Middle Eastern Arabs, and directly equivalent to what Israeli Zionists are doing to Palestinians. Is all this Humanity's problem? In some sense, but it specifically is about the specific cases where this occurs. Any historian can tell you that.
You have to look at history worldwide to understand that racism belongs to all of us, not just whites. The Chinese treated (and still treat) ethnic minorities like dirt. The Muslims of Africa were party to the slave trade. The Iroquois of North America massacred other Indian people, men, women, and children. Your anger towards white Anglo Saxons (I note you do not include the atrocities the Spanish committed against Native People) comes from the way you make sense out of the world, not out of careful reading of the facts. Ironically, you see the world in dualistic terms--oppressive, genocidal whites versus everyone else--just as political conservatives do, except to them it is fundamentalist good vs. evil or oppressed whites vs. everyone else. That dualistic point of view is an oversimplification. The world is much more complicated. Why not read a scholarly account of white settlement and the Indians? There are many of them. You will find out that not all whites approved of the slaughter of Indians, that Indians themselves committed atrocities, that some tribes got along quite well with whites for long periods of time. I cannot deny that the dominant white culture consciously tried to destroy Indian culture by sending the young to special schools, that atrocities were committed against Indians, that Indians were cheated out of their land, that treaties were broken. It was not a pretty picture. But your sense of grievance extends to the present day, many years since violent conflict ended. Time to let go.
None if it really matters, since we've evolved into institutionalized evil in the PRESENT. National 'pride' and 'patriotism' are jingoistic and destructive, regardless of the country of origin. Look at what is happening and what we are DOING NOW.
The 'spin' of 'goodness' keeps evolving, while authentic goodness devolves. In that way, we're getting the worst of all worlds, and essentially evil is calling itself good. So forget national pride and all that jingoistic nonsense; it only serves as a narcotic to keep you asleep, while we continue to kill and exploit in NAME of goodness.
Also, to those blaming the evils committed in the past, and using that to condemn: bitterness, hatred, and negativity will not improve things. You say: "We've made others suffer, so we deserve to pay and suffer in return." That means there is a desire for revenge in your heart, which only makes things worse. What we need are healing solutions because EVERYONE is suffering from the increasing darkness in the world. And adding more pain will NOT make things better, only worse.
MCCOYOTE HOWLS AGAIN
GOOD THANKS MADE MY LUNCH BETTER
Obama is steering the ship of the complete fall of the American Empire. His "change" is to bring about the complete dewstruction of social service programs in the U.S.A. even as taxes increase, wars continue to be funded, and looting and ravaging of the treasure contnues at the hands of these immoral and criminal capitalists. Obama will continue the political and social repression of George W. Bush, in order to bring about martial law and a total Fascist State. There is nothing to trust about Barack H. Obama whatsoever, but, then again, I never bought into this fraud who promised the bogus "hope and change" nonsense.
When you think of Obama, you can also think of Bush at the same time. Aside from their smiles and demeanor, there is very little which separates Obama from Bush. In fact, Obama is continuing the policies of George W. Bush. Just look at the war budgets and the continued police state measures known as FISA, the Patriot Act renewal and continued torture of innocent civilians around the world under this amoral Obama administration.
Remember, though, you shouldn't criticize this president, "because he is trying you know." Blah, Blah, Blah...Pass the Mustard and remember the hot dog goes inside that bun.....
And, this ain't no Joke, Jack!!!!
obummer is bush with a vocabulary,but, both war criminals ! But even the obummerbots are/ will get more angry as their toys are taken away. Hold on, seek shelter, heavy stuff will come with the fall of the fascist amerikan empire !
I do not believe Obama will start another war, let alone two. He knows the political difficulty in leaving. I heard that the former president of Argentina said that Dubya thought the best way to have a good economy in the US was to fight a war. Ain't we glad he doubled down on that one?
to mycoyote:
Painful history and true. To Hiro's dissection of Obama's gutless abdications of traditional American bullying, I say "Thank god, at last."
He has no choice as our empire erodes. Will we accept diminished influence gracefully or will we go snarling into more fruitless wars like a wounded, cornered beast?
I think the curtain is gradually pulling back on the realities but Americans usually only awaken in the late crisis stage of events. We are reactive, not proactive.
Until we shrink the military industrial complex to the size of a rodent and drown it in the bathtub, I think some serious snarling is coming up. That's my big fear.
We're dead broke and will be even more so after the destruction of the southeastern U.S. economy by the oil spill. What a great opportunity! We can't afford military aid to anyone, Israel included. Actually, how about no aid at all, to Honduran generals, Netanyahoo or any of their ilk. The world would be a better place and maybe Americans could actually make things again.
How can we be broke? we have the worlds largest remaining Navy,, We have over 7000 Nuclear Warheads ready to send Fed-Ex anywhere in the world that won't take our IOUs
No my friend we'll never be Broke..
>^^<
Dilip Hiro doesnt seem to understand the Americas very well. The show Obummer and Clinton put on were a distraction at best. The Honduran generals were trained right here in the USA. Zelaya is just the latest tragedy in Amerikas interest in World Oil domination. We now have a foothold to Venezuela, who has taken a very precarious stance against Amerikan hegimony.
I think the author of the article is missing a few things regarding the Obama administration. He is taking too much at face value. For example, the response to the Honduran coup was probably not a, "Let's do this...no, we'll have to back down...Too bad". It seemed to me from the start a transparent two-tier operation...An attempt to shore up a "human rights" persona while doing the bidding of the shadow government... a rather ham-fisted effort, it's true.
Your interpetation is the correct one, here and now. Clinton and the Multi-Nat'ls got what they wanted and Obama got schooled. The Clinton spent 8yrs " greasing the skids " of empire and then chummed the Bushies to retain their world-wide connections. Obama has no experience in foreign business and power politics. It shows. He acquiessed out of necessity to stronger and more powerful forces inside the corridors of D.C. Hiro is spinning some b.s. in the article if he couldn't make this obvious observation.
I picture myself standing beside the freshly buried thing that was the USA.
I feel I should say something. The most appropriate quote I can think of comes from a movie:
Two tears in a bucket motherfuckit
It was you see. Now it is no more. Is that possible?
If the world woke up tomorrow morning to find that every U.S. citizen had disappeared from the face of the earth...would they consider that a tragedy or a relief? At first there would be a lot of pronouncements about the loss of the beloved americans and investigations into where they all went. Raptured to heaven (or the other place)? But as time went on without them the world would adjust to not having the huge military/industrial complex of the Empire and not having the huge sucking up of the earth's natural resources by the United States. The world might then breath more freely and whistle a little tune and go about its' business.
No; then they'd have to deal with the Chinese. Who after watching every episode of Dallas, and General Hospital. Drooling into their rice all the while, would step into our empty shoes before they got cold, and start running our play book all over again, this time without Diversity, it'd be like the 50s all forward, as one for all. No stopping us now..
The United States of China!
>^^<
Ha, China did all this empire stuff way before us.
Long before Nike they had Vietnam growing there rice . Korea and Japan derived there legitimacy from China's recognition.
Alot like how America recognizes nations now.
Plus China did it far longer, till the Europeans went in and screwed everything up( stature right here) and started China's "century of humiliation "
Poor Obama! I guess the job is just too complicated for a department store mannequin after all.
And the Taliban - the Taliban! - are winning!
Of course they are. We made the mistake of taking the wrong side in a civil war that began 35 years ago--the same mistake the USSR made.
Or perhaps you prefer drug-running warlords?
How could we?
Iraq Afghanistan
Lookie how the world views the Great Power
Two of Poorest Nations on earth
Afghan # 3 poorest.
Irqa destituted from 8 years of sanctions by almighty power
ARMED? No planes-no missiles-no ships no no nothing
Like China invades shock & awe slaughterama East Timor.
Russia Syria. England Ireland..
How do they see us via their picture windows.
Horrid. Arabs have seen our slaughters in Iraq on TV and in press.
British have seen them.
Americans have seen exactly Zero. None.
Murders--Rapes-Thefts--by our Heroic servicemen.
Lt suffocates General in Duffle Bag. Ft Carson pals=Not Guilty
Five kids enter home at night
kill mom-- dad-- 6 yr old sister-- take turns raping 15 year old beauty.
Put in backyard--pour on kerosene and burn the body to hide evidence.
5 Heroes----One pled guilty--Tribunal gave him Life in prison-- Four not tried after years. Why?
Keeping us secure? 7000 miles away--No planes or missiles.
I will surely vomit if I hear Obama or any leader say--WE ARE FIGHTING FOR THE SECURITY OF AMERICANS. so disgraceful that 300 million can be so dumb.
come home come home enough damage has been done
1500 Million Muslims would love to see us destroyed.
We asked for hatred by our evil actions.
Jesus Christ is Angry What does God think?
olduglymeanhonest
So what is being said here? Barack Obama should have Nuked China, Turkey, Brazil, Afganistan and Russia for standing up to him in order to reassert "American Supremacy" ?
Israel and the Honduras have the USA buffaloed and Barack was against the Coup in the Honduras and is really opposed to Israels negotiating tactics?
I have a completely different take. The pushing back by the rest of the world is because they grow tired of how the USA makes a royal mess of things. They grow dubious of the uses of Military muscle feeling there other ways towards achieving "security."
Its not because Obama "backs down" it is because the Holy Grail of Violence that the USA has historically visited upon countries that opposed it drives that same USA to bankruptcy both fiscally and morally.
North brief but oh such truth
Thanks
Re: Hiro's failure to mention the role of Sec. of State's close friend, Lannie Davis, makes this a half-story at best. Davis, representing the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and it's multi-nat'l corporations worked hand-in-glove with Clinton to defeat Obama and more progressive impulses inside the adm. This was a direct attack by the DLC on Obama. As for Isreal we know what they've been about no matter who's the P.M. AIPAC control of D.C. stifles every meaningful action by progressives, again and again. China has the right to develop its' way in the world as do we.
Obama, the perfect candidate, was groomed to be president by his own efforts and those who choose candidates who present well, that is, they appeal to the popular mood. The candidates they back are rudderless enough to go along with all the insanity and corruption. It is not really about left and right, D's and R's, but whether anyone will or can do what is right (meaning all of us)--in the sense of everything--the economy, getting along with other nations, getting along with our neighbors, saving the planet, and so on. You know--a lot of things that our religions promote, then we either do nothing or do the opposite.
No doubt, we will continue in the ways of human history--going nowhere special only faster and faster. Globally speaking, the sad part is that we are speeding along a highway to destruction on a planetary scale.
"You know, President Obama ran, and he carried the hopes and dreams of young Americans with him. I would tell him, should I meet with him face to face, to be a man and take control of the situation, because this is totally of control...Have a military takeover of the cleanup, especially. Let BP and their, quote-unquote, "expertise" be responsible for shutting this well off...If the oil company is such experts, why are they trying to kill my fishermen?"--------Clint Guidry-President of the Louisiana Shrimp Association in an Interview with Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzalez on Democracy Now! From May 27, 2010
Article error -
In Honduras, Obama didn't backdown, his administration supported the coup from the start. For gods sake, we share a military base with the military that overthrew Zelaya. Obama was forced to say something to condemn the coup because of international pressure and to maintain the image the USA stands up for Democracy. When Obama did say something against the coup, others in his administration were quick to condemn Zelaya and the protesters of the coup for their resistance of the coup. My guess is the US knew the coup was going to happen before it did and probably assisted in it.
Thank you for that post!
RE: My guess is the US knew the coup was going to happen before it did and probably assisted in it.
There's pretty good evidence of that too. Democracy Now! had some very good coverage of the coup while is was happening.
Your "article error" raises questions concerning of the basic assumptions of Dilip Hiro. Without going into detail on each point in the article, it smells like (using Parenti's term) a "liberal complaint" with a dash of the radical to give it some edgy-ness.
This writer's mistaken, world leaders aren't confronting Obama because they know the US "backs off", it's the opposite. The world's getting sick and tired of Yankee bullying, genocide, unprovoked invasions, the financing of Jewish desecration of Arab land in the Middle East, the ethnic cleansing by Israel of Palestinians, the US theft of others' natural resources, coup attempts of leaders across the globe (like Honduras), etc.
They also know that the US economy's collapsing and there will be no recovery. Further military invasions are gravely compromised and becoming highly unlikely. They smell blood.
We now wait and see which nation will replace the US as the world torturer.
The terrorist actions of fascist amerika are as transparent as mass murderer obombers deadly lies ! The deluded masses in amerika continue with daily brainwashing from the empire controlled msm, but other nations; they know the darkside of amerikan imperialism ! Its just a matter of time, as amerika slides into the abyss of failed empires !
Paz, tioche, Mexico
Irrespective of their politics, flawed leaders share a common trait. They generally remain remarkably oblivious to the harm they do to the nation they lead. When it comes to foreign policy, we are now witnessing a similar phenomenon at the Obama White House.
Lie to a entire desperate nation; tell them you will do one thing when in fact you fully intend to do something else. The "something else" being homicidal and bankrupting in nature. Learn to swagger, to strut, to piss on people's shoes and chuckle while you're doing it. Learn to fire a gun and wear an Air Force pilot's leather jacket. You are the President of the United States, not a law professor. Ditch the academic intelligence and be a tough guy maintaining your gargantuan private empire. Practice flipping the bird until you can do it like Sandy Koufax throwing a fastball. Learn to say "Fuck you" a thousand different ways. That pretty much sums up Obama.
Sioux Rose
Not intending to steal Alan MacDonald's "thunder," should he show up in this thread, the U.S. claim to empire is being foreclosed upon by those interests that now host a president whose job it is to further the interest of trans-global corporations. And given this agenda, the status of the U.S. as dying empire becomes the necessary sacrifice to the "greater goal" of ceaseless plunder (a/k/a "free" trade) on a global scale. Of course our ample military comes in handy to guard the profits and the profiteers! Meanwhile citizens of the homeland are given a number of transparent excuses as cover to otherwise illegal, immoral, and deadly policies of naked aggression.
I always find it remarkable when the various pundits offer polls that demonstrate diminished approval ratings in countries the U.S. has actively bombed, or otherwise attacked through covert financial machinations. What's amazing is that such conjecture is even taken seriously. Could not a child in grade school make the connection that HOW the U.S. treats foreign lands (as targets of its military wrath and acquisition frenzy) will factor into how those populations view our land of stolen liberties? Being the target of destruction can hardly "poll" well.
Thirdly, I located what must have been a misprint suggesting China's ascent in the phase of "2050-2027." I wonder how the years should have read?
Hi Sioux,
The dates you reference in your last paragraph refer to the change from 2050 to 2027 of China's takeover as the world's dominant economic power.