A ccording to Eli Lake at Bloomberg News, on April 13th: White House and administration officials familiar with the current debate tell me there is no consensus on how many troops to send to Syria and Iraq. Two sources told me one plan would envision sending up to 50,000 troops. … But on Sunday [April 9th] in an interview with Fox News, [Trump’s National Security Advisor, H.R.] McMaster gave some insights into his thinking on the broader strategy against the Islamic State. “We are conducting very effective operations alongside our partners in Syria and in Iraq to defeat ISIS, to destroy ISIS and reestablish control of that territory, control of those populations, protect those populations, allow refugees to come back, begin reconstruction,” he said.
Trump is going to war against Russia, unless he replaces H.R. McMaster and the people whom McMaster brought into the Trump Administration. If Trump retains McMaster and his people, World War III is likely, and could start soon (the nuclear phase of it would be the final phase and last less than 30 minutes). But only after McMaster became installed, did the movement to impeach or otherwise to replace Trump by his anti-Russian Vice President, Mike Pence, subside. The bipartisan “President Pence” movement is now considerably quieted.
Editor’s Note: As the author notes, the 180 in the major media after the attack on Syria, now applauding Trump for “proving he is a president”, shows that the vicious anti-Trump movement was, from the start, cynically organized at the highest levels of the US system, and that, as some radical critics pointed out all along, including this publication, had nothing to do with sexism, islamophobia, immigrants, illegals, and the many other repulsive Trump characteristics and policies, and everything to do with the single-minded desire of Wall Street and the MIC (Military Industrial Complex)—which own all the media—from the Washington Post to the New York Times, and CNN, CBS, NBC, MSNBC, etc., plus the choir of Hillary fawning Hollywood celebrities (Maher, Colbert, Martin Sheen, George Clooney, etc.)— to lead the nation into a confrontation with Russia, China, etc., to check the rise of any competing power and secure US global supremacy. This was and remains Hillary Clinton’s agenda, and usefulness to the plutocracy, a politician that in the current crisis has been applauding Trump’s military aggression and war threats instead of responsibly denouncing them. Hillary always wanted an all out war in Syria, and the dismantlement of Russia and China, in keeping with central imperial projects, reason why many clear-thinking progressives opposed her along with her close ally in these schemes, the abject demagog Barack Obama. But tell that to the still mesmerized liberals. No greater blindness is there than that of those who refuse to see the obvious.—PG.
So: Trump has decided to do what he thinks he must do, in order to be able to stay in power. In order to stay in power, he must be a type of President that, in some crucial respects, is more like what Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama were, than what he had promised his voters he would be. And the reason that this is so, is that this is what America’s aristocracy demands, in today’s American ‘democracy’.
* Also plutocracy: the government of the rich for the rich and (in Trump’s case more than at any other time) by the rich themselves.
Investigative historian Eric Zuesse is the author, most recently, of They're Not Even Close: The Democratic vs. Republican Economic Records, 1910-2010, and of CHRIST'S VENTRILOQUISTS: The Event that Created Christianity.
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A slight correction to this excellent article: Aristocracy was a term which meant ‘rule of the best’ and included a war-like class that felt it had certain duties to lesser individuals. In the European Middle-Ages like in China and Japan a system of honorable behavior and respect for women was included, reason for the rise of the Renaissance in Italy. Even the brutality of war did not prevent a resurgence of interest in the arts, literature and a code of conduct that allowed for a highly civilized layer of society. Not so with the bourgeois commercial and industrial upper classes… Read more »