The ‘Inevitable’ War Against Iran & The Decline Of US Hegemony


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By Whitney Webb, MintPress News


 Only three weeks have passed since Trump’s inauguration, and the U.S. is already closer than ever to a full-scale military conflict with Iran. 

WASHINGTONIn the United States, war is business and business is war. As the U.S. dominates global weapons exports, accounting for 33% of the entire market, the profits of war for both the private and public sector have guided U.S. foreign policy and military action for much of the past century. Though modern history is rife with examples of the United States using its military to further business interests and vice versa, nowhere has this been more clear than in Iran.

Iran was among the first nations to be subjected to covert CIA coups when its democratically-elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh was overthrown for his attempts to nationalize Iranian oil in the 1950s.


“Trump ‘has surrounded himself with a circle of madmen, some of whom are more excited about China and others Iran.’”


In a story that’s repeated itself in numerous other countries, Iran’s democracy was replaced with a brutal dictatorial regime that was pro-United States and pro-United Kingdom. Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi’s brutality, largely made possible by the CIA and Israeli Mossad-trained SAVAK military police, targeted the nation’s Muslim population, leading to the rise of religiopolitical movements. Not surprisingly, it was the growth of this movement that led to the 1979 Islamic Revolution, which established an Islamic Republic, and the modern age of antagonistic U.S.-Iran relations.

Since 1979, the United States has followed a policy of “containment” regarding Iran. From arming Iraq to enabling the devastating Iran-Iraq war to attempting to sabotage Iran’s nuclear power program, the United States has sought to covertly subvert, weaken, and isolate the nation – frequently through the use of economic sanctions- as opposed to directly engaging it militarily. Yet, as the latest election cycle got started in earnest, it became clear that the winner would be taking a much more direct approach regarding Iran.

While Hillary Clinton was widely considered to be the most hawkish of the two contenders, Donald Trump shared a similarly aggressive, albeit more muted, stance. As far back as 2013, Trump made plain his discontent with the Obama administration’s negotiations with Iran and the controversial nuclear accord, the fate of which remains uncertain with Trump as president.

Expressing his disdain for the Obama administration’s handling of the situation, Trump forecast, “We will end up going to war with Iran because we have people who don’t know what the hell they are doing.”

Since Trump’s inauguration on Jan. 20, his tone has changed rapidly. He’s become as hawkish as his rival in last year’s election, and the groundwork for a full-scale military conflict with Iran is being set. A mere three weeks under the leadership of President Trump, and the United States is closer than ever to a full-scale war with Iran. The timing, of course, is no coincidence.


‘On Notice’: The Trump administration’s hawkish stance on Iran

Sean Spicer on “Iran’s additional hostile action that it took against our Navy vessel”

from The Intercept 00:34 Vimeo


Trump’s stance on Iran quickly became apparent following his “surprise” victory. Among the first signs that Trump was to take a decidedly aggressive position regarding Iran was his nomination of Gen. James “Mad Dog” Mattis as secretary of Defense. Though Mattis has been praised as a gifted combat commander and clever military strategist, his animosity for Iran is well-documented. In fact, Mattis’ antagonism with the Middle Eastern power alienated him from former President Barack Obama, who ultimately replaced him as Centcom commander as a result.

Another indicator of Trump’s aggressive stance on Iran came in the nomination of Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn as national security advisor. Flynn, like Trump and Mattis, was fiercely critical of the Iran nuclear accord. Despite reports from the CIA and Mossad that Iran has no nuclear weapons program nor has it ever been interested in one, Flynn insisted that “Iran has every intention to build a nuclear weapon.”

Yet it was not until Trump’s inauguration that the possibility of a full-scale military conflict with Iran moved closer to becoming reality. Just hours after the inauguration, the White House website announced a “state of the art” missile defense system aimed at “protecting” the United States against an attack from Iran — a country that has not threatened to attack the United States.

The situation escalated further on Jan. 30, when Iran conducted a ballistic missile test, a military program entirely separate from its controversial nuclear program. Though the missile test did not violate the 2015 nuclear accord, Flynn vowed a forceful response to Iran’s “destabilizing behavior across the Middle East” and said the test proved that Iran “continues to threaten U.S. friends and allies and in the region.”

Trump echoed Flynn, announcing via Twitter that, “Iran has been formally PUT ON NOTICE for firing a ballistic missile.” Neither Flynn nor Trump clarified the practical implications of putting Iran “on notice.” Following these remarks, Iran struck a defiant tone, refusing to yield to the Trump administration’s “useless” threats and vowing to conduct more ballistic missile tests.


 


Iran has been formally PUT ON NOTICE for firing a ballistic missile.Should have been thankful for the terrible deal the U.S. made with them!

[dropcap]F[/dropcap]rom there, the situation has continued to devolve. During Thursday’s press briefing, White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer argued that Iran had previously attacked a U.S. naval vessel — a contention he used to justify the administration’s bellicose “on notice” remarks. However, this attack was carried out by Iranian-supported Yemeni Houthi rebels against a Saudi vessel, a fact Spicer later admitted.

However, Spicer never addressed his false claim that Iran was responsible for the attack even though the alliance between Iran and the Houthis is tenuous at best. The Intercept and other media outlets quickly noted the similarities between Spicer’s statement and incidents that precipitated past military conflicts such as the Gulf of Tonkin and Iraq’s alleged possession of “weapons of mass destruction.”

The eventful week in U.S.-Iran relations would not be complete, of course, without the announcement of fresh sanctions against Iran. On Friday, new sanctions were officially imposed on 13 individuals and 12 entities for reasons ranging from contributing to the ballistic missile program to having alleged ties to terrorism-related activities. Bloomberg reported that Trump said the sanctions were directly related to the recent missile test and that the Islamic Republic is “playing with fire.” While Reuters claimed that these latest sanctions would avoid violating the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, it will likely serve to further “provoke” Iran as the deal’s partial lifting of long-standing sanctions was a major factor in Iran’s approval of the accord. The re-establishment of sanctions could be viewed as provocation, as Iran’s defense minister warned in December, with the potential to trigger an armed conflict.


Israel’s influence & the overall probability of a US war with Iran


[dropcap]T[/dropcap]he Trump administration’s antagonistic approach to Iran is undoubtedly influenced by Trump’s pivot toward Israel. Trump, along with his staunchly pro-Israel vice president, Mike Pence, and  “passionate Zionist” chief strategist, Steve Bannon, have made clear their commitment to combining Israel’s geopolitical goals with their own. This commitment, however, was tempered by Trump’s recent about-face on new Israeli settlements in occupied territory.

During a phone call between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Trump late last month, Iran was said to have been the major topic as Netanyahu had previously announced that “stopping the Iranian threat” was the state of Israel’s “supreme goal.” The Gulf monarchies also expressed optimism that Trump would take a hard stance against Iran, with some even praising him as the “second coming” of Ronald Reagan in terms of ties between Washington and Tehran.

However, Israel has made it clear that they plan to do more than just contain Iran. Leaked emails revealed that while Israel has more than 200 nuclear warheads pointed at Tehran, Iran has none. This has drawn little international criticism despite the fact Israel has never signed a nuclear non-proliferation treaty and refuses to admit the existence of its nuclear program.

Further, the pro-Israel lobby has been busy exerting its influence in Congress. In early January, Rep. Alcee Hastings, a Florida Democrat, introduced the Authorization of Use of Force Against Iran Resolution. The bill that would authorize the president to launch a “preemptive” war with Iran without congressional approval and without the precondition that Iran would have committed any action that would otherwise warrant a full-scale invasion.

Specifically, the text of the bill states, “The President is authorized to use the Armed Forces of the United States as the President determines necessary and appropriate in order to achieve the goal of preventing Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons.” Hastings, it should be noted, has received $332,000 from the pro-Israel lobby over the course of his career, including more than $72,000 in the 2016 election cycle. If passed, the bill would offer the Trump administration a carte blanche for starting a war with Iran.

Read the full text of the Authorization of Use of Force Against Iran Resolution:

Despite the aggressive posturing of the Trump administration and U.S. allies in the Middle East, experts and analysts are divided as to whether Trump and his advisors will actually follow through.

Sharmine Narwani, commentator and analyst focused on Middle East geopolitics, told MintPress News that Trump and his advisors’ aggressive stance toward Iran is likely to conflict with his stated goal of eradicating Daesh (an Arabic acronym for the terrorist group commonly known as ISIS or ISIL in the West).

She explained:

“Trump has no national security expertise whatsoever. He currently entrusts that vision with his advisors who probably share his views on a few critical subjects. I don’t see Iran as being one of his personal areas of interest. Let him take the advice of his ‘generals.’ He will hit a brick wall and realize that his vision of a defeated ISIS, al-Qaida, and terrorism can never be a reality by crippling the key ground player that can rout them all.

In the end, Trump is a businessman and he will go where there is more ‘bang for his buck.’ He will not find any particular efficiency in a protracted confrontation with Iran. On the contrary, Iran can be the key to delivering him a domestically-popular ‘ISIS defeat.’ He has to choose one and can’t have both.”

However, anti-war activist and author David Swanson told MintPress that Trump’s support base and decades of anti-Iran propaganda have primed much of the America public to readily accept war with Iran. Even the “average anti-Trump U.S. liberal believes all sorts of false horrors about Iran,” Swanson said, noting that this is in addition to the “40 percent of the country that supports him.” These “longstanding bipartisan lies about nukes and aggression, and heightened anti-Islam bigotry, […] all make the U.S. public more ready to accept any case for a war on Iran.”

Swanson further noted that Trump is likely to call for a “limited war” if a military approach is ultimately decided upon. However, in practice, a “limited war” is unlikely to remain within its ideal limits for long.


The Petrodollar: The weakest link for the US & Saudi Arabia?

Iranian and U.S. banknotes are on display at a currency exchange shop in downtown Tehran, Iran. (AP/Vahid Salemi)

[dropcap]T[/dropcap]hough the Trump administration, and even the U.S. in general, stands to lose much more than it might gain by entering into a military conflict with Iran, another recent development has left little room for choice in the matter.

During a television interview on Jan. 29, the governor of Iran’s central bank, Valiollah Seif, announced that Iran would no longer use the U.S. dollar as its currency of choice in its financial and foreign exchange reports. Seif explained the logic behind the decision, saying that “Iran’s difficulties [in dealing] with the dollar were in place from the time of primary sanctions and this trend is continuing.”

He then noted that “we face no limitations” when it comes to the use of other currencies. The change, set to go into effect on March 21, is set to impact all official financial and foreign exchange reports.

Forbes noted that the move is likely to “add a degree of currency risk and volatility and is likely to complicate matters for the authorities.” Though it is true that Iran’s currency may suffer in the short term as a result of the measure, the consequences for the U.S. dollar — and thus, U.S. economic hegemony — are far greater.

In the 1970s, after the United States was no longer able to guarantee the value of the dollar with gold, then-Secretary of State Henry Kissinger negotiated a deal that would change both the dollar and U.S. foreign policy forever. In order to keep the U.S. dollar valuable, Kissinger convinced the Saudi monarchy to use U.S. dollars exclusively in the country’s oil transactions, thereby generating artificial demand for dollars and, thus, artificial value for a weakening currency. This deal marked the official birth of what is known as the petrodollar system. The other countries that comprise OPEC, which includes Iran, soon followed suit, ensuring the dollar’s dominance for years to come – a crucial piece of U.S. economic hegemony.

However, some countries have since attempted to distance themselves from the dollar and have suffered the consequences. The most notable example is Saddam Hussein’s decision to dump the dollar for the euro in 2000. Following the decision, Hussein managed to generate a handsome profit for Iraq, sending a clear signal to other oil-producing nations that the petrodollar system was not necessarily in their best interest. However, the subsequent invasion of Iraq sent a clear signal that the United States would not passively allow oil-producing countries to exit the petrodollar system.

The next country that attempted to leave the petrodollar system was Libya. Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, also dissatisfied with the petrodollar system, had established the dinar, a gold-backed currency that was set to become Libya’s currency of choice for oil transactions. Gadhafi had also announced plans to make the dinar a pan-African currency to economically empower other African nations. In 2011, the U.S. destroyed the Libyan state and killed Gadhafi, preventing this deal from coming to fruition.

Iran’s decision to dump the dollar could very well force the United States’ hand in the matter. Iran, which holds 13 percent of OPEC’s oil reserves, could drastically affect global demand for dollars once it switches currencies for its oil transactions. The dollar, already on tenuous footing thanks to years of reckless “quantitative easing,” could become significantly devalued rather quickly. Combined with the overall weak health of the U.S. economy, the consequences could be potentially catastrophic.



Trump’s strongmen want war with China, Iran & Russia

White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon listens as President Donald Trump speaks in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, Tuesday, Jan. 31, 2017. (AP/Evan Vucci)

But will the Trump administration risk a major war to protect U.S. economic dominance? Considering Iran’s strategic alliances with global powers like Russia and China as well as its mutual defense agreement with Syria, any U.S. military conflict with Iran will quickly develop into a global conflict.

It seems that Trump’s 2013 comment on the “inevitability” of war with Iran may have been prudent, even though it would harm his stated goals of countering Daesh and terrorism in the Middle East.

There are also indications that the Trump administration anticipates a conflict with China as inevitable as well. Steve Bannon, Trump’s chief strategist and National Security Council member, remarked several months ago that the United States would be “going to war in the South China Sea … no doubt.”

Indeed, Trump’s tough stance on China — similar in some ways to his stance on Iran — has become increasingly aggressive in recent weeks. As David Swanson noted, Trump “has surrounded himself with a circle of madmen, some of whom are more excited about China and others Iran.” However, Trump’s characteristic unpredictability makes it near impossible to predict the ultimate outcome.

Regardless of the Trump administration’s course of action, there’s no doubt that the climax in the United States’ fight to maintain its position as a global “superpower” is quickly approaching.




NOTE: ALL IMAGE CAPTIONS, PULL QUOTES AND COMMENTARY BY THE EDITORS, NOT THE AUTHORS • PLEASE COMMENT AND DEBATE DIRECTLY ON OUR FACEBOOK GROUP CLICK HERE

Whitney Webb is a MintPress contributor who has written for several news organizations in both English and Spanish; her stories have been featured on True Activist, Activist Post, We Are Change and Waking Times among others - she currently resides in Southern Chile.  

MAIN IMAGE: Iran crack troops on parade. Man for man Iran is doubtless the strongest military in the Gulf region, albeit lacking nukes (which US concubine Israel has plenty of, not to mention the might of the US military). A war with the empire could prove devastating. 


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Doing a 180 with Hunter S. Thompson


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by John Rohn Hall


Truth is a slippery and elusive beast at best.  Hunter S. Thompson nailed the truth about truth as well as anyone with these few words:  “It’s never as it seems, Bubba.”  The best we can hope for is to understand a few things about our own lot in life and our place on the food chain.  Unless you happen to be a card-carrying member of the World Shadow Government, Council on Foreign Relations, Trilateral Commission, Bilderbergers, or your name is high on the Forbes World’s Billionaires List, you have no real way of knowing what’s going on.  It’s really none of your business.  You are nothing but a commodity.  A natural resource to be harvested at the whim of your masters.  A wage-slave with a few advantages over the other beasts controlled by your overlords.  Like cattle, swine, and poultry, you will be consumed.  Not likely eaten, but used and abused until you make your final exit.  And most of us will go to our graves, never understanding our own captivity.  Never knowing we are slaves.  Never equating the national boundaries of our countries of birth with cattle pens, pigsties, and chicken coops.


Underlings like you and I are raised on a steady diet of lies and misinformation from birth.  As young children, we are told tall tales by trusted adults.  Tales of Santa Claus, The Tooth Fairy, and The Easter Bunny dance in our vulnerable little heads, and we believe without question.  Why not?  The rewards are great.  Presents under a tree, cash under our pillows, chocolate bunnies, and smiles.  Mindless faith equals sweet rewards.  Of course our parents know that they’re blatant liars, but they’re just continuing the tradition.  To spill the beans about Santa Claus to an innocent child is akin to kicking a puppy or shoving an old lady into oncoming traffic.  Despicable. The lies must go on.  Truth has no value in this society.  Capitalism feeds on falsification and fairy tales.  Santa Claus, as we know him, was invented by a Coca Cola employee.


[dropcap]P[/dropcap]eople who take the pledge and sell themselves to the Military become simply part of the most ferocious and violent killing machine in history.  We shower them with thanks for their service, when we should, instead, forgive them, for they know not what they do.  It’s never as it seems, Bubba.


And so as adults, we readily and unquestioningly accept nearly every lie thrown at us, learning that doing so insures us a place of acceptance in society.  Gradually, as the lies of childhood are cast aside, new, mature versions are embraced.  Organized, institutional, man-made religions promise us eternal bliss in exchange for groveling prayer and cash donations.  A crucifix, crescent moon & star, or Star of David dangles from our necks, so strangers can tell which team we’re on, and whether they should look at us, speak to us, bomb us, or do business with us.  We gladly accept far-fetched tales of saviors who walk on water, turn that water to wine, and arise from the dead.  Tales which rival stories of a fat, bearded man delivering presents from a flying reindeer-driven sleigh in the middle of winter.  Tall tales with a mature theme for adults seeking the bliss of comfortable, childish lies.

 ..
[dropcap]A[/dropcap]s one who seeks the truth at all cost and above all else, I buy into Hunter S. Thompson’s 180 Degree Theory lock, stock, and barrel.  It’s never as it seems, Bubba.  Truth is the enemy of your owners.  They don’t want you to get your panties in a bunch over issues of real importance.  You’ve been trained from birth that there is comfort in doing, saying, and believing what you’re told.  Your owners are the man behind the curtain.  The curtain is there for a reason, and you’re not allowed to pay attention to, nor question the man who lurks behind it.
 ..
The only matters of any importance in this world are those which your television, newspapers, and MSM websites tell you are important.  If you’re a man, you fill your little brain with professional sports statistics and dream of Sports Illustrated Swimsuit models.  Women are required to be overly-concerned with fashion, make-up, hairstyle, varicose veins, cellulite, and Hollywood gossip.  Fear-mongering presstitutes seem to possess a never-ending repertoire of boogey men, unthinkable diseases, and dire warnings to keep us dumb, distracted, and off-balance.
 ..
We are required to unquestioningly praise the U.S. Military for keeping us free, and protecting us from the villains du jour, in spite of the fact that it is really nothing more than a band of merciless mercenaries, hired by Wall Street to rob, rape, and pillage the resources of other countries.  Amerika is in the business of war…nay, is dedicated, heart and soul, to the manufacture, sale, and use of Weapons of Mass Destruction.  People who take the pledge and sell themselves to the Military become simply part of the most ferocious and violent killing machine in history.  We shower them with thanks for their service, when we should, instead, forgive them, for they know not what they do.  It’s never as it seems, Bubba.
 ..
We are required to love the Ameikan system they call “Justice”.  To embrace the police who shoot or arrest the outlaws, to be thankful for the prison guards who isolate, taunt, and abuse them, to honor the laws that incarcerate them.  This, in spite of the fact that police forces were originally created to hunt down runaway slaves, which they are still doing.  This, in spite of the fact that people who make billions operating prisons for profit also write the draconic laws, which are responsible for Amerika’s mass-incarceration, which they pen and deliver to our elected officials along with the obligatory bribes.  All this, in spite of the fact that the U.S.A…land of the free…has 5% of earth’s population and 25% of its prisoners.  Freedom isn’t free.  Only the wealthy are semi-immune to incarceration.  It’s never as it seems, Bubba.  You’re just a commodity.  Remember?
 ..
We are expected, as Amerikans, to participate in the sorry, silly circuses called “elections”.  We are given a choice between two candidates, both of whom work for our owners, and are committed to carrying out the official, secret agenda.  We are told that these politicians are our representatives, and are looking out for our best interests.  No one outside the two approved parties is allowed an actual chance to participate in government.  Elections are just selections, and the outcomes have been pre-determined by our owners.  The results are manufactured by the media, and insured by easily-rigged electronic voting machines. There is nobody out there to represent you, Bubba.  Democracy is a scam.  It’s never as it seems.
 ..
Here in Amerika, Bubba, we are told that our educational system is the finest on earth.  For-profit schools manufacture wage-slaves for business.  Students are taught nothing about critical thinking.  “Believe!” is the motto.  Student loans keep graduates in perpetual debt peonage, from graduation to the grave.  If the loan sharks don’t devour the slaves, the pharmaceutical industry and private hospitals will.  Even though Amerikans are told that they have the finest healthcare system on earth, one sprained ankle or broken bone can spell economic disaster and bankruptcy.  ‘Tis a tangled web, Bubba, and it’s never as it seems.
 ..
Believe nothing, Bubba.  The louder and oftener it’s shouted from the rafters of the news networks, the likelier it is to be a lie.  What the hell happened to Zika!  Zika!  Zika!  A sad and frightening repeat of Mad Cow Disease, Swine Flu, Bird Flu, Hantavirus, and a host of other CDC fabrications.  Microcephaly induced by Zika?  Seems there have been no studies to substantiate the connection, but don’t worry your little head over details.  If Lester Holt says it’s so, it’s so.  Never mind that the CIA has been out to lay ruin to the alleged Zika epicenter in Brazil (one of the dreaded BRICS countries).  Never mind that Brazil is ground zero for agro-chemical agriculture, and that Microcephaly has been linked to certain toxic agro-chemicals.  Never mind that the very existence of Zika is in question, and that, at worst, the symptoms are mild.  Never mind that the Zika scam opens wide new multi-billion dollar doors for Big Pharma to market its bogus vaccines.  Believe the lies if you choose, but remember Bubba, it’s never as it seems.
 ..
Understand your lot in life, and your place on the food chain, Bubba.  Understand that you’re a slave, and that slaves are not born to question authority, make decisions, nor have opinions.  John and Bobby Kennedy were killed by lone assassins.  Osama bin Laden’s band of boogey men brought down the World Trade Center.  Paul Wellstone and John Kennedy Jr. were both killed in freak, unexplainable airplane crashes.  A disturbed, rogue racist killed MLK.  The Boston Marathon Bombing and a host of other questionable terrorist events have been perpetrated by Muslims who (as George Bush famously told us) hate our freedom.  So enjoy your freedom, Bubba.  Bask in it, bathe in it, let the ringing of Amerikan freedom fill your ears and soothe your soul.  Count yourself lucky to be among the exceptional people in the exceptional nation with the bravest and best fighting force in the history of mankind.  But above all, believe what you’re told, Bubba.  It will ease the pain of being slowly consumed.  Believe!


NOTE: ALL IMAGE CAPTIONS, PULL QUOTES AND COMMENTARY BY THE EDITORS, NOT THE AUTHORS • PLEASE COMMENT AND DEBATE DIRECTLY ON OUR FACEBOOK GROUP CLICK HERE

 John R. Hall is a street-trained agnotologist with an advanced degree in American Ignorance. Other hats include: photojournalist, novelist, restaurateur, mountaineer, grocer, nurseryman, and janitor. He’s written three novels which have been read by almost nobody: ‘Embracing Darwin’, ‘Last Dance in Lubberland’, and ‘Atlas fumbled’. An untrained writer and college drop-out, he began his short career in journalism writing the ‘Excursion’ column for The Jackson Hole News & Guide. More recently he penned the ‘Left Column’ for The Molokai Island Times; appropriately on the island once known as a leper colony. He can be reached via email at: halls245@msn.com. Read other articles by John R.     

MAIN IMAGE: The unclassifiable rebel, Hunter S Thompson.


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New Republican Strategy: Acknowledge Climate Change, Obscure Human Role (Video)

FRONTLINENEWSLOGO-2


An eco socialist critique by Prof. Chris Williams

Trump has unleashed a virtual censorship of scientific fact.


Published on Feb 4, 2017

Professor Chris Williams says the definition of climate denial should not be limited to Republican’s rejection of scientific fact; it should include the refusal to take the necessary course of action, as exemplified by the Obama presidency

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NOTE: ALL IMAGE CAPTIONS, PULL QUOTES AND COMMENTARY BY THE EDITORS, NOT THE AUTHORS • PLEASE COMMENT AND DEBATE DIRECTLY ON OUR FACEBOOK GROUP. JUST CLICK HERE.

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North Korea again a danger to US. Start trembling!

Donald Trump’s DoD chief’s trip to Seoul and the ensuing, customary saber-rattling against North Korea prompted our reposting of an excellent piece by John LaForge on the same topic. The essay is preceded by an editorial annotation focusing on the unchanging evil nature of US foreign policy.


Reviewing the essays written over the years by critics of US foreign policy, one thing stands out immediately: the obstinate sameness and continuity of America’s warmongering against enemies big and small, most of them manufactured by America itself (or imagined). Indeed, except for very brief interludes, America has been continually at war since its inception.

Why is there no change or let up in this invariably horrendous script, equal parts high-handed hypocrisy and arrogant sanctimoniousness, and always lavishly buttressed by jingoist exceptionalism and the most outrageous fabrications? The only rational answer is that US foreign policy is not so much a true adaptive and honorable response to changing world events in an effort to safeguard the authentic national interest, but the playing out of American capitalism’s sordid quest for global supremacy, a project that inevitably implies enormous imperial crimes that benefit no one but a puny plutocratic minority in control of the US government.

Since few people would be willing to spill their blood or allow the national treasure to be plundered for such ignoble purposes, none of this colossal scam is possible without the aid of American imperialism’s numerous self-serving myths so reliably served by its ideological outgrowth, the corporate controlled media, easily the most devious propaganda machine ever seen in history. Unfortunately, although it’s clear the mainstream media is losing traction in its ability to sell lies with impunity, relief from this imposture does not appear possible in the near future. Thus, as is the case with US foreign policy, which recognizes only force, never morality, and which, as a curse on humanity will not be stopped until the vampire system that engenders it is eliminated, the prostitution of the American media—from its ostensible “entertainment” sector to its so-called “news” programmes—will not disappear until corporate power itself, and its venomous influence on mass communications, is broken.

Many well-intentioned people wonder how this ludicrously malevolent state of affairs came to be. The explanation is mundane. In most cases, the widespread collaboration of American media figures with the imperial lies issues not so much from harsh coercion, as in an openly despotic regime, but from simple selfish careerism and self-preservation, selfishness being a well-entrenched and even admired “virtue” in the upside down world of US capitalist values. Says Paul Street, sagely, in a recent piece:


American “mainstream” journalists who want to keep their paychecks flowing and their status afloat know they must report current events in a way that respects the taboo status of the nation’s underlying inequality and oppression structures and its savage and relentless imperial criminality. Those topics are understood as off limits, as beyond the narrow parameters of acceptable and polite discussion. They are subjects that serious reporters and commentators have the deeply indoctrinated common sense to avoid.


That such careerism causes the death of untold millions and the destruction of the planet’s essential ecosystems and quite possibly its incineration in an imbecilic nuclear war is apparently a bargain most Western journalists are quite prepared to tolerate.

The above is aggravated by the epidemic of complacent ignorance and unquestioned belief in the national mythology we observe among mainstream journalists, regardless of social background. Thus, while many who hail from small-town “patriotic” America, folks like Dan Rather and Charlie Rose, two prominent CBS “journalists”, are apparently proud to put what they perceive as their patriotic duty (as dictated by the State Dept.) above truth or fairness, their Ivy League, Big City colleagues are scarcely exempt from the same vice.

Confronted and clearly exasperated with this universe of pseudo-facts and decontextualized news fueling the incorrigibly vile nature of US foreign policy, John Gerassi, himself a former journalist, fired the following evaluation:


A great deal is being written in America these days about Pax Americana and American hegemony in the underdeveloped world. No longer able to blot out the obvious, even calm, rational, conscientious academicians are publicly lamenting America’s increasingly bellicose policies from Vietnam to the Dominican Republic. Suddenly, as if awakened from a technicolor dream, intellectuals are discovering such words as “imperialism” and “expansionism.” And they are asking: Why? Who’s to blame? What can be done to stop all this?

The questions are childish, the assumptions false, the implications naïve. They reflect a liberal point of view, one that claims that there is a qualitative difference between U.S. policies today and yesterday. In fact, American foreign policy has varied only in degree, not in kind. It has been cohesive, coherent, and consistent. What has varied has been its strength—and its critics.

The basic difference between American imperialism today and American imperialism a century ago is that it is more violent, more far-reaching, and more carefully planned today. But American foreign policy, at least since 1823, has always been assertive, always expansionist, always imperialist. Of course, it has rarely been pushed beyond America’s capabilities. Thus, when the United States was weak, its interventions abroad were mild. When its strength grew, so did its daring. Today, as the most powerful nation on earth, with a technological advance over other countries of mammoth proportions, the United States can be imperialistic on all continents with relative security. (John Gerassi, Violence, Revolution, and Structural Change in Latin America).

Gerassi wrote this assessment in the early 1960s. Plus ça change, uh?

Salvador de Madariaga, a liberal and cynic of the old school, quoted in the same piece by Gerassi, was also struck by the robotic course of US foreign policy. His explanation found the roots of the phenomenon in native capitalism’s sacralization of American foreign policy. Consistent with this view, Madariaga argued that American foreign policy cannot be questioned because it is no so much a policy as a religious tenet: the dogma of the infallibility of the American President and the dogma of the immaculate conception of American foreign policy. The illustrious de Madariaga gave us his opinion in the 1930s.


CONCLUSION

In the excellent essay reproduced below by John LaForge, first published in January of 2016, we see, once again, the malignant reality of US exceptionalist foreign, cynically piling up threats and quite possible a huge deal of pain on a small nation the United States has tortured for well over half a century, all the while pushing the world ever closer to a tragic conflagration. For obvious reasons, now that Donald Trump’s own military emissary, Secretary for War Gen. James Mattis, has flown to South Korea to issue the usual carefully choreographed “assurances of support” by the US against some manufactured threat, we find LaForge’s essay all the more compelling. Hence this repost.

It bears repeating: None of this revolting cowardice and ugliness will stop until the American people see through this carefully maintained claptrap and dismantle the vicious empire behind it, to the last toxic brick. One can only hope that if that great day ever comes, those who have plotted and committed so many crimes against humanity, and nature itself, will be arraigned before a Nuremberg-type tribunal and dealt swift justice. I should think that, for the sake of fairness and comprehensiveness, that judgment will also should include their virtual army of media flacks and accomplices.

Meanwhile, as long as we have a supremacist capitalism at the helm of America’s ship of state we’ll have a sociopathic foreign policy.

—P. Greanville

The US Tiger and the North Korean Mouse

by John LaForge | Common Dreams, Jan. 16, 2016


 

Dateline for this photo: Feb. 1, 2017. Gen. Mattis in South Korea issuing threats against the North, and justifying the THAAD nuclear de-stabilizing system aimed at China and Russia, and not Pyongyang, as claimed.


[dropcap]N[/dropcap]orth Korea’s claim to have conducted a hydrogen bomb test January 5 has been both ridiculed as completely implausible and condemned from all sides as provocative and a violation of UN Security Council Resolutions. Without any hard evidence that North Korea has a single H-bomb, official “concern” needs to be manufactured if our weapons contractors are to stay in business.

We could expect to hear Senator Bob Corker, R-Tenn., chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, chant that he wants the US “to take a more assertive role in addressing North Korea’s provocation.” But Anna Fifield, the Washington Post Bureau Chief in Tokyo who should be an impartial observer, wrote Jan. 6 that the underground test was a “brazen provocation and a clear defiance of international treaties.” She later told National Public Radio that she wouldn’t want to speculate about what motivated the North’s President Kim Jong Un, because the inside of his head “is a scary place.” The interviewer let this assertion go unchallenged.

North Korea is such a military, economic and political nothing, that it’s astounding to see the national media parrot official Pentagon and State Department fear-mongering about its patently obvious and unquestionably terrible intentions. When was the last time North Korea bombed, invaded, militarily occupied, or installed puppet regimes in other lands? Those provocatively brazen violations of international treaties were committed by … the United States of America.

When has North Korea placed 5,000-man, 60-aircraft “super carriers” (the largest ships in the world) in the Persian Gulf and attacked Yemen, Pakistan, Somalia, Iraq, Libya, Syria and Afghanistan using Reaper drones and jet fighter-bombers? Oh right; that was the North Americans.

In 1999, US-led NATO air forces bombed Serbia and Kosovo for 78 days. That wasn’t long after US cruise missile attacks on Sudan and Afghanistan — which in turn barely followed Clinton’s 1998 Christmas-time bombing of Iraq. That of course was only an intensification of the ongoing carrier-based campaign of bombing Iraq two or three times every week for 12 years from 1991 to 2003 — when under false pretenses the Bush/Cheney horror went viral with extreme prejudice. At least 370,000 civilian deaths can be blamed on the 1991 (Bush I) and 2003 (Bush II) US wars on Iraq.

In October 2001, the Air Force and Navy returned to bombing and rocketing Afghanistan, eventually toppling the government and occupying the country. Now with the private contractors and hand-picked presidents having turned Iraq into a failed police state, it is easy to see how the global public, when polled, declares the United States the most dangerous country on earth. I haven’t forgotten that in 2003 protesters in nearly every capital city carried posters depicting the US president as a “Most Wanted” fugitive from justice, a war criminal and a danger to world order. What a relief that Barak Obama has a Peace Prize with which to conduct indiscriminate warfare, torturous force-feeding of hunger strikers, and indefinite detention of suspects without charges just like his predecessors.


A danger to the world?

[dropcap]B[/dropcap]ut forget the opinion of the world’s 95 percent, the Mpls. Star Tribune reported without attribution that, “US military planners view [North Korea] as the world’s most dangerous state.” With two-thirds the population of California, no oil, and having endured in the mid-1990s a famine that killed one-tenth of its population, North Korea is certainly more threatening than the US which has military bases in more than 100 countries, 10 aircraft carriers (Russia and China each have 1), and 14 ballistic missile submarines.

According to US intelligence services, North Korea is suspected of having perhaps two nuclear weapons and an annual military budget of $7.5 billion in 2014.  The US’s roughly $600 billion Pentagon allotment [admitted budget, real one a secret] includes 4,000 nuclear warheads on alert. Any one of the (eight) Trident subs that the US Navy keeps in the Pacific is capable of burning down the entire Korean landmass.

Even if North Korea had a rocket that could aim straight, what could it expect to gain by attacking South Korea or Japan? This central question is never asked, much less answered, by the screamers on FOX, the Senators from Lockheed-Martin, or the Representatives from Northrop-Grumman.

If the illogic sounds familiar, it is. There was never an answer to the question: Why would the USSR attack Western Europe or the United States during the Cold War? What the Soviets would have gained by attacking, and what North Korea could achieve with aggression, is obvious:  Absolutely nothing — beyond self-destruction.

With luck, the US tiger will just hold its breath and tremble at the mousey shadow of North Korea, which never stops provoking. A few years ago it had the nerve to ask the White House for a promise that it won’t be preemptively attacked.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

John LaForge is on the Nukewatch staff and edits its Quarterly.

 


 




Human Extinction 2026


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by ROBERT HUNZIKER


Human Extinction by 2026, a controversial/questionable idea, is examined in some detail on the web site: arctic-news.blogspot.com. Within the posted article, a bright red box highlights the hypothesis: “Will Humans Be Extinct By 2026?” Of course, simply posing the question is tantamount to endorsing the conclusion in the affirmative.

Main Photo by NASA/Kathryn Hansen | CC BY 2.0

Also of recent, but not directly related to the extinction article, scientists moved the infamous Doomsday Clock ahead by 30 seconds closer to midnight because of rising global nationalism and failure to confront both nuclear weapons and climate change, coincidentally as Trump takes over control of the big red button, which is mythological.

By definition, an article dealing with human extinction is highly provocative and touchy and generally dismissed as balderdash. After all, it sounds kinda crazy. Still, the named article: “Will Humans Be Extinct By 2026?” warrants serious consideration. Here’s why: The Arctic News blog is an amalgam of serious research by topnotch scientists that “speak to truth.” They endorse the distinct possibility of an extinction event that will catch humanity flat-footed. They really believe it is a serious risk. These scientists go against the grain, telling it as they see it, not pulling any punches.

Conversely, it is well known that many climate scientists have been fudging their work; edits make bad seem less bad. Otherwise, those scientists stand to lose grants and funding. This is a fact confirmed by one of the world’s leading climate scientist (mentioned in prior articles). Ipso facto, fudging data is one of the bugaboos about accurate climate science, as scientists intentionally lowball.

Assuredly, submitting the interrogatory “Will Humans Be Extinct By 2026?” suggests the existence of solid evidence. But, in general, people do not, and will not, believe it. After all, how could it be true? Therein lies the major impediment to taking steps to prevent the problems of climate change. In point of fact, there are several good ideas to ameliorate climate change, if pursued in earnest.

For example, a recent NY Times headline: China Aims to Spend at Least $360 Billion on Renewable Energy by 2020 (New York Times, Jan. 5, 2017). All of which brings to mind: What if the United States spent $360 billion on renewables? That would be hugely helpful in worldwide efforts to combat climate change.

But, since the U.S. is diametrically headed the other direction, meaning a pinpoint sharp focus on fossil fuel exploration and production, which emits the CO2 that blankets the atmosphere and brings on severe global warming, what then are the facts behind the purported rendezvous with death by the year 2026?

Is the death threat by 2026 credible?

And, what is the probability it happens?

[dropcap]T[/dropcap]he probability of a human extinction event within 10 years is 50/50, a guess! But still, it is based upon extremely severe levels of planetary stress/damage that are not widely recognized as a threat to society, i.e., global warming (off the charts, and accelerating, especially in the ocean) and massive destruction of the ecosystem, e.g., acidification of the ocean, which, over time, kills off the base of the marine food chain.

Significantly, the scientific model that leads to a conclusion that human extinction happens by 2026 is based upon facts, not fiction. Scientists simply extrapolate current data about the rate of climate change into the future. Voila, extinction is right around the corner. Ten years comes fast. Thus, the scientific modeling is credible, but the 50/50 probability is guesswork.

The following quote from the Arctic News/blog article brings this bleak issue into focus: “The situation is dire. Little or no action is taken on climate change. Earth faces a potential temperature rise of more than 10°C or 18°F by 2026.”

Without a doubt, worldwide temp increases by 18°F essentially wipes-out global agriculture.


Trump EPA chief, Scott Pruitt, is a stubborn climate denier. Like George W Bush, Trump is filling key agencies with people sworn to destroy their mission. Obama did little or nothing for the environment, except rhetoric, and both parties put human short term benefits (usually accruing to 0.1% of humanity) above the urgent needs of the planet. Disgraceful is too kind a word for these ecological assassins.

However, it’s worth noting that no universal consensus of opinion by scientists comes close to this prediction, not close at all. The scientific community at large believes temps will gradually rise, slowly, and manageably with human life continuing throughout the century, not by 18°F. Obviously, the Paris Agreement calls for holding temps to 2°C above pre-industrial. Thus, 195 countries are not looking for anything above 2°C. Otherwise, why select the 2°C upper limit?

Accordingly, a temperature rise of 10°C or 18°F within a decade is lights out for the human species. That’s bad news, leaving the planet to cockroaches.

The supporting facts behind the extinction thesis start with the Paris Agreement of December 12th, 2015 when 195 worldwide governments agreed to hold temps below 2°C above pre-industrial levels but doggedly pursue a lower limit of 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels, recognizing that this would significantly reduce the risks and impacts of climate change.

Here’s the problem with the Paris Agreement: Land+Ocean temps, according to the Arctic News/blog article, for most of the year 2016 have been above the 1.5°C guardrail, in fact it’s been above that level for ten of the months from October 2015 to November 2016. Therefore, in part, the Paris Agreement is already passé; it’s too late!

Going forward, the extinction cadre scientists foresee a series of feedbacks that cascade one upon another, in turn, cranking up temps to 10°C or 18°F by 2026. It all starts with the Arctic where temps are running 2-3 times significantly ahead of the planet, shaking lose millennia-old methane buried within ice for eons that is fast melting away. Methane, in turn, is a rip-snorting tiger at heating up the atmosphere, nothing compares, as it hits full stride, commencing runaway global warming.

Alarmingly, some scientists also believe a burp of 50 gigatons of methane (CH4) could happen within the extremely shallow waters of the East Siberian Arctic Shelf at any time without notice because of the striking loss of ice cover in the Arctic. Earth’s atmosphere currently contains 5 gigatons of CH4. If the big 50-gt burp hits, it’d be a powerful shot of testosterone for the runaway global warming monster.

In turn, and aggravating matters ever more, water vapor, a very potent greenhouse gas as every 1°C warming increase equals 7% more water vapor, is goosed up, accelerating temps even more. The warmer the atmosphere becomes, the more water vapor it holds, in turn, turbo-charging global warming into a frenzy, blanketing the atmosphere and retaining heat, like an oven with the thermostat stuck wide open, hotter and hotter it goes without doing anything new.

In all, there are several feedback loops that reinforce one another, each one influencing another such that, like a whirling merry-go-round of horse carvings that spins out of control to hyper speed, features of individual horses become a whirling blur. That’s runaway global warming! Morosely, the paleoclimate record has an example of temps cranking up rapidly within only 13 years.

Fifty-five (55) million years ago, global temps increased by 5° C within 13 years; CO2 in the atmosphere was 1,000 ppm, and there was no ice on the planet (today ice is melting like crazy, irreversibly in certain areas of Antarctica, which is extremely problematic). That’s remarkable, as it should take hundreds of years, or more, for global temps to increase by 5° C, not a measly 13 years. This fact alone, as discovered by scientists studying timeless ice core and sediment, unfortunately reinforces the “Human Extinction by 2026” thesis, somewhat. But, if 5° C within 13 years is considered warp speed in paleoclimate history, and it is, then the projection of 10°C or 18°F by 2026 seems awfully aggressive. On the other hand, because of human fossil fuel activity and the massive accumulation of warming yet in the pipeline (the latency effect), it’s within the range of possibility.

Furthermore, “no ice on the planet” (55 million years ago), equates to the imagery portrayed by the film Waterworld (Universal Pictures, 1995), post-apocalyptic science fiction when polar ice caps melted. One mythological storyline in the film claims dry land exists somewhere in the world. They search for it.

If the Doomsday Clock included everything that is wrong with Gaia, like the ocean absorbing up to 90% of planetary heat, which helps considerably to hold down land temps (tricking humans into thinking global warming is not as bad as it really is), but which also has a nasty habit of reversing the heat as a reverse feedback loop into nasty ole runaway global warming, then the Doomsday Clock is only a few seconds from midnight. That’s how dangerously close some scientists believe humanity is to extinction. Hopefully, they are dead wrong.

Alternatively, a counter-balancing course of action, the United States leads the world in renewables, but alas, Donald Trump is president and Scott Pruitt is Trump’s lead man for EPA (The Twilight Zone redux).

“Since President Nixon established the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in 1970, no prospective administrator has ever fundamentally questioned science or showed broad disdain for the work of the agency. That is until Scott Pruitt’s nomination” (Trump’s EPA Pick Scott Pruitt Won’t Stand up for Science. He Never Has, The Hill, 01/31/17).

Eris, the Greek goddess of chaos, strife, and discord, has flown by, dropping her Golden Apple of Discord, aka Scott Pruitt, into the lap of the U.S. Senate.




NOTE: ALL IMAGE CAPTIONS, PULL QUOTES AND COMMENTARY BY THE EDITORS, NOT THE AUTHORS • PLEASE COMMENT AND DEBATE DIRECTLY ON OUR FACEBOOK GROUP CLICK HERE

 Robert Hunziker lives in Los Angeles and can be reached at roberthunziker@icloud.com  


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uza2-zombienationWhat will it take to bring America to live according to its own propaganda?


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