Jeremy Corbyn Accused of Being Russian “Collaborator” for Questioning NATO Troop Build-Up on Border
Glenn Greenwald
16
January, 2017
THE
LEADER OF the
UK’s Labour Party, Jeremy Corbyn, called
for a “de-escalation” of tensions between
NATO and Russia, adding in a BBC interview on Thursday: “I
want to see a de-militarisation of the border between them.” Along
with the U.S., the UK has been rapidly building up its military
presence in the Baltic region, including states which border Russia,
and is now
about to send another
800 troops to Estonia, 500 of which will be permanently based.
In
response, Russia has moved its own troops within its country near
those borders, causing serious military tensions to rise
among multiple nuclear-armed powers. Throughout 2016, the
Russian and U.S. militaries have engaged
in increasingly provocative and aggressive maneuvers against one
another.
This week, the U.S. began
deploying 4,000
troops to Poland, “the biggest deployment of US troops in Europe
since the end of the cold war.”
It
was in this context that Corbyn said it is “unfortunate that troops
have gone up to the border on both sides,” adding that “he
wanted to see better relations between Russia, NATO and the EU.”
The Labour leader explained that while Russia has engaged in
serious human rights abuses both domestically and in Syria, there
must be a “better relationships between both sides . . . there
cannot be a return to a Cold War mentality.”
The
response to Corbyn’s call for better relations and de-escalation of
tensions with Moscow was swift and predictable. The armed forces
minister for Britain’s right-wing government, Mike Penning, accused
Corbyn of being a collaborator with the Kremlin:
“These comments suggest that the Labour leader would rather collaborate with Russian aggression than mutually support Britain’s Nato allies. As with Trident, everything Labour says and does shows that they cannot be trusted with Britain’s national security.”
This
is the same propagandistic formulation that has been used for decades
in the west to equate opposition to militarism with some form of
disloyalty or treason: if you oppose military confrontation with a
foreign adversary or advocate better relations with it, then you are
accused of harboring secret sympathy and even support for those
foreign leaders, and are often suspected of being an active
“collaborator” with (or “stooge” for) them.
This
lowly smear tactic was, of course, deployed over and over during the
Cold War with regard to those who argued for improved relations or a
reduction of conflict with Moscow, but it has been repeatedly used
since then as well every time it comes time to confront a new Foreign
Villain (those opposed to the invasion of Iraq were pro-Saddam, those
who opposed intervention in Libya were Gaddafi apologists, those who
objected to War on Terror programs are terrorist-sympathizers, etc.
etc.).
But
this template has recently become super-charged, more widely invoked
than ever, as a result of the starring role Russia now plays in
U.S. domestic politics, where many Democrats blame them for Hillary
Clinton’s defeat. Putin now occupies the role of Prime Villain in
western discourse, and this Cold War rhetorical template –
anyone opposing confrontation is a Kremlin operative or stooge
– has thus been resurrected with extraordinary speed and
ease.
The
compelling justifications for Corbyn’s concerns about
NATO/Russia tensions are self-evident. The U.S. and Russia have
massive arsenals of nuclear weapons. As Lawrence Krauss detailed in
the New Yorker in October, the two countries have come horrendously
close to full-on, earth-destroying nuclear war on several occasions
in the past, and the systems they still maintain are conducive to
apocalyptic error through miscommunication and misperception,
let alone direct military confrontation. As Krauss noted:
“In general, during the Obama Presidency, we have only deepened our dangerous embrace of nuclear weapons. At the moment, around a thousand nuclear weapons are still on a hair-trigger alert; as they were during the Cold War, they are ready to be launched in minutes in response to a warning of imminent attack.”
It
is not hyperbole to say that perhaps nothing is more reckless,more
dangerous, than ratcheting up tensions between these two countries.
That’s what makes it so repellent and toxic to demonize those such
as Corbyn as “collaborators” or traitors merely because they
oppose this escalation and belligerence. But this is the script that
– once again – is quickly becoming mainstream orthodoxy in
both Washington and London.
Let
us, for a moment, imagine if this framework were applied consistently
rather than manipulatively. Democrats have been alarmed –
rightfully so – by the preliminary belligerence of Trump and his
top aides toward nuclear-armed China: accepting
a call from
Taiwan’s president, openly
questioningthe
decades-old “One China” policy, suggesting the U.S. would
militarily intervene to
prevent Chinese control over nearby uninhabited islands (the latter
was also
suggested by
the current head of the U.S. Pacific fleet).
But
applying the prevailing Russia logic to these concerns, should one
not accuse these Democrats objecting to confrontation with China of
being “collaborators” with and apologists for the dictatorial
regime in Beijing, which imprisons dissidents and tortures
ethnic and religious minorities?
Should we publicly ponder whether the liberal writers
demanding that Trump cease his aggressive posture are being
clandestinely paid by the Chinese Politburo or merely acting as
“useful idiots” for it? Should those objecting to Trump’s
belligerent policies be accused of siding with a dictatorial regime
over their own President and country?
Of
course none of those things should happen, because it is not only
rational but morally compulsory to be deeply wary of those who seek
to escalate tensions between countries with large nuclear arsenals.
At the very least, one should be free to debate these policies
without being smeared as a traitor. That applies to China, and it
applies to Russia. And those who voice such concerns should not, as
Corbyn just was, have their loyalties and integrity be impugned
by our new Cold Warriors.
* *
* * *
For
the crucial context on NATO/Russia tension that is very rarely heard
in the western press, I highly recommend these two items:
(1) This Foreign
Affairs article by
University of Chicago political scientist John J.
Mearsheimer on the west’s relentless, aggressive march eastward up
to Russian borders and its consequences;
(2) The
passage of this interview with Noam Chomsky by German journalist Tilo
Jung – beginning at 40:30 – that explains the crucial historical
context of NATO’s march eastward toward Russia, how that is
perceived in Moscow, and, most important of all, why the dangers this
behavior creates are incomparable:
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