Trump’s
inaugural speech –
promises, hopes and opportunities
22
January, 2017
This
article was written for the Unz
Review:http://www.unz.com/tsaker/trumps-inaugural-speech-promises-hopes-and-opportunities/
Just
hours ago Donald Trump was finally sworn in as the President of the
United States. Considering all the threats hanging over this event,
this is good news because at least for the time being, the Neocons
have lost their control over the Executive Branch and Trump is now
finally in a position to take action. The other good news is Trump’s
inauguration speech which
included this historical promise “We
do not seek to impose our way of life on anyone, but rather to let it
shine as an example for everyone to follow”.
Could that really mean that the USA has given up its role of World
Hegemon? The mere fact of asking the question is already an immensely
positive development as nobody would have asked it had Hillary
Clinton been elected.
The
other interesting feature of Trump’s speech is that it centered
heavily on people power and on social justice. Again, the contrast
with the ideological garbage from Clinton could not be greater.
Still, this begs a much more puzzling question: how much can a
multi-millionaire capitalist be trusted when he speaks of people
power and social justice – not exactly what capitalists are known
for, at least not amongst educated people. Furthermore, a Marxist
reader would also remind us that “imperialism
is the highest stage of capitalism”
and that it makes no sense to expect a capitalist to suddenly
renounce imperialism.
But
what was generally true in 1916 is not necessarily true in 2017.
For
one thing, let’s begin by stressing that the Trump Presidency was
only made possible by the immense financial, economic, political,
military and social crisis facing the USA today. Eight years of
Clinton, followed by eight years of Bush Jr and eight years of Obama
have seen a massive and full-spectrum decline in the strength of the
United States which were sacrificed for the sake of the AngloZionist
Empire. This crisis is as much internal as it is external and the
election of Trump is a direct consequence of this crisis. In fact,
Trump is the first one to admit that it is the terrible situation in
which the USA find themselves today which brought him to power with a
mandate of the regular American people (Hillary’s “deplorables”)
to “drain the DC swamp” and “make America”, as opposed to the
American plutocracy, “great again”. This might be somethhing
crucial: I cannot imagine Trump trying to simply do “more of the
same” like his predecessors did or trying to blindly double-down
like the Neocons always try to.
I
am willing to bet that Trump really and sincerely believes that the
USA is in a deep crisis and that a new, different, sets of policies
must be urgently implemented. If that assumption of mine proves to be
correct, then this is by definition very good news for the entire
planet because whatever Trump ends up doing (or not doing), he will
at least not push his country into a nuclear confrontation with
Russia. And yes, I think that it is possible that Trump has come to
the conclusion that imperialism has stopped working for the USA, that
far from being the solution to the contradictions of capitalism,
imperialism might well have become its most self-defeating feature.
Is
it possible for an ideological system to dump one of its core
component after learning from past mistakes? I think it is, and a
good example of that is 21st
Century Socialism,
which has completely dumped the kind of militant atheism which was so
central to the 20th century Socialist movement. In fact, modern 21st
Century Socialism is very pro-Christian. Could 21st century
capitalism dump imperialism? Maybe.
Furthermore,
Trump inaugurational speech did, according to RT commentators, sound
in many aspects like the kind of speech Bernie Sanders could have
made. And I think that they are right. Trump did sound like a
paleo-liberal, something which we did not hear from him during the
campaign. You could also say that Trump sounded very much like Putin.
The question is will he now also act like Putin too?
There
will be a great deal of expectations in Russia about how Trump will
go about fulfilling his campaign promises to deal with other
countries. Today, when Trump pronounced the followings words “We
will seek friendship and goodwill with the nations of the world –
but we do so with the understanding that it is the right of all
nations to put their own interests first”
he told the Russians exactly what they wanted to hear: Trump does not
pretend to be a “friend” of Russia and Trump openly and
unapologetically promises to care about his own people first, and
that is exactly what Putin has been saying and doing since he came to
power in Russia: caring for the Russian people first. After all,
caring for your own first hardly implies being hostile or even
indifferent to others. All it means is that your loyalty and your
service is first and foremost to those who elected you to office.
This refreshing patriotic honesty, combined with the prospect of
friendship and goodwill will sound like music to the Russian ears.
Then
there are Trump’s words about “forming
new alliances”
and uniting “the
civilized world against Radical Islamic Terrorism, which we will
eradicate completely from the face of the Earth”.
They will also be received with a great deal of hope by the Russian
people. If the USA is finally serious about fighting terrorism and if
they really wants to eradicate the likes of Daesh, then Russia will
offer her full support to this effort, including her military,
intelligence, police and diplomatic resources. After all, Russia has
been advocating for “completely
eradicating Radical Islamic Terrorism from the face of the Earth”
for decades.
There
is no doubt in my mind at all that an alliance between Russia and the
USA, even if limited only to specific areas of converging or mutual
interests, would be immensely beneficial for the entire planet, and
not for just these two countries: right now all the worst
international crises are a direct result from the “tepid war” the
USA and Russia have been waging against each other. And just like any
other war, this war has been a fantastic waste of resources. Of
course, this war was started by the USA and it was maintained and fed
by the Neocon’s messianic ideology. Now that a realist like Trump
has come to power, we can finally hope for this dangerous and
wasteful dynamic to be stopped.
The
good news is that neither Trump nor Putin can afford to fail. Trump,
because he has made an alliance with Russia the cornerstone of his
foreign policy during his campaign, and Putin because he realizes
that it is in the objective interests of Russia for Trump to succeed,
lest the Neocon crazies crawl back out from their basement. So both
sides will enter into negotiations with a strong desire to get things
done and a willingness to make compromises as long as they do not
affect crucial national security objectives. I think that the number
of issues on which the USA and Russia can agree upon is much, much
longer than the number of issues where irreconcilable differences
remain.
So
yes, today I am hopeful. More than anything else, I want to hope that
Trump is “for real”, and that he will have the wisdom and courage
to take strong action against his internal enemies. Because from now
on, this is one other thing which Putin and Trump will have in
common: their internal enemies are far more dangerous than any
external foe. When I see rabid maniacs like David
Horowitz declaring
himself a
supporter of Donald Trump,
I get very, very concerned and I ask myself “what does Horowitz
know which I am missing?”. What is certain is that in the near
future one of us will soon become very disappointed. I just hope that
this shall not be me.
The
Saker
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