The Empire should be placed on suicide watch
The Vineyard of the Saker,
18
July, 2017
This
article was written for the Unz
Review:
http://www.unz.com/tsaker/the-empire-should-be-placed-on-suicide-watch/
http://www.unz.com/tsaker/the-empire-should-be-placed-on-suicide-watch/
In
all the political drama taking place in the USA as a result of the
attempted color
revolution against Trump,
the bigger picture sometimes gets forgotten. And yet, this bigger
picture is quite amazing, because if we look at it we will see
irrefutable signs that the Empire in engaged in some bizarre slow
motion of seppuku and
the only mystery left is who, or what, will serve as the
Empire’s kaishakunin (assuming
there will be one).
I
would even argue that the Empire is pursuing a full-spectrum policy
of self-destruction on several distinct levels, with each level
contributing the overall sum total suicide. And when I refer to
self-destructive behavior I don’t mean long-term issues such as the
non-sustainability of the capitalist economic model or the social
consequences of a society which not only is unable to differentiate
right from wrong, but which now decrees that deviant behavior is
healthy and normal. These are what I call “long term walls” into
which we will, inevitably, crash, but which are comparatively further
away than some “immediate walls”. Let me list a few of these:
Political
suicide:
the Neocons’ refusal to accept the election of Donald Trump has
resulted in a massive campaign to de-legitimize him. What the Neocons
clearly fail to see, or don’t care about, is that by
de-legitimizing Trump they are also de-legitimizing the entire
political process which brought Trump to power and upon which the
United States are built as a society. As a direct result from this
campaign, not only are millions of Americans becoming disgusted with
the political system they were indoctrinated to believe in, but
internationally the notion of “American democracy” is becoming a
sad joke.
And
just to make things worse, the US corporate media is finally showing
its true face and now unapologetically shows the entire world that
not only is it not in any way “fair” or “objective”, but that
it is a 100% prostituted propaganda machine which faithfully serves
the interests of the US “deep state”.
A
key element of the quasi constant brainwashing of the average
American has always been the regular holding of elections. Nevermind
that, at least until now, the outcome of these elections made very
little difference inside the USA and non at all outside, the goal was
never to consult the people – the goal has always been to give the
illusion of democracy and people power. Now that the Democrats say
that the Russians rigged the elections and the Republicans say that
it was the Democrats and their millions of dead voters who tried
stealing it, it become rather obvious that these elections were
always a joke, a pseudo-democratic “liturgy”, a brainwashing
ritual – you name it – but never about anything real.
The
emergence of the concept of 1% can be “credited” to the Obama
Administration, since it was during Obama that the entire “Occupy
Wall Street” movement took off, but the ultimate unmasking of the
viciously evil true face of that 1% must be credited to Hillary with
her truly historical confession in which she openly declared that
those who oppose her are a “basket of deplorables”. We already
knew, thanks to Victoria Nuland, what the AngloZionist leaders
thought of the people of Europe, now we know what they think of the
people of the USA: exactly the same thing.
The
bottom line is this: I don’t think that the moral authority and
political credibility of the USA have ever been lower than today.
Decades of propaganda by Hollywood and the official US propaganda
machine have now collapsed and nobody buys that counter-factual
nonsense anymore.
Foreign
policy suicide:
let’s see what options there are to choose from. The Neocons want a
war with Russia which the Trump people don’t. The Trump people,
however, want, well maybe not a war, although that option is very
much on the table, but at least a very serious confrontation with
China, North Korea or Iran, and about half of them would also like
some kind of confrontation with Russia. There is absolutely nobody,
at least at the top, who would dare to suggest that a confrontation
or, even worse, a war with China, Iran, North Korea or Russia would
be a disaster, a calamity for the USA. In fact, serious people with
impressive credentials and a lot of gravitas are discussing these
possibilities as if they were real, as it the USA could in some sense
prevail. This is laughable. Well, no, it it not. But it would be if
it wasn’t so frightening and depressing. The truth is very, very
different.
[Sidebar:
While it is probably not impossible for the United States to prevail,
in purely military terms, against the DPRK in a war, the potential
risks are nothing short of immense. And I don’t mean the risk posed
by the North Korean nukes which, apparently, is also quite real. I
mean the risk of starting a war against a country which has Seoul
within conventional artillery range, an active duty army of well over
one million people and 180’000 special forces operators. Let us
assume for a second that the DPRK has no air force and no navy and an
army composed of only 1M+ soldiers, 21k+ artillery pieces and 180k
special forces. How do you propose to deal with that threat? If you
have an easy, obvious solution, you have watched too many Hollywood
movies. You probably also don’t understand the terrain.]
But
yes, the DPRK also has major wseaknesses and I cannot exclude that
the North Korean armed forces would rapidly collapse under a
sustained attack by the US and the ROK. I did not say that I believe
that this would happen, only that I don’t exclude it. Should that
happen, the US might well prevail relatively rapidly, at least in
purely military terms. However, please keep in mind that any military
operation has to serve a political goal and, in that sense, I cannot
imagine any scenario under which the USA would walk away from a war
against the DPRK with anything remotely resembling a real “victory”.
There is a paraphrase of something Ho Chi Minh allegedly
told to the French in
the 1940s which I really like. It goes like this:” we
kill some of you, you kill a lot of us, and then we win”.
That is how a war with the DPRK would probably play out. I call this the “American curse”: Americans are very good at killing people, but they are not good at winning wars. Still, in the case of the DPRK there is at least a possibility of a military victory, even if at a potentially huge cost. With Iran, Russia or China there is no such possibility at all: a war with any of them would be a guaranteed disaster (I wrote about a war in Iran here and about a war with Russia too many times to count). So why is it that even though out of the 4 possible wars, one is a potential disaster and the 3 others are a guaranteed disaster, why is it that these are discussed as if they were potential options?!
That is how a war with the DPRK would probably play out. I call this the “American curse”: Americans are very good at killing people, but they are not good at winning wars. Still, in the case of the DPRK there is at least a possibility of a military victory, even if at a potentially huge cost. With Iran, Russia or China there is no such possibility at all: a war with any of them would be a guaranteed disaster (I wrote about a war in Iran here and about a war with Russia too many times to count). So why is it that even though out of the 4 possible wars, one is a potential disaster and the 3 others are a guaranteed disaster, why is it that these are discussed as if they were potential options?!
The
reason for that can be found in the unique mix of crass ignorance and
political cowardice of the entire US political class. First, a lot
(most?) of US politicians believe in their own silly propaganda about
the US armed forces being “the best” in “the world” (no
evidence needed!). But even those who are smart enough to realize
that this is a load of baloney which nobody outside the USA still
takes seriously, they know that saying that publicly is political
suicide. So they pretend, go along, and keep on repetitively spewing
the patriotic mantra about “rah, rah, USA, USA, ‘Merica number
one, we are the best” etc. Some figure that since the USA spends
more on aggression that the rest of the planet combined, that must
mean that the US armed forces must be “better” (whatever that
means).
To the birthplace of “bigger is better” the answer is self-evident. It is also completely wrong.
To the birthplace of “bigger is better” the answer is self-evident. It is also completely wrong.
Eventually,
something crazy inevitably happens. Like in Syria were the State
Department had one policy, the Pentagon another and the CIA yet
another one.
The resulting cognitive dissonance is removed by engaging in classical doublethink: “yes, we screwed up over and over, but we are still the best”. Ironically, that kind of mindset is at the core of the American inability to learn from past mistakes. If the choice is between an honest evaluation of past operations and political expediency, the latter always prevails (at least amongst civilians, US servicemen are often far more capable of self-critical evaluation, especially in ranks up to Colonel and below, the problem here is that civilians and generals rarely listen to them).
The resulting cognitive dissonance is removed by engaging in classical doublethink: “yes, we screwed up over and over, but we are still the best”. Ironically, that kind of mindset is at the core of the American inability to learn from past mistakes. If the choice is between an honest evaluation of past operations and political expediency, the latter always prevails (at least amongst civilians, US servicemen are often far more capable of self-critical evaluation, especially in ranks up to Colonel and below, the problem here is that civilians and generals rarely listen to them).
The
result is total chaos: the US foreign policy is wholly dependent on
the US ability to threaten the use of military force, but the harsh
reality is that every country out there which dared to defy Uncle Sam
did that only after coming to the conclusion that the US did not have
the means to crush it militarily. In other words, only the weak,
which are already de-facto US colonies, fear the USA. Or, put
differently, the only countries who dare to defy Uncle Sam are the
strong ones (that was all quite predictable, but US politicians don’t
know about Hegel or dialectics). And just to make it worse, there is
no real US foreign policy. What there is is only the sum vector of
the different foreign policies desired by various more or less covert
“deep state” actors, agencies and individuals. That resulting
“sum vector” is inevitably short-term, focuses on a quickfix
approach, and unable to take into account any complexity.
As
for the US “diplomacy” it simply doesn’t exist. You don’t
need diplomats to deliver demands, bribes, ultimatums and threats.
You don’t need educated people. Nor do you need people with any
understanding of the “other”. All you need is one arrogant
self-enamored bully and one interpreter (since US diplomats don’t
speak the local languages either. And why would they?). We saw the
most compelling evidence of the totalrigor
mortis of
the US diplomatic corps when 51
US “diplomats” demanded that Obama bomb Syria.
The rest of the world could just observe in amazement, sadness,
bewilderment and total disgust.
The bottom line is this: there is no “US diplomacy”. The USA have simply let that entire field atrophy to the point were it ceased to exist. When so many baffled observers try to understand what the US policy in the Ukraine or Syria is, they are making a mistaken assumption – that there is a US foreign policy to being with. I would argue that the US diplomacy slowly and quietly passed away, sometime after James Baker (the last real US diplomat, and a brilliant one at that).
Military
suicide:
the US military was never a very impressive one, certainly not when
compared to the British, Russian or German ones. But it did have a
couple of very strong points including the ability to produce a lot
of technical innovations which made it possible to produce new,
sometimes quite revolutionary, weapons.
And if the US track record on ground operations was rather modest, the US did prove to be a most capable adversary in naval and aerial warfare. I don’t think that it can be denied that for most of the years following WWII the USA had the most powerful and sophisticated navy and airforce in the world. Then, gradually, things started getting worse and worse as the costs of the very expensive ships and aircraft shot through the roof while the quality of the produced systems appeared to be gradually degrading. Weapons systems which looked nothing short of awesome in the lab and test grounds proved to be almost useless once they to to their end user on the battlefield. What happened? How did a country which produced the UH-1 Huey or the F-16 suddenly start producing Apaches and F-35s?! The explanation is painfully simple: corruption.
And if the US track record on ground operations was rather modest, the US did prove to be a most capable adversary in naval and aerial warfare. I don’t think that it can be denied that for most of the years following WWII the USA had the most powerful and sophisticated navy and airforce in the world. Then, gradually, things started getting worse and worse as the costs of the very expensive ships and aircraft shot through the roof while the quality of the produced systems appeared to be gradually degrading. Weapons systems which looked nothing short of awesome in the lab and test grounds proved to be almost useless once they to to their end user on the battlefield. What happened? How did a country which produced the UH-1 Huey or the F-16 suddenly start producing Apaches and F-35s?! The explanation is painfully simple: corruption.
Not
only did the US military industrial complex bloat beyond any
reasonable size, it also cloaked itself in so many layers of secrecy
that massive corruption became inevitable. And when I speak of
“massive corruption” I am not talking about millions but billions
or even trillions. How? Simple – the Pentagon claimed did not have
the accounting tools needed to properly account for the missing money
and that the money was therefore not really “missing”. Another
trick – no bid contracts.
Or contracts which cover all the private contractor’s costs, no matter how high or ridiculous. Desert Storm was a bonanza for the MIC, as was 9/11 and the GWOT. Billions of dollars got printed out of thin air, distributed (mostly under the cover of national security), hidden (secrecy) and stolen (by everybody in this entire food chain). The feeding frenzy was so extreme that one of my teachers as SAIS admitted, off the record of course, that he had never seen a weapons system he did not like or which he did not want to purchase. This man, whom I shall not name, was a former director of the US Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. Yes, you read that right. He was in charge of DIS-armament. You can imagine what the folks in charge of armament (no “dis) were thinking…
Or contracts which cover all the private contractor’s costs, no matter how high or ridiculous. Desert Storm was a bonanza for the MIC, as was 9/11 and the GWOT. Billions of dollars got printed out of thin air, distributed (mostly under the cover of national security), hidden (secrecy) and stolen (by everybody in this entire food chain). The feeding frenzy was so extreme that one of my teachers as SAIS admitted, off the record of course, that he had never seen a weapons system he did not like or which he did not want to purchase. This man, whom I shall not name, was a former director of the US Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. Yes, you read that right. He was in charge of DIS-armament. You can imagine what the folks in charge of armament (no “dis) were thinking…
With
the stratospheric rise of corruption, the kind of US general which
had to be promoted went from fighting men who remembered Vietnam
(where they often lost family members, relatives and friends)
to ass-kissing
little chickenshits”
like David Petraeus. In less than half a century US generals went
from combat men, to managers, to politicians. And it is against this
lackluster background that a rather unimpressive personality like
General James Mattis can appear, at least to some, like a good
candidate for Secretary of Defense.
Bottom
line: the US armed forces are fantastically expensive and yet not
particularly well-trained, well-equipped or well-commanded. And while
they still are much more capable than the many European militaries
(which are a joke), they are most definitely not the kind of armed
forces needed to impose and maintain a world hegemony. The good news
for the USA is that the US armed forces are more than adequate to
defend the USA against any hypothetical attack. But as the backbone
of the Empire – they are close to useless.
I
could list many more types of suicides including an economic suicide,
a social suicide, an educational suicide, a cultural suicide and, of
course, a moral suicide. But others have already done that elsewhere,
and much better than I could ever do myself. So all I will add here
is one form of suicide which I believe the AngloZionist Empire has in
common with the EU: a
“Suicide
by reality denial”:
this is the mother and father of all the other forms of suicide –
the stubborn refusal to look at reality and accept the fact that “the
party is over”. When I see the grim determination of US politicians
(very much including the people supporting Trump) to continue to
pretend as if the US hegemony was here to stay forever, when I see
how they see themselves as the leaders of the world and how they
sincerely believe that they need to get involved in every conflict on
the planet, I can only come to the conclusion that the inevitable
collapse will be painful. To be fair, Trump himself clearly has
moments of lucidity about this, for example when he recently declared
to Congress
Free nations are the best vehicle for expressing the will of the people — and America respects the right of all nations to chart their own path. My job is not to represent the world. My job is to represent the United States of America. But we know that America is better off, when there is less conflict — not more.
These
are remarkable words for which Trump truly deserves a standing
ovation as they are the closest thing to a formal admission that the
United States have given up on the dream of being the World Hegemon
and that from now on the US President will no longer represent the
interest of trans-national plutocracies but he will represent the
interests of the American people. This sort of language is nothing
short of revolutionary, whether Trump truly delivers on that or not.
Unlike everybody else, Trump does not appear to suffer from “suicide
by reality denial” syndrome, but when I look at the people around
him (nevermind the prostitutes in Congress) I wonder if he will ever
get to act on his personal instincts.
Trump
is clearly the best man in the Trump administration, he seems to have
his heart in the right place and, unlike Hillary, he is clearly aware
of the fact that the US armed forces are in a terrible shape. But a
good heart and common sense are not enough to deal with the Neocons
and the US deep state. You also need an iron will and a total
determination to crush the opposition. Alas, so far Trump has failed
to show either quality. Instead, Trump is trying to show how “tough”
a guy he is by declaring that he will wipe out Daesh and by giving
the Pentagon 30 days to come up with a plan to do this. Alas (for
Trump), there is no way to crush Daesh without working with those who
already have boots on the ground: the Iranians, the Russians and the
Syrians. It is really that simple. And every American general knows
that. Yet everybody is merrily plowing ahead is if there was some
kind of possibility for the USA to crush Daesh without establishing a
partnership with Russia, Iran and Syria first (Erdogan tried that. It
did him no good. Now he is working with Russia and Iran). Will the
good folks at the Pentagon find the courage to tell Trump that “no,
Mr President, we cannot do that alone, we need the Russians, the
Iranians and the Syrians”? I very much doubt it. So, yet again, we
are probably going to see a case of reality denial, maybe not a
suicidal one, but a significant one nonetheless. Not good.
b
Alexander
Solzhenitsyn used to say that all states can be placed on a continuum
which ranges from states whose authority is based on their power to
states whose power is based on their authority. I think that we can
agree that the authority of the USA is pretty close to zero. As for
their power, it is still very substantial, but not sufficient to
maintain the Empire. It is, however, more than adequate to protect
the interests of the United States as a country provided the United
States accept that they simply don’t have the means to remain a
world hegemon.
If
the Neocons succeed in their attempt to overthrow or, failing that,
at paralyzing Trump, then the Empire will have the choice between an
endless horror or a horrible end. Since the Neocons don’t really
need a war with the DPRK, which they don’t like, but which does not
elicit the kind of blind hatred Iran does, my guess is that Iran will
be their number one target. Should the AngloZionists succeed in
triggering a war between Iran and the Empire, then Iran will end up
being the Empire’s kaishakunin.
If the crazies fail in their manic attempts at triggering a major
war, then the Empire will probably collapse under the pressure of the
internal contradictions of the US society. Finally, if Trump and the
American patriots who do not want to sacrifice their country for the
sake of the Empire succeed in “draining the DC swamp” and finally
crack-down hard on the Neocons then a gradual transition from Empire
to major power is still possible. But the clock is running out fast.
The
Saker
Catherine Austin Fitts interviews the Saker for the Solari Report: The Emerging Multipolar World – Seeking a US Foreign Policy with Saker
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