Putin and the Neo-Comintern
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
The
Comintern, or Communist International, also known as the Third International,
was the 1919 creation of Vladimir Lenin.
Its
declared purpose: Fight "by all available means, including armed
force, for the overthrow of the international bourgeoisie and for
the creation of an international Soviet republic ..."
Fomenting
the communist revolution worldwide was, in brief, the Comintern's
mission.
At
its Seventh World Congress in 1935, however, on Stalin's orders,
the Comintern repudiated the revolutionary overthrow of capitalism
as its mission and called for formation of Popular Fronts in Western
nations to combat fascism a Moscow First policy.
For
this act of heresy, Trotsky, the champion of permanent revolution,
excommunicated Stalin as a "reformist" and was himself rewarded
in 1940 with an ice ax in the head, courtesy of Stalinist assassin
Ramon Mercader.
But
Trotskyism did not die with Leon Trotsky. It mutated and is today
the taproot of that neoconservatism that calls for permanent revolution
to advance not global communism, but global democracy. Today, this
ideology is embedded in the Party of Reagan and the Bush administration,
and neoconservatives are using tax dollars to create and operate
their own Neo-Comintern.
The
National Endowment for Democracy (NED), which pumps out tens of
millions of dollars to "promote democracy" abroad, is its pivotal
agency. For 20 years, it has been headed by Carl Gershman, who broke
from the Socialist Party to organize Social Democrats USA, which
rallied to the candidacy of liberal Democratic Sen. Henry "Scoop"
Jackson, whose staff was a nesting ground of neocons from Richard
Perle to Frank Gaffney to Elliott Abrams.
One
organization captured by the Neo-Comintern is Freedom House. Founded
by Eleanor Roosevelt and Wendell Willkie in 1941 as a voice for
global democracy and human rights, Freedom House, on the eve of
the Iraq war, chose as its new chairman ex-CIA Director James Woolsey.
By his first anniversary in office, Woolsey had declared Vladimir
Putin's Russia "un-free" and was beating the drums for "World War
IV" against "Islamofascism."
Flush
with tax dollars and tax-deductible contributions, NED, Freedom
House and their collaborator foundations and think tanks now routinely
interfere in the internal affairs of foreign nations. Under the
rubric of promoting democracy, creating free markets, etc., they
seek to dethrone recalcitrant rulers and advance to power those
who share their ideology and will advance their interests and agenda.
Democracy
is our goal, the neocons claim. But viewing their target lists in
the Middle East, Near East, Central Asia and Latin America, it is
perhaps more exact to say the Neo-Comintern seeks destabilization
of any and all regimes that fail to meet its criteria for membership
in their world democratic revolution.
Though
a radical leftist populist, Venezuela's Hugo Chavez was democratically
elected. He charges that NED had a hand in the 2002 coup that briefly
overthrew his government and in the recall election forced upon
him in 2004. Foreign journalists contend that the color-coded popular
"revolutions" that ousted Milosevic in Serbia, Shevardnadze in Georgia
and the Kuchma crowd in Ukraine were also made in the USA and hand-tooled
at Langley.
Observing
Kiev's "orange revolution" unfold, the Guardian's Ian Traynor called
it "an American creation, a sophisticated and brilliantly conceived
exercise in Western branding and mass marketing that, in four countries
in four years, has been used to try to salvage rigged elections
and topple unsavory regimes."
Russian President Putin, however, is a former KGB colonel who knows
a little about subversion and wants to guarantee that what happened
to his friends in Belgrade and Kiev does not happen to him or his
chosen successor when he transfers power in 2008. And he is moving
to restrict, and perhaps expedite the expulsion of, all American
and Western meddlers in Russian politics.
"Organizations
functioning in our country and involved in political activity are
basically being used as instruments of foreign policy of other states,"
says Putin. And the man has a point.
Which
raises questions for our own government. By what right does the
United States, through tax-funded and tax-exempt organizations,
interfere in the politics of nations that have not attacked or threatened
us? Were the Chinese to intrude in the politics of Mexico and Central
America as we have in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, would we
not be enraged? Would we not react?
Given
that resentment of the United States is pandemic in Latin America,
the Middle East and Europe, what benefits do we derive from incessantly
intruding in the internal affairs of these nations to justify the
rising cost in elite and popular ill will?
Did
we defeat the world communist revolution only to launch our own
world democratic revolution? Did we bury the Comintern of Stalin
only to create our own? What happened to the America that minded
her own business? Why is Bush outsourcing foreign policy to neocons
who are the source of most of his headaches today?
November
30, 2005
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire.
Copyright
© 2005 Creators Syndicate
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J. Buchanan Archives
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