Diplomatic Deception: The Calm Before the Firestorm
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
DK
at Talking Points Memo has this exactly right: the new mainstream
media meme of a "quieter, more diplomatic" Bush foreign
policy is yet another steaming crock served up by Karl Rove and
swallowed whole by the
fat and sassy gluttons of the
press. As DK and Kevin Drum point out, the Bush Administration's
whimpering reactions to provocations by North Korea, to the alarming
resurgence of the Taliban (who have
essentially trapped the British Expeditionary Force in the south
in a loose but deadly siege), to the horrific death spiral in the
raging Iraqi civil war, to the continuing imbroglio with Iran, etc.,
don't stem from some deliberate choice of "letting diplomacy
work" but are simply the result of the Bushists' own blithering
incompetence and utter cluelessness about how to actually govern
a country and conduct a coherent foreign policy.
But
of course they don't care about governing, coherent policies, etc.
What they care about are loot and dominion. The only way they know
how to get it is through strong-arm Mob tactics: you threaten the
mark, and if he doesn't pay up, you beat him or kill him. (Actually,
it is a pretty coherent policy after all: the logical consistency
of a thug.) Thus this new "quiet" is in some ways even
more dangerous than the bellicosity of old. Because as DK notes,
the main reason for the lack of serious war-whooping at the moment
is that the tin-pot triumvirate of Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld have
broken the American military: they've smashed it to pieces on the
stones of Iraq, poured out rivers of blood and whole seas of public
treasure in their stupid, brutal greed. We can see the military
unravelling before our eyes (Steve
Gilliard has been tracking this closely), as discipline unravels,
new atrocity cases emerge almost every week and, intent on using
their combat training to bring their race war to America' s streets
(more on this later in the week).
But their goal
loot
and dominion hasn't gone away. And their "policy"
extortion and violent force remains the same. (Indeed,
it's apparently the only thing they know how to do.) So if you still
want to dominate and you still believe in force but your regular
military force is broken, what do you do? What do you have left
to bring out and swing around and show the world how big and tough
you are? What else: "A smoking gun in the form of a mushroom
cloud."
Remember,
the Bushists have altered
America's official military doctrine to "regularize"
the use of nuclear weapons as part of the "normal" combat
arsenal, authorizing its
use even against non-nuclear enemies, in pre-emptive, non-retaliatory
strikes. As
Jorge Hirsch points out in an excellent article on Antiwar.com,
the Bushists see the use of "tactical" nuclear weapons
as a key element in their "revolution in military affairs,"
the use of stripped down, lean and mean military able to strike
quickly around the world. America's nuclear arsenal is the necessary
"force multiplier" for this smaller force, which otherwise
couldn't take on large traditional armies or fight on several fronts
simultaneously. But as Hirsch notes, this force multiplier is worthless
unless it is established as a "credible deterrent"
unless, that is, that it is actually used sometime, somewhere, to
prove to the world that yes, by God, we will nuke you if
you don't play ball our way.
The most likely
target will be Iran, despite the resistance to a Persian nuke-fest
mounted by the top U.S. brass, as
Seymour Hersh recently reported in the New Yorker. But
as Hirsch notes, the final decision on the weaponry used in an attack
on Iran and there will almost certainly be an attack
is in the hands of the triumvirate, not the military.
So don't be
lulled by the spoon-fed folderol of the toothless media watchdogs.
For while the well-wadded poltroons at Time and the Times serve
up Karl Rove's comfort food about a more "mature" and
sensible Bush foreign policy, the world is actually drawing closer
and closer to a even deeper level of darkness.
July
11, 2006
Chris
Floyd [send him mail],
Global Eye columnist for the Moscow Times, is the author
of Empire
Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime.
Copyright
© 2006 Chris Floyd
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