[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

NBC: The United States, Europe and Ukraine have made a list of 22 conditions for ending the conflict

President Trumps Proposal to Eliminate Income Taxes: Can It Be Done?

Trump Still Does Not Understand What Russia Wants and Demands

Borrell: Half of bombs dropped on Gaza supplied by Europe

Surprise, Surprise: Bibi Discovers "Secret Iranian Nuclear Weapons Facility" in Iran

Report: Trump Delinks Saudi Nuclear Deal from Israeli Normalization

Lebanon's war-wounded and pregnant women face deepening healthcare crisis

Hordes of NATO military and elite PMCs suddenly went to the Kursk region

The Ukrainian Armed Forces will receive missiles for attacks on the rear, headquarters, airports of Russia

Minister o Defense Thousands of corpses on the border - a French breeding ground near Kiev was destroyed

Ivermectin Reverses Alzheimer's Disease

80% Of 'Liberal' Americans Want Elon Musk Thrown In Prison

Why Silver is Lagging Gold

Democrat Rep. LaMonica McIver verbally and physically assaulted federal agents in New Jersey

Diana Ross & The Supremes - Reflections [Spain TV] [1967]

Rep. Anna Paulina Luna Introduces Bill to REPEAL the USA PATRIOT Act Declares War on Surveillance State

Car Followed Home. Quick Thinking Driver Saved Himself

Woody Harrelson Couldn't Hold Back

Burkina Faso leaders visit to Moscow for Victory Day carries HUGE strategic significance: heres why

Pope Francis Donated Funds for Drones for the Armed Forces of Ukraine - Historian Zinchenko

President Trump Signs Executive Order to Establish National Center for Homeless Veterans

Report:: Trump plans to announce US recognition of Palestinian state at upcoming Middle East conference

With US mediation, POTUS DJT announces that India and Pakistan have agreed to a ceasefire

Expert's urgent warning over sweetener in thousands of food linked to BRAIN DAMAGE

Here's What The World's Paying For Eggs

Richard Gage 9-11-2001 and Otober 7, 2024

"America is great because America is good, and if America ever ceases to be good, America will cease to be great"

Warsaw Ghetto Uprising compared to Gaza

Mainstream Media Blacks Out ICJ Hearings on Israeli Genocide

Pakistani air victory raises alarms for Taiwan’s defense strategy


Editorial
See other Editorial Articles

Title: US Hypocrisy Marks Descent Into Barbarism
Source: [None]
URL Source: https://www.strategic-culture.org/n ... ks-descent-into-barbarism.html
Published: Apr 6, 2018
Author: editorial staff
Post Date: 2018-04-06 20:16:34 by Ada
Keywords: None
Views: 174
Comments: 1

The war of words over American trade tariffs on Chinese exports and the expulsion of Russian diplomats may seem unrelated issues. But there is a connecting theme: the staggering US hypocrisy over its own aggressive behaviour.

This blatant American hypocrisy – beyond reason and respect for international law – marks a fatal descent into barbarism towards foreign relations. Dialogue and diplomacy are repudiated with a “might is right” attitude.

Washington took the initiative to propose slapping China’s economy with nearly $50 billion in levies on certain exports – claiming unfair trading practices conducted by Beijing. Then when China responded this week by announcing it would be reciprocating by imposing equivalent tariffs on American exports, the Trump White House threw up its arms in annoyance, saying that the Chinese decision was “not fair”.

Similarly, last week Washington took the decision to expel 60 Russian diplomats in support of tenuous Britain’s allegations that the Russian state had some involvement in the apparent poisoning of an exiled spy and his daughter in the English town of Salisbury on March 4. This week Moscow reciprocated by expelling 60 American diplomats from Russia.

As with China’s symmetrical response to US trade tariffs, Washington then declared that Russia’s expulsion of its diplomats was “not fair”. State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert made the haughty comment that “Russia should not be acting like the victim here”.

So, let’s get this straight. Washington arrogates the right to take aggressive actions against foreign states, damaging the national interests of those states. But when the other side takes a reciprocal measure, the Americans complain that the measures are unacceptable and an affront.

Such an attitude in Washington is impossibly hypocritical, arrogant and intolerable. It certainly gives new meaning to American claims of being an “exceptional nation” – exceptionally hubristic.

Fears of a full-on global trade war with China have receded somewhat this week because the Trump administration sought to walk back from the proposed tariffs on Chinese exports. Earlier President Trump was bragging that he would easily win a trade war with China. But following Beijing’s announcement of penalties on American agricultural exports, aviation and cars, the White House is toning down the bellicose rhetoric – albeit still griping about China’s moves as “not being fair”.

On the expulsion of Russian diplomats, it should be recalled that there have been several rounds of such American sanctions, going back to December 2016 when the Obama administration expelled some 30 Russian envoys and their families over allegations of Moscow “interfering in US elections”. During the Trump administration, Russia’s diplomatic properties have also been shuttered and raided by US law enforcement officers.

All these American diplomatic censures have been launched on the back of unproven allegations of Russian interference in US democracy. The irony is that these claims have been made by Trump’s political enemies as a way to smear his presidency as somehow being a beneficiary of Kremlin subversion, yet his administration has ratcheted up the diplomatic tensions with Russia by expelling its diplomats over unfounded claims.

The American claims of Russian “cyberattacks” are of a piece with the recent British claims about Kremlin agents allegedly carrying out an assassination plot on its territory. The claims are always in the realm of assertion, with no verifiable evidence to support. Indeed, it looks as if both narratives on either side of the Atlantic are unravelling from the lack of credibility. US special investigator Robert Mueller can’t find any evidence of Russian collusion with Trump – after a year of probing and congressional hearings. Meanwhile, British government scientists are now saying they actually have no evidence that an alleged nerve poison apparently used against Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia was originated in Russia – flatly contradicting the high-flown assertions made last month by British Prime Minister Theresa May and her bumptious Foreign Minister Boris Johnson.

The point is that disputes between states must be resolved by dialogue and a basic mutual respect. Whether it is disputes over trade matters or politics. All the more so whenever alleged grievances are being levelled recklessly without any supporting proof or adherence to due legal process.

But the conflictual problem seems to stem from an ulterior agenda. American perceived grievances against China and Russia seem more about finding pretexts to pursue aggressive policy at all costs. Several foreign policy and military documents out of Washington have openly declared Beijing and Moscow as “rival powers”. This gets back to the issue of American global power relying on a unipolar hegemonic ambition, unable and unwilling to engage with China or Russia as mutual powers. Or anyone else for that matter in a multipolar world.

In order to pursue this dangerous ambition, Washington must – out of warped necessity – erode and cut off diplomatic engagement with China and Russia. That explains why Washington has initiated such aggressive moves over trade and expulsion of envoys. Ominously, it harks to the maxim of “war as a continuation of politics by other means” formulated by the Prussian military strategist Karl von Clausewitz (1780-1831).

What we are witnessing is a hollowing out of US diplomacy and its replacement with a policy of bellicosity. The Trump administration has gutted the State Department and its diplomatic corps.

This is inevitably a reprehensible decent into barbarism by Washington where international law and norms of dialogue are being repudiated out of hand. Why, for example, does Washington not take its alleged trade grievances with China to the World Trade Organization and resolve them in a civilized forum?

The degeneration of American diplomacy is perhaps most glaringly apparent when it hypocritically protests about “unfair” practices by China and Russia that merely reciprocate its own offensive behaviour.

When such arrogant delusion has taken hold, it does not bode well for civilized resolution and a peaceful international order. Because such an attitude violates the foundations of civilized multilateralism upon which international peace depends.

The arrogance of American unilateralism over trade bullying with China and the senseless diplomatic row with Russia is a disastrous resort to “might is right”.

American hypocrisy is a symptom of its degenerate diplomacy and contempt for international law. That in turn is a symptom of American democracy degenerating into a moribund morass. Blaming China and Russia is a desperate attempt to cover-up the inherent existential problems of American capitalism.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: Ada (#0)

Blaming China and Russia is a desperate attempt to cover-up the inherent existential problems of American capitalism jew bankers.

“The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out... without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, intolerable.” ~ H. L. Mencken

Lod  posted on  2018-04-06   21:39:04 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]