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Ron Paul See other Ron Paul Articles Title: Who Is Making US Foreign Policy? An anti-neocon president appears to have been surrounded by neocons in his own administration. President Trump campaigned and was elected on an anti-neocon platform: he promised to reduce direct US involvement in areas where, he believed, America had no vital strategic interest, including in Ukraine. He also promised a new détente (cooperation) with Moscow. And yet, as we have learned from their recent congressional testimony, key members of his own National Security Council did not share his views and indeed were opposed to them. Certainly, this was true of Fiona Hill and Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman. Both of them seemed prepared for a highly risky confrontation with Russia over Ukraine, though whether retroactively because of Moscows 2014 annexation of Crimea or for more general reasons was not entirely clear. Similarly, Trump was slow in withdrawing Marie Yovanovitch, a career foreign service officer appointed by President Obama as ambassador to Kiev, who had made clear, despite her official position in Kiev, that she did not share the new American presidents thinking about Ukraine or Russia. In short, the president was surrounded in his own administration, even in the White House, by opponents of his foreign policy and presumably not only in regard to Ukraine. How did this unusual and dysfunctional situation come about? One possibility is that it was the doing and legacy of the neocon John Bolton, briefly Trumps national security adviser. But this doesnt explain why the president would accept or long tolerate such appointees. A more plausible explanation is that Trump thought that by appointing such anti-Russian hard-liners he could lay to rest the Russiagate allegations that had hung over him for three years and still did: that for some secret nefarious reason he was and remained a Kremlin puppet. Despite the largely exculpatory Mueller report, Trumps political enemies, mostly Democrats but not only, have kept the allegations alive. The larger question is who should make American foreign policy: an elected president or Washingtons permanent foreign policy establishment? (It is scarcely a deep or secret state, since its representatives appear on CNN and MSNBC almost daily.) Today, Democrats seem to think that it should be the foreign policy establishment, not President Trump. But having heard the cold-war views of much of that establishment, how will they feel when a Democrat occupies the White House? After all, eventually Trump will leave power, but Washingtons foreign-policy blob, as even an Obama aide termed it, will remain. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Ada (#0)
To answer the question: jews and the jew controlled congress and white house.
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