President Donald Trump’s recent statement
on the Jamal Khashoggi killing by Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince might
well be considered a metaphor for his foreign policy. Several
commentators have suggested that the text appears to be something that
Trump wrote himself without any adult supervision, similar to the poorly
expressed random arguments presented in his tweeting only longer. That
might be the case, but it would not be wise to dismiss the document as
merely frivolous or misguided as it does in reality express the kind of
thinking that has produced a foreign policy that seems to drift randomly
to no real end, a kind of leaderless creative destruction of the United
States as a world power.
Lord
Palmerston, Prime Minister of Britain in the mid nineteenth century,
famously said that “Nations have no permanent friends or allies, they
only have permanent interests.”The United States currently has neither
real friends nor any clearly defined interests. It is, however, infested
with parasites that have convinced an at-drift America that their
causes are identical to the interests of the United States. Leading the
charge to reduce the U.S. to “bitch” status, as Congresswoman Tulsi
Gabbard has artfully put it,
are Israel and Saudi Arabia, but there are many other countries,
alliances and advocacy groups that have learned how to subvert and
direct the “leader of the free world.”
Trump’s
memo on the Saudis begins with the headline “The world is a very
dangerous place!” Indeed, it is and behavior by the three occupants of
the White House since 2000 is largely to blame. It is difficult to find a
part of the world where an actual American interest is being served by
Washington’s foreign and global security policies. Indeed, a national
security policy that sees competitors and adversaries as enemies in a
military sense has made nuclear war, unthinkable since the demise of the
Soviet Union in 1991, thinkable once again. The fact that no one is the
media or in political circles is even talking about that terrible
danger suggests that war has again become mainstreamed, tacitly
benefiting from bipartisan acceptance of it as a viable foreign policy
tool by the media, in the U.S. Congress and also in the White House..........http://www.unz.com/pgiraldi/u-s-foreign-policy-has-no-policy/
No comments:
Post a Comment