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Scare The World: Obama Puts US Back On Track

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  • Scare The World: Obama Puts US Back On Track

    SCARE THE WORLD: OBAMA PUTS US BACK ON TRACK
    By Alexander Cockburn

    First Post
    http://www.thefirstpost.co.uk/60823,news-comm ent,news-politics,alexander-cockburn-scare-the-wor ld-barack-obama-puts-america-back-on-track
    March 11 2010
    UK

    Accused of bumbling, Barack Obama is only doing what's expected of
    him - flexing American muscle

    Are they really bumblers? The establishment's opinion columns quiver
    with reproofs for maladroit handling of foreign policy by President
    Obama and his Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton. Meanwhile, those
    who cherished foolish illusions that Obama's election might presage
    a shift to the left in foreign policy fret about "worrisome signs"
    that this is not the case.

    It's true that there have been some embarrassing moments. Vice
    President Biden, on a supposed mission of peace to Israel, is given the
    traditional welcome - a pledge by Israel to build more settlements,
    plus an adamant refusal to reverse the accelerating evictions of
    Palestinians from their homes in East Jerusalem.

    Hillary Clinton, touring Latin America, was not greeted with gobs of
    spit, like Vice President Richard Nixon back in 1958, but she did get
    a couple of robust diplomatic slaps from Brazil's foreign minister,
    Celso Armorim, rejecting Mrs Clinton's hostile references to Venezuela
    and calls for tougher action towards Iran.

    Amid detailed news reports of butchered activists in Tegucigalpa, Latin
    Americans and even some Democratic members of the US Congress listened
    incredulously to Mrs Clinton's brazen hosannas to the supposedly
    violence-free election of Honduras' new, US-sanctioned President Lobo
    in a process to which both the Organisation of American States and
    the European Union refused to lend the sanction of official observers.

    Meanwhile China signals its displeasure at the US with stentorian
    protests about Obama's friendliness towards the Dalai Lama. The
    People's Republic continues its rumblings about shrinking its vast
    position in US Treasury bonds.

    The Turks recall their ambassador from Washington in the wake of a
    vote in a US congressional committee to recognise the massacre of
    the Armenians in 1916 as "genocide".

    Russia signals its grave displeasure at Mrs Clinton's rejection,
    in a speech at the Ecole Militaire in Paris, of President Medvedev's
    proposal to negotiate a new security pact for Europe. "We object to
    any spheres of influence claimed in Europe in which one country seeks
    to control another's future," she said.

    Shortly before this categorical statement, Poland announced that the
    US would deploy Patriot missiles on its territory, less than 50 miles
    from the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad on the Baltic Sea.

    Is this partial list a reflection of incompetence, or a registration
    that, with a minor hiccup or two, US foreign policy under Obama is
    moving purposefully forward in its basic enterprise: to restore US
    credibility in the world theatre as the planet's premier power after
    eight years of poor management?

    Consider the situation that this Democratic president inherited. In
    January 2009, the world was reeling amidst violent economic
    contraction. Obituaries for the American Century were a dime a dozen.

    The US dollar's future as the world's reserve currency was written
    off with shouts of derision. Imperial adventuring, as in the 2003
    invasion of Iraq, was routinely denounced as fit only for Kipling
    buffs. The progressives who voted Obama in were flushed with triumph
    and expectation.

    Not much more than a year later Obama has smoothed off the rough edges
    of Bush-era foreign policy, while preserving and indeed widening its
    goals, those in place through the entire post-war era since 1945.

    Latin America? Enough of talk about a new era, led by Chavez of
    Venezuela, Morales of Bolivia and other progressive leaders. So far as
    Uncle Sam is concerned, this is still his backyard. On the campaign
    trail in 2008 it was Republican John McCain who was reviled as the
    lobbyist for Colombia's death squad patron, president Uribe. Today,
    it's Obama who presides over an adamantly pro-Uribe policy, supervising
    a widening of US military basing facilities in Colombia.

    As an early signal of continuity, Honduras' impertinent president
    Zelaya, guilty of populist thoughts, was briskly evicted with US
    approval and behind-the-scenes stage management.

    If ever there was a nation for whose enduring misery the US bears
    irrefutable responsibility (along with France) it is Haiti. The
    hovels which fell down in the earthquake were those of people rendered
    destitute by US policies since Jefferson, and most notably by the man
    to whom Obama is most often compared, another Nobel peace prize-winning
    US president, Woodrow Wilson.

    The houses that did not fall down in such numbers were those of the
    affluent elites, most recently protected by Bill Clinton, who was
    second only to Wilson in the horrors he sponsored in Haiti.

    Yet under Obama the US is hailed as a merciful and generous provider
    for the stricken nation, even though it has been Cuba and Venezuela
    who have been the stalwarts, with doctors (in the case of Cuba) and
    total debt forgiveness (in the case of Venezuela.) The US refused
    such debt relief.

    Israel? Not one substantive twitch has discommoded the benign support
    of Israel by its patron, even though Obama stepped into power amidst
    Israel's methodical war crimes - later enumerated by Judge Goldstone
    for the UN - in Gaza. Consistent US policy has been to advocate
    a couple of mini-Bantustans for the Palestinians and under Obama
    the US has endured no substantive opposition to this plan from its
    major allies.

    With Iran there is absolute continuity with the Bush years, sans
    the noisy braggadocio of Cheney: assiduous and generally successful
    diplomatic efforts to secure international agreement for deepening
    sanctions; disinformation campaigns about Iran's adherence to
    international treaties, very much in the Bush style of 2002. In the
    interests of overall US strategy in the region, Israel is held on
    a leash.

    No need to labour the obvious about Afghanistan: an enlarged US
    expeditionary force engineered with one laughable pledge - earnestly
    brandished by the progressives - that the troops will be home in
    time for the elections of 2012. The US - and indeed world - anti-war
    movements live only in memory. Earlier this week, Congressional
    Democrats in the House could barely muster 60 votes against the
    Afghan war.

    Russia? Vice President Biden excited the foreign policy commentariat
    with talk of a "reset" in posture towards Russia. Outside rhetoric,
    there's been no such reset - merely continuation of US policy since
    the post-Soviet collapse. Last October Biden emphasised that the US
    "will not tolerate" any "spheres of influence," nor Russia's "veto
    power" on the eastward expansion of NATO. Yet the US is involved in
    retraining the Georgian army.

    China may thunder about the Dalai Lama and Taiwan - but on the larger
    stage the Middle Kingdom's world heft is much exaggerated. The astute
    China watcher Peter Lee hit the mark when he wrote recently in Asia
    Times that "the US is cannily framing and choosing fights that unite
    the US, the EU, and significant resource producers, and isolate China
    and force it to defend unpopular positions alone. By my reading,
    China is pretty much a one-trick pony in international affairs. It
    offers economic partnership and cash. What it doesn't have is what
    the US has: military reach... heft in the global financial markets
    (Beijing's immense over-exposure to US government securities is,
    I think, becoming less of an advantage and more of a liability),
    or a large slate of loyal and effective allies in international
    organisation."

    The United States, as Lee points out, is also making "good progress
    in pursuing the most destabilising initiative of the next 20 years:
    encouragement of India's rise from Afghanistan through to Myanmar as
    a rival and distraction to China".

    All of this is scarcely a catalogue of bumbledom. Obama is just
    what the Empire needed. Plagued though it may be by deep structural
    problems, he has improved its malign potential for harm - the first
    duty of all US Presidents of whatever imagined political stripe.

    â~@¢ Oscars in the Age of Obama

    IF YOU WANT a signifier of the changed image of empire, and imperial
    adventures in foreign lands, think about last Sunday's six Oscars
    for The Hurt Locker, including ones for best picture and best director.

    The film's director, Kathryn Bigelow, said at the end of her acceptance
    speech: "I'd like to dedicate this to the women and men in the military
    who risk their lives on a daily basis in Iraq and Afghanistan and
    around the world and may they come home safe."

    Suppose Bigelow's former husband, James Cameron, had won best director
    for Avatar. There is surely no way Cameron would ever have dedicated
    his Oscar to any soldiers, American or Canadian, serving as members
    of the imperial coalition - volunteers all - in Iraq or Afghanistan,
    unless they had defected to the other side or mutinied and been put
    in the brig or were facing a firing squad for treason. There is also
    surely no way that any movie about a serving unit in Iraq would have
    been in the running for an Oscar back in Bush time.

    I hoped Avatar would get a big Oscar rather than the consolation
    ones for cinematography and special effects. It would have honoured
    a truly uncompromising anti-war, anti-American Empire movie.

    I haven't seen The Hurt Locker and don't plan to, having endured
    more than one bomb-disposal film in my movie-going career. Also the
    circumstances of the movie's filming seemed distasteful, with scenes
    shot in a Palestinian refugee camp in Jordan. "We had these Blackwater
    guys that were working with us in the Middle East and they taught us
    like tactical maneuvers and stuff - how to just basically position
    yourself and move with a gun," Hurt Locker actor Anthony Mackie told
    the New York Times' Melena Ryzik. "We were shooting in Palestinian
    refugee camps. We were shooting in some pretty hard places. It wasn't
    like we were without enemies. There were people there looking at us,
    'cuz we were three guys in American military suits runnin' around
    with guns. It was nothing easy about it. It was always a compromising
    situation."

    After Jeremy Scahill wrote an item in The Nation about Blackwater's
    role, as disclosed by Ryzik, the author of The Hurt Locker's
    screenplay, Mark Boal, made haste to contact him to deny that
    Blackwater had ever been hired in any capacity. Boal apparently
    supervised all such hiring of military and security consultants.

    Scahill asked him about comments made by the film's director,
    Kathryn Bigelow, in other interviews, mentioning the presence of
    Blackwater personnel on set, including as technical advisers. "It's
    possible," Boal conceded, "that at some point somebody on set worked
    for Blackwater, but we never hired Blackwater."

    However, Melena Ryzik described Mackie showing her how the Blackwater
    men trained him to hold his weapon. "If you're a trained killer,"
    Mackie told Ryzik, "you're very precise." This is Blackwater-precision,
    as displayed by the panic-stricken contractors when they mowed down
    17 unarmed Iraqi civilians in Nisour Square in Baghdad in 2007.

    But then, as Obama quoted in his Nobel peace prize acceptance speech
    from his favourite intellectual and unappetising apologist for Empire,
    Reinhold Niebuhr: "To say that force may sometimes be necessary is not
    a call to cynicism - it is a recognition of history; the imperfections
    of man and the limits of reason."
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