The Mind of Mr. Putin – Patrick J. Buchanan
The Mind of Mr. Putin
Friday – October 2, 2015 at 12:15 am
Source: The Mind of Mr. Putin – Patrick J. Buchanan – Official Website
By Patrick J. Buchanan
“Do you realize now what you have done?”
So Vladimir Putin in his U.N. address summarized his indictment of a U.S. foreign policy that has produced a series of disasters in the Middle East that we did not need the Russian leader to describe for us.
Fourteen years after we invaded Afghanistan, Afghan troops are once again fighting Taliban forces for control of Kunduz. Only 10,000 U.S. troops still in that ravaged country prevent the Taliban’s triumphal return to power.
A dozen years after George W. Bush invaded Iraq, ISIS occupies its second city, Mosul, controls its largest province, Anbar, and holds Anbar’s capital, Ramadi, as Baghdad turns away from us — to Tehran.
The cost to Iraqis of their “liberation”? A hundred thousand dead, half a million widows and fatherless children, millions gone from the country and, still, unending war.
How has Libya fared since we “liberated” that land? A failed state, it is torn apart by a civil war between an Islamist “Libya Dawn” in Tripoli and a Tobruk regime backed by Egypt’s dictator.
Then there is Yemen. Since March, when Houthi rebels chased a Saudi sock puppet from power, Riyadh, backed by U.S. ordinance and intel, has been bombing that poorest of nations in the Arab world.
Five thousand are dead and 25,000 wounded since March. And as the 25 million Yemeni depend on imports for food, which have been largely cut off, what is happening is described by one U.N. official as a “humanitarian catastrophe.”
“Yemen after five months looks like Syria after five years,” said the international head of the Red Cross on his return.
On Monday, the wedding party of a Houthi fighter was struck by air-launched missiles with 130 guests dead. Did we help to produce that?
What does Putin see as the ideological root of these disasters?
“After the end of the Cold War, a single center of domination emerged in the world, and then those who found themselves at the top of the pyramid were tempted to think they were strong and exceptional, they knew better.”
Then, adopting policies “based on self-conceit and belief in one’s exceptionality and impunity,” this “single center of domination,” the United States, began to export “so-called democratic” revolutions.
How did it all turn out? Says Putin:
“An aggressive foreign interference has resulted in a brazen destruction of national institutions. … Instead of the triumph of democracy and progress, we got violence, poverty and social disaster.
Nobody cares a bit about human rights, including the right to life.”
Is Putin wrong in his depiction of what happened to the Middle East after we plunged in? Or does his summary of what American interventions have wrought echo the warnings made against them for years by American dissenters?
Putin concept of “state sovereignty” is this: “We are all different, and we should respect that. No one has to conform to a single development model that someone has once and for all recognized as the right one.”
The Soviet Union tried that way, said Putin, and failed. Now the Americans are trying the same thing, and they will reach the same end.
Unlike most U.N. speeches, Putin’s merits study. For he not only identifies the U.S. mindset that helped to produce the new world disorder, he identifies a primary cause of the emerging second Cold War.
To Putin, the West’s exploitation of its Cold War victory to move NATO onto Russia’s doorstep caused the visceral Russian recoil. The U.S.-backed coup in Ukraine that overthrew the elected pro-Russian government led straight to the violent reaction in the pro-Russian Donbas.
What Putin seems to be saying to us is this:
If America’s elites continue to assert their right to intervene in the internal affairs of nations, to make them conform to a U.S. ideal of what is a good society and legitimate government, then we are headed for endless conflict. And, one day, this will inevitably result in war, as more and more nations resist America’s moral imperialism.
Nations have a right to be themselves, Putin is saying.
They have the right to reflect in their institutions their own histories, beliefs, values and traditions, even if that results in what Americans regard as illiberal democracies or authoritarian capitalism or even Muslim theocracies.
There was a time, not so long ago, when Americans had no problem with this, when Americans accepted a diversity of regimes abroad. Indeed, a belief in nonintervention abroad was once the very cornerstone of American foreign policy.
Wednesday and Thursday, Putin’s forces in Syria bombed the camps of U.S.-backed rebels seeking to overthrow Assad. Putin is sending a signal: Russia is willing to ride the escalator up to a collision with the United States to prevent us and our Sunni Arab and Turkish allies from dumping over Assad, which could bring ISIS to power in Damascus.
Perhaps it is time to climb down off our ideological high horse and start respecting the vital interests of other sovereign nations, even as we protect and defend our own.
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October 4, 2015 at 2:56 PM
US Senator John McCain whines about ‘Disgraceful’ Russian Airstrikes
Listen to this exceptional example of megalomania .
The USA can and must bomb all over the world at their will !
October 4, 2015 at 3:53 PM
John Quincy Adams on “American Exceptionalism” http://tinyurl.com/nquyzbs
It made sense way back then….and it is still the sensible way to behave as a nation.
October 4, 2015 at 4:06 PM
Hat tip Skip Patel
John Quincy Adams on “American Exceptionalism”
John Quincy Adams, while secretary of state, delivered an Independence Day speech in the House of Representatives on July 4, 1821. If the “inventors of Congreve rockets and Shrapnel shells” should enquire as to what “America has done for the benefit of mankind,” Adams said, “Let our answer be this: America, with the same voice which spoke herself into existence as a nation, proclaimed to mankind the indistinguishable rights of human nature and the only lawful foundations of government.” But the Declaration of those truths did not impose upon our nation the duty to enforce them all over the world. The United States had over half a century, Adams observed, “respected the independence of other nations while asserting and maintaining her own. She has abstained from interference in the concerns of others, even when conflict has been for principles to which she clings, as to the last vital drop that visits the heart.”
America, said Adams, “goes not abroad in search of monsters to destroy. She is the well-wisher to the freedom and independence of all. She is the champion and vindicator only of her own.” Our nation’s “glory is not dominion, but liberty. Her march is the march of the mind. She has a spear and a shield: but the motto upon her shield is, Freedom, Independence, Peace. This has been her Declaration: this has been, as far as her necessary intercourse with the rest of mankind would permit, her practice.”
It is a practice that the America of our time has long since abandoned. And the costs, in blood, treasure, and further chaos in lands where our bombs and bullets have failed to bring “peace and stability,” have yet to be fully calculated. But there is yet another cost, one that cannot be measured in dollars or even in lives. America seeking dominion over other nations, Adams warned, “might become the dictatress of the world: she would be no longer the ruler of her own spirit.”
http://www.thenewamerican.com/culture/history/item/18633-american-exceptionalism-true-and-false
That is the USA where i dreamed over years ago , as a bright example for human kind.
A nation state born out of freedom and not out of a feudal system.
But this beautiful experiment ( USA ) is wracked into something ugly .
When i visit a long time ago the USA i read the beautiful words carved in rocks with tears in my eyes at Mount Rushmore .
I spend over a year in the USA and visit 35 states .
October 4, 2015 at 4:22 PM
Excellently brought up, Skip Patel.
I fully agree with J.Q. Adams.
As then, so now.
The principle of non interference in other countries, by war or similar shit, is as important in the 21st century as it was in the 19th.
Democracy, as we understand it in the western world, will not work in the Middle East, no matter what western propaganda tries to say.
Lies, after lie, after lie.
As to John McCain, the best thing he could do, for the US first and for the rest of the world afterwards, is to retire and enjoy his $$$, a big chunk of it made by illegal weapons selling by the way…
October 4, 2015 at 5:32 PM
The United States Code is unequivocal: 18 USC § 2339A “providing material support to terrorists” is a crime:
Let’s indict McCain. O’Bama & Hillary!
McCain-Obama Terrorist funding~ http://tinyurl.com/pashk4y
Senator John McCain, Foreign Relations “Adviser” to Al Qaeda Death Squads in Syria http://tinyurl.com/l9kr3v9
18 USC § 2339A – Providing material support to terrorists
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/2339A
October 4, 2015 at 6:02 PM
Yep.
You nailed it.
That’s why I support Putin bombing both IS and the “moderate Syrian rebels”.