A spy or a patriot?
>> Friday, July 27, 2018
PERRYSCOPE
Perry Diaz
Once the undisputed
leader of the free world since the end of World War II, the United States, led the fight against Communism. American
presidents took their jobs and responsibilities seriously in seeing to it that
red lines were drawn to deter the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR)
from expanding. This came to be known as “containment.”
In 1946, the diplomat
George Kennan explained this “containment” policy: “The Soviet Union
was a political force committed fanatically to the belief that with the U.S.
there can be no permanent modus vivendi.” The following year, President
Harry Truman asked Congress to adopt a policy “The US should give support to
countries or peoples threatened by Soviet forces or communist
insurrection.” This principle came to be known as the “Truman
Doctrine.” This was the beginning of the Cold War.
Trump blasts NATO
Last July 11-12, NATO’s
cohesiveness was put to test when President Donald Trump attended the annual
NATO summit in Brussels, Belgium. On his first day, Trump and
several of his aides had breakfast with NATO Secretary General Jens
Stoltenberg. The event, which was televised, began with Trump
criticizing German Chancellor Angela Merkel (who was not present) and
complained about a gas pipeline linking Russia to Germany, which the German
government had approved. He then accused Germany of being “a
captive of Russia.”
When the NATO leaders
began their summit meeting, Trump accused them of being delinquent in their
defense spending and insisted they double it to 4% of their
GDP. However, the 28 other leaders ignored Trump’s proposed
increased military spending and instead agreed to a joint summit declaration
that recommitted them to moving toward the 2% target by 2024, which they
already had agreed upon during the 2014 summit. But Trump countered
by tweeting that he had “single-handedly raised vast amounts of money” for
NATO. Evidently, he lied again.
On July 13, Trump
visited the Queen of England and met with UK Prime Minister Theresa
May. It was a pretty hectic week but it could have generated a lot
of goodwill among the leaders of NATO and strengthened America’s enduring
military partnership with her 28 NATO allies. Instead, Trump wreaked havoc
on the alliance.
Foolish, stupid
But not only did Trump
blast his NATO allies, he blamed his own country for the deterioration of relations
with Russia. Before the Helsinki summit began, Trump tweeted: “Our
relationship with Russia has NEVER been worse thanks to many years of U.S.
foolishness and stupidity and now, the Rigged Witch Hunt!" The
Russian foreign ministry tweeted back: "We agree."
On July 16, Trump and
Putin met in Helsinki, Finland, behind closed doors with just their
interpreters. Their meeting lasted more than two
hours. When they finally emerged in the pressroom, Putin was
noticeably observed walking with his signature KGB stance. Putin
took charge of the briefing by speaking first. His report did not
reveal anything that showed what they had agreed upon in specific, measurable,
and deliverable terms. They’re all nice things to hear if you happen
to be in Alice’s Wonderland. But in geopolitical terms, it’s all
hogwash.
Chilling shock waves
During the question and
answer session, Trump was asked about the indictment of 12 officers from
Russia’s GRU, the equivalent of the CIA. Indicted for
allegedly hacking the Democratic Party’s computer servers during the 2016
elections, Special Counsel Robert Mueller III issued a 29-page indictment on
July 13, 2018 against the Russian spies.
The investigation that
led to the indictment was backed up by US intelligence agencies’ detailed
narrative, which was provided to Trump before the summit. But in a
surprising – and stunning – rebuke of the US intelligence community, Trump
declined to endorse the US government’s assessment that Russia interfered in
the 2016 elections, saying he doesn’t “see any reason why" Russia
would be responsible.
Standing next to Putin,
he then firmly said in no uncertain terms: “I have great confidence
in my intelligence people. But, I will tell you that President Putin was
extremely strong and powerful in his denial today. He just said it’s
not Russia. I will say this: I don’t see any reason why it
would.” Evidently, Trump just vindicated Putin of interfering in the
US elections, which sent chilling shock waves around the world. Trump
had just thrown America and the American people under the bus.
When Putin was asked
whether he had actively wanted Trump to win the presidency, and if he directed
any officials to help ensure Trump would win, Putin may have let the cat out of the bag
without knowing the repercussion. His answer to the double question
was: “Yes, I did. Yes, I did. Because he [Trump] talked
about bringing the US-Russia relationship back to normal.”
The following day, as
criticisms of Trump’s performance snowballed upon his return to Washington, he
hastily gathered reporters at the White House. He professed his full
faith in the U.S. intelligence agencies. But in a play of words,
Trump used the “Would/Wouldn’t” word game, apparently in a desperate attempt to
control the geopolitical tsunami he created in Helsinki.
He then read a prepared
script by his staff, “In a key sentence in my remarks, I said
‘would’ instead of ‘wouldn’t.’ The sentence should have been, ‘I don’t see any
reason why it wouldn’t be Russia.’ I think that probably
clarifies it,” he said. Then he added, extemporaneously (unscripted): “It could
be other people also. There are a lot of people out there. There was no
collusion at all,” in an apparent attempt to shield Putin and the indicted
Russian spies. That blew it!
Pax Russica
In defense of Putin,
former Republican presidential candidate and commentator Patrick Buchanan
posted on his website: “Trump’s message has been clear, consistent
and startling. NATO is obsolete. European allies have freeloaded off U.S. defense
while rolling up huge trade surpluses at our expense. Those days are over.
Europeans are going to stop stealing our markets and start paying for their own
defense. And there will be no Cold War II.”
This brings to the fore
how Putin reacted at the end of Cold War I. In his annual state of the nation
address to Russian parliament and the country’s top political leaders in April
2005, Putin said the Soviet collapse was a tragedy for
Russians. “First and foremost it is worth acknowledging that the
demise of the Soviet Union was the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the
century,” Putin said. “As for the Russian people, it became a genuine
tragedy. Tens of millions of our fellow citizens and countrymen found
themselves beyond the fringes of Russian territory.”
In retrospect, it is a
well-known fact that Reagan was instrumental in the dissolution of the Soviet
Empire in 1989 when he worked with USSR’s Secretary General Mikhail Gorbachev
under the principle of “detante,” a period of easing of the geopolitical
tensions between the US and USSR, which led to lessening the Cold War.
But detante worked
favorably for Reagan because his goal – unbeknown to Gorbachev -- was to
achieve the end of communism in Eastern Europe, the breakup of the Warsaw Pact,
and, eventually, the dissolution of the Soviet Union. In Putin’s
playbook, he’d use Trump to achieve the breakup of the European Union (EU) and
the dissolution of NATO (23 of the 28 members of EU are members of NATO), the
same way Reagan used Gorbachev to break up of the Warsaw Pact and the collapse
of the Soviet Union.
Yes, Trump and Buchanan
were right; there will be no more Cold War II, not because America and Russia
would become partners and the two world superpowers. It’s because
America would cease to be the world’s sole superpower, and EU and NATO would no
longer exist.
The Russian Federation
would then fill the power vacuum left by the US and become the only
superpower. It would be the birth of a new Russian Empire that would
include all the former Soviet satellites that had joined the defunct
NATO. It would be a complete turnaround of the East-West
geopolitical relationship. Hence, we’ll see the end of Pax Americana
and the beginning of Pax Russica.
Spies among us
Just about the time
Trump and Putin were answering questions from reporters at the conclusion of
their private meeting, a Russian national residing in the US, Maria Butina, was
arrested and indicted on charges of conspiracy and acting as a foreign agent.
Putin’s background as a
KGB officer assigned in East Germany before the implosion of the Soviet Empire
could most probably been involved in recruiting spies – known as “assets” -- to
work for Russia. East Germany was then a hotbed of espionage
activities because of its proximity to NATO countries. Would it be
outrageous then to suspect that Trump could be Putin’s asset?
In my column, “Was
Trump the Siberian Candidate?” (December 28, 2016), I wrote: “During
the presidential campaign, the American media had suggested that Trump was the
‘Siberian Candidate’ whom Putin helped in winning the presidency by
orchestrating the hacking of the U.S. elections. While Trump seemed
to be Putin’s man in the U.S. elections, it’s turning out now that Trump may
have deceived – or tricked — Putin all along to help him win the
election. And this begs the question: Was Trump the ‘Siberian Candidate’
or an American patriot?” A wise man once said, “When in doubt, there
is no doubt.” (PerryDiaz@gmail.com)
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