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RSN: Trump and the November 6th Election Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=38303"><span class="small">Ronnie Dugger, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Thursday, 01 November 2018 10:50

Dugger writes: "As former Labor secretary Robert Reich wrote this month on Reader Supported News, 'All three branches of government are now under control of one party, and that party is under the control of Donald J. Trump.' That is why USA Today concluded that its just-completed poll with Suffolk University about the national midterm elections of November 6th was 'all about the man who's not on the ballot.'"

Sign for polling station. (photo: Getty)
Sign for polling station. (photo: Getty)


Trump and the November 6th Election

By Ronnie Dugger, Reader Supported News

01 November 18

 

s former Labor secretary Robert Reich wrote last month on Reader Supported News, “All three branches of government are now under control of one party, and that party is under the control of Donald J. Trump.” That is why USA Today concluded that its just-completed poll with Suffolk University about the national midterm elections of November 6th was “all about the man who’s not on the ballot.”

The federal voting will be for Congressional candidates. USA Today’s poll last week indicated that more than half of those polled will be thinking about President Trump when they’re voting. They should be. With the Republican officials in Congress sheepishly obeying Trump’s threatening orders how to vote, citizens who vote to put Republicans in Congress November 6th will be siding for Trump as the president for at least the next two years. If the Republicans keep control of both chambers of Congress in the election, that will strengthen the prospect that the United States under Trump will further strengthen dictatorship and weaken democracy and social justice here and around the world.

Trump has failed to order and require his executive agencies to punish Russia for their Dictator Putin secretly and illegally interfering in our 2016 presidential election and thereby helping elect Trump president. Trump has sided against the FBI and U.S. intelligence agencies’ condemnations of that interference, instead agreeing with Putin’s denial they did it. The Democratic majority member of the House Intelligence Committee wants an investigation into whether Putin has secret power over our president.

Running for president, Trump exploited the Democratic Party’s slowly worsening neglect of working Americans’ causes and needs during the past 40 years by promising again and again to champion “the left-out and forgotten Americans.” Instead, although he has been the most powerful person on earth for the last 22 months, he has said and done literally nothing to help raise the morally criminal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour and has weakened both the job safety of working people and the unions of millions of federal workers.

Trump damned the U.S. war on Iraq and promised to end it. Instead, he has enlarged it, making the longest war in U.S. history two years longer. He has impulsively and illegally bombed Syria with 59 missiles; without authority from Congress he has continued our arming and refueling in the air Saudi Arabia’s airplanes bombing Yemen, and he has withdrawn us from the historic six-nation agreement with Iran delaying its nuclear arsenal ten or so years.

A lifelong self-promoter, Trump as a candidate promised again and again to “drain the swamp” of the bribes and corporate dominations in Washington. Instead, he has kept his finances totally secret and his companies under his total personal ownership, actively profiting for himself in impeachable violations of the Constitution. The swamp of Washington corruption has been worsened shamelessly in his cabinet of major CEOs of corporations and banks. He has shown himself to be our most corrupting president since the late 19th Century.

Sworn to uphold the Constitution, including of course freedom of the press, Trump again and again has condemned the free press (in late October as “The Fake News Media, the true Enemy of the People.”)

In his most insistent policy program he uses cruel prejudice and even hate of foreigners – Hispanics, Muslims, asylum seekers who, fleeing hells in their countries, he now illegally refuses entry into ours. He has even torn apart families blocked at the border, with the government left unable to later return frightened children to their parents. On October 29th he messaged to the caravan coming up in Mexico, “This is an invasion of our Country and our Military is waiting for you!” The other side on this, to quote the poem on the Statue of Liberty, is “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to be free.”

Worst of all, though, so far, Donald J. Trump is the only American president we have ever had who beyond any denial or doubt on the subject is a conscious, dishonest, continuous, vicious, libelous, and pathological liar. We conclude alas after 22 months of closely listening to, reading, and watching him that this is who he is and we will not change him.

* * *

The most important reason why voters should be voting against Trump’s supine Republican supporters in the Congress, in my opinion, is his high danger to us and the rest of the human race because he is the one and only person in our country who now has total control over the use of our arsenal of nuclear weapons, in addition, of course, to his command of the rest of our most powerfully lethal military in the history of the world.

Just one of our Hbombs can kill everyone in any city anywhere on earth. Trump is an emotional egomaniac and reacts infuriatedly, revengefully, and often viciously when insulted or criticized or when he sees himself as being “a loser” in public opinion. He has called people he is slamming “deranged,” and some of his critics say he is deranged, too. He just called billionaire Tom Steyer, who has raised almost six million signatures on a petition to impeach him, “a crazed and stumbling lunatic.” How the terribly damaging opinion that someone is mentally ill is posed matters. “Is he mentally ill?” seems a question for psychologists or psychiatrists. “Is he stable?” an informed and intelligent lay person is likelier to feel entitled to decide about as a citizen. “Is he impulsive?” many would just answer “yes.” But concerning whether Donald Trump himself should be the sole user-in-chief of our most massively murderous arsenal in history, I believe every voter should try to answer the question mentally before voting. A national election can endanger our whole human race. The world may depend on who wins it.

In the 1980s, when Trump was a notorious figure in New York City, he told reporters, as I reported fully in Reader Supported News in 2016, that he wanted to become the leading U.S. negotiator in charge of making a deal with Communist Russia to team us up together as the world’s two dominating nuclear-weapons nations and to have that over everybody, especially the smaller nuclear-weapons nations. Perhaps that was the background in his mind in 2016 as he welcomed the news that Putin and disguised Russians were interfering in his presidential campaign with Hillary Clinton and, on international TV, he excitedly called on them, if they had them or could, to make her 30,000 missing emails public.

He has brooded publicly about nuclear weapons many times, recently publicly. He expresses horror about their effects; often now he says he wants to be unpredictable what he might do concerning them. More of the facts are saliently relevant.

Trump ambiguously threatened small nuclear-nation North Korea with U.S. attack if he caused the West to defend ourselves from his nuclear weapons. Addressing the United Nations and thus the world, he threatened Dictator Kim Jong-un that he would “totally destroy North Korea,” a nation of 25 million persons. Surely this horrible threat made before the human race implied, at least, that the president of the United States might use our nuclear weapons against North Korea. Maybe he was bluffing, and maybe not. A nuclear war between them and us could kill maybe ten million people, as Trump himself has said.

Trump has said in passing that he would not make first use of nuclear weapons, but this coming ad lib from a chronic liar is not reassuring. He might start a war, a nuclear war, without the Constitution’s required decision by Congress. When in anger he had us bomb Syria, he did so without authority from Congress. And Congress has never declared war on Yemen, but Trump has continued authorization of our arming Saudi Arabia and our planes’ actions re-fueling its planes in the air as Crown Prince bin Salman bombs and bombs the country. Thus our U.S. under Trump with no OK from Congress nor thus from us, the people, joins Saudi Arabia in killing many thousands of people, eight million of them now said to be consequentially in danger of starvation, leading the UN to call Yemen the worst humanitarian crisis in the world.

Having withdrawn the U.S. from the six-nation treaty with Iran that is delaying the Iranians’ obtaining nuclear weapons for an expected total of 10 or so years, Trump and his current officials have been building verbally what appears to be a case for the U.S. attacking that country. After the famous warmonger John Bolton wrote an essay published in the Wall Street Journal describing and defending as legal a pre-emptive military first-attack on North Korea, Trump called Bolton to his side in the White House to be his new national military adviser.

Another major reason to think “Trump” as one votes in this election is what he is doing to the Supreme Court. A five-or-more majority of its nine members, voting together on their “judicial review,” can and do change or destroy laws formally made the laws of the land by Congress. The Supreme Court majority therefore governs the United States more finally than the 535 members of Congress themselves. Most lawyers characteristically contend the court rulings that justices are making are not political and are only to uphold the Constitution, but as facts by now have made obviously clear, their decisions depend deeply and can be decisively decided on and by their personal political convictions.

As a candidate, Trump made a political agreement with two private right-wing organizations to favor selecting his nominees to the Supreme Court from the two organizations’ prepared lists of right-wing attorneys. Late in Obama’s term as president, the Republican Senate had refused for 14 months even to have a hearing on President Obama’s nominee to replace a justice who had died. Elected, Trump was therefore able to nominate from the list or lists for the thus unfilled vacancy a right-winger, who was approved. Then Justice Kennedy quit, and Trump nominated another listed right-winger, Brett Kavanaugh, to replace him. Withholding 90% of Kavanaugh’s official legal papers when he worked for the second President Bush, Trump and his GOP senators have just forced through Kavanaugh’s confirmation in the Senate in lightning time by a one-vote margin. Speedily also nominating many other federal judges who are getting confirmed, presumably from the court-packing lists, Trump is stacking the now totally politicized Supreme Court with a right-wing Republican majority for probably at least the next 30 or 40 years. The president has said he wants that Republican majority to continue forever.

* * *

Also performing as the dictator he often demonstrates he wants to be, Trump, alone among the leaders of the 193 nations whose representatives had adopted the Paris agreement to try to cooperate internationally to minimize world-threatening climate change, announced he is withdrawing the United States from the agreement because he doesn’t believe climate change justifies it. Obviously he did that to politically pay off the coal, oil, and gas industries. This vividly illustrates what he means by his central slogan, “America First”: Screw the world. He was inattentive, or perhaps silently angry, when this month the United Nations scientific panel on climate change – 91 scientists from 40 countries – warned that without radical steps there is grave danger by as soon as 2040, two decades and two years from now, of ocean-covered coastlines threatening 50 million people and of worsened world poverty and drought. The Democrats are in the minority in Congress. The Republican majorities in Congress have supinely accepted Trump’s historic pollution of the swamp he said he’d drain.

After promising the people health insurance for everyone, Trump, although apparently ignorantly, twice bullied his GOP yes-voters in the House into nearly repealing the Democrats’ Obamacare, which would have thereby repealed health care for tens of millions of citizens and simultaneously cancelled the Democrats’ prohibition against insurance companies denying health insurance because of pre-existing conditions.

Almost unbelievably, a mere year or so later Trump and his leaders are now quite predictably lying with shameless arrogance that if they win November 6th they won’t continue to try to kill the Democrats’ health law. Much worse, as The New York Times’ Paul Krugman reported this month, Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader, broached trying again to repeal Obamacare and “called for… ‘cuts in Medicare, Social Security, and Medicaid.’” McConnell, Democratic senator Elizabeth Warren declared, thus “gave the game away. If Republicans keep control of Congress, they want to pay for their tax breaks for billionaires and giant corporations” with their slashes to come on Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid and they will again try to take health care away from “tens of millions of Americans.”

It would take a book to specify and correctly describe the content and consequences of Trump’s deliberate deregulatory, pro-billionaire, and pro-giant-corporation uses of his great power for himself and his convenient allies and against workers, women, Hispanics, blacks, Muslims, and all poor people white and minority during his first 22 months as the most powerful person in the world. We all know – including the Republicans among us – that they and their party at both state and federal levels are determined to block as many poor whites, blacks, and Hispanics from voting as they can by transparently again turning election rules into barriers for poor people. You might just brush your mind lightly again over Trump’s and the very rich peoples’ fantastic deficit-swelling cut of the corporate tax rate from 35 to 21 percent; his other anti-worker and anti-union executive-order assaults on federal regulations that protect the rights and pocketbooks of ordinary Americans and our actual interests abroad (let’s let his emptyings-out of just the Department of State and Richard Nixon’s Environmental Protection Agency stand for all this); his attacks on NATO and Germany’s Merkel and his support of emerging European pro-fascist countries like Hungary; his authoritarian values dramatized by his admirations of dictators Putin of Russia, Xi Jinping of China, Erdogan of Turkey, bin Salman of Saudi Arabia, and even the mass-murderous Duterte of the Philippines. Oh, yes, he keeps looking for ways to politically blackmail his Republican victims in Congress to pay for his thousand-or-so mile southern border wall…. His no-taking-back thematic anti-democracy damnations of the Democrats now as “evil” and “an angry mob” suggest again that he seeks under himself an American dictatorship and he wants the Republicans to establish a permanent one….

* * *

Usually in the midterm elections Republicans vote Republican, Democrats Democratic, and independents independently. This time though, as I reported, USA Today observed a few days ago that its just-completed poll conducted with Suffolk University about the midterms is “all about the man who’s not on the ballot.” A majority of those just polled there said Donald Trump will have “a lot” of influence on their Congressional voting.

This makes practical sense. The outcomes between the two parties will decide, for example, whether the Democrats have won back the House, and then a majority will turn to considering whether to impeach Trump. But if the Republicans win or Trump can claim they did, especially if they retain their House majority, the future of the United States and the world, so complexly reacting to Trump’s egocentric and would-be dictatorial presidency, accordingly will be very different.

“All politics is local,” the cliché goes, and of course a Republican Congressional incumbent or candidate may merit the support of any voter; but it is also dramatically true in these midterms that Trump is the main and most important issue, and he has attacked, insulted and alienated our allies even as he celebrates the world’s major dictators. For whatever flattering or lying reasons he says he now “loves” Kim Jong-un. He also celebrates when his fans and a Republican congressman physically beat up one of his hecklers, a reporter, and urges them loudly to keep doing it. He seeks to inspire his narrow Congressional majority to follow our flag as he waves it and declares that the United States will put his dictations of our national interests ahead of and above the interests of the human race and all other nations.

Some close to Trump have said he didn’t expect to win even the GOP nomination and certainly not the Presidency. If he has an understandable overall intention as president now, one can’t guess it well from what he says, he lies so much. It may be though, let’s guess anyway, he may intend to gut and close (in order to get campaign money from big business) the U.S. government agencies devoted to advancing the common good; stack the Supreme Court right-wing majority for, say, a century; cripple public respect for the FBI and intelligence agencies if they don’t obey his orders to protect and glorify him; subordinate unto himself the independence of the military, the Treasury, and all the “independent” agencies; at last make his deal with Russia (and ultimately perhaps China) to dominate the world with our nuclear weapons; and/or wage the wars he wants our troops and weapons to fight and die in on his orders whether Congress declares them as the Constitution requires or not.

Advocating that this nation abandon internationalism and put his dogmatic views of our interests ahead of the entire human race, Trump has disgraced the United States and Americans before the world. By now, Congress – the Republicans and as importantly the overcautious and too self-protecting Democrats – should have turned very sharply against him. They haven’t, largely one hopes from their selfish fears that he will damn them with his power as president if they don’t obey him or they lack courage or fear losing votes if they really take him on.

The Republican majority in both chambers flatter him or are silent, and in the naked reality, they have joined him in his own me-first betrayals of our American democracy. There are of course many, many millions of decent and honest Republicans. Incredibly, however – who among us ever expected such a stunning collapse of our country? – a vote this time against Trump’s totally cowed Republican Party in Congress is a vote for the restoration of a fair, good, and honest democracy in our country. In my hope and expectation, like the majority’s in our country, decency and democracy will win.

If the Democrats win back the House, obviously Trump’s impeachment there, which a poll in August showed Americans then favored narrowly 49 to 46 percent, becomes a serious possibility. If he is impeached, whether two-thirds of the Senate would eject him from the White House might well depend on whether the Mueller investigations, if they are permitted to emerge, do or do not justify a political consensus that Trump and his presidential campaign abetted, “colluded,” and conspired with Putin in his internationally treacherous interference with the 2016 election, which they are now caught doing again. Whether Trump’s complicity in this the last time and his scandalous inaction on it as president would be “treason” or not, his initial strategy chief Steve Bannon was quoted in Michael Wolff’s book Fire and Fury charging that Trump’s world-seen endorsement of Putin’s lie was. If Mueller’s data proves Trump and his team guilty of conspiracy with the Russians, in my opinion that will end the legitimacy of his presidency.

So this election is about the future of democracy, maybe both here and abroad, and of our humanity itself. Except for Jefferson’s and Lincoln’s first ones, our country may never have had a more important election than our next one a few days from now.

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Ronnie Dugger won the 2011 George Polk career award in journalism. He founded The Texas Observer, has written biographies of Lyndon Johnson and Ronald Reagan, a book on Hiroshima and one on universities, many articles in The New Yorker, The Nation, Harper's, The Atlantic, Mother Jones, and other publications, and is now writing a book on new thinking about nuclear war. Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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A Blitzkrieg Strategy of Lies and Distractions Print
Thursday, 01 November 2018 08:23

Lakoff writes: "Here's a clear example of the degree to which many reporters - even great ones - fail to understand how Trump manipulates the media."

CNN's Jim Acosta at a Trump rally. (photo: Getty)
CNN's Jim Acosta at a Trump rally. (photo: Getty)


A Blitzkrieg Strategy of Lies and Distractions

By George Lakoff, Medium

01 November 18


Trump counts on reporters to chase his lies and distractions like dogs chase balls. Too often, they meet his expectations

ere’s a clear example of the degree to which many reporters?—?even great ones?—?fail to understand how Trump manipulates the media.

Carl Bernstein, one of the legendary Watergate reporters who took down the corrupt Nixon presidency, was interviewed by CNN’s Brian Stelter about Trump’s constant lies. Bernstein correctly observed that Trump and his ilk are engaged in a “war on truth.” But then he suggested that reporters counter Trump’s lies by dedicating more time and energy to examining whether they are true.

Said Bernstein: “When Trump talks, for instance, about voter fraud. . .we need to be doing stories about the reality of whether or not there is widespread voter fraud.”

This couldn’t be more wrong. If reporters dedicate time and energy to investigating whether known lies might be true, they will continue to cede control of the news cycle to Trump.

Trump’s “big lie” strategy is designed to exploit journalistic convention by providing rapid-fire “news” events for reporters to chase. Trump spews falsehoods in a blitzkrieg fashion, but the lies are only part of the game. What reporters continue to miss is the strategy behind the big lies: to divert attention from big truths. The technique is simple: create controversy and confusion around politically-charged topics to stoke his conservative base and distract from stories that harm Trump.

It’s a numbers game. The more he can get his key terms and images repeated in the media?—?even as “fact checks”?—?the more he wins. That’s just how our brains work. The more we hear about something, the more it sticks. Even if it’s not true. When I say “don’t think of an elephant,” it forces you to think of an elephant. Repeating lies, even to debunk them, helps spread and strengthen them. The scientific evidence is clear.

Trump’s most recent spate of large lies coincided with the shocking revelation that Saudi Arabia murdered and dismembered journalist Jamal Khashoggi. Trapped in a terrible storyline?—?the President of the United States giving cover to a foreign leader who horrifically butchered a journalist?—?Trump started spewing new lies to change the subject.

He launched predictable attacks on immigrants, on California, on the voting process, on transgender people. He made entirely false claims about tax cuts. He counts on his political opponents to react passionately. He counts on reporters to chase his lies and distractions like dogs chase balls. Too often, they meet his expectations.

The lies and distractions will ramp up as Election Day draws near. And all of this is just practice for the outcome of the Mueller investigation. Just imagine the pile of weaponized lies, distortions and distractions Trump will begin hurling when the shoes start to drop on his criminal collusion.

Bernstein’s advice plays into Trump’s strategy. Trump wins by dictating the frame and keeping his fraudulent claims front-and-center.

This doesn’t mean reporters should ignore the president’s lies. It means they must be extremely cautious about spreading the substance of the lies, because that rewards his lying strategy.

I recommend using the “truth sandwich” method. And maybe it’s time to take Trump’s circus of lies off of the front page and put them in their own special section of the newspaper, perhaps with the comics and the horoscopes. Document them, but don’t give them the power to overshadow important news.

When Trump tells a big lie on any particular subject it’s usually because he’s distracting from a big truth. The big truth he’s trying to cover up by making up lies about the election system is the massive voter suppression effort Republicans have undertaken. They are wiping voter rolls and doing everything they can to make it harder for people?—?especially people of color?—?to vote. Meanwhile, Trump uses his bully pulpit to accuse his opponents of doing exactly what he and his party are up to.

Trump’s success is rooted in the media’s tendency to amplify, rather than analyze, his tactics. Like a pickpocket who distracts your attention with one hand while the other hand takes your wallet, he knows what he’s doing. When Trump tries to keep them busy debunking sprees of lies, good reporters should pivot to focus on the relevant truth.

Faced with an authoritarian leader who uses lies as weapons, reporters must evolve to counter the threat. Protecting the truth requires more than fact checking. It demands that reporters take into account the strategy behind Trump’s blitzkrieg of lies and refuse to fall for it.

Either you beat the strategy or the strategy beats you.

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Steve King, the White-Supremacist Congressman Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=46005"><span class="small">David Leonhardt, The New York Times</span></a>   
Thursday, 01 November 2018 08:23

Leonhardt writes: "Steve King, the Republican congressman who represents the northwestern part of Iowa, is a white nationalist."

Representative Steve King, Republican of Iowa, at a hearing on Capitol Hill. (photo: J. Scott Applewhite/AP)
Representative Steve King, Republican of Iowa, at a hearing on Capitol Hill. (photo: J. Scott Applewhite/AP)


Steve King, the White-Supremacist Congressman

By David Leonhardt, The New York Times

01 November 18


Steve King, who has a long history of racism, may finally be in political danger.

teve King, the Republican congressman who represents the northwestern part of Iowa, is a white nationalist.

King has said he doesn’t want Muslims working in Iowa meatpacking plants. He has lied about how much crime undocumented immigrants commit. He has said that Dreamers — undocumented immigrants who came to the United States as young children — have calves the size of cantaloupes.

He has cultivated ties with European white supremacists. He has decried “cultural suicide by demographic transformation.” He said that “Leftists” consider “everyone who lacks melanin” to be racist. He has approvingly retweeted a woman who called interracial marriage worse than murder and who said the TV show “Seinfeld” taught her to dislike Jews.

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Trump Strips Citizenship From Children of Immigrants, Thus Disqualifying Himself From Presidency Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=9160"><span class="small">Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker</span></a>   
Wednesday, 31 October 2018 13:19

Borowitz writes: "Donald J. Trump on Tuesday signed an executive order stripping the children of immigrant mothers of their citizenship, thus disqualifying himself from being President of the United States."

President Trump signs an executive order. (photo: Pete Marovich/Getty)
President Trump signs an executive order. (photo: Pete Marovich/Getty)


Trump Strips Citizenship From Children of Immigrants, Thus Disqualifying Himself From Presidency

By Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker

31 October 18

 

The article below is satire. Andy Borowitz is an American comedian and New York Times-bestselling author who satirizes the news for his column, "The Borowitz Report."


onald J. Trump on Tuesday signed an executive order stripping the children of immigrant mothers of their citizenship, thus disqualifying himself from being President of the United States.

The constitutional crisis came to light moments after the signing ceremony, when a fourth grader visiting the Oval Office on a school tour pointed out the far-reaching legal ramifications of the order.

“Hey, wait, wasn’t your mother from Scotland?” the student, Tracy Klugian, asked. “That means you’re not a citizen and you can’t be President.”

Stephen Miller, a senior adviser to Trump and the author of the executive order, quickly grabbed the document from the Oval Office desk, panic spreading across his face as he reread it.

“Oh, my God,” Miller gasped. “What have I done?”

Trump immediately called Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh for help in voiding the executive order, but Kavanaugh was unable to take the call because he was “sleeping off a rough night,” an aide to the Justice said.

Asked to comment on Trump’s predicament, former President Barack Obama said, “I can’t imagine what it would be like not to be an American citizen. Of course, my mom was born here, so I’m good.”

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The New Global Tinderbox, It's Not Your Mother's Cold War Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=20415"><span class="small">Michael Klare, TomDispatch</span></a>   
Wednesday, 31 October 2018 13:19

Klare writes: "When it comes to relations between Donald Trump's America, Vladimir Putin's Russia, and Xi Jinping's China, observers everywhere are starting to talk about a return to an all-too-familiar past."

Chinese troops prepare for the arrival of President Xi Jinping at a People's Liberation Army (PLA) garrison. (photo: Damir Sagolj/Reuters)
Chinese troops prepare for the arrival of President Xi Jinping at a People's Liberation Army (PLA) garrison. (photo: Damir Sagolj/Reuters)


The New Global Tinderbox, It's Not Your Mother's Cold War

By Michael Klare, TomDispatch

31 October 18

 


Last week, Russian President Vladimir Putin issued a warning. As the New York Times described it: “If the United States deploys new intermediate-range missiles in Europe after withdrawing from a nuclear treaty prohibiting these weapons, European nations will be at risk of ‘a possible counterstrike.’” It was the sort of threat that, in the previous century, would have raised the level of everyday nuclear fears in this society, too. I remember them well -- from the “duck-and-cover” experiences of schoolchildren huddling under desks that were somehow to protect them from nuclear annihilation to the vivid nightmares of my teen years. (Yes, in a dream at least, I saw and felt an atomic blast.) This was the world of the Cold War in which I grew up.

I’ve always believed that the last of such Cold War nuclear fears manifested themselves on September 11, 2001, when those towers in lower Manhattan collapsed amid a horrifying cloud of smoke and ash -- and the place where it all happened was promptly christened Ground Zero, a term previously reserved for the spot where a nuclear blast had gone off. Somehow, on that day, something was called back to life from those Cold War years in which newspapers regularly drew imagined concentric circles of atomic destruction from fantasy Ground Zeros in American cities, while magazines offered visions of our country as a vaporized wasteland. In the chaos and destruction of that moment, there was perhaps a subliminal feeling that the U.S., the first country to use an atomic weapon, had finally experienced some kind of payback. As Tom Brokaw, chairing NBC's nonstop news coverage, said that day, it looked “like a nuclear winter in lower Manhattan."

In Donald Trump’s upside-down world, the trek of a few thousand desperate migrants, some carrying tiny children or even babies, across thousands of miles of Honduras, Guatemala, and now Mexico is treated as if it were potentially a major invasion of (if not a nuclear attack on) the United States. As the president dispatches the U.S. military to the border, claims that ISIS-like Middle Easterners lurk in that caravan, and blames the Democrats for it all, who has time to think about an actual catastrophe?

Fortunately, TomDispatch regular Michael Klare does and he has news for us. As the U.S. prepares to withdraw from a classic Cold War nuclear treaty, it’s time to start ramping up those fears again. After all, we’re now in a new world of expanding global rivalries and potential madness in which impoverished migrants from Honduras are the least of our problems.

-Tom Engelhardt, TomDispatch


hen it comes to relations between Donald Trump’s America, Vladimir Putin’s Russia, and Xi Jinping’s China, observers everywhere are starting to talk about a return to an all-too-familiar past. “Now we have a new Cold War,” commented Russia expert Peter Felgenhauer in Moscow after President Trump recently announced plans to withdraw from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty. The Trump administration is "launching a new Cold War," said historian Walter Russell Mead in the Wall Street Journal, following a series of anti-Chinese measures approved by the president in October. And many others are already chiming in.

Recent steps by leaders in Washington, Moscow, and Beijing may seem to lend credence to such a “new Cold War” narrative, but in this case history is no guide. Almost two decades into the twenty-first century, what we face is not some mildly updated replica of last century’s Cold War, but a new and potentially even more dangerous global predicament.

The original Cold War, which lasted from the late 1940s until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, posed a colossal risk of thermonuclear annihilation. At least after the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962, however, it also proved a remarkably stable situation in which, despite local conflicts of many sorts, the United States and the Soviet Union both sought to avoid the kinds of direct confrontations that might have triggered a mutual catastrophe. In fact, after confronting the abyss in 1962, the leaders of both superpowers engaged in a complex series of negotiations leading to substantial reductions in their nuclear arsenals and agreements intended to reduce the risk of a future Armageddon.

What others are now calling the New Cold War -- but I prefer to think of as a new global tinderbox -- bears only the most minimal resemblance to that earlier period. As before, the United States and its rivals are engaged in an accelerating arms race, focused on nuclear and “conventional” weaponry of ever-increasing range, precision, and lethality. All three countries, in characteristic Cold War fashion, are also lining up allies in what increasingly looks like a global power struggle.

But the similarities end there. Among the differences, the first couldn’t be more obvious: the U.S. now faces two determined adversaries, not one, and a far more complex global conflict map (with a corresponding increase in potential nuclear flashpoints). At the same time, the old boundaries between “peace” and “war” are rapidly disappearing as all three rivals engage in what could be thought of as combat by other means, including trade wars and cyberattacks that might set the stage for far greater violence to follow. To compound the danger, all three big powers are now engaging in provocative acts aimed at “demonstrating resolve” or intimidating rivals, including menacing U.S. and Chinese naval maneuvers off Chinese-occupied islands in the South China Sea. Meanwhile, rather than pursue the sort of arms-control agreements that tempered Cold War hostilities, the U.S. and Russia appear intent on tearing up existing accords and launching a new nuclear arms race.

These factors could already be steering the world ever closer to a new Cuban Missile Crisis, when the world came within a hairsbreadth of nuclear incineration. This one, however, could start in the South China Sea or even in the Baltic region, where U.S. and Russian planes and ships are similarly engaged in regular near-collisions.

Why are such dangers so rapidly ramping up? To answer this, it’s worth exploring the factors that distinguish this moment from the original Cold War era.

It’s a Tripolar World, Baby

In the original Cold War, the bipolar struggle between Moscow and Washington -- the last two superpowers left on planet Earth after centuries of imperial rivalry -- seemed to determine everything that occurred on the world stage. This, of course, entailed great danger, but also enabled leaders on each side to adopt a common understanding of the need for nuclear restraint in the interest of mutual survival.

The bipolar world of the Cold War was followed by what many observers saw as a “unipolar moment,” in which the United States, the “last superpower,” dominated the world stage. During this period, which lasted from the collapse of the Soviet Union to the Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014, Washington largely set the global agenda and, when minor challengers arose -- think Iraq’s Saddam Hussein -- employed overwhelming military power to crush them. Those foreign engagements, however, consumed huge sums of money and tied down American forces in remarkably unsuccessful wars across a vast arc of the planet, while Moscow and Beijing -- neither so wealthy nor so encumbered -- were able to begin their own investment in military modernization and geopolitical outreach.

Today, the “unipolar moment” has vanished and we are in what can only be described as a tripolar world. All three rivals possess outsized military establishments with vast arrays of conventional and nuclear weapons. China and Russia have now joined the United States (even if on a more modest scale) in extending their influence beyond their borders diplomatically, economically, and militarily. More importantly, all three rivals are led by highly nationalistic leaders, each determined to advance his country’s interests.

A tripolar world, almost by definition, will be markedly different from either a bipolar or a unipolar one and conceivably far more discordant, with Donald Trump’s Washington potentially provoking crises with Moscow at one moment and Beijing the next, without apparent reason. In addition, a tripolar world is likely to encompass more potential flash points. During the whole Cold War era, there was one crucial line of confrontation between the two major powers: the boundary between NATO and the Warsaw Pact nations in Europe. Any flare-up along that line could indeed have triggered a major commitment of force on both sides and, in all likelihood, the use of so-called tactical or theater atomic weapons, leading almost inevitably to full-scale thermonuclear combat. Thanks to such a risk, the leaders of those superpowers eventually agreed to various de-escalatory measures, including the about-to-be-cancelled INF Treaty of 1987 that banned the deployment of medium-range ground-launched missiles capable of triggering just such a spiral of ultimate destruction.

Today, that line of confrontation between Russia and NATO in Europe has been fully restored (and actually reinforced) along a perimeter considerably closer to Russian territory, thanks to NATO’s eastward expansion into the Czech Republic, Poland, Hungary, Romania, Slovakia, and the Baltic republics in the era of unipolarity. Along this repositioned line, as during the Cold War years, hundreds of thousands of well-armed soldiers are now poised for full-scale hostilities on very short notice.

At the same time, a similar line of confrontation has been established in Asia, ranging from Russia’s far-eastern territories to the East and South China Seas and into the Indian Ocean. In May, the Pentagon’s Pacific Command, based in Hawaii, was renamed the Indo-Pacific Command, highlighting the expansion of this frontier of confrontation. At points along this line, too, U.S. planes and ships are encountering Chinese or Russian ones on a regular basis, often coming within shooting range. The mere fact that three major nuclear powers are now constantly jostling for position and advantage over significant parts of the planet only increases the possibility of clashes that could trigger a catastrophic escalatory spiral.

The War Has Already Begun

During the Cold War, the U.S. and the USSR engaged in hostile activities vis-à-vis each other that fell short of armed combat, including propaganda and disinformation warfare, as well as extensive spying. Both also sought to expand their global reach by engaging in proxy wars -- localized conflicts in what was then called the Third World aimed at bolstering or eliminating regimes loyal to one side or the other. Such conflicts would produce millions of casualties but never lead to direct combat between the militaries of the two superpowers (although each would commit its forces to key contests, the U.S. in Vietnam, the USSR in Afghanistan), nor were they allowed to become the kindling for a nuclear clash between them. At the time, both countries made a sharp distinction between such operations and the outbreak of a global “hot war.”

In the twenty-first century, the distinction between “peace” and “war” is already blurring, as the powers in this tripolar contest engage in operations that fall short of armed combat but possess some of the characteristics of interstate conflict. When President Trump, for example, first announced tough import tariffs and other economic penalties against China, his stated intent was to overcome an unfair advantage that country, he claimed, had gained in trade relations. “For months, we have urged China to change these unfair practices, and give fair and reciprocal treatment to American companies,” he asserted in mid-September while announcing tariffs on an additional $200 billion worth of Chinese imports. It’s clear, however, that his escalating trade “war” is also meant to hobble the Chinese economy and so frustrate Beijing’s drive to achieve parity with the United States as a major world actor. The Trump administration seeks, as the New York Times’s Neil Irwin observed, to “isolate China and compel major changes to Chinese business and trade practices. The ultimate goal... is to reset the economic relationship between China and the rest of the world.”

In doing so, the president is said to be particularly keen on disrupting and crippling Beijing’s “Made in China 2025” plan, an ambitious scheme to achieve mastery in key technological sectors of the global economy, including artificial intelligence and robotics, something that would indeed bring China closer to that goal of parity, which Trump and his associates are determined to sabotage. In other words, for China, this is no mere competitive challenge but a potentially existential threat to its future status as a great power. As a result, expect counter-measures that are likely to further erode the borders between peace and war.

And if there is any place where such borders are particularly at risk of erosion, it’s in cyberspace, an increasingly significant arena for combat in the post-Cold War world. While an incredible source of wealth to companies that rely on the Internet for commerce and communications, cyberspace is also a largely unpatrolled jungle where bad actors can spread misinformation, steal secrets, or endanger critical economic and other operations. Its obvious penetrability has proven a bonanza for criminals and political provocateurs of every stripe, including aggressive groups sponsored by governments eager to engage in offensive operations that, while again falling short of armed combat, pose significant dangers to a targeted country. As Americans have discovered to our horror, Russian government agents exploited the Internet’s many vulnerabilities to interfere in the 2016 presidential election and are reportedly continuing to meddle in America’s electoral politics two years later. China, for its part, is believed to have exploited the Internet to steal American technological secrets, including data for the design and development of advanced weapons systems.

The United States, too, has engaged in offensive cyber operations, including the groundbreaking 2010 “Stuxnet” attack that temporarily crippled Iran’s uranium enrichment facilities. It reportedly also used such methods to try to impair North Korean missile launches. To what degree U.S. cyberattacks have been directed against China or Russia is unknown, but under a new “National Cyber Strategy” unveiled by the Trump administration in August, such a strategy will become far more likely. Claiming that those countries have imperiled American national security through relentless cyberattacks, it authorizes secret retaliatory strikes.

The question is: Could trade war and cyberwar lead one day to regular armed conflict?

Muscle-Flexing in Perilous Times

Such dangers are compounded by another distinctive feature of the new global tinderbox: the unrestrained impulse of top officials of the three powers to advertise their global assertiveness through conspicuous displays of military power, including encroaching on the perimeters, defensive or otherwise, of their rivals. These can take various forms, including overly aggressive military “exercises” and the deployment of warships in contested waters.

Increasingly massive and menacing military exercises have become a distinctive feature of this new era. Such operations typically involve the mobilization of vast air, sea, and land forces for simulated combat maneuvers, often conducted adjacent to a rival’s territory.

This summer, for example, the alarm bells in NATO went off when Russia conducted Vostok 2018, its largest military exercise since World War II. Involving as many as 300,000 troops, 36,000 armored vehicles, and more than 1,000 planes, it was intended to prepare Russian forces for a possible confrontation with the U.S. and NATO, while signaling Moscow’s readiness to engage in just such an encounter. Not to be outdone, NATO recently completed its largest exercise since the Cold War’s end. Called Trident Venture, it fielded some 40,000 troops, 70 ships, 150 aircraft, and 10,000 ground combat vehicles in maneuvers also intended to simulate a major East-West clash in Europe.

Such periodic troop mobilizations can lead to dangerous and provocative moves on all sides, as ships and planes of the contending forces maneuver in contested areas like the Baltic and Black Seas. In one incident in 2016, Russian combat jets flew provocatively within a few hundred feet of a U.S. destroyer while it was sailing in the Baltic Sea, nearly leading to a shooting incident. More recently, Russian aircraft reportedly came within five feet of an American surveillance plane flying over the Black Sea. No one has yet been wounded or killed in any of these encounters, but it’s only a matter of time before something goes terribly wrong.

The same is true of Chinese and American naval encounters in the South China Sea. China has converted some low-lying islets and atolls it claims in those waters into miniature military installations, complete with airstrips, radar, and missile batteries -- steps that have been condemned by neighboring countries with similar claims to those islands. The United States, supposedly acting on behalf of its allies in the region, as well as to protect its “freedom of navigation” in the area, has sought to counter China’s provocative buildup with aggressive acts of its own. It has dispatched its warships to waters right off those fortified islands. The Chinese, in response, have sent vessels to harass the American ones and only recently one of them almost collided with a U.S. destroyer. Vice President Pence, in an October 4th speech on China at the Hudson Institute, referred to that incident, saying, “We will not be intimidated, and we will not stand down.”

What comes next is anyone’s guess, since “not standing down” roughly translates into increasingly aggressive maneuvers.

On the Road to World War III?

Combine all of this -- economic attacks, cyber attacks, and ever more aggressive muscle-flexing military operations -- and you have a situation in which a modern version of the Cuban Missile Crisis between the U.S. and China or the U.S. and Russia or even involving all three could happen at any time. Add the apparent intent of the leaders of all three countries to abandon the remaining restraints on the acquisition of nuclear weapons in order to seek significant additions to their existing arsenals and you have the definition of an extremely dangerous situation. In February, for instance, President Trump gave the green light to what may prove to be a $1.6 trillion overhaul of the American nuclear arsenal initially contemplated in the Obama years, intended to “modernize” existing delivery systems, including intercontinental ballistic missiles, submarine-launched ballistic missiles, and long-range strategic bombers. Russia has embarked on a similar overhaul of its nuclear stockpile, while China, with a much smaller arsenal, is undertaking modernization projects of its own.

Equally worrisome, all three powers appear to be pursuing the development of theater nuclear weapons intended for use against conventional forces in the event of a major military conflagration. Russia, for example, has developed several short- and medium-range missiles capable of delivering both nuclear and conventional warheads, including the 9M729 ground-launched cruise missile that, American officials claim, already violates the INF Treaty. The United States, which has long relied on aircraft-delivered nuclear weapons for use against massive conventional enemy threats, is now seeking additional attack options of its own. Under the administration’s Nuclear Policy Review of February 2018, the Pentagon will undertake the development of a “low-yield” nuclear warhead for its existing submarine-launched ballistic missiles and later procure a nuclear-armed, sea-launched cruise missile.

While developing such new weapons and enhancing the capability of older ones, the major powers are also tearing down the remaining arms control edifice. President Trump’s October 20th announcement that the U.S. would withdraw from the 1987 INF treaty to develop new missiles of its own represents a devastating step in that direction. “We’ll have to develop those weapons,” he told reporters in Nevada after a rally. “We’re going to terminate the agreement and we’re going to pull out.”

How do the rest of us respond to such a distressing prospect in an increasingly imperiled world? How do we slow the pace of the race to World War III?

There is much that could, in fact, be done to resist a new nuclear arms confrontation. After all, it was massive public pressure in the 1980s that led the U.S. and USSR to sign the INF Treaty in the first place. But in order to do so, a new world war would have to be seen as a central danger of our time, potentially even more dangerous than the Cold War era, given the three nuclear-armed great powers now involved. Only by positioning that risk front and center and showing how many other trends are leading us, pell-mell, in such a direction, can the attention of a global public already distracted by so many other concerns and worries be refocused.

Is a nuclear World War III preventable? Yes, but only if preventing it becomes a central, common objective of our moment. And time is already running out.

Michael T. Klare, a TomDispatch regular, is the five-college professor emeritus of peace and world security studies at Hampshire College and a senior visiting fellow at the Arms Control Association. His most recent book is The Race for What’s Left. His next book, All Hell Breaking Loose: Climate Change, Global Chaos, and American National Security, will be published in 2019.

Follow TomDispatch on Twitter and join us on Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Books, Beverly Gologorsky's novel Every Body Has a Story and Tom Engelhardt's A Nation Unmade by War, as well as Alfred McCoy's In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power, John Dower's The Violent American Century: War and Terror Since World War II, and John Feffer's dystopian novel Splinterlands.

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