Just Another Bad Guy

A Putin lackey. An Assad-apologist. Tulsi Gabbard goes by many monikers, following her challenge on the problematic Democratic Presidential candidate Kamala Harris. That she’s a Kremlin-sponsored plant. That she’s publicly liked by many of the bogeymen of US and international politics. And the Democratic media establishment comes crawling out of the woodwork to discredit, and defame, the Hawaiian Representative.

Why though? Well, for all intents and purposes, because she wants to end American Interventionism (more modernly referred to as the War on Terror). End the US’s self-imposed role as world police.

And heavens forbid that the US stop micro-managing the affairs of other countries! Heavens forbid that they stop destabilizing and infiltrate world powers in an effort to propagate a new cold war. For how would a world look like without the bluster of America on the world stage? Surely Putin and Jinping would take over and divvy up the world according to their wishes instead. And surely, the world is better off with a belligerent stars-and-striped big brother. A big brother so aggressive that, as of the time of writing, it has become so violent onto itself that there have been more mass shootings this year within its borders than days have passed in 2019.

Look, I have no idea if Congress Representative Tulsi Gabbard is being sponsored by Russian interests, like #MoscowMitch and #LeningradLindsey, or if such smears against her comes solely from the Kamala Harris campaign management. But just meeting and talking with a foreign despot, such as Syrian Assad, can’t intelligently be construed as an act of support. Because meeting with foreign despots and elected leaders alike is pretty much the definition of statemanship, regardless if you like them or not. Nothing about international politics would work if you refused to meet with and talk to your opponents.

And despite being used against Gabbard as some sort of stupendous proof that she supports foreign dictators, she argues one thing very well. And that one argument is undeniably true; American Interventionism has been universally destructive ever since the end of the second World War.

Korea still stands divided. The war never ended, despite the US’s “benevolent” involvement. Famously, the US lost the Vietnam war. Every American coup perpetrated in Central and South America in the 80’s and 90’s has been followed by massive bloodshed and a spiral of violence that many nations still struggle to climb out of. Afghanistan is still a shit-show, with the ever beaten – never defeated Taliban on the rise again. Iraq is no better off vis-a-vis security and safety than it was under Ba’ath party tyranny, despite that the American mission was “accomplished”. And even though the Orange Hydra has declared ISIL defeated (which it isn’t), Syria is still in shambles.

The World never asked for the US to impose its distorted will upon all others. We never asked them to become the timeless world cops that they paint themselves as. Because American Interventionism has never been about protecting freedoms or human rights. If so, America would already be elbow-deep in conflicts with Saudi Arabia, China, North Korea, Congo, Turkey, Russia, India, Indonesia, Brazil, and the list goes on. Because American Interventionism was always about imposing US will on other nations. Not values or living standards, but profit margins for private interests. The US hasn’t been a world saviour since 1944. It is not a good guy standing up in the face of Russian or Chinese influence. The rest of the world, eastern and western both, with the glaring exception of Israel, does not see a friend when they look at America. We see a bully. Just another bad guy.

And the first thing that you have to do if you want to change that, if you want to stop being a bully, a bad guy, is to stop doing bad things. Just like Gabbard proposes.

/Sebastian Lindberg 6/8-2019

The Rally ‘Round the Flag Syndrome

The drums of global war are sounding again. Again.

No longer very great Britain have made the call to bomb the Syrian Assad regime. The Orange Hydra administration is tagging along, and are itching to send troops. Putin’s Russia are eager to defend their Assad ally from American attack.

Why now? What’s new? You don’t just go break the “in-case-of-emergency-need-for-WW3”-glass without good reason, right? Well, supposedly, Wicked Witch May and the Orange Hydra have had enough of Assad using chemical weapons against his domestic opponents.

But that’s not news…

Since the Arab Spring sent Syria into civil war in 2011, there have been 73 reported chemical weapon attacks in the conflict. There have been U.N. investigations, a Syrian Army disarmament program, and still these chemical attacks keep happening. Governments and the U.N. have reported both rebels and government forces using mustard, chlorine, and sarin gas. And we can only assume that there have been at least a dozen or so such attacks done unto IS-forces, though no record or complaint of such have surfaced with the international community (go figure).

There are chemical weapons being used in the Syrian civil war. There have been from the start. All sides seem to be using them, even if they were initially stockpiled by the Syrian government. Even the Turks and Kurds have been accused of using them.

So why does May and the Orange Hydra care all of a sudden?

Because foreign intervention wars can be great for domestic approval ratings. As long as you can excuse them on, for example, WMDs or chemical weapons. And the US hasn’t had a good offensive, full scale war since they trundled into Iraq. The second time. That’s 15 years ago now.

It is a commonly known theory among political scientists that a well managed foreign war can be great for domestic approval ratings, referred to as the “rally ’round the flag”-syndrome. Both May and the Orange Hydra can feel their administrations sinking. They’d have to by now. And desperate times call for desperate measures. Sending people to die in a foreign war is just the sort of gamble that might be the last one available to either of them. And you can be sure that Putin’s not going to let Trump trump all over one of his allies or miss the chance to trump the US.

After seven years of civil war, it looks like the Syrian conflict might escalate rather than not. Finally attracting the participation of failing superpowers. Not for oil. Not for chemical weapons. But because of a desperate need for red herrings to distract from their utter failures to manage their own states.

/Sebastian Lindberg 14/4-2018