The United States is growing increasingly isolationist – not
by following the Ron Paul path to
Peace and Prosperity, but instead due to the world finally being in a
position to push back.
On the economic stage, the US burned its last bridges in
2008; in the meantime, we live through the transition toward whatever is next –
and rest assured, the elite don’t have a replacement plan prepared, else it
would have been rolled out by now.
Geo-politically, Syria has completely changed the game – at least
it is the first obviously visible sign to laymen that this is so. Putin
has outmaneuvered Obama, and this in a situation where Russia has the
wherewithal to back up its words.
This is no return to the cold war – then, the two so-called
super-powers fought through proxies. This
one is naked for the world to see – no shell games, no intrigue. US diplomacy by bombing vs. Russian diplomacy
by…diplomacy.
It seems Russia is not done pushing back, and it seems the
US is growing increasingly isolated (well, except for the French and maybe the
British – but they, like the US, don’t have a seat at the table if my
speculation of a possible future plays out).
From Bloomberg:
Russia rejected a U.S. and European
plan to include enforcement in a United Nations Security Council resolution on
Syrian chemical weapons disarmament, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
said.
Of course, Russia has both the ability and the muscle to
reject the US plan if it chooses to do so.
Western actions are “irresponsible
and unprofessional,” Lavrov said in an interview with Russia’s Channel One
published on the Foreign Ministry’s website today. They want to “drive through
a resolution based on force” and that blames President Bashar al-Assad for
everything, he said.
If someone can point to any untruth in these statements, let
me know.
Part of the agreement previously reached between Lavrov and
Kerry was for Syria to itemize and disclose its chemical weapons arsenal:
The Organization for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons said Sept. 20 it had “received an initial
disclosure from the Syrian government of its chemical weapons program.” The
Sept. 14 U.S.-Russian agreement, which averted an American military strike on
Assad’s government, called for an itemization of Syria’s poison gas stocks by
yesterday.
Mmm…several days before the due date. The result of effective engagement – the course
Russia pursued.
The executive council of the
chemical weapons organization in The Hague, which would oversee Syria’s
disarmament, said Sept. 20 it postponed a meeting on Syria and is aiming for a
new date in the middle of this week.
Wait – Syria was early, and now the bureaucrats want to
delay the discussion? Can you smell the United States behind this delaying action? Lavrov does:
“Our American partners are trying
to blackmail us,” Lavrov said. The U.S. is saying that “unless Russia accepts
to adopt this resolution under Chapter 7 [an enforcement provision], we will
stop the work of the OPCW in The Hague,” he said referring to the UN charter’s
chapter, which lays out provisions that have been used to justify armed interventions
since the Korean War.
I was a fly on the wall in the oval office when the news was
delivered that Syria complied with its report deadline:
Kerry: Big O, Assad just delivered the inventory.
Obama: Dammit John, you told me they would delay and
obfuscate. Just how stupid are you
trying to make me look?
Kerry: Well, since you asked: it gets worse. Remember, we wanted a quick meeting at The
Hague because we just knew the Syrians wouldn’t deliver the report on
time? Remember how we were going give
Russia a diplomatic wedgie when Assad didn’t deliver?
Obama: Yeah – that was a nice Photoshop – I never laughed so
hard as when you had that picture of Putin with his Haines pulled up over his
head!
Kerry: Well, you can stop laughing now. Assad delivered, and now the meeting is
tomorrow.
Obama: I never thought I would miss Hillary.
But attempts at looking tough continue:
Ben Rhodes, White House deputy
national security adviser, said Sept. 20 that it was “a positive step” for
Syria to submit the list within the period outlined in the agreement, which
calls for the Arab country to turn over its chemical weapons to international
control for eventual destruction.
Can’t you just hear the international world chuckling at
this statement? As if somehow the United
States took any positive actions toward making it come about (and no, “bombs
away” isn’t a positive action)? As if
anything the US now says on this matter is terribly relevant?
“There needs to be consequences for
noncompliance,” Rhodes told reporters on a conference call. “We would want to
see the strongest enforcement possible.”
The US government is reduced to expressing “wants.” It has lost its standing. The only diplomacy known to Washington is to
make threats. This has been exposed, and
this was stopped by one of the few entities on earth powerful enough to stop
it.
The US is quickly losing standing in the international arena. Everyone knew the emperor had no clothes, but
perhaps the time and situation had to grow ripe for the global exclamation of
this fact.
The US has grown extremely isolated in the world.
I feel like I have nothing original to say, other than "I continue to enjoy your writing on this" (and everything else for that matter).
ReplyDeleteWill toss it up on Lions tomorrow morning.
Marc, you say plenty of original things at your site - it continues to be one of my regular stops.
DeleteAnd thank you for your continuing support of my work.
Agreed. Keep up the good work, bm.
Delete