How the Clintons Set the World on the Road to War
Again
Have you noticed that the presstitute media
features warmongers who orchestrate a “Russian Threat,” not real experts who
actually know what they are talking about, such as Amb. Jack Matlock and
Professor Stephen Cohen?
How the Clintons Failed to Heed Lessons of Treaty
of Versailles.
Changing Course, They Set the U.S. on Dangerous Path
of Confronting Russia.
Ever more antiwar voices are clamoring for a Stop
Hillary Clinton movement in the Democratic primaries – and with very good
reason. There are many alarming, indeed frightening, indictments of her tenures
as one-half president in the 90s and then as Senator and Secretary of State.
Her estranged relationship with truth, her callousness toward human life and
her love for every imperial military adventure and regime change scheme are
beyond worrisome. They are downright scary.
But the most damning indictment yet of the Clintons
on the world stage comes in the book Superpower Illusions by
former Ambassador to the USSR, Jack Matlock. The book came out way
back in 2009, but it is worth examining again as we confront the possibility of
a return to Clintonism. And Matlock is a man who knows whereof he speaks.
Wikipedia gives a summary of his career thus:
After
(graduate) studies at Columbia University…, (Matlock) entered the Foreign Service in 1956. His
35 year career encompassed much of the Cold War … His first assignment to
Moscow was in 1961, and it was from the embassy there that he experienced the
1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, helping to translate diplomatic messages between the
leaders.
At the
beginning of détente, he was Director of Soviet Affairs in the State
Department, ..(attended) all but one of the U.S. – Soviet summits held in the
20 year period 1972-91. Matlock was back in Moscow in 1974, serving in the
number two position in the embassy for four years (including time under
President Jimmy Carter, jw). Matlock was assigned to Moscow again in 1981 as
acting ambassador during the first part of Ronald Reagan’s presidency. Reagan appointed him as ambassador
to Czechoslovakia and later asked him to return to Washington in
1983 to work at the National Security Council, with the assignment to develop a negotiating
strategy to end the arms race. When Mikhail Gorbachev became the leader of the Soviet Union in 1985,
arms negotiations and summit meetings resumed. Matlock was appointed ambassador
to the Soviet Union in 1987 and saw the last years of the Soviet Union before
he retired from the Foreign Service in 1991.
There is no doubt that Matlock knew what was going
on during this period, and he saw considerable promise for a peaceful, secure
future at the end of the Bush I presidency. So when he forcefully condemns the
Clintons for a disastrous turn in U.S. policy, he is a voice that must be
heeded. The original sin of the era stains the Clintons, and they spawned their
own inevitable Cain in the form of W.
Being a diplomat, Mattlock speaks diplomatically of
the colossal, damaging shift in U.S. -Russia relations under the Clintons who
reversed the approach of Reagan and Bush I. He gets to the point right away in
the preface to Superpower Illusions:
“The Clinton administration’s decision to expand
NATO to the East rather than draw Russia into a cooperative arrangement to
ensure European security undermined the prospects of democracy in Russia, made
it more difficult to keep peace in the Balkans and slowed the process of
nuclear disarmament started by Presidents Reagan and Gorbachev.”
That is a severely damaging condemnation of the
Clintons, one of historic dimensions, as we see now as events unfold in
Ukraine, with one of Hillary’s protégés, her State Department spokeswoman,
Victoria Nuland, very much in charge of the U.S. intervention there. Matlock
was so appalled by the Clintons that he changed his political affiliation:
“After I retired from the Foreign Service, I left
the Democratic Party early in the Clinton presidency. I felt that President
Clinton… lacked both the vision and the competence to take advantage of the
opportunity the end of the Cold War and the breakup of the Soviet Union
provided. That opportunity was nothing less than a chance to create a world in
which security tasks could be shared, weapons of mass destruction reduced
rapidly and barriers to nuclear proliferation raised.”
Matlock is appalled that President Clinton lacked both
the vision and the competence to proceed on a peaceful task. What else
is there? Of course he should have said Presidents Clinton since, as Bill
always reminded us, he and Hillary shared the task – “two for one,” as he put
it, or Billary or Hillbillary as the alternative media labels the duo.
Matlock does not let Bush II off the hook. He is no
apologist for the GOP hawks. He sees “W” as continuing and deepening the folly
of the Clintons, writing:
“In its sixteen years under Bill Clinton and George
W. Bush, America went from being the most admired country on the planet in many
opinion polls to the most feared…..The majority of the people in many countries
considered the United States the most dangerous country in the world. Nobody likes
a bully….”
If anyone comes across as a hectoring bully in her
public statements, it is surely Hillary. There are plenty of pundits, mostly of
the Democrat or “progressive” persuasion, out there who are all too willing to
blame Bush II for all this– even unto FOX’s Megyn Kelly. But in fact the latest
bad turn in American imperial policies began with the Clintons.
Matlock also reminds us that it was the Clintons
who began NATO’s war on the Balkans, the precedent for other “humanitarian”
interventions, including Libya and Syria. This too was a sharp break with
Reagan/Bush I as Matlock notes:
“Bush and Baker also injected caution in extending
American involvement in disputes that were not directly relevant to American
security. As tensions rose among Yugoslavia’s constituent republics, they tried
to keep the United States aloof and leave the primary responsibility to
America’s European allies. Regarding the growing conflict in Yugoslavia, Baker
was quoted as saying, ‘We don’t have a dog in that fight.’”
But there is no fight for which Hillary lacks a
dog, and almost always it is a dog of war. The war in the Balkans so engaged
her that she declared that she came under fire while visiting there to cheer on
the effort. The claim of bullets whizzing by her head turned out to be little
more than another in the fabric of mistruths woven by this “congenital liar,”
as the late William Safire, a master and connoisseur of the trade of deception
himself, labeled her.
On locations 3236 to 6276 of the Kindle edition of Superpower
Illusions, Matlock makes his case against the Clintons. Here are some of
his words:
“For all of its initial talk about a ‘partnership
for reform,’ the Clinton administration dealt with Russia as if it no longer
counted, even in European politics. Two decisions in particular turned Russian
public opinion during the years of the Clinton administration from strongly
pro-American to vigorous opposition to American policies abroad. The first was
the decision to extend the NATO military structure into countries that had
previously been members of the Warsaw Pact – something Gorbachev had understood
would not happen if he allowed a united Germany to remain in NATO. The second
was the decision to bomb Serbia without authorization from the United Nations
Security Council. “ (A similar contempt for the UN showed up when Obama and
Hillary won approval for a no fly zone over Gaddafi’s Libya to the UN Security
Council in 2011 by getting China and Russia not to veto it – and then turned it
into a bombing campaign, in violation of promises to Russia and China,
something Putin labeled as the last straw in terms of trusting the U.S. – jw)
“There was no need to expand NATO to ensure the
security of the newly independent countries of Eastern Europe. There were other
ways those countries could have been reassured and protected without seeming to
re-divide Europe to Russia’s disadvantage. As for the bombing of Serbia
(another favorite project of Hillary’s, jw), if NATO had not been enlarged in
the manner that occurred, Russia’s government would been much more willing to
put pressure on Slobodan Milosevic to come to terms with the Kosovars and – if
unsuccessful in this effort – more willing to vote in the United Nations to
authorize military intervention…….Clinton’s actions severely damaged the
credibility of democratic leaders in Russia who appealed for a more considerate
attitude toward Russian national interests.”
“Combined with claiming “victory” in the Cold War
(Something the Clintons did but Reagan had not done! jw) expanding NATO
suggested to the Russian public that throwing off communism and breaking up the
Soviet Union had probably been a bad idea. Instead of getting credit for
voluntarily joining the West, they were being treated as if they had been
defeated and were not worthy to be allies.”
“The Clinton administration was deaf to these
appeals as well as those of George Kennan the author of the successful
containment policy, who warned that enlarging NATO in the proposed manner would
be the ‘most fateful error of American policy in the entire post-cold-war era.’
He then explained why: ‘Such a decision may be expected to … restore the
atmosphere of the cold war in East-West relations and to impel Russian foreign
policy in directions decidedly not to our liking. And last but not least it may
make it much more difficult, if not impossible, to secure the Russian Duma’s
ratification of the START II agreement and to achieve further reductions of nuclear
weapons’’
Thus, the Clintons turned the United States in a
very confrontational direction, something that is a hallmark of Hillary’s views
to this day. Again Matlock:
“The Clinton administration, without any
provocation, in effect repeated a fundamental mistake made at Versailles in
1919. … The Clinton administration practically ensured that … Russia would lose
its incentive to reduce nuclear weapons….My point is that the United States
should have made every effort to bring the European states, West and East, and
including Russia into a new security arrangement…..”
Matlock concludes this section:
“The Clinton administration’s action in bombing Serbia
without U.N. approval not only enraged Russia and made close cooperation on
nuclear issues more difficult, but it also sent a message to other countries
with policies or practices that met American disapproval: Better get nuclear
weapons as fast as you can! Otherwise, you can become a target for the U.S. Air
Force.”
I would disagree with one point Matlock makes. He
feels that the Clintons made the mistakes they did out of domestic political
concerns, specifically to get the votes of Poles and others of Eastern European
extraction who harbored considerable resentment against the Soviet Union and
hence Russia. But the Clintons pursued these policies deep into his second
administration right up to the 2000 election of W.
Moreover, Hillary espoused these policies
consistently in her 2008 primary battle with Obama who defeated her, largely by
presenting himself in contrast to her as the candidate of Peace. And she
continued to espouse these hawkish policies right up to last week where she
told the Wall Street Journal that she will be a more warlike president than
Obama, saying that she would have sent more arms to the “moderate” Syrian
rebels long ago – in contrast to Obama. (Of course the “moderate” Syrian rebels
have the same base in reality as the Seven Dwarfs. They are a fairy tale.)
From watching the Clintons in the White House for
eight years and from Hillary’s hawkish record as Senator and Secretary of
State, there can be little doubt that her views are heartfelt. She remains a
lethal admixture of neocon and humanitarian imperialist views, an American
Exceptionalist, giddy with American military power, arrogantly confident that
“our values” are universal and determined that no other power, however
peaceful, will achieve the military or economic might to stand up to the U.S.
As China rises, peacefully so far, consistent with its history and culture, and
as Russia and Iran gain strength, her views could plunge us into a World War.
She is far too shallow, arrogant and bellicose to be President at a time when
new thinking and considerable wisdom is needed.
John V. Walsh also writes for Antiwar.com,
DissidentVoice.org and CounterPunch.com. By day until recently he slaved over a
hot oscilloscope attempting to tease out the secret of cellular neuronal
function. He can be
reached at john.endwar@gmail.com
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