Trump Speech in Poland Fans Conflict with Germany, Russia
Global
Research, July 07, 2017
Trump
Speech in Poland Fans Conflict with Germany, Russia By Patrick Martin Global
Research, July 07, 2017
Donald Trump delivered a speech in Warsaw
Thursday morning, but it will be studied far more carefully in Berlin and
Moscow. So hostile was the population of the Polish capital to the visit by the
US president that the ruling (Law and Justice) PiS party, which shares Trump’s
outlook of semi-fascistic nationalism, had to bus in supporters from the rural
areas to make a respectable—and suitably enthusiastic—crowd.
The speech touched several bases
required of any US president, and particularly Trump, battered by months of
allegations by the intelligence apparatus and media—aimed at pushing him to
take a more aggressive stance against Moscow—that Russia intervened into the US
presidential election to favor his candidacy. He reaffirmed, in categorical
fashion, the obligation of the US government under Article Five of the NATO
charter to respond militarily to any attack on any member of NATO.
Trump had previously cast doubt on the
possibility of the US going to war with Russia, a potential nuclear cataclysm,
in response to a border clash in Estonia, Lithuania or Latvia, the three Baltic
republics ruled by viciously anti-Russian right-wing governments. Article Five does
not cover Ukraine, which is not a NATO member.
The US president claimed that his
previous criticisms of NATO were sparked by the disparity between the US
financial contribution and those of its European allies, and that this had been
vindicated by a flood of promises of greater military spending from these
countries. He then added,
“To those who would criticize our tough
stance, I would point out that the United States has demonstrated not merely
with words but with its actions that we stand firmly behind Article 5, the
mutual defense commitment.”
Trump also singled out Russia for
criticism, declaring,
“We urge Russia to cease its
destabilizing activities in the Ukraine and elsewhere and its support for
hostile regimes, including Syria and Iran, and instead join the community of
responsible nations in our fight against common enemies and defense of
civilization itself.”
The most important passages in the
speech, drafted for Trump by his foreign policy team and delivered without any
obvious deviations, declared sympathy for the plight of Poland, trapped
geographically between more powerful nations, Germany and Russia, sometimes
partitioned or overrun by them. The speech was delivered at the site of a
memorial to the Warsaw uprising by the Polish Home Army in 1944, which was
bloodily suppressed by the Nazis.
Stephen Bannon (Source: Don Irvine / Wikimedia Commons)
Trump himself knows next to nothing of
the geography or history of Poland, or any other country, for that matter.
These lines were undoubtedly prepared for him by the National Security Council
and fascistic aides like Stephen Bannon,
and the clear purpose of the material was to fan the flames of anti-German and
anti-Russian sentiment, both in Poland and more broadly in Europe.
This is in keeping with the new
orientation of US foreign policy, which regards the European Union as a major
economic and (potentially) strategic adversary dominated by Germany, and
therefore makes common cause with the EU members most antagonistic to Brussels—first
of all Britain, which is pursuing Brexit, and secondly Poland, which has
repeatedly clashed with the EU over the ultra-right and antidemocratic measures
of the PiS government.
Trump deliberately associated himself
with the viciously anti-immigrant policies of the PiS, claiming that, like his
own administration, the government in Warsaw was not persecuting immigrants but
rather fighting terrorism, which both Trump and the PiS identify with the
Muslim countries and Muslim minorities in Europe and the United States.
Trump invoked religion repeatedly as
the key to the history of the Polish people, claiming that the collapse of the
Stalinist regimes should be dated on June 2, 1979, when “one million Poles
gathered around Victory Square for their very first mass with their Polish
Pope,” and “one million Poles sang three simple words: ‘We Want God’.”
He continued,
“Their message is as true today as
ever. The people of Poland, the people of America, and the people of Europe
still cry out ‘We want God’.”
Actually, Europe is a largely secular
society, and Poland is a relative backwater with its powerful Roman Catholic
hierarchy and priest-ridden rural population—the price paid for decades of
persecution of socialist and left-wing thought by the Stalinist bureaucracy.
From his glorification of (Christian)
religion, Trump went on to demonize Muslims, declaring,
“We are confronted by another
oppressive ideology—one that seeks to export terrorism and extremism all around
the globe. America and Europe have suffered one terror attack after another.”
He urged Russia to join the Western
powers “in our fight against common enemies and in defense of civilization
itself.”
In perhaps the most remarkable passage
of a fascistic speech, Trump announced he has identified “yet another danger …
invisible to some but familiar to the Poles: the steady creep of government
bureaucracy that drains the vitality and wealth of the people.”
In one paragraph, the US president
managed to conflate the danger of ISIS terrorism and the apparently equal
menace of environmental regulations by the EPA. He told his audience,
“We must work together to confront
forces, whether they come from inside or out, from the South or the East, that
threaten over time to undermine these values and to erase the bonds of culture,
faith and tradition that make us who we are.”
There was a definite anti-Semitic
subtext in the speech, thinly disguised by a perfunctory one-sentence reference
to the Holocaust and the extermination of the Jews of Poland. But there was no
mistaking the undertones of an address that hailed the Polish people, their
culture and religion—the word “Polish” appears 25 times in the seven-page text
of the speech—and makes exactly one reference to the Jews, and no mention of
anti-Semitism. In addition, Trump did not visit either the memorial to the
Warsaw Ghetto uprising or the recently opened Museum of the History of Polish
Jews, honored as the 2016 European Museum of the Year.
The speech referred to the
Holocaust—the systematic murder of six million Jews, half of them in Poland—as
merely one in a list of “evils beyond description.”
The speech was concluded on a note
likely supplied by Bannon, a devotee of the pronouncements of Mussolini and
other Italian fascists. Trump argued
“the defense of the West ultimately
rests not only on means but also on the will of its people to prevail and be
successful and get what you have to have. The fundamental question of our time
is whether the West has the will to survive.”
The evocation of “will” as the decisive
category is significant. It is not for nothing that Leni Riefenstahl’s propaganda film on the German Nazi Party’s 1934
congress in Nuremberg was given the title “Triumph of the Will.” Trump may not
know, but Bannon certainly does, the fascist pedigree of this particular piece
of right-wing rhetoric.
Featured
image from @SebastianLedwon/Twitter via Encyclopedic News
The
original source of this article is World Socialist Web Site
Copyright ©
Patrick Martin, World Socialist Web Site, 2017
Donald
Trump delivered a speech in Warsaw Thursday morning, but it will be studied far
more carefully in Berlin and Moscow. So hostile was the population of the
Polish capital to the visit by the US president that the ruling (Law and
Justice) PiS party, which shares Trump’s outlook of semi-fascistic nationalism,
had to bus in supporters from the rural areas to make a respectable—and
suitably enthusiastic—crowd. The speech touched several bases required of any
US president, and particularly Trump, battered by months of allegations by the
intelligence apparatus and media—aimed at pushing him to take a more aggressive
stance against Moscow—that Russia intervened into the US presidential election
to favor his candidacy. He reaffirmed, in categorical fashion, the obligation
of the US government under Article Five of the NATO charter to respond
militarily to any attack on any member of NATO. Trump had previously cast doubt
on the possibility of the US going to war with Russia, a potential nuclear
cataclysm, in response to a border clash in Estonia, Lithuania or Latvia, the
three Baltic republics ruled by viciously anti-Russian right-wing governments.
Article Five does not cover Ukraine, which is not a NATO member. The US
president claimed that his previous criticisms of NATO were sparked by the
disparity between the US financial contribution and those of its European
allies, and that this had been vindicated by a flood of promises of greater
military spending from these countries. He then added, “To those who would
criticize our tough stance, I would point out that the United States has
demonstrated not merely with words but with its actions that we stand firmly
behind Article 5, the mutual defense commitment.” Trump also singled out Russia
for criticism, declaring, “We urge Russia to cease its destabilizing activities
in the Ukraine and elsewhere and its support for hostile regimes, including
Syria and Iran, and instead join the community of responsible nations in our
fight against common enemies and defense of civilization itself.” The most
important passages in the speech, drafted for Trump by his foreign policy team
and delivered without any obvious deviations, declared sympathy for the plight
of Poland, trapped geographically between more powerful nations, Germany and
Russia, sometimes partitioned or overrun by them. The speech was delivered at
the site of a memorial to the Warsaw uprising by the Polish Home Army in 1944,
which was bloodily suppressed by the Nazis. Image result for stephen bannon
Stephen Bannon (Source: Don Irvine / Wikimedia Commons) Trump himself knows
next to nothing of the geography or history of Poland, or any other country,
for that matter. These lines were undoubtedly prepared for him by the National
Security Council and fascistic aides like Stephen Bannon, and the clear purpose
of the material was to fan the flames of anti-German and anti-Russian
sentiment, both in Poland and more broadly in Europe. This is in keeping with
the new orientation of US foreign policy, which regards the European Union as a
major economic and (potentially) strategic adversary dominated by Germany, and
therefore makes common cause with the EU members most antagonistic to
Brussels—first of all Britain, which is pursuing Brexit, and secondly Poland,
which has repeatedly clashed with the EU over the ultra-right and
antidemocratic measures of the PiS government. Trump deliberately associated
himself with the viciously anti-immigrant policies of the PiS, claiming that,
like his own administration, the government in Warsaw was not persecuting
immigrants but rather fighting terrorism, which both Trump and the PiS identify
with the Muslim countries and Muslim minorities in Europe and the United States.
Trump invoked religion repeatedly as the key to the history of the Polish
people, claiming that the collapse of the Stalinist regimes should be dated on
June 2, 1979, when “one million Poles gathered around Victory Square for their
very first mass with their Polish Pope,” and “one million Poles sang three
simple words: ‘We Want God’.” He continued, “Their message is as true today as
ever. The people of Poland, the people of America, and the people of Europe
still cry out ‘We want God’.” Actually, Europe is a largely secular society,
and Poland is a relative backwater with its powerful Roman Catholic hierarchy
and priest-ridden rural population—the price paid for decades of persecution of
socialist and left-wing thought by the Stalinist bureaucracy. From his
glorification of (Christian) religion, Trump went on to demonize Muslims,
declaring, “We are confronted by another oppressive ideology—one that seeks to
export terrorism and extremism all around the globe. America and Europe have
suffered one terror attack after another.” He urged Russia to join the Western
powers “in our fight against common enemies and in defense of civilization
itself.” In perhaps the most remarkable passage of a fascistic speech, Trump
announced he has identified “yet another danger … invisible to some but
familiar to the Poles: the steady creep of government bureaucracy that drains
the vitality and wealth of the people.” In one paragraph, the US president
managed to conflate the danger of ISIS terrorism and the apparently equal menace
of environmental regulations by the EPA. He told his audience, “We must work
together to confront forces, whether they come from inside or out, from the
South or the East, that threaten over time to undermine these values and to
erase the bonds of culture, faith and tradition that make us who we are.” There
was a definite anti-Semitic subtext in the speech, thinly disguised by a
perfunctory one-sentence reference to the Holocaust and the extermination of
the Jews of Poland. But there was no mistaking the undertones of an address
that hailed the Polish people, their culture and religion—the word “Polish”
appears 25 times in the seven-page text of the speech—and makes exactly one
reference to the Jews, and no mention of anti-Semitism. In addition, Trump did
not visit either the memorial to the Warsaw Ghetto uprising or the recently
opened Museum of the History of Polish Jews, honored as the 2016 European
Museum of the Year. The speech referred to the Holocaust—the systematic murder
of six million Jews, half of them in Poland—as merely one in a list of “evils
beyond description.” The speech was concluded on a note likely supplied by
Bannon, a devotee of the pronouncements of Mussolini and other Italian
fascists. Trump argued “the defense of the West ultimately rests not only on
means but also on the will of its people to prevail and be successful and get
what you have to have. The fundamental question of our time is whether the West
has the will to survive.” The evocation of “will” as the decisive category is significant.
It is not for nothing that Leni Riefenstahl’s propaganda film on the German
Nazi Party’s 1934 congress in Nuremberg was given the title “Triumph of the
Will.” Trump may not know, but Bannon certainly does, the fascist pedigree of
this particular piece of right-wing rhetoric. Featured image from
@SebastianLedwon/Twitter via Encyclopedic News The original source of this
article is World Socialist Web Site Copyright © Patrick Martin, World Socialist
Web Site, 2017
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