Surrounded by Neocons
They are all the news that fits
Philip Giraldi • January 9, 2018 •
Award winning journalist James Risen has recently described in some detail his sometimes painful relationship with The New York Times.
His lengthy account is well worth reading as it demonstrates
how
successive editors of the paper frequently cooperated with the
government to suppress stories on torture and illegal activity while
also self-censoring to make sure that nothing outside the framework
provided by the “war on terror” should be seriously discussed. It became
a faithful lap dog for an American role as global hegemon, promoting
government half-truths and suppressing information that it knew to be
true but which would embarrass the administration in power, be they
Democrats or Republicans.
If one were to obtain a similar insider account of goings-on at the other national “newspaper of record” The Washington Post it is quite likely that comparable trimming of the narrative also took place. To be sure, the Post is worse than the Times,
characterized by heavily editorializing in its news coverage without
necessarily tipping off the reader when “facts” end and speculation
begins. In both publications, stories about Iran or Russia routinely
begin with an assertion that Moscow interfered in the 2016 U.S. election
and that Iran is the aggressor in the Middle East, contentions that
have not been demonstrated and can easily be challenged. Both
publications also have endorsed every American war since 2001, including
Iraq, Libya and the current mess in Syria, one indication of the
quality of their reporting and analysis.
A recent op-ed in the Times
by Bret Stephens is a perfect example of warmongering mischief wrapped
in faux expert testimony to make it palatable. Stephens is the resident
neocon at the Times. He was brought over from the Wall Street Journal
when it was determined that his neocon colleague David Brooks had
become overly squishy, while the resident “conservative” Russ Douthat
had proven to be a bit too cautious and even rational to please the
increasingly hawkish senior editors.
Stephens’ article, entitled Finding the Way Forward on Iran
sparkles with throwaway gems like “Tehran’s hyperaggressive foreign
policy in the wake of the 2015 nuclear deal” and “Real democracies don’t
live in fear of their own people” and even “it’s not too soon to start
rethinking the way we think about Iran.” Or try “A better way of
describing Iran’s dictatorship is as a kleptotheocracy, driven by
impulses that are by turns doctrinal and venal.”
Bret
has been a hardliner on Iran for years. Early on in this op-ed he makes
very clear that he wants it to be dealt with forcibly because it has
“centrifuges, ballistic missiles, enriched uranium [and] fund[s]
Hezbollah, assist Bashar al-Assad, arm[s] the Houthis, [and] imprison[s]
the occasional British or American citizen.” He describes how Iran is a
very corrupt place run by religious leaders and Revolutionary Guards
and proposes that their corruption be exposed so that the Iranian people
can take note and rise up in anger. And if exposure doesn’t work, they
should be hammered with sanctions. He does not explain why sanctions,
which disproportionately hurt the people he expects to rise up, will
bring about any real change.
Stephens cites two of his buddies Ken Weinstein of the Hudson Institute and Mark Dubowitz of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies
(FDD), who are apparently experts on how to squeeze Iran. Weinstein
prefers exposing the misdeeds of the Mullahs to anger the Iranian people
while Dubowitz prefers punitive sanctions “for corruption.”
The
article does not reveal that Weinstein and Dubowitz are long time
critics of Iran, are part of the Israel Lobby and just happen to be
Jewish, as is Stephens. The Hudson Institute and the FDD are leading
neocon and pro-Israel fronts. So my question becomes, “Why Iran?” The
often-heard Israeli complaint about its being unfairly picked on could
reasonably be turned on its head in asking the same about Iran. In fact,
Iran compares favorably with Israel. It has no nuclear weapons, it does
not support any of the Sunni terrorist groups that are chopping heads,
and it has not disenfranchised hundreds of thousands of people that it
rules over. The fact is that Iran is being targeted because Israel sees
it as its prime enemy in the region and has corrupted many “opinion
makers” in the U.S., to include Stephens, to hammer home that point. To
be sure, Iran is a very corrupt place run by people who should not be
running a hot dog stand, but the same applies to the United States and
Israel. And there are lots of places that are not being targeted like
Iran that are far worse, including good friend and ally of both
Jerusalem and Washington, Saudi Arabia.
Oddly
enough Stephens, Weinstein and Dubowitz do not get into any of that
back story, presumably because it would be unseemly. And, of course and
unfortunately, the New York Times opinion page is not unique. An interesting recent podcast interview by Politico‘s
Chief International Affairs correspondent Susan Glasser with leading
neoconservatives Eliot Cohen and Max Boot, is typical of how the media
selectively shapes a narrative to suit its own biases. Glasser, Cohen
and Boot are all part of the establishment foreign policy consensus in
the U.S. and therefore both hate and fail to understand the Trump
phenomenon. Both Cohen and Booth were vociferous founding members of the
#NeverTrump foreign policy resistance movement.
Boot
describes the new regime’s foreign policy as “kowtow[ing] to dictators
and undermin[ing] American support for freedom and democracy around the
world,” typical neocon leitmotifs. Glasser appears to be in
love with her interviewees and hurls softball after softball. She
describes Boot as “fantastic” and Cohen receives the epithet “The
Great.” The interview itself is remarkably devoid of any serious
discussion of foreign policy and is essentially a sustained assault on
Trump while also implicitly supporting hardline national security
positions. Cohen fulminates about “a very serious Russian attack on the
core of our political system. I mean, I don’t know how you get more
reckless and dangerous than that,” while Boot asks what “has to be done”
about Iran.
Pompous
ass Cohen, who interjected in the interview that “and you know, Max and
I are both intellectuals,” notably very publicly refused to have any
part in a Trump foreign policy team during the campaign but later when
The Donald was actually elected suggested that the new regime might
approach him with humility to offer a senior position and he just might
condescend to join them. They did not do so, and he wrote an angry
commentary on their refusal.
Hating
Trump is one thing, but I would bet that if the question of a hardline
policy vis-à-vis Russia or the Jerusalem Embassy move had come up Cohen
and Boot would have expressed delight. The irony is that Trump is in
fact pursuing a basically neocon foreign policy which the two men would
normally support, but they appear to be making room for Trump haters in
the policy formulation process to push the national security consensus
even farther to the right. Indeed, in another article by Boot at Foreign Policy
he writes “I applaud Trump’s decisions to provide Ukraine with arms to
defend itself from Russian aggression, to recognize Jerusalem as the
capital of Israel, to send additional U.S. troops to Afghanistan, and to
accelerate former President Barack Obama’s strategy for fighting the
Islamic State.” Cohen meanwhile applauds the embassy move, though he warns that Trump’s success in so doing might embolden him to do something reckless over North Korea.
Perhaps
one should not be astonished that leading neocons appearing in the
mainstream media will continue to have their eyes on the ball and seek
for more aggressive engagement in places like Iran and Russia. The media
should be faulted because it rarely publishes any contrary viewpoint
and it also consistently fails to give any space to the considerable
downside to the agitprop. It must be reassuring for many Americans to
know that the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is preparing
itself to deal with the aftermath of a nuclear attack on the United
States and it will be sharing information on the appropriate
preparations with the American people. There will be a public session on how to prepare for a nuclear explosion on January 16th.
CDC
experts will consider “planning and preparation efforts” for such a
strike. “While a nuclear detonation is unlikely, it would have
devastating results and there would be limited time to take critical
protection steps,” the Center elaborated in its press release on the
event.
That
the United States should be preparing for a possible nuclear future can
in part be attributed to recent commentary by the “like, really smart”
and “very stable genius” who is the nation’s chief executive, but the
fuel being poured on the fire for war is the very same neocons who are
featured in the mainstream media as all-purpose experts and have
succeeded in selling the snake oil about America’s proper role as
aggressor-in-chief for the entire world. It would be an unparalleled
delight to be able to open a newspaper and not see Bret Stephens, Eliot
Cohen, Max Boot or even the redoubtable Bill Kristol grinning back from
the editorial page, but I suppose I am only dreaming.
Philip
M. Giraldi, Ph.D., is Executive Director of the Council for the
National Interest, a 501(c)3 tax deductible educational foundation that
seeks a more interests-based U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East.
Website is www.councilforthenationalinterest.org, address is P.O. Box
2157, Purcellville VA 20134 and its email is inform@cnionline.org.
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