Eric Zuesse
On March 22nd, I headlined “Why the Western Alliance Is Ending,” and
I listed the recent events which indicate that the Western Alliance
doesn’t have much longer to go. And, now, it has actually already ended.
The handwriting is on the wall, for everyone to see; it’s so
out-in-the-open, as of today.
Here is what has just happened (as reported in German Economic News,
and translated by me), which virtually brings down the curtains on
America’s dominance of the world — a dominance that started when World
War II ended in 1945:
March 21: “GEOPOLITICS: Washington nervous: China, Japan and South Korea forge an Alliance.” This
news story reports: “For the first time in three years, the foreign ministers of the three countries met. They agreed on Saturday in Seoul to work towards a summit of their leaders, and to take on problems with the interpretation of history [which have separated them till now]. They also expressed their intention to continue to work for a free trade agreement and for new multi-party talks on North Korea’s controversial nuclear program.”
news story reports: “For the first time in three years, the foreign ministers of the three countries met. They agreed on Saturday in Seoul to work towards a summit of their leaders, and to take on problems with the interpretation of history [which have separated them till now]. They also expressed their intention to continue to work for a free trade agreement and for new multi-party talks on North Korea’s controversial nuclear program.”
Here’s the important context of that: The
U.S. in WW II conquered Japan, which had invaded China and conquered
Korea; but, now, Japan, China and South Korea are moving toward
one-another, while China, and indirectly the BRICS group of
rising economic powers as a whole — Brazil, Russia, India, China and
South Africa — are making their move past the previous U.S.-European
control of the world. Furthermore, these Asian powers are collectively
inviting North Korea to move toward them, and to join this group, which
would finally bring an end to the stalemated hostilities between South
and North Korea. So: welcome to the 21st Century! (For more details on
that, see the terrific news reporting in GEN.)
And, in addition: for these three
economic powerhouses to “work for a free trade agreement” that’s outside
the orbit of Obama’s secret negotiations for his TPP or Trans-Pacific Partnership with
them, may mean that they all will be less likely to accept the
trade-deal that he is trying to negotiate collectively with them. So:
this three-party ministerial meeting is, in itself, potentially
an extremely important historical event. But it is part of this larger
and interconnected whole, which is far more important than any
trade-deal.
March 20: “General Motors ends Opel production in Russia.” This
news story reports yet another sign of the separation between the
Western and the Eastern economic blocs, which, yet again, is both a
direct and an indirect result of Obama’s sanctions against Russia, and
of his Secretary of State John Kerry’s agreement with the king of Saudi
Arabia to increase oil production in order to drive down the oil price
and thereby starve Russia of its crucial foreign-exchange earnings from
Russia’s huge oil-sales. However, countering Obama’s purpose of harming Russia,
GM’s Russian production facilities might now be acquired as abandoned
assets by Russia’s oligarchs or the Russian state, and produce new
models, the profits from which will remain inside Russia and accrue to
Russians. In this regard: Reuters headlined on March 19th “Lada maker’s hopes rise as rival flees Russian car market,” and
reported that, “Russian carmaker Avtovaz, producer of the … Lada,
expects to grab a bigger share of the shrinking domestic market as its
international rivals pull back.” That money will stay in Russia,
building up Russia’s economy, instead of Germany’s (Opel) and America’s
(GM).
March 23: “Volkswagen Drives Back Russian Production.” Germany’s
largest car-maker adds yet further to the opportunities for Russia’s
investors, and for investors in other BRICS countries (since they’re not
participating in Obama’s anti-Russian sanctions).
March 23: “Spain: Protest party, Podemos, comes third in regional election.” “The
Socialists won the [Andalusian] election, the Conservatives of Premier
Mariano Rajoy clearly lost the election.” The conservative party, and
its leader of Spain, Mariano Rajoy, which have been strongly
pro-American and have supported America’s fascist anti-Russian coup in Ukraine as much as they thought the Spanish public would tolerate (given that Spain’s public are overwhelmingly anti-fascist
after the dismal fascist Franco decades), were trounced in regional
elections. Spain’s new socialist party, Podemos, was silent on foreign
policy because of Spain’s domestic problems, but will likely be less
supportive of America’s anti-Russian war than the conservatives have
been — which already has not been very supportive (because Rajoy fears a
voter-backlash).
March 23: “France: Sarkozy-bloc ahead, National Front strong, Hollande beaten.” The
party of the ‘socialist’ Francois Hollande, who has been as cooperative
with Obama’s anti-Russian policies as he can be (given the public’s
sentiment against those policies), has been beaten in local elections
throughout France, by two politicians who have spoken out strongly
against Hollande’s kowtowing to American supremacy and his caving to
Obama on Ukraine and Russia (such as by defaulting on the Mistral deal):
Nicolas Sarkozy and Marine Le Pen. Nominally, these are ‘right-wing’
politicians, but in this matter they are predominantly against
imperialism, they’re progressives here, because the imperialism is being
practiced by America against their own country, France; and they are more like Charles DeGaul, who was a French patriot who opposed American domination of French affairs.
Public pressures in Europe are largely
behind the breakaway from America of European leaders (the phenomenon
which was discussed and documented in my “Why the Western Alliance Is Ending”). However, the signal event isn’t really in Europe; it’s in Asia: “GEOPOLITICS: Washington nervous: China, Japan and South Korea forge an Alliance.” What
that indicates, and which is only being supported and reinforced by
these European events, is a re-alignment of world-powers, in which,
Russian leader Vladimir Putin’s “EurAsian” concept is being endorsed
virtually world-wide, except perhaps among the Arabic oil-sheikdoms such
as the Saudi, Qatari and Bahraini aristocracies, all of whom are allied
with the U.S. aristocracy and crucial to the dollarization of the
oil-price and thus of the trading of weapons for oil and gas.
Vladimir Putin’s multipolar world is
winning; it’s attracting support from non-fascists in all corners of the
globe. Barack Obama’s opposite vision — reflected especially in his
often-repeated phrase, in which he refers to the United States as “the one indispensable nation” (meaning that all other nations are
“dispensable”) — is the likes of which the world hasn’t even heard,
from anyone else, ever since the time of Adolf Hitler’s infamous
“Deutschland über alles” in the 1930s and ’40s; and it really means the
very same thing, only for a different country: it’s actually
nationalism, instead of patriotism; and only a small minority of people, even in today’s nazi
Ukraine and in Nazi Germany, have supported it, or sought to impose it.
It’s far stronger among aristocrats than among the public.
The shock of the world, to find a
President of the United States saying that, and his going so far as to
tell America’s military to view America’s economic competitors as being
what they will be fighting against, is driving away the publics, and now
even the leaders of other nations. For example, Obama told West Point cadets:
“The United States is and remains the one
indispensable nation. … Russia’s aggression toward former Soviet states
unnerves capitals in Europe, while China’s economic rise and military
reach worries its neighbors. From Brazil to India, rising middle classes
compete with us, and governments seek a greater say in global forums.”
He thinks our military should be fighting against nations (such as Russia) that have rising economies. For him, it’s about conquest, and not only about national defense. And he’s obsessed with conquering Russia. Even the aristocrats in most other countries are now backing off from that. He has the support for it, at home, of virtually all members of Congress, but even in the U.S., more than two-thirds of the public oppose it. He
has over-reached, so very far, that it’s finally beyond his grasp, and
it’s only driving the world faster into the multipolar vision that
Russia’s leader, much maligned by the Western press, has
been championing for the world’s future: a world of free and
independent states, which recognize that for any one of them to benefit
at the expense of others is wrong and brings no one any good in the
final analysis — much less in the present (just wars such as in Ukraine).
Whatever may happen to Vladimir Putin,
his vision has actually taken over the world, and he has made clear that
Russia itself (and he himself) has no intention or desire to do so. (He
even refuses to accept the rebelling region of the former Ukraine into becoming a part of Russia. He had accepted Crimea only because it’s vital to Russia’s national defense and had been a part of Russia until 1954.) This is remarkable. And his contrast to Obama is also remarkable.
Obama’s arrogance is what’s driving the
world away. It has brought about the end of The American Century, in
world affairs. It has given entirely new meaning to the old phrase “the
ugly American.” In its new meaning, this phrase refers not to the
American public (who never really deserved such opprobrium anyway), but
clearly to the American aristocracy, the billionaire elite whom Obama and the U.S. Congress actually serve. They
are America’s problem, but perhaps they won’t become the world’s, after
all. That is what is at stake here: whether an overreaching national
aristocracy will succeed in imposing its will upon and against the
entire world. Other aristocracies are now deciding: no. They won’t. And
that’s today’s big news-story.
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