History is being made, once again. What may well determine Europe’s fate is that also outside the defenders of the Atlanticist faith, decent Europeans cannot bring themselves to believe in the dysfunction and utter irresponsibility of the American state.
by Karel van Wolferen
Strategic Culture
The European Union is not
(anymore) guided by politicians with a grasp of history, a sober
assessment of global reality, or simple common sense connected with the
long term interests of what they are guiding. If any more evidence was
needed, it has certainly been supplied by the sanctions they have agreed
on last week aimed at punishing Russia.
One way to fathom their
foolishness is to start with the media, since whatever understanding or
concern these politicians may have personally they must be seen to be
doing the right thing, which is taken care of by TV and newspapers.
In much of the European Union the
general understanding of global reality since the horrible fate of the
people on board the Malaysian Airliner comes from mainstream newspapers
and TV which have copied the approach of Anglo-American mainstream
media, and have presented ‘news’ in which insinuation and vilification
substitute for proper reporting.
Respected publications, like
the Financial Times or the once respected NRC Handelsblad of the
Netherlands for which I worked sixteen years as East Asia Correspondent,
not only joined in with this corrupted journalism but helped guide it
to mad conclusions. The punditry and editorials that have grown out of
this have gone further than anything among earlier examples of sustained
media hysteria stoked for political purposes that I can remember. The
most flagrant example I have come across, an anti-Putin leader in the
(July 26) Economist Magazine, had the tone of Shakespeare’s Henry V
exhorting his troops before the battle of Agincourt as he invaded
France.
One should keep in mind that there are
no European-wide newspapers or publications to sustain a European public
sphere, in the sense of a means for politically interested Europeans to
ponder and debate with each other big international developments.
Because those interested in world affairs usually read the international
edition of the New York Times or the Financial Times, questions and
answers on geopolitical matters are routinely shaped or strongly
influenced by what editors in New York and London have determined as
being important.
Thinking that may deviate
significantly as can now be found in Der Spiegel, the Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung, Die Zeit and Handelsblatt, does not travel across
German borders. Hence we do not see anything like a European opinion
evolving on global affairs, even when these have a direct impact on the
interests of the European Union itself.
The Dutch population was rudely shaken
out of a general complacency with respect to world events that could
affect it, through the death of 193 fellow nationals (along with a 105
people of other nationalities) in the downed plane, and its media were
hasty in following the American-initiated finger-pointing at Moscow.
Explanations that did not in some way involve culpability of the Russian
president seemed to be out of bounds.
This was at odds right away with
statements of a sober Dutch prime minister, who was under considerable
pressure to join the fingerpointing but who insisted on waiting for a
thorough examination of what precisely had happened.
The TV news programs I saw in
the days immediately afterwards had invited, among other anti–Russian
expositors, American neocon-linked talking heads to do the disclosing to
a puzzled and truly shaken up audience. A Dutch foreign policy
specialist explained that the foreign minister or his deputy could not
go to the site of the crash (as Malaysian officials did) to recover the
remains of Dutch citizens, because that would amount to an implicit
recognition of diplomatic status for the “separatists”. When the
European Union en bloc recognizes a regime that has come into existence
through an American initiated coup d’état, you are diplomatically stuck
with it.
The inhabitants and anti-Kiev fighters
at the crash site were portrayed, with images from youtube, as
uncooperative criminals, which for many viewers amounted to a
confirmation of their guilt. This changed when later reports from actual
journalists showed shocked and deeply concerned villagers, but the
discrepancy was not explained, and earlier assumptions of villainy did
not make way for any objective analysis of why these people might be
fighting at all.
Tendentious twitter and youtube ‘news’
had become the basis for official Dutch indignation with the East
Ukrainians, and a general opinion arose that something had to be set
straight, which was, again in general opinion, accomplished by a grand
nationally televised reception of the human remains (released through
Malaysian mediation) in a dignified sober martial ceremony.
Nothing that I have seen or read
even intimated that the Ukraine crisis – which led to coup and civil
war – was created by neoconservatives and a few R2P (“Responsibility to
Protect”) fanatics in the State Department and the White House,
apparently given a free hand by President Obama. The Dutch media also
appeared unaware that the catastrophe was immediately turned into a
political football for White House and State Department purposes. The
likelihood that Putin was right when he said that the catastrophe would
not have happened if his insistence on a cease-fire had been accepted,
was not entertained.
As it was, Kiev broke the cease-fire –
on the 10th of June – in its civil war against Russian speaking East
Ukrainians who do not wish to be governed by a collection of thugs,
progeny of Ukrainian nazis, and oligarchs enamored of the IMF and the
European Union. The supposed ‘rebels’ have been responding to the
beginnings of ethnic cleansing operations (systematic terror bombing and
atrocities – 30 or more Ukrainians burned alive) committed by Kiev
forces, of which little or nothing has penetrated into European news
reports.
It is unlikely that the American NGOs,
which by official admission spent 5 billion dollars in political
destabilization efforts prior to the February putsch in Kiev, have
suddenly disappeared from the Ukraine, or that America’s military
advisors and specialized troops have sat idly by as Kiev’s military and
militias mapped their civil war strategy; after all, the new thugs are
as a regime on financial life-support provided by Washington, the
European Union and IMF. What we know is that Washington is encouraging
the ongoing killing in the civil war it helped trigger.
But Washington has constantly had the
winning hand in a propaganda war against, entirely contrary to what
mainstream media would have us believe, an essentially unwilling
opponent. Waves of propaganda come from Washington and are made to fit
assumptions of a Putin, driven and assisted by a nationalism heightened
by the loss of the Soviet empire, who is trying to expand the Russian
Federation up to the borders of that defunct empire. The more
adventurous punditry, infected by neocon fever, has Russia threatening
to envelop the West.
Hence Europeans are made to believe that
Putin refuses diplomacy, while he has been urging this all along. Hence
prevailing propaganda has had the effect that not Washington’s but
Putin’s actions are seen as dangerous and extreme. Anyone with a
personal story that places Putin or Russia in a bad light must move
right now; Dutch editors seem insatiable at the moment.
There is no doubt that the
frequently referred to Moscow propaganda exists. But there are ways for
serious journalists to weigh competing propaganda and discern how much
veracity or lies and bullshit they contain. Within my field of vision
this has only taken place a bit in Germany. For the rest we must piece
political reality together relying on the now more than ever
indispensable American websites hospitable to whistleblowers and
old-fashioned investigative journalism, which especially since the onset
of the ‘war on terrorism’ and the Iraq invasion have formed a steady
form of samizdatpublishing.
In the Netherlands almost
anything that comes from the State Department is taken at face value.
America’s history, since the demise of the Soviet Union, of truly
breathtaking lies: on Panama, Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Venezuela, Libya
and North Korea; its record of overthrown governments; its black-op and
false flag operations; and its stealthily garrisoning of the planet
with some thousand military bases, is conveniently left out of
consideration.
The near hysteria throughout a week
following the downed airliner prevented people with some knowledge of
relevant history from opening their mouths. Job security in the current
world of journalism is quite shaky, and going against the tide would be
almost akin to siding with the devil, as it would damage one’s
journalistic ‘credibility’.
What strikes an older generation
of serious journalists as questionable about the mainstream media’s
credibility is editorial indifference to potential clues that would
undermine or destroy the official story line; a story line that has
already permeated popular culture as is evident in throwaway remarks
embellishing book and film reviews along with much else. In the
Netherlands the official story is already carved in stone, which is to
be expected when it is repeated ten-thousand times. It cannot be
discounted, of course, but it is based on not a shred of evidence.
The presence of two Ukrainian fighter
planes near the Malaysian airliner on Russian radar would be a potential
clue I would be very interested in if I were investigating either as
journalist or member of the investigation team that the Netherlands
officially leads. This appeared to be corroborated by a BBC Report with
eyewitness accounts from the ground by villagers who clearly saw another
plane, a fighter, close to the airliner, near the time of its crash,
and heard explosions coming from the sky.
This report has recently drawn attention
because it was removed from the BBC’s archive. I would want to talk
with Michael Bociurkiw, one of the first inspectors from the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) to reach the
crash site who spent more than a week examining the wreckage and has
described on CBC World News two or three “really pock-marked” pieces of
fuselage. “It almost looks like machine gun fire; very, very strong
machine gun fire that has left these unique marks that we haven’t seen
anywhere else.”
I would certainly also want to have a
look at the allegedly confiscated radar and voice records of the Kiev
Air Control Tower to understand why the Malaysian pilot veered off
course and rapidly descended shortly before his plane crashed, and find
out whether foreign air controllers in Kiev were indeed sent packing
immediately after the crash.
Like the “Veteran Intelligence
Professionals for Sanity”, I would certainly urge the American
authorities with access to satellite images to show the evidence they
claim to have of BUK missile batteries in ‘rebel’ hands as well as of
Russian involvement, and ask them why they have not done so already.
Until now Washington has acted like a
driver who refuses a breathalyzer test. Since intelligence officials
have leaked to some American newspapers their lesser certainty about the
American certainties as brought to the world by the Secretary of State,
my curiosity would be unrelenting.
To place European media loyalty to
Washington in the Ukraine case as well as the slavish conduct of
European politicians in perspective, we must know about and understand
Atlanticism. It is a European faith. It has not given rise to an
official doctrine, of course, but it functions like one. It is well
summed up by the Dutch slogan at the time of the Iraq invasion: “zonder
Amerika gaat het niet” (without the United States [things] [it] won’t
work).
Needless to say, the Cold War gave birth
to Atlanticism. Ironically, it gained strength as the threat from the
Soviet Union became less persuasive for increasing numbers among
European political elites. That probably was a matter of generational
change: the farther away from World War II, the less European
governments remembered what it means to have an independent foreign
policy on global-sized issues. Current heads of government of the
European Union are unfamiliar with practical strategic deliberations.
Routine thought on international relations and global politics is deeply
entrenched in Cold War epistemology.
This inevitably also informs
‘responsible’ editorial policies. Atlanticism is now a terrible
affliction for Europe: it fosters historical amnesia, willful blindness
and dangerously misconceived political anger. But it thrives on a
mixture of lingering unquestioned Cold War era certainties about
protection, Cold War loyalties embedded in popular culture, sheer
European ignorance, and an understandable reluctance to concede that one
has even for a little bit been brainwashed.
Washington can do outrageous things
while leaving Atlanticism intact because of everyone’s forgetfulness,
which the media do little or nothing to cure. I know Dutch people who
have become disgusted with the villification of Putin, but the idea that
in the context of Ukraine the fingerpointing should be toward
Washington is well-nigh unacceptable.
Hence, Dutch publications, along with
many others in Europe, cannot bring themselves to place the Ukraine
crisis in proper perspective by acknowledging that Washington started it
all, and that Washington rather than Putin has the key to its solution.
It would impel a renunciation of Atlanticism.
Atlanticism derives much of its
strength through NATO, its institutional embodiment. The reason for
NATO’s existence, which disappeard with the demise of the Soviet Union,
has been largely forgotten. Formed in 1949, it was based on the
idea that transatlantic cooperation for security and defense had become
necessary after World War II in the face of a communism, orchestrated
by Moscow, intent on taking over the entire planet. Much less talked
about was European internal distrust, as the Europeans set off on their
first moves towards economic integration. NATO constituted a kind of
American guarantee that no power in Europe would ever try to dominate
the others.
NATO has for some time now been a
liability for the European Union, as it prevents development of
concerted European foreign and defense policies, and has forced the
member states to become instruments serving American militarism. It is
also a moral liability because the governments participating in the
‘coalition of the willing’ have had to sell the lie to their citizens
that European soldiers dying in Iraq and Afghanistan have been a
necessary sacrifice to keep Europe safe from terrorists.
Governments that have supplied troops to
areas occupied by the United States have generally done this with
considerable reluctance, earning the reproach from a succession of
American officials that Europeans do too little for the collective
purpose of defending democracy and freedom.
As is the mark of an ideology,
Atlanticism is ahistorical. As horse medicine against the torment of
fundamental political ambiguity it supplies its own history: one that
may be rewritten by American mainstream media as they assist in
spreading the word from Washington.
There could hardly be a better
demonstration of this than the Dutch experience at the moment. In
conversations these past three weeks I have encountered genuine surprise
when reminding friends that the Cold War ended through diplomacy with a
deal made on Malta between Gorbachev and the elder Bush in December
1989, in which James Baker got Gorbachev to accept the reunification of
Germany and withdrawal of Warsaw Pact troops with a promise that NATO
would not be extended even one inch to the East.
Gorbachev pledged not to use force in
Eastern Europe where the Russians had some 350,000 troops in East
Germany alone, in return for Bush’s promise that Washington would not
take advantage of a Soviet withdrawal from Eastern Europe. Bill Clinton
reneged on those American promises when, for purely electoral reasons,
he boasted about an enlargement of NATO and in 1999 made the Czech
Republic and Hungary full members.
Ten years later another nine countries
became members, at which point the number of NATO countries was double
the number during the Cold War. The famous American specialist on
Russia, Ambassador George Kennan, originator of Cold War containment
policy, called Clinton’s move “the most fateful error of American policy
in the entire post-cold-war era.”
Historical ignorance abetted by
Atlanticism is poignantly on display in the contention that the ultimate
proof in the case against Vladimir Putin is his invasion of Crimea.
Again, political reality here was created by America’s mainstream media.
There was no invasion, as the Russian sailors and soldiers were already
there since it is home to the ‘warm water’ Black Sea base for the
Russian navy.
Crimea has been a part of Russia for as
long as the United States has existed. In 1954 Khrushchev, who himself
came from the Ukraine, gave it to the Ukrainian Socialist Republic,
which came down to moving a region to a different province, since Russia
and Ukraine still belonged to the same country. The Russian speaking
Crimean population was happy enough, as it voted in a referendum first
for independence from the Kiev regime that resulted from the coup
d’état, and subsequently for reunification with Russia.
Those who maintain that Putin had no
right to do such a thing are unaware of another strand of history in
which the United States has been moving (Star Wars) missile defense
systems ever closer to Russian borders, supposedly to intercept hostile
missiles from Iran, which do not exist. Sanctimonious talk about
territorial integrity and sovereignty makes no sense under these
circumstances, and coming from a Washington that has done away with the
concept of sovereignty in its own foreign policy it is downright
ludicrous.
A detestable Atlanticist move was the
exclusion of Putin from the meetings and other events connected with the
commemoration of the Normandy landings, for the first time in 17 years.
The G8 became the G7 as a result. Amnesia and ignorance have made the
Dutch blind to a history that directly concerned them, since the Soviet
Union took the heart out of the Nazi war machine (that occupied the
Netherlands) at a cost of incomparable and unimaginable numbers of
military dead; without that there would not have been a Normandy
invasion.
Not so long ago, the complete military
disasters of Iraq and Afghanistan appeared to be moving NATO to a point
where its inevitable demise could not to be too far off. But the Ukraine
crisis and Putin’s decisiveness in preventing the Crimea with its
Russian Navy base from possibly falling into the hands of the
American-owned alliance, has been a godsend to this earlier faltering
institution.
NATO leadership has already been moving
troops to strengthen their presence in the Baltic states, sending
missiles and attack aircraft to Poland and Lithuania, and since the
downing of the Malaysian airliner it has been preparing further military
moves that may turn into dangerous provocations of Russia. It has
become clear that the Polish foreign minister together with the Baltic
countries, none of which partook in NATO when its reason for being could
still be defended, have become a strong driving force behind it.
A mood of mobilization has
spread in the past week. The ventriloquist dummies Anders Fogh Rasmussen
and Jaap de Hoop Scheffer can be relied upon to take to TV screens
inveighing against NATO member-state backsliding. Rasmussen, the current
Secretary General, declared on August 7 in Kiev that NATO’s “support
for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine is unwavering”
and that he is looking to strengthen partnership with the country at the
Alliance’s summit in Wales in September.
That partnership is already strong, so
he said, “and in response to Russia’s aggression, NATO is working even
more closely with Ukraine to reform its armed forces and defense
institutions.”
In the meantime, in the American
Congress 23 Senate Republicans have sponsored legislation, the “Russian
Aggression Prevention Act”, which is meant to allow Washington to make
the Ukraine a non-NATO ally and could set the stage for a direct
military conflict with Russia. We will probably have to wait until after
America’s midterm elections to see what will become of it, but it
already helps provide a political excuse for those in Washington who
want to take next steps in the Ukraine.
In September last year Putin
helped Obama by making it possible for him to stop a bombing campaign
against Syria pushed by the neocons, and had also helped in defusing the
nuclear dispute with Iran, another neocon project. This led to a neocon
commitment to break the Putin-Obama link. It is hardly a secret that
the neoconservatives desire the overthrow of Putin and eventual
dismemberment of the Russian Federation.
Less known in Europe is the existence of numerous NGOs at work in Russia, which will help them with this.
Vladimir Putin could strike now or soon, to preempt NATO and the
American Congress, by taking Eastern Ukraine, something he probably
should have done right after the Crimean referendum. That would, of
course, be proof of his evil intentions in European editorial eyes.
In the light of all this, one of the
most fateful questions to ask in current global affairs is: what has to
happen for Europeans to wake up to the fact that Washington is playing
with fire and has ceased being the protector they counted on, and is
instead now endangering their security? Will the moment come
when it becomes clear that the Ukraine crisis is, most of all, about
placing Star Wars missile batteries along an extensive stretch of
Russian border, which gives Washington – in the insane lingo of nuclear
strategists – ‘first strike’ capacity?
It is beginning to sink in among older
Europeans that the United States has enemies who are not Europe’s
enemies because it needs them for domestic political reasons; to keep an
economically hugely important war industry going and to test by
shorthand the political bona fides of contenders for public office.
But while using rogue states and
terrorists as targets for ‘just wars’ has never been convincing, Putin’s
Russia as demonized by a militaristic NATO could help prolong the
transatlantic status quo. The truth behind the fate of the Malaysian
airliner, I thought from the moment that I heard about it, would be
politically determined. Its black boxes are in London. In NATO hands?
Other hindrances to an awakening remain
huge; financialization and neoliberal policies have produced an intimate
transatlantic entwining of plutocratic interests. Together with the
Atlanticist faith these have helped stymie the political development of
the European Union, and with that Europe’s ability to proceed with
independent political decisions. Since Tony Blair, Great Britain has
been in Washington’s pocket, and since Nicolas Sarkozy one can say more
or less the same of France.
That
leaves Germany. Angela Merkel was clearly unhappy with the sanctions,
but in the end went along because she wants to remain on the good side
of the American president, and the United States as the conqueror in
World War II does still have leverage through a variety of agreements.
Germany’s foreign minister, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, quoted in
newspapers and appearing on TV, repudiated the sanctions and points at
Iraq and Libya as examples of the results brought by escalation and
ultimatums, yet he too swings round and in the end goes along with them.
Der Spiegel is one of the German
publications that offer hope. One of its columnists, Jakob Augstein,
attacks the “sleepwalkers” who have agreed to sanctions, and censures
his colleagues’ finger-pointing at Moscow. Gabor Steingart, who
publishes Handelsblatt, inveighs against the “American tendency to
verbal and then to military escalation, the isolation, demonization, and
attacking of enemies” and concludes that also German journalism “has
switched from level-headed to agitated in a matter of weeks.
The spectrum of opinions has been
narrowed to the field of vision of a sniper scope.” There must be more
journalists in other parts of Europe who say things like this, but their
voices do not carry through the din of vilification.
History is being made, once again. What
may well determine Europe’s fate is that also outside the defenders of
the Atlanticist faith, decent Europeans cannot bring themselves to
believe in the dysfunction and utter irresponsibility of the American
state.
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