Coming
Trump World Order: Western Intelligence On Sixes and Sevens
Saeed Naqvi
Pardon my naiveté, but I cannot for the
life of me, comprehend why the entire US establishment, with the Intelligence
Community in the vanguard, is in convulsions about the alleged Russian efforts
to hack into the US elections which brought Donald Trump to power. The CIA must
be lazy if it doesn’t hack into Moscow, Beijing, everywhere.
The Washington Post on December 23
published a story by Lindsey A. Rourke, under the headline: “The US tried to
change other countries’ governments 72 times during the Cold War”.
As a journalist, I have been witness to
efforts at regime change or attempted assassination of leaders. Ronald Reagan
bombed Tripoli and Benghazi in 1986, killing Qaddafi’s six month old daughter.
Qaddafi barely escaped.
Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi was so moved
that he arranged for a delegation of non aligned foreign ministers to Tripoli
to commiserate with the Libyan leader.
The Reagan White House was not pleased.
The power a particular Indian ambassador to Washington had acquired depended
largely on extraordinary access to key officials around the President. To
preserve this priceless access, Rajiv Gandhi was persuaded to sack Foreign
Minister, Bali Ram Bhagat. His guilt? He led the “peace” delegation to Tripoli – at Rajiv’s behest.
In 1987, in Managua, Nicaragua, Cardinal
Ovando Bravo led me to Mother Mary’s statue in the centre of town which had not
stopped “shedding tears” eversince the Daniel Ortega led Sandinistas came to
power. Mary’s tears were not in vain. God was working through the US who were
financing and arming the anti Sandinista Contra rebels. Mysterious were God’s
ways. The money for the Contras came from a secret fund in Iran (Devil
incarnate for neo cons) which was receiving arms from the US for this
extraordinary munificence.
It might be argued that the examples
listed above belong to the Cold War era. Well, Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Libya,
all victims of US interventions, are clearly post cold war enterprises. Agreed,
the creation of the Islamist Mujahideen did result in the Soviet Union vacating
Afghanistan, but at the cost of the Afghan nation. Zbigniew Brzezinski placed
the matter in a kind of perspective: “Our aim was to defeat the Soviet Union”
he said. “And not worry about stirred up Muslims.”
The tizzy in which the US intelligence
community finds itself, might be a good occasion to revisit the Syrian story to
which I am witness from the very beginning. I extricate myself from a group of
Arab experts at the Semiramis hotel in Damascus, to keep an appointment with Bouthaina
Shaaban, senior adviser to President Bashar al Assad.
How do you explain US ambassador, Robert
Stephen Ford and his French counterpart, holding meetings in Hama, Homs and Darra
with rebel groups, in full public gaze? I ask her.
Ms. Shaaban, elegant and articulate,
shrugs her shoulders. “Just shows how much we have been penetrated.” Ford, it
is commonly known, was a great favourite of Hillary Clinton when she was
Secretary of State.
Among the senior
Arabists in Damascus at that time is also, Edward Lionel Peck, a former US
ambassador to Arab countries. His disgust with Ford’s behaviour is contained in
a letter he wrote to members of the group who were in Damascus with him. There
is such universal endorsement of the Ford school of diplomacy which borders on
the Secret Service type operations, that I feel obliged to give Peck as much airing
as I can. He wrote: “I have been dismayed by the accolades and support given to
Ambassador Ford, our man in - and now out of Syria, for stepping well out of
the traditional and appropriate role of a diplomat and actively encouraging the
revolt/insurrection/sectarian strife/outside meddling, call it what you will,
that is still going on. It is easy to imagine the US reaction if an ambassador
from anywhere were to engage in even distantly related activities here. I fear
my country remains somewhat more than merely insensitive, and is sliding into
just plain rampant and offensive arrogance.” Will Trump put an end to such
shenanigans?
There is something strained and edgy in
the way the neo cons, the media, with the Intelligence Community in front, have
mounted a virtual war on the incoming administration. It is actually a kind of
blackmail. The message seems to be: you will get more of the same if you
deviate from the ongoing policy which sees Vladimir Putin as arch enemy.
Trump’s commitment to “bomb the shit”
out of terrorists, threatens to expose the doublespeak of established policy on
Syria too. So far the US and its allies have pursued a policy riddled with
ambiguity: fight IS and al Nusra but also oust or atleast weaken the Assad
regime, a paradox which, in the given circumstances, cannot be reconciled. The
Russian policy is more straightforward: fight the IS and Nusra in which the
regime troops can be decisive.
Trump is quite clear: seek Russian
cooperation to defeat terrorism. Who can quarrel with this line? The moment of
reckoning may also have arrived in Afghanistan, where the Taleban are to be
mobilized by Russia and China to fight IS and Al Qaeda. Can Trump be far
behind? That’s the tricky one.
In brief, with Trump’s arrival on the
scene, the stranglehold of the Intelligence Community on foreign policy may
well weaken.
The world of western Intelligence is therefore
all upside down.
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ReplyDeleteIt appears the US deep state with its atlantic alliance and the cold war world view is more concerned about Ukraine and possible Russian adventures in the baltics. The Syrian tragedy might reach some conclusion if Trump puts his foot down and stops all support to the 'rebels' . We in india seem asleep to the Russian moves towards China and their new found love for the Taliban, i hope you write something on the opportunities or costs for us of joining that bandwagon.
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