Conned again
By Paul Craig Roberts
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Nov 11, 2008, 00:26
If the change President-elect Obama has promised includes a
halt to America’s wars of aggression and an end to the rip-off of taxpayers by
powerful financial interests, what explains Obama’s choice of foreign and
economic policy advisors? Indeed, Obama’s selection of Rahm Israel Emanuel as
White House chief of staff is a signal that change ended with Obama’s election.
The only thing different about the new administration will be the faces.
Rahm Israel Emanuel is a supporter of Bush’s invasion of
Iraq. Emanuel rose to prominence in the Democratic Party as a result of his
fundraising connections to AIPAC. A strong supporter of the American Israeli
Public Affairs Committee, he comes from a terrorist family. His father was a
member of Irgun, a Jewish terrorist organization that used violence to drive
the British and Palestinians out of Palestine in order to create the Jewish
state. During the 1991 Gulf War, Rahm Israel Emanuel volunteered to serve in
the Israel Defense Forces. He was a member of the Freddie Mac board of
directors and received $231,655 in director’s fees in 2001. According to Wikipedia, “during the time Emanuel spent on the board,
Freddie Mac was plagued with scandals involving campaign contributions and
accounting irregularities.”
In “Hail to the Chief of Staff,” Alexander Cockburn describes
Emanuel as “a super-Likudnik hawk,”
who as chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee in 2006 “made great efforts to knock out antiwar
Democratic candidates.”
My despondent friends in the Israeli peace movement ask, “What is this man doing in Obama’s
administration?”
Obama’s election was necessary as the only means Americans
had to hold the Republicans accountable for their crimes against the
Constitution and human rights, for their violations of US and international
laws, for their lies and deceptions, and for their financial chicanery. As an
editorial in Pravda
put it, “Only Satan would have been
worse than the Bush regime. Therefore it could be argued that the new
administration in the USA could never be worse than the one which divorced the
hearts and minds of Americans from their brothers in the international
community, which appalled the rest of the world with shock and awe tactics that
included concentration camps, torture, mass murder and utter disrespect for international
law.”
But Obama’s advisers are drawn from the same gang of
Washington thugs and Wall Street banksters as Bush’s. Richard Holbrooke, son of
Russian and German Jews, was an assistant secretary of state and ambassador in
the Clinton administration. He implemented the policy to enlarge NATO and to
place the military alliance on Russia’s border in contravention of Reagan’s
promise to Gorbachev. Holbrooke is also associated with the Clinton
administration’s illegal bombing of Serbia, a war crime that killed civilians
and Chinese diplomats. If not a neocon himself, Holbrooke is closely allied
with them.
According to Wikipedia, Madeline Albright was born Marie
Jana Korbelova in Prague to Jewish parents who had converted to Catholicism in
order to escape persecution. She is the Clinton era secretary of state who told
Leslie Stahl (60 Minutes) that the US policy of Iraq sanctions, which resulted
in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi children, had goals important
enough to justify the children’s deaths. Albright’s infamous words: “We think the price is worth it.”
Wikipedia reports that this immoralist served on the board of directors of the
New York Stock Exchange at the time of Dick Grasso’s $187.5 million
compensation scandal.
Dennis Ross has long associations with the
Israeli-Palestinian “peace
negotiations.” A member of his Clinton era team, Aaron David Miller, wrote
that during 1999-2000 the US negotiating team led by Ross acted as Israel’s
lawyer: “we had to run everything by
Israel first.” This “stripped
our policy of the independence and flexibility required for serious
peacemaking. If we couldn’t put proposals on the table without checking with
the Israelis first, and refused to push back when they said no, how effective
could our mediation be?” According to Wikipedia, Ross is “chairman of a new Jerusalem-based think
tank, the Jewish People Policy Planning Institute, funded and founded by the Jewish Agency.”
Clearly, this is not a group of advisors that is going to
halt America’s wars against Israel’s enemies or force the Israeli government to
accept the necessary conditions for a real peace in the Middle East.
Ralph Nader predicted as much. In his “Open Letter to Barack Obama” (November 3, 2008), Nader pointed
out to Obama that his “transformation
from an articulate defender of Palestinian rights . . . to a dittoman for the
hard-line AIPAC lobby” puts Obama at odds with “a majority of Jewish-Americans” and “64% of Israelis.” Nader quotes the Israeli writer and peace
advocate Uri Avnery’s description of Obama’s appearance before AIPAC as an
appearance that “broke all records for
obsequiousness and fawning.” Nader damns Obama for his “utter lack of political courage [for]
surrendering to demands of the hard-liners to prohibit former President Jimmy
Carter from speaking at the Democratic National Convention.” Carter, who
achieved the only meaningful peace agreement between Israel and the Arabs, has
been demonized by the powerful AIPAC lobby for criticizing Israel’s policy of
apartheid toward the Palestinians whose territory Israel forcibly occupies.
Obama’s economic team is just as bad. Its star is Robert
Rubin, the bankster who was secretary of the treasury in the Clinton administration.
Rubin has responsibility for the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act and, thereby,
responsibility for the current financial crisis. In his letter to Obama, Nader
points out that Obama received unprecedented campaign contributions from
corporate and Wall Street interests. “Never
before has a Democratic nominee for president achieved this supremacy over his
Republican counterpart.”
Obama’s victory speech was magnificent. The TV cameras
scanning faces in the audience showed the hope and belief that propelled Obama
into the presidency. But Obama cannot bring change to Washington. There is no
one in the Washington crowd that he can appoint who is capable of bringing
change. If Obama were to reach outside the usual crowd, anyone suspected of
being a bringer of change could not get confirmed by the Senate. Powerful
interest groups -- AIPAC, the military-security complex, Wall Street -- use
their political influence to block unacceptable appointments.
As Alexander Cockburn put it in his column, “Obama, the first-rate Republican,” “never has the dead hand of the past had a
‘reform’ candidate so firmly by the windpipe.” Obama confirmed
Cockburn’s verdict in his first press conference as president-elect. Disregarding
the unanimous US National Intelligence Estimate, which concluded that Iran
stopped working on nuclear weapons five years ago, and ignoring the continued
certification by the International Atomic Energy Agency that none of the
nuclear material for Iran’s civilian nuclear reactor has been diverted to weapons
use, Obama sallied
forth with the Israel Lobby’s propaganda and accused Iran of “development of a nuclear weapon” and
vowing “to prevent that from happening.”
The change that is coming to America has nothing to do with
Obama. Change is coming from the financial crisis brought on by Wall Street
greed and irresponsibility, from the eroding role of the US dollar as reserve
currency, from countless mortgage foreclosures, from the offshoring of millions
of America’s best jobs, from a deepening recession, from pillars of American
manufacturing -- Ford and GM -- begging the government for taxpayers’ money to
stay alive, and from budget and trade deficits that are too large to be closed
by normal means.
Traditionally, the government relies on monetary and fiscal
policy to lift the economy out of recession. But easy money is not working.
Interest rates are already low and monetary growth is already high, yet unemployment
is rising. The budget deficit is already huge -- a world record -- and the red
ink is not stimulating the economy. Can even lower interest rates and even
higher budget deficits help an economy that has moved offshore, leaving behind
jobless consumers overburdened with debt?
How much more can the government borrow? America’s foreign
creditors are asking this question. An official organ of the Chinese ruling
party recently called
for Asian and European countries to “banish the US dollar from
their direct trade relations, relying only on their own currencies.”
“Why,” asks another Chinese publication,
“should China help the US to issue debt
without end in the belief that the national credit of the US can expand without
limit?”
The world has tired of American hegemony and had its fill of
American arrogance. America’s reputation is in tatters: the financial debacle,
endless red ink, Abu Ghraib, Gitmo, rendition, torture, illegal wars based on
lies and deception, disrespect for the sovereignty of other countries, war
crimes, disregard for international law and the Geneva Conventions, the assault
on habeas corpus and the separation of powers, a domestic police state,
constant interference in the internal affairs of other countries, boundless
hypocrisy.
The change that is coming is the end of American empire. The
hegemon has run out of money and influence. Obama as “America’s First Black President” will lift hopes and, thus, allow
the act to be carried on a little longer. But the New American Century is
already over.
Paul
Craig Roberts [email
him] was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury during President
Reagan’s first term. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal. He has
held numerous academic appointments, including the William E. Simon Chair,
Center for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University,
and Senior Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He was
awarded the Legion of Honor by French President Francois Mitterrand. He is the
author of Supply-Side
Revolution : An Insider’s Account of Policymaking in Washington; Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and Meltdown:
Inside the Soviet Economy, and is the co-author with Lawrence M.
Stratton of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are Trampling the
Constitution in the Name of Justice. Click here for
Peter Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the recent
epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.
Copyright © 1998-2007 Online Journal
Email Online Journal Editor