The Deep State and the Boomerang Effect
By
Jerry Kroth, Ph.D.
May 08, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- Academic psychology does not rank high
on solutions to international crises,
but it does have a concept worthy of our
attention, “reactance” or the boomerang
effect.
It
means that the more you push in one
direction, the more the opposite result
occurs as a powerful form blowback. The
greater the sanctions on North Korea to
stop its nuclear program, for example,
the more rapidly it develops its
weapons, and the further grows the range
of its ballistic missiles. The more the
U.S. tries to decapitate Al-Qaeda in
Afghanistan, the more Al-Qaeda
storefronts open in over 14 countries
from Uganda to Uzbekistan. [1]
The more you push forward, the greater
the pushback. It is curious how
mainstream media wonks on Meet the
Press or Face The Nation
rarely venture into this terrain. For
one thing, there is almost no discussion
of Israel’s nuclear cruise missiles on
three submarines stationed off the coast
of Iran. They patrol 24-7, and they can
reach any target in Iran in a matter of
minutes.[2] Corporate media censorship
on this issue is absolute and ironclad.
How can one talk about Iran’s
development of nuclear weapons—as a
boomerang reaction to Israel’s constant
nuclear threat—if there is no
permissible discussion of Israel’s
nuclear threat in the first instance?
And there isn’t.
So
our punditocracy obsessively blathers
about the myriad dangers facing the
United States with little interest in
how many of these external threats are
actually boomerang reactions to our own
behavior.
The deep state
Before we explore this blowback idea
further, let us pause to examine the
conspiracy theory of the “deep state”
and the so-called military-intelligence
axis we hear so much about.
The New York Times
and The New Yorker recently
sermonized that the “Deep State” is
nothing but a fiction. [3] It is all a
“trumped” up conspiracy. “The problem in
Washington is not a conspiracy against
the President, it’s the President
himself,” so opines David Remnick in his
piece “There is no deep state!” The
Atlantic similarly scolds, “There
is no American deep state!” [4] Denials
are all over the corporate media.
But the Donald insists he was bugged,
that his conversations with the
Australian prime minister and others
were tapped and then released to the
press. [5] The substance of those
conversations could only have come from
FBI, NSA, or CIA counterintelligence
sources, he says, along with leaks to
the press. So is this a wild conspiracy
theory or an inconvenient truth?
The mainstream media rejoinder is that
it is all just unpresidential,
paranoiac, early-morning tweeting,
nothing more— “President Trump has
offered no evidence backing his claims.”
[6] So echoes the New York Times,
the New York Daily News,
spokespersons for the House Intelligence
Chairman, et. al.,
But progressives like Dennis Kucinich
surprisingly believe the deep state not
only exists, but that Trump’s
wiretapping assertions are not all that
crazy. [7] Former Attorney General
Michael Mukasey thinks Trump was bugged
too. [8]
NSA whistleblower William Binney said
“Trump is actually right. Everything was
being monitored.”[9] Two separate
sources “with links to the
counter-intelligence community” have
confirmed ... that a FISA court warrant
was issued to surveille Trump as far
back as October, concluding “Obama’s
fingerprints are all over this.” [10]
More intrigue comes from Evelyn Farkas,
assistant secretary of defense under
Obama, who alleged “that not only was
the previous administration collecting
intelligence on the Trump team, it was
attempting to share it as far and wide
as possible.” [11] [Under scrutiny,
though, she walked back those
comments.][12]
Curiously, Obama’s national security
counsel, Susan Rice, admitted some
wiretaps occurred. [13] Mark Levin, a
former Reagan official, summarizes:
“The Obama administration’s targeting of
the Trump organization, in the middle of
a presidential campaign, was a more
egregious abuse of executive power than
Nixon exercised with the Watergate break
in. . . an attempted coup to prevent
Trump from assuming office.” [14]
If
there is a deep state plying these
clandestine waters, who are they? Those
on the left wag their fingers, at least
on the political front, at Diane
Feinstein, [15] Adam Schiff, other
members of the Senate Intelligence
Committee, Lindsey Graham—who wants
boots on the ground in Syria now—
along with noted war-hawk John McCain.
There are other persons of interest too.
[16] [17] But there is also a
possibility that a corps of entrenched
bureaucrats, embedded anonymously inside
the NSA, CIA, and FBI, populate a
putative shadow government along with
what others call so-called Wall Street
cohorts. [18] [19]
Strangely, Trump first appeared to the
American electorate dressed in the garb
of a resolute isolationist who
questioned the relevance of NATO,
thought the Iraq war was a mistake, and
wanted to get comfy with Russia. Fast
forward 100 days, and his wardrobe
change is breathtaking. It boasts a
number of new deep-state insignias: He
let Attorney General Jeff Sessions
recuse himself in the Russia
investigation; he stayed silent as
favorite Michael Flynn left in disgrace;
he withheld support as Steve Bannon got
booted out of the National Security
Council; Trump advisor and crony,
Sebastian Gorka, of Muslim-ban fame also
got his walking papers. [20] Besides
those drapersonnel changes, Trump sent
an ominous flotilla to North Korean
shores saying “If China is not going to
solve North Korea, we will!” [21] And
then he added a touch of bravado by
sending 59 Tomahawk missiles into Syria,
all to the applause of his critics.
Quite a turn around. Left face! Right
face! About face, Mr. President!
It
looks like Donald has embarked on John
McCain’s doomsday train dragging the
rest of us with him. All aboard!
As
this transition is happening The
Bulletin of Atomic Scientists moved
the Doomsday Clock forward to 2 ˝
minutes before midnight. It hasn’t been
that close in 58 years. [22]
Princeton professor Steven Cohen says
this is the most dangerous moment in
U.S. history since the Cuban Missile
Crisis,[23] and Michael Moore tweets
that “Donald Trump is going to get us
killed!”[24]
An
amazing conversion for an America-first
isolationist. His come-to-Jesus baptism
by the deep state also reversed his
comments about NATO: “I said it was
obsolete. . . It’s no longer obsolete.”
[25] As for NAFTA, he flipped again with
“I was psyched to terminate NAFTA, but
reconsidered.”[26]
Is
this a personality disorder with a
dollop of bipolarity, or are we
witnessing the stealthy tentacles of the
deep state slowly enveloping its prey?
From sea to shining sea
We
don’t know quite how our shadow
government works, but it does tilt to
the aggressive. It sends a flotilla into
the Black Sea, and when Russia feels
uncomfortable, it accuses the Russians
of harassment. [27] Far to the north, it
patrols the waters of the Baltic
brazenly parking off the coast of
Russia’s enclave in Kaliningrad. When
the Russians get rattled, the headline
reads “Why the Russians decided to
harass that U.S. Navy destroyer this
week.”[28] Our poor flotillas, just
7,000 miles from home, seem perpetually
harassed by Putin goons.
On
the other side of the world in the South
China Sea, the U.S. routinely flies spy
missions 12 miles off China’s shores,
[29] more than once a day. [30] Ah, if
only China performed similar feats in LA
and San Francisco.
In
addition, though, we are building a $10
billion base in South Korea called Camp
Humphreys only 150 miles from China’s
borders. [31] Most Americans never even
heard of it, much less than the cost for
this single installation is 20 times
larger than the National Endowment for
the Humanities, the Arts, and the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting
combined. [32]
Can you imagine China building a $10
billion base in the Bahamas where 36,000
Chinese Red Army and Navy personnel
would be permanently stationed?
When China bristles at all this
intrusiveness—and it does—the corporate
media obediently bellows how
“aggressive” the Chinese are becoming,
and The Atlantic calls their
behavior a “dangerous game.” [33]
Indeed, if there is a deep state, it
seems resolute, undeterred, and
incredibly unflappable. While Russia and
China together have only 2 overseas
military bases, the U.S. boasts 1,000,
with even more lily pad installations
built under Obama. [34] This morbid
obesity just keeps growing regardless of
administrations from the Ukraine to
Latvia, central Africa, all the way to
the Polish border where we recently
installed a brigade. [35]
There is a certain macho to this too:
The U.S. actually deployed troops a mere
300 meters from the Russian border, as
if to say “So what are you gonna do
about that buddy!” [36]
According to Jill Stein, under Trump and
Obama, the US is fighting and killing
people in seven countries: [37]Pakistan,
Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Yemen, the
Sudan, and Libya, and Special Forces are
now deployed in 138 nations. [38]
Imagine that, seven ongoing war fronts
in the spring of 2017.
While the deep state continues to
broaden its footprint, it does so quite
indifferent to what the American people
want: 70 percent of Americans are
against military intervention in the
Ukraine; 80 percent oppose troops on the
ground in Syria (sorry Sen. Graham); 75
percent oppose aiding Syrian rebels
at all, and 67 percent are fed up
with Afghanistan too.[39]
Majority rule and the deep state mix
like oil and water.
Back to boomerangs:
Returning to psychology’s “reactance:”
If we assume that the more you push, the
greater the pushback—the boomerang
effect—then, let us think through some
scenarios that fit. Here are a few
guesses of what that might look like:
Boomerang 1:
North Korea, pushed to the brink by
American exercises, asset freezes,
carrier groups, and newly installed
missile batteries, rather than
succumbing to such pressure, decides to
sell dirty bombs on the black market as
Hezbollah and ISIS stand in line with
cash for any such purchases. A dirty
bomb detonated in Haifa, Israel would
make a 36 square block area virtually
uninhabitable with clean up costs close
to a trillion dollars as huge numbers of
Israelis evacuated the country. [40] Is
that storyline impossible? The tunnels
are already dug; only the package needs
delivering.
Boomerang 2:
ISIS momentarily suspends its erstwhile
genocide to enlist 20 martyrs who still
possess valid international passports.
They volunteer to become infected with
Ebola and board planes to the U.S. early
in their infection. They will not be
contagious for another 4-10 days.[41]
Those who can’t make it through passport
control enlist Mexican cartels to get
smuggled into the U.S. through one of
over 80 tunnels dug under the border.
[42] The cartels gladly accept cash in
return for safe passage. ISIS martyrs
spread out across the country, and when
they are properly contagious, they
sneeze their way through every bus stop,
train station, airport, homeless
shelter, and football stadium they can
find. The mortality rate for Ebola is 30
percent: that’s 100 million Americans.
Impossible to track down all their
contacts. And there are other brews too,
biological weapons and synthetic super
pathogens, that can exact even heavier
tolls. [43]
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Boomerang 3:
The film Fahrenheit 451 showed
that the U.S. had only two border patrol
officers covering over 50 miles of
Oregon coastline. This vast “landing
zone” from Seattle to Northern
California could host a hostile drop of
a nuclear weapon or dirty bomb smuggled
quite easily into the West Coast. [44]
Ditto for the porous Canadian border.
Some suitcase nuclear weapons can be as
small as a backpack.
There are allegedly 84 “missing” Russian
suitcase bombs that cannot be accounted
for, [45] and in 2015 there had been a
total of “four attempts by Moldovan
residents to smuggle nuclear materials
into the hands of unscrupulous
buyers.”[46]
The Nuclear Threat Initiative recently
warned about the lack of controls on
highly enriched uranium saying “an
amount small enough to fit in a 5-pound
bag of sugar could be used to build a
nuclear device with the potential to
kill hundreds of thousands of people.”
[47]And just how many possible boomerang
return addresses do we now have to keep
track of? Al Qaeda, North Korea, ISIS,
Boko Haram, Hezbollah, Islamic Jihad,
the Al Nusra Front, Ansar al-Sharia, the
Taliban, Abu Sayyaf ? [48]
Boomerang 4:
If that isn’t enough darkness for your
morning coffee, flash to Pakistan which
has been experimenting with “tiny”
nuclear bombs, the smallest tactical
nuclear weapons known.[49] The U.S. has
some too like “Little John” which is so
small it can be fired as an artillery
shell. [50] France has the Pluton that
can fly 120 km and a deliver a
Hiroshima-sized warhead. Pakistan is now
a member of this club.
Over 66 percent of Pakistanis oppose
U.S. drone strikes on their
territory—after all, we’ve been bombing
them for 13 years [51]— so their
attraction to boomerangs might be a bit
high. [52] But in addition, they
maintain dubious control over their
nuclear arsenal in the first place, so
through theft, or by way of black market
dealings, Al Qaeda, the Taliban,
Hezbollah, or ISIS, could obtain a
nuclear device. Smuggled into Lebanon,
it could be carried through Hezbollah
tunnels to Israel’s third largest city,
Haifa, launched atop an Iranian Fateh
short-range missile, or perhaps
delivered as an artillery shell.[53] It
only has 90 miles to travel to hit its
target. Israel’s sophisticated Iron
Dome, Arrow, or David’s Sling defense
systems might shoot it down, [54] but it
also could be overwhelmed by a fusillade
of decoy missiles. Hezbollah has
150,000. [55] If successful, thousands
of Haifa residents would be killed and a
mass exodus of Israelis begun. In the
meantime, once Israel found the source
of the bomb, it would use its own
arsenal to obliterate the sender.
Welcome to World War III.
The doctrine of Mutually Assured
Destruction (MAD), we would all like to
believe will prevent such surreptitious
weapons transfers, but unfortunately, it
is now a shibboleth which will not deter
stateless actors who are spread thin,
found all over the place, and quite
fully prepped for martyrdom anyway. [56]
[57]
This scenario may sound unduly alarmist,
but Israel has already bombed Syria many
times in order to prevent transfer of
advanced weapons to Hezbollah. [58] How
much more preposterous is it to think
the weapon they are trying to prevent
could be a tactical nuclear device?
We
conclude this dark and ominous exercise
by returning to North Korea. Kim Jon-un
is very young for a world leader, only
33, deeply paranoid, recently had his
stepbrother whacked, and, to make a
point, shot an artillery shell into his
defense minister. [59] He is obsessed
with incinerating America, and his
stentorian threats are clear: “Our
super-might preemptive strike will
reduce America’s military to ashes.”
[60] All the while, Kim does not bend or
capitulate to flotillas, exercises, a
$10 billion Camp Humphrey, or American
sanctions. His missiles get larger, and
his nuclear weapons cache grows by the
day—estimated at more than 20 at this
writing.
That’s 20 more than he had 10 years ago,
and Kim is the youngest person—and
perhaps the least stable person on the
planet—with the capability of launching
a nuclear war.
The question to consider is this: Do
John McCain and America’s deep state
gurus have sufficient perspicacity to
psychoanalyze Kim and know he will
eventually cave into pressures and
succumb to America’s might instead of
directing a boomerang back to us?
And if you aren’t that impressed with
McCain’s acumen, we might redirect the
question and try to end this article on
a more positive note: Does psychology
have any remedy for any or all these
horrific scenarios?
The answer is probably yes:
To
avoid pushback, stop pushing!
Jerry Kroth, Ph.D., is an
Associate Professor Emeritus from Santa
Clara University in California and may
be reached through his website,
collectivepsych.com