America the
Victim: Are Enemies Lining Up for Revenge in the Wake of
the Coronavirus?
By Philip Giraldi
May 02, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - When
in trouble politically, governments have traditionally
conjured up a foreign enemy to explain why things are
going wrong. Whatever one chooses to believe about the
coronavirus, the fact is that it has resulted in
considerable political backlash against a number of
governments whose behavior has been perceived as either
too extreme or too dilatory. Donald Trump’s White House
has taken shots from both directions and the response to
the disease has also been pilloried due to repeated
gaffes by the president himself. The latest mis-spoke,
now being framed by Trump’s press secretary as sarcasm,
involved a presidential suggestion that one might
consider injecting or imbibing disinfectant to treat the
disease, either of which could easily prove lethal.
So, the administration is
desperate to change the narrative and has decided to hit
on the old expedient, namely seeking out a foreign enemy
to distract from what is going on in the nation’s
hospitals. The tale of malevolent foreigners has been
picked up by a number of
mainstream media outlets
and has proven especially titillating because there is
not just one bad guy, but instead at least four: China,
Russia, North Korea and Iran.
The accepted narrative is
that America’s enemies are now taking advantage of a
moment of weakness due to the lockdown response to the
coronavirus and have stepped up their attacks, both
physical and metaphorical, on the Exceptional Nation
Under God. The most recent claim that the United States
is being targeted involves an incident in mid-April
during which a swarm of Iranian gunboats allegedly
harassed a group of American warships conducting a
training exercise in the Persian Gulf by crossing the
bows and sterns of the U.S. vessels at close range.
The maneuvers were described
by the Navy as “unsafe and unprofessional” but the tiny
speedboats in no way threatened the much larger warships
(note the photo in the link which illustrates the
disparity in size between the two vessels).
Donald Trump
characteristically responded to the incident
with a tweet last
Wednesday: “I have instructed the United States Navy to
shoot down and destroy any and all Iranian gunboats if
they harass our ships at sea.” Although no context was
provided, the president commands the armed forces and
the tweet essentially defined the rules of engagement,
meaning that it would be up to the ships’ commanders to
determine whether or not they are being harassed. If so,
the would be able to open fire and destroy the Iranian
boats. Of course, there might be a physical problem in
“shooting down” a gunboat that is in the water rather
than in the air.
In the Mediterranean the threat
against the U.S. consisted of two Russian jet fighters
flying close to a Navy P8-A submarine surveillance
plane. The Russian fighters were scrambled from Hmeymim
air base in Syria after the U.S. aircraft approached
Syrian airspace and Russian military facilities. One of
the fighters, a SU-35 carried out an “unsafe” maneuver
when it flew upside down at high-speed 25 feet in front
of the Navy plane.
Also in mid-April, North
Korea meanwhile
fired cruise missiles
into the Sea of Japan amidst rumors that its head of
state Kim Jong Un
might be dead or dying
after major surgery. President Trump was unconcerned
about the missiles and
also commented that he
had received a “nice note” from the North Korean leader.
Wars and rumors of wars
notwithstanding, China continues to be the principal
target for Democrats and Republicans alike on Capitol
Hill. GOP congressmen
are reportedly urging
sanctions against China while there are already a number
of coronavirus lawsuits targeting Chinese assets in U.S.
courts, at least one of which has a trillion dollar
price tag. Theories about the deliberate weaponization
of the Wuhan virus abound and they are also mixed in
with stories of how Beijing unleashed the weapons and is
now engaged in Russia style social media intervention to
promote the notion that the United States has proven
incapable of handling what has become a major medical
emergency.