Kicking Sand
In Russia’s
Face
By Eric
Margolis
15/07/08
"ICH" -- --
Last week’s
utterly
useless and
hugely
expensive G8
summit in
Japan was at
least a
welcome
comic relief
after all
the bombast
and threats
flying back
and forth
between the
US, Israel
and Iran.
The world
leaders
dined on
caviar as
they
earnestly
discussed
hunger and
the global
food crisis.
They agreed
to do
something
about global
warming by
2058. That’s
real courage
and
leadership.
"Yo Harper,"
called out
President
George Bush,
beckoning
Canada’s
prime
minister to
come meet
the
president of
Nigeria.
Stephen
Harper now
joins
Britain’s
late,
unlamented
former PM
Tony Blair
in being
treated like
a White
House car
jockey.
Bush’s
arrogant
public
behavior
towards two
of his most
faithful
followers
says a great
deal about
the
importance
of America’s
"key" allies
to
Washington.
Bush and
Harper, who
had just
come from a
session
blasting
Zimbabwe’s
ruler,
Robert
Mugabe, as a
wicked,
corrupt
tyrant,
glad-handed
with
Nigeria’s
President
Umaru
Yar-Adua who
won office
last year in
one of
Nigeria’s
most
spectacularly
rigged
elections.
That’s
saying a
lot, since
Nigeria is
without
doubt the
world’s most
corrupt
nation. But
Nigeria has
oil, and may
supply up to
25% of
America’s
future
requirements.
The US is
also
building
bases in
West Africa
to oversee
the region’s
growing oil
exports.
Mugabe’s
Zimbabwe,
which I
fondly
remember
when it was
prosperous,
beautiful
Rhodesia, is
now dirt
poor and
bankrupt
thanks to
Afro-socialism
and
expulsion of
its white
minority.
Obedient
western-backed
dictators
who rig
elections
are hailed
as
"statesmen."
Insubordinate
rulers who
don’t
cooperate
are branded
"dictators"
or
"tyrants."
Good for old
crocodile
Mugabe for
refusing to
be pushed
around by
the
hypocritical
western
powers who
are
screaming
about his
electoral
fraud while
blessing
worse fraud
and
oppression
in the Arab,
Central
Asian, and
African
dictatorships
they
support.
Invited
guests at
the G8
summit
included
Ethiopia,
which is
inflicting
wide-scale
atrocities
in Somalia
and on its
own Oromo
minority,
and is now
facing
another
major
famine. Oil
and gas-rich
Algeria,
whose brutal
military
rulers, one
of the
world’s most
repressive
regimes,
proudly call
themselves
"the
eradicators."
One of
Bush’s
official
briefing
books fell
into media
hands. It
described
Italy as
"known for
governmental
corruption
and vice,"
and called
Bush’s "best
pal" PM
Silvio
Berlusconi a
"political
dilettante"
who holds
power thanks
to his
ownership of
the media.
"Are the
courts still
after you,
Silvio,"
tactfully
called out
buddy Bush
to Italy’s
embarrassed
leader? Mama
mia!
Italians
have a
perfect
expression
for this: "bruta
figura."
Adding to
the surreal
aura at the
G8, and
exposing the
utter
falsity of
Washington’s
faux "war on
terror," the
Bush
administration
announced it
was taking
Nelson
Mandela off
its
terrorist
list. Who is
next? The
late Mother
Theresa?
Bambi?
While this
farce was
going on in
northern
Japan,
Bush’s girl
Friday and
Secretary of
State
Condoleezza
Rice flew to
Prague to
initial a
truly daft
plan to
build a new
US
anti-missile
system (ABM)
in the Czech
Republic and
Poland.
Washington
claims the
system is
designed to
shoot down
Iranian
long-ranged
missiles –
which Iran
does not
have –
carrying
nuclear
warheads –
which Iran
also does
not have.
"We are
protecting
Europe,"
chirped
Rice. Of
course,
Condi. Those
mad mullahs
in Tehran
are just
itching to
attack
Belgium and
Norway.
The only
possible use
for these
ABM missiles
would be to
protect US
military
bases in
Western and,
more
important,
Eastern
Europe, from
some future
missile
attack by
Iran. But
Iran would
only attack
US bases,
and thus
court
national
destruction,
if it were
first
attacked by
the United
States.
Predictably,
Moscow went
ballistic.
It has been
fuming for
over a year
over Bush’s
missile
plan, and
getting
angrier by
the month.
The Kremlin
actually
threatened a
"military-technical"
response,
whatever
that means,
if the US
installs an
ABM system
on its
doorstep.
Nearly 70%
of Czechs
and Poles
also oppose
this crazy
and
unnecessarily
provocative
plan. Poland
is demanding
a $3 billion
air defense
system from
Washington
as its price
for basing
the
interceptor
missiles.
The clever
Poles may be
trying to
sabotage the
plan without
having to
say no to
their
protector
and ally,
the US. One
wonders how
much Czech
politicians
are getting
paid to go
along with
Bush’s
little
Central
European
Maginot
Line?
If the White
House is so
determined
to provoke
Russia, why
doesn’t it
just go and
bomb Putin’s
country
dacha or
Lenin’s
tomb?
Bush and
Rasputin
Dick Cheney
have broken
a 1991
pledge made
by President
Bush Senior
to Soviet
chairman
Michael
Gorbachev.
In exchange
for Gorby’s
not using
the Red Army
to crush
spreading
revolts in
East Germany
and across
the dying
Soviet
Union,
Washington
agreed not
to advance
NATO
eastward
toward
Russia or
into the old
USSR.
Gorbachev’s
courageous,
humane
concession
averted a
crisis that
could have
led to a
nuclear war.
Gorbachev
kept his
side of the
bargain,
allowing the
Soviet Union
to implode.
But the US,
sneering at
Boris
Yeltsin’s
bankrupt,
demoralized
post-imperial
Russia,
quickly
reneged and
began
advancing
NATO ever
closer to
Russia’s
borders.
Washington
is currently
mucking
around in
Georgia and
Ukraine,
both parts
of Russia’s
back yard
and
considered
seriously
off limits
to the
western
powers.
Small wonder
Bush’s
foolish ABM
system so
outrages the
Ruskis who
have every
right to
moral
outrage and
being angry
as hornets.
Bush’s
paranoia and
obsession
with Iran is
causing him
to risk
provoking a
military
clash with
Russia. He
is fast
pushing
Russia’s new
President
Dimitri
Medvedev and
PM Vlad
Putin to the
wall.
John McCain
is cheering
Bush on. He
recently
called for
Russia to be
expelled
from the G8
and vowed
that if
elected
president,
he would
"confront"
Russia. At
least old
crocodile
Mugabe isn’t
threatening
to start a
war or two.
Eric
Margolis,
contributing
foreign
editor for
Sun National
Media
Canada, is
the author
of War at
the Top of
the World.
Visit his
website.
http://www.ericmargolis.com/
Copyright ©
2008 Eric
Margolis
