La hipocresía del Imperio y sus vasallos de la NATO, a la hora de joder al resto de las naciones del mundo, reconoce pocas limitaciones. Algunos detalles del modus operandi de estos chicos se explicitan hoy en esta nota
de Andrew Korybko para el sitio web The Vineyard of the Saker
(http://thesaker.is/the-haunt-of-history-in-eurasia). Básicamente, la idea sería militarizar la memoria histórica y exacerbar tensiones pre-existentes, algunas de ellas centenarias, entre pueblos y naciones. Genial, ¿no?
Título: The Haunt
Of History In Eurasia
Texto: Eurasia is
on pace to become integrated like never before, with China’s Belt & Road
and Russia’s Eurasian Union providing the structural basis for this historical
connection between continents. The US understands the threat that this poses to
its global hegemony (see Brzezinski’s The Grand Chessboard), ergo the rolling
out of its latest postmodern weapon, the militarization of historical memory.
Eurasia is full of a patchwork of conflicting memories, but none are more
controversial, polarizing, and convenient for the US’ geostrategic aim of
dividing Eurasia than World War II and the Sunni-Shia split. Let’s take a
closer look:
Asia
The US is fully
supportive of Japan’s remilitarization, especially so because it rattles the
nerves of China and evokes memories of a return to Tokyo’s fascist past. China
lost tens of millions of its citizens as a result of Japan’s brutal aggression
and subsequent occupation, and it plans on commemorating their memory during
the upcoming 70th anniversary of Victory Day in Asia. The US finds this
absolutely unnecessary, according to Obama’s top Asia advisor, Evan Medeiros,
since a transcript provided by the State Department to Reuters quoted him as
saying that:
“We want for the
region to get past it so the region can realize its full potential as a driver
of global growth, for example, so when we think about these history questions
and when we think about this ceremony in China, these are the kinds of
considerations that we’re looking at.”
Wait a minute…is
the US saying that victims of state-sponsored aggression and those which have
lost millions of lives as a result should simply “get past it”? Well, yeah,
that is what he said, but remember, the US is consistently subjective in
applying its own articulated policies, hence why it has a completely opposite
approach when it comes to World War II in Eastern Europe. Before addressing
that, however, a few more words about the militarization of historical memory
in Asia are required.
The US
understands that the only feasible way to construct a China Containment
Coalition (CCC) is to bring about the increased regional involvement of Japan
as its predominant Lead From Behind proxy in the theater. The only time that
Tokyo fulfilled the role of regional hegemon was during World War II, and as
much as it may pain some people to admit, China notwithstanding, many of the
region’s people were somewhat relieved to fall under Japan’s control as they
saw it as preferable to European colonization (Indochina and Indonesia being
prime examples).
True, there certainly
were resistance groups and the Japanese obviously partook in large-scale
atrocities in the occupied lands, but by and large, there was no resistance to
Japan on par with that demonstrated by the Chinese, who literally were fighting
for their very existence (in the same manner as the Soviet Union and its people
were also fighting for their own against the Nazis). Whether one calls the
majority of Japan’s non-Chinese occupied Asian subjects “collaborators” or
passive acceptors of Tokyo’s tyranny, it doesn’t change the fact that there was
sizeable enough support among the population that they didn’t feel compelled to
rise up and initiate Chinese-style resistance.
It is this exact
state of affairs that the US wants to emulate in the 21st century, with
Imperial Japan serving as the model for the CCC in Northeast and Southeast
Asia, just as it did during World War II. The official American attitude
towards Chinese criticism of Japan’s remilitarization and clear adherence to
its Fascist-era template, as evidenced by Medeiros’ statement, is that Beijing
should just “get past it”, which is easy to say when the US lost but a tiny
fraction of what the Chinese did during World War II and hasn’t fought a war on
its home turf for over 200 years.
Europe
How does the US
react to the invocation of World War II-era criticism by its radical
nationalist Eastern European allies? Does it tell Kiev, Poland, or the Baltic
States to simply “get past it” and bury their Fascist past? How about that they
should simply accept the historical fact of their liberation by the Red Army
and be grateful that the Soviet Union ended the war? Nope, it’s the total polar
opposite, as most of you already know. In Eastern Europe, the US also supports
the revival of Fascist-era movements and historical interpretations, much as it
does in East Asia with Japan, and it also lambasts anyone (especially Russia)
for suggesting that the US is on the wrong side of history through its flouting
of Neo-Fascist alliances. In this Western theater of the Eurasian-wide
push-back being waged by the US, Washington doesn’t want anyone to ever “get
past” World War II, except of course the Russian Federation and its Soviet-era
liberation victory. Aside from Moscow, everybody in Eastern Europe needs to
keep the war at the forefront of their thoughts, but only if it’s the ‘right’
(Fascist) version sanitized by the US.
That version is
far from sanitary to the average human being, but for the US, which never
utilizes actual morals, ethics, or principles in its foreign policy (all
references to the aforementioned are window-dressed marketing to sell whatever
the war of the year may be), it’s the only acceptable interpretation of World
War II events. In fact, the US would prefer for such ideas to make the upgrade
from interpretation to regional ideology, all in an effort to build a
21st-century ‘cordon sanitaire’ around the Russian Federation. The more
subjectively (and in many cases, falsely) cited ‘facts’ that can divide Russia
from Europe, the better, and since Eastern Europe is the most receptive to this
type of information war, it makes sense that half of NATO’s ‘strategic
communication centers’ are located in that area. It should be taken as a given
that these entities are cranking out loads of revisionist World War II-era
material in a frantic quest to rapidly rewrite history and imprint the US’
approved version of events into the minds of the regional majority. Only by
planting the roots of intergenerational hate against Russia can the US feel
assured that its regional vassals will remain under its sway for decades to
come.
Mideast
The US’ plans to
foster intergenerational hate against Russia appear mild when compared to what
it’s doing in the Mideast, which is the creation of inter-centennial hate between
Islamic sects. Although the Sunni-Shia split occurred over a thousand years ago
and the brief period of bloodshed resulting thereof had largely and rightfully
been relegated to the past, the US decided to unearth this bitter memory in
order to better its contemporary strategy. The last thing it ever wants is for
Muslims to “get past” their sectarian divisions, and if they appear to have
done so (as was the case for well over a millennium already), then they must
forcibly be reminded of their differences and provoked into bloodshed. The
concept here is to divide and rule the region through the militarization of the
Sunni-Shina split, whereby each sect viciously kills the other simply because
of their adherence to a different denomination. The model that the US is aiming
for is the Mideast equivalent of Europe’s Thirty Years’ War, where Catholic and
Protestant forces engaged in such a severe bloodletting that Oxford
Bibliographies estimates between 15-20% of the pre-war population was killed or
injured by the time it ended, with “the scope of misery and destruction it
brought to those experiencing it, as a disaster comparable to, if not greater
than, the two world wars and the Black Death.”
The whole point
here is to create such a whirlpool of chaos that it eventually sucks in Russia
and Iran, hence the expansionist nature of the un-“Islamic State” movement,
which is nothing more than a cancerous ideological growth enforced by militant
means. Its danger derives from the fact that it can theoretically crop up
anywhere that Muslims live, and the animal-like sectarian violence that it’s
precipitated is ideal for provoking the reactionary attacks necessary to begin
a Mideast-wide Sunni-Shia war, the US’ ultimate objective. In the aftermath of
that catastrophic conflagration, should the US be successful in setting it off
(the fuse is already unfortunately lit), then the Mideast version of the “Peace
of Westphalia” that ended the Catholic-Protestant war and ushered in the era of
nation-states would be written according to the US’ geopolitical imperatives,
likely along the divisive and cartographically revisionist proposals of Ralph
“ethnic cleansing works” Peters , the New York Times’ “How 5 Countries Could
Become 14”, or some hybrid application.
Historical Recap
A lot of complex
information has been expressed in the previous sections, so it’s necessary to
engage in a brief historical recap in order to place everything into the bigger
picture. The US is reviving the historical divisions of World War II and the
Sunni-Shia split in order to achieve its grandest strategic objective, the
division of Eurasia and the preclusion of Chinese-Russian-Iranian integration
of the supercontinent. The focus on Fascism in Asia is meant to empower the
former Japanese aggressor as the US’ preferred Lead From Behind proxy and
convince China’s neighbors to collaborate with it just like they did in the
past. This proposed relationship is anticipated to form the basis of a
proto-NATO in East and Southeast Asia, with Japan forming the link between the
two containment theaters.
Over in Eastern
Europe, matters are a bit different. The US celebrates the Fascist
collaborationist governments and movements that fought against the USSR’s
counter-offensive liberation campaign, hoping that this will drive wedges
between their citizens and pragmatic cooperation with Russia. The end effect of
such a strategy is to strengthen the population’s commitment to NATO to the
point where the people actually invite the US to deepen its occupation of their
territories, as is already the case in the Baltics and Poland. Ukraine is the
epistemological experiment underpinning the success or failure of US’ other
European ventures in this regard, and thus far, this tactic has been a wild
success in generating anti-Russian sentiment all throughout Europe, even
penetrating into its Scandinavian and Western European periphery.
Moving down to
the South-Central portion of Eurasia, it’s not World War II divisions that are
being revived, but rather religious ones from over 1,000 years ago. The US
wants to divide and rule the entire region, hoping that the sectarian war it
wishes to unleash will do the Pentagon’s dirty work for it. The end game is to
bolster the power of Saudi Arabia, the cauldron of sectarian hate, so that the
Kingdom can become the core of an Arab NATO (in league with Israel) for future
deployment against Iran. Additionally, the virulent expansion of the
un-“Islamic State” is meant to undermine Iran’s regional (and perhaps one day,
even domestic) stability, and also pose a dilemma for the Central Asian states
that form the bedrock of Russian and Chinese security. The unleashing of
full-scale Islamic insurgency in the heart of Asia would inevitably spill over
to these two Eurasian giants, thereby putting them on the strategic defensive
and reopening the Pandora’s Box of domestic destabilization.
Concluding
Thoughts
The US is
experimenting with a novel method of warfare in its quest to contain and
dismember Russia, China, and Iran, and that’s the militarization of historical
memory. World War II has been reinterpreted in such a way as to fashion it as a
weapon against Russia and China, while the Sunni-Shia split, which had been
peacefully dormant for over a thousand years, has been reawakened with militant
religious vigor unseen since the time of the Crusades. Each theater and
historical reinterpretation targets a different Eurasian anchor, but the
pattern of postmodern warfare is clear. The US, while still confronting its
identified adversaries in a direct manner, is now seeking to accelerate its
indirect strategies as well, hence the invocation of divisive and militarized
historical memory in the quest to create large proxy coalitions against its
rivals. The facts of historical record no longer matter to the US, and it can
be argued that they never did matter to begin with, but what’s important right
now for America is whether its intended audiences remain receptive to the
revised record or not, but as one can evidently see with their own eyes, the US
has succeed in fertilizing these seeds of historical discord and they’re
finally beginning to bear their poisonous fruits.
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