Sabemos que Donaldo promete una cosa, hace otra, inventa algo nuevo más tarde, y así hasta agotar la paciencia/los nervios de sus interlocutores. La estrategia tiene un límite, claro: la cantidad de contradicciones del Imperio es tal que nadie les va a creer cuando empiece la balacera. La nota que sigue es de Ghassan Kadi y habla de todo esto. Apareció hoy en el sitio web The Vineyard of the Saker:
Título: The
Double-Triple-Quadruple-Crossing Trump:
Texto: Trumps
recent and sudden 180 degree turn on a number of international issues is
mind-boggling, to say the least. But, if we connect the dots it becomes easier
to get into the mind of the pragmatic billionaire-turned-President.
First and
foremost, we must thank Obama for the “if” state of mind he gave us about
Trump. Many analysts, including myself, felt hopeful when Clinton was defeated
and Trump won. Given the Obama disappointment, we all learnt to reserve our
enthusiasm and make optimistic statements on the condition of “if” Trump kept
his promises; which we now know he obviously did not. Whether he did not, could
not or did not want to in the first place, makes no difference at all because,
at the end of the day, he did not keep his promises of reducing world tension
and conflict.
When analysts sit
and try to explain why was it that the Trump administration suddenly decided to
bomb Syria, with the “chemical attack” as aside, they have been forgetting
that, out of the blue, and for no reason at all, and just a few days before
this incident, the Trump administration made very strong pro-Assad statements.
That was a
prelude for the upcoming Xi Jinping visit. Trump wanted to present to the rest
of the world that he was working against ISIS primarily, with Russia and even
with Assad.
That was all
meant to change the moment the Chinese Tiger laid foot on American soil.
The scenario that
I am speculating on involves a direct American role in the Chemical attack,
otherwise the timing would have been an almost impossible feat.
Let’s wind back
the clock a bit. Soon after his inauguration, Trump told the Russians to tell
the Syrians that he was prepared to stop total support for ISIS and have it
eradicated on condition that Syria and Russia guarantee that they will
reciprocate by kicking Iran and Hezbollah off Syrian soil. I have written a
whole article about this called “The Race for Raqqa”.
The Russians and
the Syrians were not either prepared to back-stab their allies or prepared to
give America a central and pivotal role in the Levant. In other words, Trump’s
outcries fell on deaf ears to his sheer dismay, the accomplished business man,
who is not used to taking “no” for an answer. That “no” that Trump received
from Russia marked a pivotal point in as far as his future relationship with
Russia is concerned. For a simple minded person who judges complex
international events and diplomats as being “bad”, “good” and “tough” amongst
other school playground expressions, he had to make a stand to prove that he
was “tough”.
Trump’s message
to Xi Jinping was clear, stop supporting Russia and the USA will give you a
“better deal”. The Chinese leader’s response was even clearer; don’t blame
America’s problems on China and don’t interfere with our international
diplomacy.
In the middle of
the negotiations between the two leaders, Trump wanted to give his Chinese
counterpart a clear preparedness on his part to dump Russia and any future
collaboration with Russia as a prelude for closer and better relationships with
China. What better way did he have than do a 180 degree turn and attack Syria,
with Russian troops on the ground, and only a few days after endorsing Assad’s
Presidency and fate?
The Tomahawks
that hit Syria were not launched to inflict major damage because Trump clearly
cannot afford to escalate the situation there between America and Russia to the
point of no return. Trump’s attack on Syria was simply a message for China,
telling China “for me to gain your support I am prepared to do crazy things,
including dumping Russia”.
When Tillerson
went to Moscow a few days after the attack on a pre-scheduled visit, he had
nothing to say in defense of that attack and left Moscow “agreeing” that this
should not happen again in a manner as if he was saying it shouldn’t have
happened in the first place.
The big fish that
Trump wants to fry is not Syria. Even though in his stumbling, awkward
arrogance, he may attack Syria again if he feels he needs to.
It is as if Trump
is courting two potential partners; Russia and China. He tried to strike a
military deal with Russia on Syria but he failed. But he also tried to strike a
much more complex deal with China but this is also failing.
Ideally, Trump
wants China to let go of its Island development program in the South China Sea
and abandon its BRICS based economic and other strategic alliances with Russia.
China is not biting.
Comes the MOAB.
There was no
strategic or logical explanation or gain behind Trump’s orders to drop a MOAB
on Afghanistan. It was a simple show of force and determined mentality of
aggression at any cost.
Trump now wants
to bring the war closer to China’s borders. He wants to turn Korea into Obama’s
Ukraine. The stalemate in Ukraine will eventually give way. If NATO was going
to do something against Russia it would have done it already. The new hotspot
is Korea.
What Trump hopes
for is a that a war against North Korea will give him enough justification to
blockade China’s sea trade routes all the way down to the South China Sea under
the guise of military necessity.
Trump seems
confident that he can blow a devastating strike on North Korea and then follow
this up with a blockade that covers the entire China Sea, north, middle and
south. In his short-sightedness and arrogance, he thinks that nuclear North
Korea is not going to be able to retaliate and that China will sit idle.
What is to happen
in the next few days, weeks or months is going to be pivotal in deciding the
short term future of humanity on this planet.
At best, the
bottom line behind Trump’s new moves, if he is truly continuing to uphold the
slogan of “make America great again”, is that he realized now that the American
economy has been destroyed beyond repair and that he needs drastic measures,
including limited nuclear wars, to restore America’s dominion. By the same
token, by now, Trump would have realized that it is really the Deep State that
is in charge and for him to secure his survival as President, he has to tow the
line.
Irrespective of
what is driving Trump; the Deep State, financial pragmatism, the shrinking
global influence of the United States or any other factor or combination of the
above, Trump is playing a very dangerous game which may prove to be a decisive
game of Russian Roulette of global reach.
Trump is up
against Russia and China, not to forget the smaller powers of North Korea and
Iran. In the Levant you can add the Syrian Army and Hezbollah to the equation.
Is the ailing USA up to the task? Rational thinking implies the contrary.
Irrespective, the consequences of the interaction of all of those powers at
play is something that we as citizens of the world have no other option but to
sit back and watch.
el artículo viene a poner un poco de claridad a la confusión general y al silencio insólito de parte de la mass media que no puede ocultar que el tipo que acusaban de loco se esta comportando como un loco y ahora no pueden decir que es SU lider mundial...
ResponderEliminarLos imperios acorralados son capaces de cualquier locura. pero esta gobernado por un presidente particularmente desacreditado por la máss media y el establishment politico-militar como para poder generar masa crítica para tomar ciertas decisiones. Es el final de un imperio menguante.
Harán maniobras idiotas como las actuales en búsqueda de que sus adversarios pisen el palito, pero sus adversarios no son idiotas principiantes como ellos. Tanto Rusia como China saben que postergar el conflicto aumenta la decadencia de un imperio que no tiene nada para ofrecer salvo guerra.