Hillary Cracks the Whip
Isn’t it time for Washington to recognize that it has become a rogue state and for Hillary to come home, sit down, and stop talking?
by Philip Giraldi
While it would seem that international conferencing and seeking to overthrow two regimes would make for a busy weekend for even the most peripathetic secretary of state, Hillary also decided to whack her host, Turkey.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was at it again last week. She was in Turkey attending a NATO gathering dealing with what to do about the succession in Libya, based on the perhaps erroneous assumption that Muammar Gadhafi is on his way out.
Clinton and NATO decided, based on their own admittedly partial view of the situation, that the Gadhafi regime is no longer legitimate and that the rebels who are trying to topple him are now to be regarded as the legal government.
The “international recognition” will enable them to use the roughly $30 billion in frozen Libyan government assets, mostly located in American and European banks. Hopefully, things will go better than they did in Iraq back in 2003. Washington sent in a proconsul supported by a host of neocon Myrmidons to make sure things would run smoothly.
More than $20 billion of Iraqi state “reconstruction” funds were unfrozen and then went missing after liberation took place. The Iraqi people are still waiting for the electricity to come back on.
Clinton also took some heavy-handed swipes at Syria, making clear that both she and her boss want to see regime change. Three hundred fifty representatives of Syrian dissident groups were perhaps not coincidentally present in Istanbul for a “National Salvation Conference,” so Clinton took the opportunity to denounce President Bashar al-Assad’s government as having “lost legitimacy.”
The White House backed up Clinton’s possibly impromptu comment, and over at Foggy Bottom, Victoria Nuland, the State Department’s neoconnish press spokeswoman, made the case more explicitly, denouncing “a Syrian government that continues to beat, imprison, torture, slaughter its own people.”
If Syria sounds like any number of regimes that the United States has quite comfortable relationships with, it should.
While it would seem that international conferencing and seeking to overthrow two regimes would make for a busy weekend for even the most peripatetic secretary of state, Hillary also decided to take on her host, Turkey. She lauded Muslim Turkey as a model for the future development of Arab Spring states but then whacked its government for imprisoning journalists.
Whoever was briefing her from her staff or from the Embassy evidently neglected to describe how Turkey has a wide open and fairly raucous press that often is very critical of the government. Most of the 60 detained journalists are reported to have close and continuing ties with separatist groups, including the terrorist Kurdish Workers Party (PKK). Others are believed to be linked to right-wing extremists who have been advocating a military coup to overthrow the civilian government.
Turkish sources make clear that there is little doubt that the authorities have quite likely overreacted and used sometimes flimsy evidence to concoct their cases against at least some of the journalists, but the political engagement of many of those arrested might suggest that there is more to the story than meets the eye.
I will confess right here that I have a particular fondness for Turkey, having lived and worked there, and I continue to have many close Turkish friends.
Turks are particularly stubborn and extremely loyal, but my recent trips to the country have revealed that they are also utterly fed up with United States policies in the region.
The Turkish media is full of the latest missteps by Washington, with particular emphasis on how the entire Near East has been destabilized through U.S. military action and the “war on terror.”
Even shopkeepers are caught up in the outrage. On my last visit I was harangued for 30 minutes on U.S. policy by a rug merchant whom I have known for 30 years, a man who has visited the United States and who has many American friends. Even though I agreed with nearly everything he said, he insisted on explaining things in some detail “in his own words,” a prolonged tale of Washington’s arrogance and ignorance.
The U.S. media fans the flames and reciprocates by frequently reporting on Washington’s disenchantment with Turkey and the direction it is moving in, but they are really only expressing their own biases, which are generally measured through their consideration of what Israel appears to want.
Recently, two American senators have indicated that they will work to derail any planned NATO missile defense deployment in Turkey unless Ankara agrees to share all information with Israel.
Perhaps someone should point out to Sens. Jon Kyl and Mark Kirk that Israel is not a member of NATO and is not in any formal alliance, with the United States or anyone else. Which means that the United States would be compelling NATO to participate in the defense of Israel without any apparent reciprocity on the part of Tel Aviv.
In the middle of all the finger pointing, the United States seems to have lost sight of its own national interest.
It is true that Turkey did not support the invasion of Iraq, but it was the right decision not to do so. If a few more countries had also said “no,” perhaps the United States would not have killed a couple of hundred thousand people and wasted more than $1 trillion dollars while accomplishing absolutely nothing.
It is also true that Turkey has condemned Israeli policies and its occupation of the Palestinian territories, but most of the world would consider that a perfectly legitimate viewpoint.
Turkey is also derided for becoming more religious even though most of its people have always been devout, and the open expression of belief is also part of its becoming more democratic.
In addition, the mainstream media frequently claims that Ankara is soft on Iran sanctions and aligning culturally and politically with its eastern neighbors. Critics forget that Turkey’s attempts to become part of the European Union have been consistently rejected while the country itself is geographically mostly in Asia and sharing borders and trade relationships with quite a lot of the rest of it, including Iran.
To my mind, Turkey is far too nice to Hillary and to Washington. Rather than be lectured, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan might suggest that Clinton go away and find another bone to chew. If the Middle East is in a catastrophic state, it is precisely because of Washington’s meddling and its perennial tilt toward Israel.
Erdogan might note that Turkey’s economy is booming because it takes pains to remain on good terms with everyone, and he might reasonably ask why Washington cannot recognize its own failure to put its house in order.
How many congressmen are suggesting that the costs of empire be cut to help pass a federal government budget? Only a handful, while to virtually everyone else in the world watching the spectacle of American impotence on display, the mailed fist and the angry frown of Hillary Clinton are what the United States represents.
What is going on in Syria is another poster child for what is wrong. I have no particular insight into what is occurring in Syria except for my belief that the United States government quite likely knows little about what is taking place and is probably wildly wrong about what the dissidents represent and what they would be likely to do if they were to seize power.
There might be a few Patrick Henrys among them ready to go all out for the cause, but I doubt there is a Thomas Jefferson who can pick up the pieces and put Humpty Dumpty back together. Would a destabilized Syria be a precondition for an Israeli attack supported by Washington? You heard it here first.
In the case of Syria, the United States has made plain right from the get-go that it is supporting dissidents through training and provision of technology and infrastructure to enable them to communicate and organize.
On July 7, U.S. Ambassador Robert Ford traveled with full ambassadorial entourage to the city of Hama, believed to be a hotbed of resistance to the government. He did so to express his support for the rebels. When he returned to Damascus, an angry crowd, no doubt egged on by the regime, attacked and entered the U.S. Embassy and was eventually driven out of the building by the Marine guards.
At the end of it all, it was difficult to discern what the ambassador’s trip was intended to do apart from increase tension. It did produce a tit-for-tat that benefited neither Washington nor Damascus, nor, insofar as can be determined, the rebels or reformers, depending on how one regards them.
The examples of Libya, Syria, and Turkey reveal that the United States persists in thinking that it can lead the world by intimidation rather than by example.
One hesitates to construct an analogy, but if the ambassador of an unfriendly country, Venezuela perhaps, were to publicly announce that his country would support separatists in the United States with training and communications equipment and, furthermore, that he would travel to attend an anti-government rally in Texas or Alaska, it would certainly cause considerable heartburn, and I can well imagine President Barack Obama taking aggressive steps to stop the activity.
The United States is ever the proverbial pot calling the kettle black, acting out in ways that it denies to others. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama are no strangers to the word “hypocrisy” in their dealings all around the world. Yes, it is certainly true that people are protesting and dying in Syria, but it is not our quarrel. It is something that the Syrians themselves will have to sort out.
But perhaps there is a more fundamental question. Who is Hillary Clinton to pronounce on the legitimacy of any foreign government? Victoria Nuland’s condemnation of Syria cites “beating, imprisoning, torturing, and slaughtering,” but doesn’t Washington do all of that and more?
Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo, CIA secret prisons, and Predator drone strikes surely tell the tale. No other government claims that it has the right to kill its own citizens anywhere in the world based on secret evidence. Isn’t it time for Washington to recognize that it has become a rogue state and for Hillary to come home, sit down, and stop talking?
See original@ antiwar.com
Philip Giraldi, Executive Director of Council for the National Interest (CNI), is a former CIA counter-terrorism specialist and military intelligence officer who served 18 years in Turkey, Italy, Germany, and Spain. He was Chief of Base in Barcelona from 1989 to 1992, and designated as the Agency’s senior officer for Olympic Games support. Dr. Giraldi holds an MA and PhD from the University of London. He speaks Spanish, Italian, German, and Turkish.
Short URL: http://www.veteranstoday.com/?p=123356
Posted by Phillip Giraldi on Jul 22 2011, With 0 Reads, Filed under Americas, Editors Picks, Israel, Libya, Syria, WarZone, World. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
COMMENTS
To post, we ask that you login using Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, or Hotmail in the box below.Don't have a social network account? Register and Login direct with VT and post.
Before you post, read our Comment Policy - Feedback
FACEBOOK
TWITTER































Dry, precise and intelligent…pity its going to go over most peoples heads.
@ peter
Thanks! we tried to do something about the dry bit, added some beautiful photos
I’m waiting for Hillary’s comment on the Norway bombing. Norway just recognized Palestine and indicated that it would support UN recognition in September. Now a bomb goes off and she’ll have to pretend it wasn’t Israel trying to get even and trying to drag NATO into another Israeli war.
Absolutely correct. Al CIA EDA (zionist Israel) and the zionist owned State Dept. have done everything they can to protect Israel. You all better check out Dennis Kucinch and his take on Libya, NATO and Gaddaffi. The entire Libyan debacle is anti constitutional, and nothing more than regime change! UK France and Germany are zionized and Rupert Murdock zionized….We are living in a fascist nation and nato are nothing but facists and zionists, turning the world inside out. This has nothing to do with democracy, somebody better investigate just who those “Libyan rebels are” CIA and Israel are both involved….to steal the oil….same ole tune.
Turkey is one of our best friends, and here we go again carrying water for the Likud party both in Congress and in Israel. The kow-towing is nauseating. Israel wants an independent Kurdish state who they have already worked out the arrangements with for oil resources and pipelines.
As Iraq is in tough shape due to our help (unending), Israel thinks it can gobble up a huge piece of Iraq’s oil & gas, and control it through an independent Kurdish state, along with that pipeline running from Iraq to Haifa.
Enough.
juden
Great article.
Turkey will never become a member of the EU and it is right to work with its neighbours. Hopefully regional nations in the Middle East will work together to bring about peace in the region. I believe that Turkey should be a country that encourages countries, including Iran, to implement reforms.
Many people in Asia, including Australia, see America as an empire in decline and the likes of Hilary Clinton will only quicken its pace in which it does decline. Who in this world is going to want to help support an empire that is a bully and who’s main purpose in life is to support Israel and sell US military equipment. America, the one we all use to love, seems to have lost its way.
I was watching a discussion last night – the 9/11 decade and how everything has changed – link below. The two Aussies were frank and honest with their American counterpart. I think more of America’s allies (real allies) have got to speak up more about American policy.
http://ussc.edu.au/events-special/page-2011-national-summit/dinner-roundtable-on-the-911-decade
//I believe that Turkey should be a country that encourages countries, including Iran, to implement reforms.//
In some areas. In other areas Turkey should learn from its neighbors too. Turkey is a relatively new country and has some deep but serious ‘cultural’ contradictions that soon or later will surface and have to be sorted out. For example, Turkey’s constitution does not recognize any ethnic identity in the nation except “Turks”. This is while “Turks” hardly constitute five percent of the population. Every large ethnic group in Iran has a province to their name and mostly handle their cultural issues by themselves. Every religions (except Bahaiism) with followers more than fifty thousands get a representative in parliament. “Turks” have holed up in the army which is the second largest army in the NATO. They have caused four coupes in the last fifty years, every time the “civilian” government stepped out of the designated boundaries. I hope I am wrong, but the “democracy” in Turkey might not be as deeply institutionalized as it seems on the surface. I am debating if the recent Erdogan’s grotesque handling of Syria’s rebel incident was a revelation or a disappointment.
Please ask your representatives how many AIPAC members faught in Iraq?
AIPAC is determining our foreign policy and our interactions with countries like Turkey. As a result, the world is starting to ignore what America says and does. America has become the laughing stock after we bankrupted ourselves because of AIPACs wars and the ponzi schemes Wall Street runs to finance AIPAC’s operations.
I remember Hilary and her 60s hairdo and her Marxist rantings and constant bashing of Viet vets and the ongoing war.
Now look at her. Can anyone here tell me what the psychological makeup of people like Hilary is. Narcissist I guess. What an evil woman. She too is getting older. It ain’t gonna last forever.
I doubt that any AIPAC members fought in Iraq. How many AIPAC members have been in US military?
jews for israel serve in the israeli terrorist force.
the few that actually enlist in the u.s. military, rabbis, are there to make sure kosher cos are well represented, to collect money for israel, and nothing against israel is said without complaining to the post commander.
Why doint the whole world, just tell america to go fu——–ck themselves. ( THE WORLD AND EVERYBODY WOULD BE BETTER OFF ) Just who do these slime balls think they are in our federal government ?????????? ALL 535 IMBECILES AND OUR PRESIDENT PAST AND PRESENT SHOULD ALL CRAWL BACK UNDER THE ROCK WERE THEY CAME FROM.
west makes huge amount of money out of Saudi Arabia and the royal family is a puppet of the Zionists. That’s why it’s not destabilized for the interest of west and Israel. Even though Mubarak was an ally, Egypt wasn’t a source of wealth for the Zionist west, so; they had to spare the old puppet and get a bigger and better one which hides behind the cover of being Islamic to be portrayed as the fake enemy of the west. Muslim brotherhood is created and funded by west. Libya didn’t shop around in west for weapons and didn’t allow its central bank to be regulated by the Zionist world bank and that is why we have the humanitarian bombing. Syria is not a puppet of Israel like Jordan and that’s why it is under pressure and threat as well.