Daily Report
E-Journal
Back Issues
Our Mission
Contact Us
Subscribe
Support Us
Links
Documents
About Us
Exit Poll
Search Archive
|
 TheatersBooks
|
Barack Obama pawn in intra-elite paleo-neocon wars?
Submitted by Bill Weinberg on Sat, 02/16/2008 - 04:34.
We've noted that Zbigniew Brzezinski is one of the primary exponents of the policy-elite backlash against the neocons, and his emergence as an adviser for Barack Obama says much about the coalition that is coming together behind the Obamarama. The original ideological whiz-kid of the (yes, really) Trilateral Commission and Jimmy Carter's National Security Advisor, Zbiggy represents the "pragmatist" wing of the ruling elites. Rival Hillary Clinton has also got "pragmatists" in her camp, and Obama is also attempting to woo the neocons. But the basic division seems pretty clear. From "Behind Clinton and Obama" by Stephen Zunes in Foreign Policy in Focus, Feb. 4 (emphasis added):
The American-Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) will of course have the loyalty of either candidate. But which one is scrambling to reassure them of his support (implying that it is in doubt) is telling. Akiva Eldar writes for the Israeli daily Haaretz Feb. 14:
In the Jerusalem Post Feb. 13, Hoenlein appeared (intentionally, no doubt) to be talking out of both sides of his mouth:
In other words, Obama is on notice that his "pro-Israel" creds are suspect. Unlike most of the neocons, Hoenlein has expressed his concerns that the "Jewish lobby" could provoke a backlash if it does not assume a lower profile—and thereby forfeit its cherished war drive against Iran. Well, the backlash is on—and Barack Obama may be its public face. Brzezinski was the voice of Cold War realpolitik in the Carter administration—who got the ball rolling towards the Reagan-era policies of nuclear first-strike capability and aid to the Afghan mujahedeen. He was on the far right of the Carter coalition. But he is on the left of the "pragmatist" camp—which is generally made up of Republican "paleocons." The factor that could put Obama over the edge is an eruption of neo-Mugwumpery. History buffs will recall that in the election of 1884, many old-line Lincoln Republicans abandoned GOP candidate James G. Blaine, deeming him too aggressively imperialist and beholden to industrial interests. These "Mugwumps" defected to the reformist and "pragmatic" Democratic candidate Grover Cleveland—who won. Mark Twain proudly proclaimed himself a Mugwump. Conservatives who view a "100-year occupation" of Iraq as a losing proposition and seek to mend fences with the Arab world (getting the oil that way) may now similarly bolt the McCain ticket—even for a Black man whose middle name is Hussein. But it isn't 1884 anymore, and there is no longer an even vaguely progressive wing of the Republican party—just divisions over the correct strategy for maintaining US global hegemony. For those of us who are no more comforted by the "pragmatic" paleocons than the hubristic neocons, this new alliance behind Obama may be seen as an ominous accommodation with the old-guard sector of the right establishment. His irritating talk about bipartisan "unity" is another manifestation of this strange convergence. But hell—better him than Ron Paul! |
google2
|
6 hours 1 min ago
7 hours 30 min ago
13 hours 3 min ago
13 hours 57 min ago
14 hours 5 min ago
14 hours 8 min ago
14 hours 28 min ago
15 hours 34 min ago
19 hours 39 min ago
23 hours 9 min ago