Saturday 30th of November 2024

the lies of the empire.....

Article not to be missed... The author, a Chinese official, describes in a reasoned and rational manner the absurdity behind the ruthless wars, and invites "human society" to adopt other political perspectives corresponding to the traditions and interests of everyone for the peace and development of all.

 

BY Danielle Bleitrach

 

It updates the contradictions of the hegemony of the United States, the distance between the FACTS and their narration, the way of stirring up fears and wars for the sole profit of a handful. China, which passionately wants peace and planetary development, is rightly surprised that we do not see who has worked to make the Russian-Ukrainian conflict a permanent escalation harmful to the whole world.

This blindness is all the stranger in that it is an ultimate reproduction of the scenarios of entering the war, of sanctions, with which the United States maintains their domination, looting, war and permanent insecurity. on the planet, including since the Cold War. This phenomenon of planetary self-destruction continues to grow and claims to attract new victims into its trap. A relentless analysis. 

 

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by Guan Guoping

The Russian-Ukrainian conflict has been going on for a year after it erupted on February 24, 2022, which has had a profound impact globally.

The conflict is spreading and peace negotiations are still a long way off. Tanks, missiles and other more sophisticated weapons supplied by the United States and NATO continue to land on the battlefield, while Russia mobilizes more people to participate in "special military operations".

There is no end in sight to the conflict” who uses money from Europe, costs the lives of Ukrainians, brings wealth to the United States but makes the whole world suffer ».

For a year, the people of Ukraine and Europe have been suffering, but growing calls for a ceasefire have not deterred the United States from insisting on “fighting to the last Ukrainian”. The harsh reality of the past year has given the world a clearer understanding of America's hegemonic narrative.

The cold war mentality, which has not retreated since the end of it, combined with hegemony, has led to the continuous expansion of NATO, which should have ended its mission, because it will against the global public interest. Over the past 30 years, the phenomenon of the grotesque capture of global security with lies and the pursuit of Cold War-style confrontation has emerged endlessly at the heart of American hegemony.

Absurdity #1: Kidnapping War with Stories

For a year, the United States has defined the conflict between Russia and Ukraine as " the war between democracy and despotism which dominated the United States and Western society. Immersed in a carefully choreographed narrative, many people in the West are unaware that it was US-led NATO that has gradually drawn Russia into conflict with Ukraine over the past few decades.

After the 'proxy conflict', the United States and its NATO allies engaged in agitprop, 'making noise' and 'distributing weapons' with massive amounts of military aid, and they use the continuation of the conflict to stimulate the "revival" of NATO and maintain hegemony.

American military analysts have long believed that the outcome of modern warfare hinges not just on which military wins, but also on "which story wins."

In the words of former US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, “we cheated”. From the story of the US-made 'baby incubator' before the use of force against Iraq in 1990, to a staged 'White Helmets' video cited as evidence to wage wars in Syria, there are many cases of US kidnapping public opinion with lies, which are closely associated with US foreign strategy.

It is the same story that we find in the Russian-Ukrainian conflict. The United States and the West have invented a number of "striking and provocative stories to defame Russia". For example, video of a Turkish drone strike on the Syrian army was described as a destroyed Russian tank on a Ukrainian battlefield. Video of a Russian military exercise in April 2021 was used to make it look like Russia was bombing Ukrainian cities. Images of children injured in Syrian airstrikes in 2018 have been fabricated as "Ukrainian children in pain".

Absurdity #2: Using “Hegemonic Stability Theory” to Create Trouble world

Western international political discourse has created concepts such as “security dilemma”, “Thucydides' trap” and “Kindleberger's trap” rehashed for decades, all of which have served the same purpose – ensuring the continued stability of hegemony.

However, there is a huge gap between concept and reality. The narrative of “peace” and “development” engendered by American domination has always been at the center of American narrative, but it has increasingly come across as an illusion in the pursuit of hegemony by the United States. , and even a tool to promote hegemony. Looking back over the 30 years since the end of the Cold War, the world might have enjoyed a promising "long-term peace", but humanity has not experienced real peace and tranquility and still experiences ongoing conflicts and crises.

After the start of the Russian-Ukrainian conflict, the United States and Europe provided military aid to Ukraine and used their financial hegemony to impose the toughest economic and financial sanctions on Russia in history, including freezing hundreds of billions of dollars of Russian foreign exchange reserves and kicking Russia out of SWIFT. These measures did not bring Russia to its knees, but triggered drastic fluctuations in international energy and financial markets.

The dollar is the dominant reserve currency in the world. However, the United States has long abused this position to grab the wealth of other countries. In just a year and a half since the outbreak of COVID-19, the United States has printed nearly half of all dollars in circulation in its more than 200-year history, leading the world to undergo pressures caused by inflation, turbulence and bubbles that it should not have undergone.

The United States has privatized and weaponized the public good – the global financial system in geopolitical conflicts to deal with hostile countries and sub-state actors. This is worse than Britain, which was "the hegemonic power" unable to provide international public goods between the two world wars.

Absurdity #3: Using “the international order” to embellish “one-sided law and petty clique rules”

The post-World War II international order is often portrayed as a product of American power. The victorious nations, the United States and its allies, impose their will on the rest of the world, formulating institutions and norms that serve their interests and ensure their supremacy.

The United States and the West see themselves as "spokespersons for the international community" and have a habit of labeling certain countries with discriminatory labels such as "Evil Empire", "Evil Axis", " Rogue State” and “Failed State” in order to distinguish the so-called “civilized self” from the “other savages”. While demonizing other countries, they see themselves as the moral arbiter of the world. Onstage it is about “freedom and democracy”, but behind the scenes is the ambition for endless hegemony.

The Russian-Ukrainian conflict, which erupted under long-term containment and heavy pressure from the US and NATO, has been described by some Western politicians as an "epic" of "democracy versus autocracy". it's not just that, NATO also used the word "challenge" to describe China for the first time, falsely claiming that China was challenging NATO interests, security and values ​​and uniting its forces to Russia to "undermine the rules-based international order".

Absurdity #4: Repressing “Hegemonic Anxiety” by Selling “Fear”

From James Monroe who is known for his Monroe Doctrine, to Theodore Roosevelt who asserted that "every expansion of civilization breeds peace", and to Joe Biden who today touts "democracy" and "freedom", America's elites relentlessly sell, generation after generation, the beacon of freedom as they expand their territory and impose their hegemony, but at the same time, they have to create all kinds of fears from scratch.

From "fear of the barbarian" during the Indian massacre to "Islamic fear" during the war on terror, from "fear of the communist" during the Cold War to "fear" of "China's defiance of rules and to order” today, all the United States wants is to extract profit economically and maintain its hegemony in the midst of fear and chaos.

The exaggeration of "fear" reflects the anxiety of the United States as a hegemon. In a strategic culture that is eager to "find the enemy", the law of the jungle, the Cold War mentality and the zero-sum game still linger in the minds of American politicians, and their sense of insecurity about the fact that American hegemony will be replaced and threatened still persists.

Recently, a Chinese civilian airship strayed into US airspace due to force majeure. Although many US officials have said the Chinese balloon poses no threat to US personnel and security, this incident has been exploited. The United States sent in advanced fighter jets and even used this opportunity to engage in political manipulation, smear and attack China, incite an anti-China atmosphere, and stage a hysterical “political balloon show”.

By standing on the side of peaceful dialogue, human society must not return to the old path of confrontation and division of sides, and must not fall into the trap of zero-sum games and war conflicts. It is the strong desire of the people of all countries, it is the common responsibility of all countries in the world and the right direction of the development of the times to come.

Great powers can compete, but should do so peacefully. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz once said in an article that the central question for Europeans and for the European Union is how they can remain independent players in an increasingly multipolar world, that the rise of China does not justify isolating Beijing or stifling cooperation, and that we must also avoid the temptation to divide the world into blocs again.

Faced with the great changes of history, all countries in the world are facing challenges. Only by adhering to the right narrative that keeps pace with history and shares the destiny of the times, acting together, can we win a bright future.

source: History and Society

 

READ MORE:

https://en.reseauinternational.net/chine-toute-labsurdite-derriere-les-guerres-ou-comment-les-usa-mentent-pour-manipuler-lopinion/

 

 

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the light at the end of the tunnel.....

 

BY Robert Freeman

 

“Light at the end of the tunnel” was an iconic phrase used by the warmongers who kept the U.S. in Vietnam long after the War had been lost.

The implication was that insiders could see through the fog of war and know that things were getting better. It was a lie.

In January 1966, long before the military height of the war, Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara told President Lyndon Johnson that the U.S. had a one-out-of-three chance of winning on the battlefield.

But Johnson, like Eisenhower and Kennedy before him, and Nixon after him, didn’t want to be the first American president to lose a war. So, he ginned up a simplistic lie and “soldiered on.” 

The lie was blown by the Tet Offensive in January 1968. More than 100 U.S. military installations were attacked in a simultaneous nationwide assault that stunned the U.S. 

The broadcaster, Walter Cronkite, then “the most trusted man in America,” bellowed on national television, “I thought we were supposed to be winning this damned thing.” It was the beginning of the end of the U.S.’ murderous and failed occupation. 

We’re now facing another light-and-tunnel event, this time in Ukraine. Only now, it’s not the light at the end of the tunnel. It’s the tunnel at the end of the light. What do we mean by that? 

Until now, it’s been all light. Remember when the scrappy Ukrainian forces were kicking the barbarian Russian hordes’ asses? When every development betrayed the Russians’ clod-footed strategy, its soldiers’ bad morale, its army’s poor provisioning and worse leadership, and the perilous political situation for Russian President Vladimir Putin back home?

The testosterone was flowing. The bravado was intoxicating. The exceptionalism was sublimely seductive. It was only a matter of time and pluck and determination before Ukraine would bloody the bully’s nose and show it what the West was made of. 

Remember?

No more. 

You can prosecute a war for only so long on the strength of smoke and mirrors, delusions and illusions, lies and press releases. Eventually, however, reality catches up with you.

The thuggishly propagandized American citizenry couldn’t know it, but that catching up began in the first weeks of the war and has only accelerated since. 

Within the first week of the war, Russia had destroyed Ukraine’s air force and air defenses. By the second week, it had taken out most of Ukraine’s armories and weapons depots. Over following weeks and months, it systematically demolished artillery shipped in from former Warsaw Pact, now NATO, countries in Eastern Europe.

It dismantled the country’s transportation and fuel supply systems. It has recently taken out most of the country’s electrical infrastructure. 

The Ukrainian army has lost an estimated 150,000 troops, a pace more than 140 times the rate of U.S. losses in Vietnam. This, at a time when 10 million of its formerly 36 million people have fled the country.

The military is down to dragooning 16-year-old boys and 60-year-old men to man the barricades. It cannot get replacement ammunition. Russia has knocked out some 90 percent of Ukraine’s drones, leaving it largely sightless.

Delivery times for the tanks that are the hoped-for “game changer” are running into months and years. Not that that will matter.

Remember all the other failed “game changers”? The M777 howitzers and the Stryker armored fighting vehicles? The HIMARS multiple rocket launchers and the PATRIOT air defense systems? All were going to turn the tide at one time.

All have proven impotent to stop Russia from seizing 20 percent of Ukraine’s territory and annexing it and its people to Russia. 

 

Losing the Economic War

The U.S. lost the economic war, as well. Remember Joe Biden’s delusional prediction that the U.S. would see that “the ruble will be reduced to rubble?” And that “the most stringent sanctions regime in history” was going to “weaken” Russia, perhaps even leading to Putin’s overthrow?

Most of it backfired, badly. Last year, the ruble reached its highest exchange rate in history. Russia’s 2022 trade surplus of $227 billion was up 86 percent from 2021. The U.S.’ trade deficit over the same period rose 12.2 percent, and is approaching $1 trillion.

As a result of all of the above and more, the tide of insider opinion has turned against the War. Senior officials in Europe are talking openly about how the losses are unsustainable and they need to get back to security architectures that prevailed before the poisoned C.I.A.-supported coup in Maidan in 2014.

Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, recently let slip that “It will be very, very difficult to eject the Russians from all of occupied Ukraine in the next year.” The Washington Post warned recently that Ukraine faced a “critical moment” in the war, belaboring the fact that U.S. support was not limitless and would soon be reached. 

The Rand Corporation, one of the U.S.’ best-connected strategic whisperers, just published a report stating that “The consequences of a long war far outweigh the benefits.” It explicitly states that the U.S. needs to husband its resources for its more important upcoming conflict with China.

Newsweek headlined that “Joe Biden Offered Vladimir Putin 20 Percent of Ukraine to End War.” It also revealed that “Nearly 90 percent of the world isn’t following us on Ukraine.” Vast swaths of Latin American, Africa and Asia refuse to support the U.S. in its demand for sanctions against Russia.

These are not “Light at the end of the tunnel” divinations. Quite the contrary. If there’s a common thread running through it all it is the sickening recognition that the war is lost, militarily, economically and diplomatically; that there is no plausible scenario in which those losses will be turned around by soldiering on and that what is needed now is a hide-the-loss, get-out-any-way-you-can, face-saving exit strategy. 

That will not be available, either. That’s where the tunnel at the end of the light comes into play.

 

Infrastructure Competition 

Even before the U.S. and its NATO puppets undertook the War, the rest of the world — and that means most of the world — was congealing itself into an anti-Western economic and security bloc.

Led by China and its strategic ally, Russia, that bloc includes more than a dozen trade and security organizations. Those include the BRICS confederation of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa, working explicitly to devise multi-polar institutions to stand up to the U.S.’ unipolar hegemonic model. 

It includes the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, a security compact made up of leading nations from east, central and south Asia, including China, Russia, India and soon, Iran, Turkey and Saudi Arabia. It is explicitly working to devise measures to prevent the kind of predatory military assaults the U.S. carried out against Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Yemen and Afghanistan. 

The organizing economic engine behind these efforts it is China’s Belt and Road Initiative. BRI is a dizzyingly ambitious plan to connect Asia and more than 100 nations with 21st-century economic infrastructure, everything from highways and high-speed rail lines to power generation, energy pipelines, communication systems, cities, ports and more.

It is critical to understand why BRI poses such daunting challenges to U.S. supremacy in the world. 

Infrastructure is so powerful because it spins off a vast, unimaginable array of secondary and tertiary economic benefits. It was the railroads in the 19th century that bound the U.S. together as the world’s first continental-scale market.

Manufacturers could produce for a larger market, and, therefore, at larger scale, and, therefore, at lower cost, than could producers anywhere else on earth. 

The railroads made the U.S. the largest market in the world for iron, steel, machine tools, grading equipment, farm equipment and scores of other commercial and industrial products essential to a modern industrial economy.

The U.S. began the 1800s with 1.5 percent of the world’s GDP. It ended the century with 19 percent of a four-times larger number, making it the largest economy in the world.

Similarly, automobiles. People think it was Henry Ford and mass production that made the 20thcentury “The American Century.” In fact, it was the build-out of millions of miles of roads and, later, interstates, without which automobiles would have remained expensive playthings of the wealthy.

Those roads stitched the country together into an asphalt network that allowed individual mobility, by virtually anybody, anywhere, down to every street address in the country. The world had never seen anything like it.

The secondary and tertiary economic effects were astounding, everything from the world’s largest markets for steel, glass, plastics and rubber, to gasoline, diesel, highway construction on a continental scale, repair shops and drive-ins, to the entire panoply of culture we know of as suburbia.

The 20th century was the Century of the Automobile. The infrastructure the U.S. built to make it possible was the major reason — at least economically — that the U.S. led the world for most of that century. 

China is now proposing to do the same for Asia in the 21st century, but on a much larger scale. It is leading an infrastructure build-out that will dwarf Eisenhower’s interstate highway system. It will serve most of the 5 billion people in Eurasia, 30 TIMES more than the 150 million people Eisenhower’s project helped. 

Wisely, China has ensured that all of the 100+ nations joining BRI are enriched by their participation, whether building themselves up domestically, or extending their reach internationally.

It is the largest, most compelling, geographically extensive, nationally inclusive, mutually enriching economic enterprise in the history of the world. The U.S. is not part of it.

 

Mortgaging Bretton Woods 

Finally, there is the matter of the dollar. Since the Bretton Woods Agreement of 1944, the global economy has used the dollar as the primary currency of international trade.

This has given the U.S. an “exorbitant privilege” in that it can essentially write an unlimited stream of hot checks to the world, because countries need dollars to be able to conduct international commerce. The U.S. “sells” them dollars by issuing Treasury debt, which is a universally fungible international medium of exchange. 

One of the consequences of this arrangement is that it has allowed the U.S. to spend far beyond its means, running up $32 trillion of debt since 1980, when its national debt stood at a mere $1 trillion.

The U.S. uses this debt to, among other things, fund its gargantuan military with its 800 military bases around the world, which it uses to do things like destroy Serbia, Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Somalia and a host of lesser predations on other countries. All the world sees this and is repulsed by it. 

The world sees how dollar hegemony underwrites the U.S.’ ability to carry out or attempt coups in Honduras, Venezuela, Peru, Bolivia, Kazakhstan, Pakistan, Myanmar, Belarus, Egypt, Syria, and, of course, Ukraine, among others. And these are just those in the past two decades. 

The same dollar hegemony underwrote U.S. predations in the latter part of the 20th century against Iran, the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Vietnam, Nicaragua, Cuba, Chile, Congo, Brazil, Indonesia, and dozens of other countries.

Again, the rest of the world sees this. U.S. citizens, rapturously oblivious in their hermetically sealed media bubble, do not. 

The world saw how the U.S. stole $300 billion of Russian funds that were held in Western banks, part of its sanctions regime against Russia for its role in the Ukraine war. They’ve seen how the U.S. has carried out similar thefts against dollar-denominated funds of Venezuela, Afghanistan and Iran.

It sees how the Federal Reserve’s raising of interest rates to take care of U.S. needs makes capital flow out of other countries, and how it makes their currencies fall, forcing inflation on them. Not a single country in the world is left untouched. 

The cumulative impact of these facts is that many countries would rather not be held hostage to the implicit and explicit negative consequences of dollar hegemony. They also want to remove the “exorbitant privilege” that they believe the U.S. has abused to their individual and collective detriment. 

They have begun — again, led by Russia and China — to build an international finance and trading system that doesn’t rely on dollars, that uses countries’ local currencies, gold, oil, or other assets to trade.

This received special impetus last year when Saudi Arabia announced it would begin accepting Chinese yuan in exchange for its oil. Oil is the world’s most valued internationally-traded commodity, so the perception is that a dam is beginning to break. 

It will take years before an equally functional substitute for the dollar is devised but what began a few years ago as a trickle has gained momentum and urgency as a consequence of U.S. actions in Ukraine.

When the dollar is no longer the world’s international reserve currency and nations don’t need dollars to trade with each other, the U.S. will no longer be able to fund its massive budget and trade deficits by writing hot checks.

The withdrawal will be agonizing and will greatly circumscribe the U.S.’ role as global hegemon.

U.S. actions in Ukraine have driven together its two greatest adversaries, Russia and China. They, joined by India, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Iran and dozens of other countries, are carrying out a Mackinder-feared Eurasian integration that will leave the U.S. outside of the world’s largest and most dynamic trading bloc. 

The U.S.’ military failure has advertised, once again (after Iraq and Afghanistan), the relative impotence of U.S. military solutions. Yes, it can still destroy small, defenseless countries like Serbia, Libya, Afghanistan and Iraq.

But against a peer competitor that has chosen to stand up to it, the U.S. has, frankly, been handed its ass. All the world can see it.

Events have shown the hollowness of U.S.-led economic and financial systems, as well, especially compared to China. China’s economic performance has far surpassed that of the U.S. It has lifted more people out of poverty more quickly than any country in the history of the world.

Its growth has made it the largest economy in the world in purchasing power parity terms. While average inflation-adjusted incomes in the U.S. are little higher than they were 50 years ago, incomes in China are up more than 10 TIMES over the same period. And it has done this without brutalizing and pillaging other nations that refuse to bend to its hegemonic will. 

And, the war has betrayed, as nothing else possibly could, the diplomatic isolation of the U.S., with the vast majority of the world’s people refusing to implement U.S.-demanded sanctions against Russia.

Its destruction of the Nord Stream gas pipeline is recognized as the greatest act of state-sponsored terrorism in history, easily surpassing 911 in terms of the hundreds of millions of people it will hurt. And this, to one of its putative allies, Europe. Imagine what happens to its enemies. 

This is the tunnel at the end of the light, a multi-polar as opposed to a unipolar world. It means increasing isolation of the U.S. from the rest of the world, the closing in of options, the narrowing of opportunities, the loss of strategic primacy that once graced the greatest power in the history of the world.

It will mean dramatically reduced power and influence vis-à-vis the U.S.’ strategic adversaries, and markedly constrained ability to operate militarily, economically and financially in the world, what with the hot checkbook soon to be taken away. 

In 20 or 30 years, the U.S. will still be a substantial regional power, perhaps like Brazil in South America, Iran in West Asia, or Nigeria in Africa. But it will not be the global hegemon it once was, able to project and inflict power in the world as it has done for the last century.

The U.S. abused its providential anointment as the exceptional nation. That abuse has been recognized, called out, and is now being acted against by most of the other nations of the world.

The future will be very different for the U.S. than it has been for the past 80 years, since the end of World War II when it towered over the rest of the world like a giant among pygmies. Ukraine will prove to have been the turning point in this transformation, the tunnel at the end of the light.

 

Robert Freeman is founder and executive director of The Global Uplift Project which builds small-scale infrastructure projects in the developing world to improve humanity’s capacity for self-development. Robert taught economics and history at Los Altos High School where he also coached the Speech and Debate team, including producing a national champion in 2006. He has traveled extensively in both the developed and developing world. He is the author of The Best One Hour History series which includes World War I (2013), The InterWar Years (2014), The Vietnam War(2013), and other titles.

This article is from  Common Dreams.

The views expressed in this article and may or may not reflect those of Consortium News.

 

 

READ MORE:

https://consortiumnews.com/2023/02/28/ukraine-the-tunnel-at-the-end-of-the-light/

 

READ FROM TOP.

 

THE LIGHT AT THE END OF THE TUNNEL?: LIKE VIETNAM, LET RUSSIA HAVE ITS WAY:

NO NATO IN UKRAINE

THE DONBASS REGIONS AND CRIMEA ARE RUSSIAN

A MEMORANDUM OF NON-AGGRESSION BETWEEN THE USA ANS RUSSIA.

EASY.

 

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US (war) crimes....

 

By Ben Norton / Geopolitical Economy Report

 

The Chinese government has published a lengthy report condemning “US hegemony” and its destructive effects on the world.

The document analyzed the ways in which the United States has “abused” its hegemony politically, militarily, economically, financially, technologically, and culturally.

China’s Foreign Ministry noted that Washington has roughly 800 foreign military bases all around the world and has launched 400 foreign military interventions.

The United States committed genocide against Indigenous nations, imposed its colonialist “Monroe Doctrine” in Latin America, and annexed independent territories like Hawaii, Beijing pointed out.

China denounced the US for sponsoring coups, regime-change operations, and “color revolutions” in dozens of countries, while constantly spreading “misinformation” and propaganda to destabilize foreign adversaries.

Just since 2001, US wars have killed hundreds of thousands of civilians, wounded millions, and created tens of millions of refugees, Beijing recalled.

 These devastating facts were laid out in the report “US Hegemony and Its Perils“, which China’s Foreign Ministry released on February 20. It was subsequently republished by major Chinese media outlets.

Beijing said the goal of the report was to “draw greater international attention to the perils of the U.S. practices to world peace and stability and the well-being of all peoples”.

The Foreign Ministry wrote:

 

Since becoming the world’s most powerful country after the two world wars and the Cold War, the United States has acted more boldly to interfere in the internal affairs of other countries, pursue, maintain and abuse hegemony, advance subversion and infiltration, and willfully wage wars, bringing harm to the international community.

The United States has developed a hegemonic playbook to stage “color revolutions,” instigate regional disputes, and even directly launch wars under the guise of promoting democracy, freedom and human rights.

Clinging to the Cold War mentality, the United States has ramped up bloc politics and stoked conflict and confrontation.

It has overstretched the concept of national security, abused export controls and forced unilateral sanctions upon others.

It has taken a selective approach to international law and rules, utilizing or discarding them as it sees fit, and has sought to impose rules that serve its own interests in the name of upholding a “rules-based international order.”

 Political hegemony

China condemned the countless examples of “U.S. interference in other countries’ internal affairs”.

It noted that the US has treated Latin America as its colonial territory with the so-called “Monroe Doctrine”.

Beijing denounced Washington’s illegal, 61-year blockade of Cuba; the 1973 CIA coup against Chile’s democratically elected President Salvador Allende; and the Donald Trump administration’s attempt to overthrow Venezuela’s government.

China likewise blasted the “color revolutions” and “regime change” operations that the United States supported in George, Ukraine, Kyrgyzstan, and beyond.

“The U.S. exercises double standards on international rules. Placing its self-interest first, the United States has walked away from international treaties and organizations, and put its domestic law above international law”, Beijing wrote.

“The U.S. arbitrarily passes judgment on democracy in other countries, and fabricates a false narrative of “democracy versus authoritarianism” to incite estrangement, division, rivalry and confrontation”, it added.

 Military hegemony

“The history of the United States is characterized by violence and expansion”, the Chinese Foreign Ministry wrote, explaining:

 

Since it gained independence in 1776, the United States has constantly sought expansion by force: it slaughtered Indians, invaded Canada, waged a war against Mexico, instigated the American-Spanish War, and annexed Hawaii.

After World War II, the wars either provoked or launched by the United States included the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Gulf War, the Kosovo War, the War in Afghanistan, the Iraq War, the Libyan War and the Syrian War, abusing its military hegemony to pave the way for expansionist objectives.

In recent years, the U.S. average annual military budget has exceeded 700 billion U.S. dollars, accounting for 40 percent of the world’s total, more than the 15 countries behind it combined.

The United States has about 800 overseas military bases, with 173,000 troops deployed in 159 countries.

 

“As former U.S. President Jimmy Carter put it, the United States is undoubtedly the most warlike nation in the history of the world”, Beijing added.

It cited a Tufts University report that found that the United States carried out almost 400 military interventions from 1776 to 2019.

Since 2001, US wars have killed hundreds of thousands of civilians, injured millions, and created tens of millions of refugees, China pointed out.

 Economic hegemony

“By taking advantage of the dollar’s status as the major international reserve currency, the United States is basically collecting ‘seigniorage’ from around the world; and using its control over international organizations, it coerces other countries into serving America’s political and economic strategy”, the Chinese Foreign Ministry wrote.

It identified the “hegemony of U.S. dollar” as “the main source of instability and uncertainty in the world economy”.

Through the use of sanctions and other measures, “The United States willfully suppresses its opponents with economic coercion”, and “America’s economic and financial hegemony has become a geopolitical weapon”, Beijing warned.

 Technological hegemony

“The United States seeks to deter other countries’ scientific, technological and economic development by wielding monopoly power, suppression measures and technology restrictions in high-tech fields”, China said.

Beijing condemned Washington’s global use of cyber attacks and surveillance.

“The United States monopolizes intellectual property in the name of protection”, it wrote.

“The United States politicizes, weaponizes technological issues and uses them as ideological tools”, it added.

 Cultural hegemony

“The United States has often used cultural tools to strengthen and maintain its hegemony in the world”, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said.

Washington uses movies, TV shows, and media outlets as weapons of soft power, Beijing pointed out.

“U.S.-dominated Western media has a particularly important role in shaping global public opinion in favor of U.S. meddling in the internal affairs of other countries”, it wrote.

Citing a report from The Intercept, the Chinese Foreign Minister noted how the “U.S. Department of Defense manipulates social media”, spreading war propaganda on Twitter, Facebook, and other platforms.

“The United States uses misinformation as a spear to attack other countries, and has built an industrial chain around it”, Beijing warned.

US propaganda is “targeting socialist countries” in particular, it noted, stressing that Washington “pours staggering amounts of public funds into radio and TV networks to support their ideological infiltration, and these mouthpieces bombard socialist countries in dozens of languages with inflammatory propaganda day and night”.

 

READ MORE:

https://scheerpost.com/2023/02/23/china-report-excoriates-us-hegemony-war-crimes-cia-coups-400-foreign-interventions/

 

 

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nutcase zelenskeeee....

 

BY JAMES TWEEDLE

 

Volodymyr Zelensky had just returned to Kiev when he made his incendiary comments following a tour of European capitals to demand even more arms, including jet fighters. In November 2022 he falsely claimed a Russian cruise missile had struck Poland, demanding NATO retaliate and enter the conflict.

Ukrainian Volodymyr Zelensky has sparked the perfect twitstorm after his threat that the US will have to send its children to fight Russia.

Speaking at a press conference on the first anniversary of the launch of Russia's operation to defend the peoples' republics of Donetsk and Lugansk, the comedian-turned-politician repeated his claim that NATO troops will have to fight the Russian army if NATO does not meet his ever-growing demands for arms supplies.

 

"The US will have to send their sons and daughters exactly the same way as we are sending sons and daughters to war," Zelensky said, insisting that Moscow's aim is to annex the whole of Ukraine and then roll on into NATO member states.

 

Zelensky:“The US will have to send their son's & daughter's exactly the same way as we are sending,and they will have to fight,and they will be dying God Forbid." pic.twitter.com/Uq1LZ5A2dN

— AZ @AZgeopolitics) March 1, 2023

Thousands of Ukrainian troops are on the verge of being encircled the key DPR city of Artemovsk, where the Russian Wagner PMC Group is advancing into their rear supply lines.

The clip went viral on social media, with many outraged at Zelensky's latest shameless attempt to escalate the conflict towards nuclear world war.

One guest on Podcast host Tim Pool's Timcast show said Zelensky had touched his "last nerve" with his comments, and warned the US government against any attempt to draft his own children "to die for your Habsburg dynasty, World War One, needless 20-million pile of deaths replay, elites p*ssing contest."

Americans give their answer to Zelensky's demand that eventually American sons and daughters will also have to fight and die in Ukraine.... pic.twitter.com/rUSLRZwK3Y

— Richard (@ricwe123) February 28, 2023

Others were more succinct. "Those with a Ukrainian flag in their bio should go first," tweeted investment pundit Collin Rugg. "HELL NO" was podcaster Monica Crowley's response.

 

"If you’re a liberal who’s flying the Ukrainian flag or posting it in your bios, don’t you feel stupid now that Zelensky has said he’s expecting your sons and daughters to fight and die in his war?" asked 2022 California Republican senate candidate James Bradley.

 

Even Polish-descended Conservative commentator Jack Posobiec said Zelensky was "now stating the obvious" that "if this war escalates American sons and daughters will be sent."

In November last year, Zelensky tried to draw NATO directly into the conflict by falsely claiming two Russian cruise missiles had struck Poland, killing two people on a farm near the Ukrainian border. Although it was soon established that they were stray S-300 surface-to-air missiles fired by a Ukrainian Air Force battery, Zelensky doubled down on his claim.

 

READ MORE:

https://sputniknews.com/20230302/your-money-or-your-life-online-backlash-to-zelensky-threat-of-us-kids-fighting-russia-1107936493.html

 

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