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saving the world from a catastrophic armageddon....Donald Trump’s “snatch-and-grab” foreign policy rejects the belief in US primacy and exception that was sliding towards a military confrontation with China. Some have been surprised by the speed with which President Donald Trump is moving on his agenda. Yet, his chief of staff, Susie Wiles, served notice only days after last November’s election, declaring Trump had two years to revolutionise the government. Paul Keating says Trump may avoid a major war By James Curran
What is surprising is how quickly Trump’s approach across a wide range of domestic and international policies has been adopted as the new normal. This thread of virtual submission and acceptance to Trump’s will is itself astonishing. Observe the widespread admiration for the alpha male, applause for the denigration of other nations, especially Canada, America’s closest and indeed best ally and friend, and the seeming capitulation of others in the firing line: Denmark, and Colombia’s u-turn particularly. How did this blithe acceptance sweep around the world in just a week? Is it a total policy and intellectual failure? To be giggling at the turbulence caused by the string of executive orders from the Oval Office, as some on the right are, is no response. The classic cop-out: “that’s just Trump”, is likewise insufficient. The phenomenon demonstrates what has not been understood until now. Namely, that the United States’ long-enduring “soft power”, fashioned by American popular culture, has been hijacked almost overnight by Trump to touch a nerve of conservative, notably male, reaction around the world. And as far as we can gauge, in the suburbs and regions of Australia. As a result, Trump’s caudillo style of presidency is now the most prominent part of a continuum alongside Facebook and Instagram, a popular culture that is now the environment of mass attention. There is more to this than simple aggression. Trump is also giving voice to a dramatically different style of American power. Former Labor prime minister Paul Keating, in his first public comments on this second Trump administration, offers an important and hopeful point: that Trump may avoid a major war. Keating knows it is too early to be definitive in any assessments of Trump 2.0. But he has some confidence in discerning Trump’s primary view of international strategic settings. He spoke exclusively to this column: “Donald Trump believes in American nationalism but he does not believe in American internationalism,” Keating says. “Nor does he buy the idea of American exceptionalism, the idea that Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton and George W. Bush were glued to. That in some way they had God’s ear and that their job was the propagation of the faith – the values of their ‘exceptional’ state.” Keating continues: “Trump’s street smartness tells him this is nonsense. Though he lacks an analytic framework, his intuition pushes him past crude US policy dressed up as some rules-based order. He knows the key US rule is ‘snatch and grab’, a policy he understands and is okay with but will not eulogise. “Trump’s presidency could be central to him engineering avoidance of a third world war which the Democrats, in their manic commitment to primacy, were otherwise sliding towards – using Ukraine from 2014 as a US surrogate to contain Russia and their mealy-mouthed claim that China represented a military threat to the United States when, in fact, China intends to attack no other state, certainly not the US. China’s objection to foreign military assets in its near waters being no different to US intolerance of foreign military assets in the western hemisphere. I think Trump understands this. His vice president, J.D. Vance, certainly does.” Keating clearly sees the potential for a new practice of American power and possible positives from it. As Keating puts it, it is in essence about “snatch and grab”, echoing the greed that characterised America’s foreign policy when first it placed its tread on the world stage in the late nineteenth century and took the Philippines. That thread of hope doesn’t make it a benign policy, or a constructive one. Predictably enough Trump has now placed tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China. It is worth remembering, however, that they didn’t change the world last time, and won’t now. America has a massive savings paucity, the source of its current account deficit, and no amount of tariffs, quotas or threats, can bridge this savings gap. The tariffs are but a tactical remedy to a structural malignancy. And there should be a great deal more alarm than there is about Trump’s approach to Greenland: the first time, in essence, that one member of NATO has virtually threatened military action against another member, or at the very least failed to rule out military action. Denmark in a NATO context did, after all, play its part during the Afghanistan war, though that of course was a policy setting from the very presidents — George W. Bush and Joe Biden — that Trump ridicules. Even if, in a year from now, the US has an additional military base on Greenland, the idea this will be down to Trump’s strategic genius is highly dubious. It makes no sense to talk about a close ally like this. Indeed, only a declaration of independence by Greenland could justify Trump’s bluster. So Defence Minister Richard Marles, who like Coalition foreign minister Julie Bishop before him, studs his speeches with ritual incantations to the “rules-based order”, might well be asked at his next press conference: “My dear minister, what part of the ‘rules-based order’ enables Trump to lay claim to Greenland?
Republished from the Australian Financial Review, Feb 02, 2025
https://johnmenadue.com/paul-keating-says-trump-will-save-the-world-from-wwiii/
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USAID in russia....
Why Was USAID Kicked Out of Russia?
President Trump has promised to “make a decision” on USAID’s future after getting rid of the “radical lunatics” running it after DOGE chief Elon Musk said it was time for the “criminal” agency “to die.” Russia banned Washington’s long-favored soft power tool in 2012. Here’s why.
Russia knew about the US Agency for International Development’s “criminal” nature long before Elon Musk's epiphany.
USAID was expelled from the country after post-election street protests in Moscow verging on an attempted color revolution, with the agency accused of using its grant network to try to influence politics and civil society after the 2011-2012 Russian parliamentary and presidential elections.
USAID’s mission in Russia was narrowed to political influence operations in the 2000s, including funding for civil society groups like the Golos* election watchdog, the Memorial* and Moscow Helsinki Group* rights organizations, and others.
These organizations engaged in increasingly sharp criticism of the Russian government prior to the US aid agency's ouster, helping to radicalize a portion of the population toward more pro-Western opposition views through the popularization of their positions.
20 Years of 'Democracy Promotion'
USAID first entered Russia in 1992, immediately after the USSR's collapse, and spent nearly $3 bln over 20 years on ‘democracy, human rights and civil society promotion’ programs.
In reality, USAID’s work in the 90s was aimed at cheerleading the gutting of Russia’s social and economic system during the painful transition to a market economy, and meddling in politics in support of liberal, pro-West politicians against conservative, populist and neo-communist forces.
Nowhere was this more evident than during the 1993 constitutional crisis and the 1996 elections, which saw radical opposition to liberal reforms crushed and the voting rigged, with USAID-backed “independent media,” publishing houses and NGOs cheering on the processes.
The US amassed a literal journalistic empire during its stay in Russia. Up to the year 2000 alone, its National Press Institute held 2,300 briefings and seminars attended by over 57,000 journalists, provided training for 2,700 media specialists, management and consulting services for 84 newspapers, and support for other print, TV and internet media.
On the economic front, USAID provided “technical advisory services and material support” for the infamous voucher privatization scheme. This program cemented immense wealth transfers worth hundreds of billions of dollars from the state to private and foreign coffers.
In the 90s, USAID ambitiously outlined 14 “strategic objectives” for Russia, from fiscal, monetary, social service and energy reforms to US “joint ventures,” civil and legal training, environmental programs and even women’s reproductive health.
Political stabilization and the maturing of the modern post-Soviet Russian state ultimately sealed USAID's fate.
But perhaps the greatest damage done by USAID to Russia has been in its backyard, where billions of dollars spent over the past 35 years helped to put neighbors on a path to NATO and EU membership, and literally rewrite history books to cast Russia as an enemy. Nowhere has this effort paid off more than in Ukraine.
https://sputnikglobe.com/20250203/why-was-usaid-kicked-out-of-russia-1121532152.html
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SEE ALSO:
How Clinton Used Russia’s 1993 Crisis to Dupe Yeltsin on NATO’s Eastward MarchREAD FROM TOP.
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
HYPOCRISY ISN’T ONE OF THE SINS OF THE TEN COMMANDMENTS.
HENCE ITS POPULARITY IN THE ABRAHAMIC TRADITIONS…
PLEASE DO NOT BLAME RUSSIA IF WW3 STARTS. BLAME AMERICA.