Huffing and Puffing at the Pentagon
by
Dave Lindorff
American Secretary of War Robert Gates knows a real leader when he sees one. “Clearly, as far as I’m concerned,†he said, Vladimir Putin, and not President Dmitry Medvedev, "has the upper hand right now."
Well hell, Gates should know. After all, he deals on a daily basis with the same peculiar situation here in the US, where the president also is a figurehead and the real power lies in the hands of Vice President Dick Cheney.
But Gates doesn’t speak with such clarity and directness in other matters. "I think that there is a real concern that Russia has turned the corner here and is headed back toward its past rather than toward its future, and my hope is that we will see actions in the weeks and months to come that provide us some reassurance," he said, speaking on ABC and CNN, claiming that the country was returning to the authoritarianism of the old Soviet era.
Ahem.
It might also be noted that the US is heading
increasingly towards an authoritarian future, no? Certainly over the
course of the last seven years we have seen the executive branch in the
US claim that it no longer needs to enact or adhere to laws passed by
Congress or to terms of international treaties approved by the Senate.
We have also seen this administration refuse to respond to
Congressional subpoenas for information and testimony from White House
officials, effectively establishing the presidency as a dictatorship,
have we not?
As for Gates’ condemnation of Russia for
resorting to force in Georgia, one need not defend Russia’s actions
there to note that such tactics have long been deemed fully appropriate
in the US. Only recently America used force to depose an elected
government in Haiti, hustling its elected president off into exile. The
US has also been working assiduously through covert means to overthrow
the elected government of Venezuela, even supporting (and probably
helping to organize) a temporarily successful military coup there. Then
of course there is the decades-long effort by the US to overthrow the
government of Cuba, which has included everything from invasions and
embargos to multiple assassination attempts against Cuban leader Fidel
Castro.
Russia is clearly moving in an authoritarian direction
at home, and is reasserting its influence and control over some—though
hardly all—of the states that were formerly part of the USSR. But in
all of this it is merely aping the behavior of the US government, which
is becoming more authoritarian also, and which has always been a bully
in its local neighborhood.
If Gates has anything legitimate to
complain about it is that the American military disasters in Iraq and
Afghanistan, and its preoccupation with drumming up conflict with Iran,
have rendered the Pentagon almost impotent when it comes to threatening
Russia.
All that is left for Gates to do is huff and puff about
Russia backsliding to the bad old days when it was able to stand up to
the US as an equal.