48

Goodbye ‘Freedom and Democracy’ – Hello ‘Rules-based International Order’

Paul Carline

The banner and the clarion call of western countries, and their own asserted legitimation – especially when they are engaging in illegal wars and coups – used to be “freedom and democracy”: the precious gift they were generously and selflessly offering to a backward world – or one allegedly in the ‘chains’ of Socialism/Communism. There was “Radio Free Europe”, for example, pushing out western liberal propaganda, primarily against the countries of the former Soviet Union.

The Washington-based “Freedom House” organisation, which claims to be independent, has around 150 staff members in Washington and in ‘field offices’ around the world. Its President is Michael J. Abramowitz, who before joining Freedom House in 2017, was director of the US Holocaust Memorial Museum’s Levine Institute for Holocaust Education. Before that, he was National Editor and then White House correspondent for the Washington Post. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and a former fellow at the German Marshall Fund and the Hoover Institution. He is also a board member of the National Security Archive. The Board of Trustees is chaired by Michael Chertoff, Secretary of Homeland Security under George W. Bush and co-author of the USA Patriot Act.

Since 1972, Freedom House, whose website sports a warm endorsement by none other than Francis Fukuyama, has produced an annual “Freedom in the World” global map (above), which divides the world into countries which are either “free”, “partly free”, or “not free”. The allegedly “free” countries are coloured green, the “partly free” ones a kind of muddy yellow, and the “not free” ones blue.

Its analysis of “freedom” covers “the electoral process, political pluralism and participation, the functioning of government, freedom of expression and belief, rights of association and organization, the rule of law, and personal autonomy and individual rights”. The word ‘democracy’ is not used in the ratings system, nor is it defined anywhere, but the 2018 analysis is headlined “Democracy in Crisis”.

According to Freedom House, in 2018 45% of the world (by country) or 39% (by population) was “free”, 30% (country) or 24% (population) was “partly free”, and 25%/37% “not free”. Countries are rated on a percentage points system. Sweden, which last year joined in the NATO ‘war games’ – despite not being a NATO member – is given a full 100 points, Canada 99, Uruguay 98, both Chile and the UK 94, France a completely undeserved 90, the USA 86 and Israel an unreal 79. By contrast, China scores 14, Iran 17, and Russia a mere 20, while Tibet and Syria are granted only 1 point each (no bias there). Almost incredibly, Ukraine scores 62 – allowing it to be rated as “partly free”! Very oddly, the FAQ section is available in only two languages – English and Ukrainian!

I suspect that the statement by Freedom House’s President, Michael J. Abramowitz, to the effect that: “A quarter-century ago, at the end of the Cold War, it appeared that totalitarianism had at last been vanquished and liberal democracy had won the great ideological battle of the 20th century”, must induce wry smiles – if not outright anger – in many Off-Guardian readers. Abramowitz predictably refers to “the rise of populist leaders who appeal to anti-immigrant sentiment and give short shrift to fundamental civil and political liberties” and describes “newcomer Emmanuel Macron” as a “centrist” who “handily” (interesting choice of words!) won the French presidency.

Depressingly predictable is his comment on China and Russia, which he labels “the world’s leading autocracies” and which he asserts “have seized the opportunity not only to step up internal repression but also to export their malign influence to other countries, which are increasingly copying their behaviour and adopting their disdain for democracy” (emphasis added; no mention of the massive ‘disdain for democracy’ in the USA, UK, and numerous members of the EU).

According to Abramowitz, “Democratic governments allow people to help set the rules to which all must adhere, and have a say in the direction of their lives and work!” If that were true, there would be lots of direct democracy in all those “free” countries. It’s true that there is some ‘direct democracy’, e.g. popular initiatives and referendums, in a few states of the USA and in a few European countries – with Switzerland far and away the best example, followed by Germany at the regional and local levels, thanks to the efforts over decades of its leading pro-democracy organisation “Mehr Demokratie”, which has been trying to have direct democratic rights established also at the national level, which would really allow the people to “help set the rules”. Germany’s “Basic Law” (it doesn’t have a proper constitution for reasons which I cannot go into here but which will be known to many) actually states: “All power derives from the people” (Article 20) and “State power is exercised by the people in elections and referendums” (emphasis added) – but successive governments have refused to enact the laws that would allow state-level referendums, presumably because they fear the “people power” that is the literal meaning of ‘democracy’.

Given subsequent developments, Kofi Annan’s 2001 Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech now strikes a sour note:

“The obstacles to democracy have little to do with culture or religion, and much more to do with the desire of those in power to maintain their position at any cost. This is neither w new phenomenon nor one confined to any particular part of the world. People of all cultures value their freedom of choice and feel the need to have a say in the decisions affecting their lives”

In the 2002 UNDP World Development Report, Annan re-affirmed the true nature of democracy in these words:

“True democratization means more than elections. People’s dignity requires that they be free – and able – to participate in the formation and stewardship of the rules and institutions that govern them”.

According to Abramovitch’s definition, and that of Kofi Annan, there is zero genuine democracy in the U.K. (a purely representative system – especially one still using an outdated and wholly disreputable FPTP system, with rare referendums arranged by the government, which sets the question – is not a legitimate form of democracy).

We may also ask, in parenthesis as it were, who – if not the electorates – is “helping to set the rules”, for example in Europe specifically. As of July 2017, there were 11,327 registered lobby organisations in the EU, employing some 82,096 people – the equivalent of 50,326 full-time personnel – of which nearly 7,000 have access to the Parliament. In Germany there are around eight lobbyists – representing ‘outside’ interests – for every member of the national parliament – and the lobby registers are voluntary. Only seven countries (France, Ireland, Lithuania, Austria, Poland, Slovenia and the UK) have passed any laws on lobbying.

What is extremely interesting and telling is the general absence of references to ‘freedom and democracy’ by our so-called ‘leaders’. Those words have been replaced in the political lexicon by the now clearly favoured expression “the rules-based international order” – which doesn’t have quite the same ring, or the same connotations, as “freedom and democracy”.

One is forced to ask: whose order? whose rules? If Abramowitz is correct, and since we are privileged enough to live in a country which, if we are to believe its FH rating, is little short of perfect, we the people must have been involved in setting those rules. We should at least have been told what they mean! For example, what does ‘international’ mean in this context? It suggests a global compact – but when it is used it specifically excludes certain countries and regimes which we are led to believe are not part of, or indeed are allegedly trying to undermine, this new ‘order’.

Although the word ‘international’ is often taken to be a synonym for ‘global’ or ‘universal’, its literal meaning is ‘between nations’. The UN has of course long promulgated and endorsed all kinds of ‘universal’ rules (the ICC rules on aggression for instance) – many of which are routinely flouted by the countries which most loudly lay claim to being ‘democracies’ and loyal observers of the “rules-based international order”.

But we are now seeing a new type of literally ‘inter-national’ agreements being made in Europe, often merely between two governments at a time (with no democratic endorsement by either parliaments or people) and where the suspicion is that this is a new way of hiding from the general public what is really going on in Europe – specifically the step-by-step implementation of the “United States of Europe” project which dates from at least 1946.

There seems to be an undue haste to complete the creation of a unified military establishment that would not be answerable to the individual nation states which are contributing their forces (and infrastructure!) and which would also appear to include a much closer working relationship between military and police forces. Does the urgency have to do with the level of chaos in Europe and the threat – now materialised in the form of the “Yellow Vest” protests – of widespread civil unrest and potentially public revolt?

So Prime Minister Theresa May can pretend to the public that the ‘Brexit’ approved by a majority of voters will take place i.e. that Britain will “come out of” the EU, while at the same time, and largely in secret or behind closed doors in completely undemocratic meetings, the government is committing the entire UK military establishment, step by step, to the new ‘unified European defence establishment’. The UK enters into a special relationship with France (and thereby with the EU). France and Germany have just signed a new treaty – the Aachen Treaty – so does the UK automatically acquire the special relationship with Germany? And will this “two-step” approach eventually link all willing states (one could imagine Hungary, perhaps Italy and Greece also, not being so willing) in the ‘new European order’?

In struggling to understand the “rules-based international order” I found this definition by the RAND Corporation very helpful:

Since 1945, the United States has pursued its global interests through creating and maintaining international economic institutions, bilateral and regional security organizations, and liberal political norms; these ordering mechanisms are often collectively referred to as the international order.

In recent years, rising powers have begun to challenge aspects of this order. This report is part of a project, titled “Building a Sustainable International Order,” that aims to understand the existing international order, assess current challenges to the order, and recommend future US policies with respect to the order.

This report is the first of those and reflects the project team’s attempt to understand the existing international order, including how US decision makers have described and used the order in conducting foreign policy, as well as how academics have assessed the mechanisms by which the order affects state behaviour.

When discussing policy responses to a fraying international order, the first challenge is to understand what we mean by the term. Order has various meanings in the context of international politics, and specific orders can take many forms.1 For the purposes of this project, we conceive of order as the body of rules, norms, and institutions that govern relations among the key players in the international environment. An order is a stable, structured pattern of relationships among states that involves some combination of parts, including emergent norms, rulemaking institutions, and international political organizations or regimes, among others.

– RAND Corporation 2016, Understanding the Current International Order

This more recent observation was both insightful and amusing:

“The rules-based international order is being challenged, quite surprisingly, not by the usual suspects, but by its main architect and guarantor, the US,” Donald Tusk, the president of the European Council, said as the summit meeting got underway in Quebec’s picturesque resort town of La Malbaie on the banks of the St. Lawrence River.

The trans-Atlantic rift manifested itself in a behind-the-scenes debate about the wording of the traditional summit communiqué. The American side objected to including the phrase “rules-based international order,” even though it is boilerplate for such statements, according to two people briefed on the deliberations. The Europeans and Canadians were pushing back, but it remained unclear whether the Trump administration would ultimately sign the statement or be left on its own.

– NYT June 8, 2018 Michael D. Shear

So the ‘rules-based international order’ is, in reality, the expression of America’s “global interests”. Other parties – such as British and other governments – may be allowed to put on the mask of the Eagle, whilst claiming to be on the side of justice, truth, human rights … and yes, democracy. And since it’s a US construct, the US and its allies can feel free to ‘make it up as they go along’.


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USAma Bin Laden
USAma Bin Laden
Feb 5, 2019 5:18 AM

If you want to understand what the Western democracy’s (sic) vaunted Rules Based International Order is really about, you must look at their illegal invasion of Iraq, their humanitarian bombing of Libya, their proxy terror war against Syria, their unending colonial occupation of Afghanistan, their backing of the Saudi/UAE war on Yemen, and the regime change/sanctions war against Venezuela.

The West is dripping in the blood of millions of people, and attempt to disguise this reality with pathetic delusions that they are crusaders for a rules based international order.

What an Orwellian joke.

The Western Civilizing Mission and European-American colonialism never ended.

They have only been given a new rebranding.

Everyone's a Winner!
Everyone's a Winner!
Feb 3, 2019 4:28 PM

Good catch finding that cheesy CIA map, which is in panicked response to this:

https://www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/Indicators/Pages/HRIndicatorsIndex.aspx

Comprehensive indicators of all state duties under world-standard human rights law. This map has multiple precisely-specified indicators, compiled by internationally-elected experts acting in their personal capacity and not for governments. The indicators are based on inputs of independent NGOs, treaty bodies, charter bodies, or special procedure and documented to a gnat’s ass.

They show the US is in the cellar in all categories but one. That one, reporting, is an ‘E for Effort’ that discounts the US failure to report to the Convention Against Torture.

TFS
TFS
Feb 3, 2019 11:18 AM

A few signs of a Democracy are:

1. The Judiciary is even handed and not subject to a Political will or Affluenzer.
2. That a law exists, and the people are aware of it AND that such a law is Jury Nullification; The ability of the public to say, the law is not applicable in this case.
3. That laws exists to make sure those in Parliament are as patriotic as the men and women they send into harms way are given the cocktail of drugs the military are.
4. That laws exist, so when a referendum is held, the Politicians honour its outcome or face automatic removel from Parliament.

https://hat4uk.wordpress.com/2019/02/01/opinion-we-dont-need-14th-century-treason-laws-to-make-brexit-happen-we-just-need-concerted-will/

https://parliamentlive.tv/event/index/81a76aba-1e5f-4a02-92c7-248f2a072f42?in=14:30:48.

okulo
okulo
Feb 3, 2019 12:08 AM

You can’t have freedom AND democracy.

In a democracy, your freedom is curtailed in one circuitous way or another by the will of the majority or greater minority.

And democracy as we know it is just a prestidigitatory means of converting dissent into a mandate.

Just saying.

zach
zach
Feb 2, 2019 5:36 PM

Abramowitz needs to stop with the fairy tales and listen to what his own country”s oldest living president had to say about the US in 2015 . . .

https://theintercept.com/2015/07/30/jimmy-carter-u-s-oligarchy-unlimited-political-bribery/

George cornell
George cornell
Feb 2, 2019 7:12 PM
Reply to  zach

Abramowitz et al have everything to do with sliming the only principled president they have had for a long time. He could not be bought or bullied so the media was used to demean him.

zach
zach
Feb 2, 2019 8:18 PM
Reply to  George cornell

George, i’m afraid Trump has exactly the same core principles as all the rest of them: to further enrich the richest at home and to ruthlessly assert US power abroad. The sole reason he upsets the likes of Abramowitz is because he has stripped away the customary veneer of bogus respectability from the Hegemon. Trump is representing far too vividly to the rest of the world what America is all about.

zach
zach
Feb 2, 2019 8:30 PM
Reply to  zach

Gah! You were referring to Jimmy Carter. Sorry, George!

rtj1211
rtj1211
Feb 2, 2019 1:47 PM

I am afraid that once you get quasi private organisations defining what ‘freedom’ and ‘democracy’ mean, you are rapidly going down the road of invalidating them.

By definition demos kratos can only be defined by the demos, as only the demos will know whether the kratos they have is worth anything. Having some unaccountable elitist body do it guarantees political shenanigans.

I define my kratos in the UK as the relevance and utility any vote of mine has. Living often in ‘safe seat’ constituencies, my Westminster election votes are frequently worthless. I can harangue politicians in a variety of ways, make constructive suggestions, but none of them are demonstrably meaningful. There is very much a sense of hoping against hope that what you can do has some vague sliver of utility.

George cornell
George cornell
Feb 2, 2019 12:54 PM

Do you think it might have something to do with the demand by the American consumer for inexpensive goods, and the political suicide that would follow if they were thwarted?

White Rabbit
White Rabbit
Feb 2, 2019 12:20 PM

Are you entirely dure the Yellow Vests genesis is organic? Not synthetic at all? Why does the Economist 2017 Year in Review magazine front cover depict the Yellow Vests arrival on the 23rd of November 2018? You think surely not? Then take a look at that magazine cover and notice it is tiled with Tarot Cards. Then zoom in on The Hermit card. Do you see the Yellow Vests? Do you see the constellation Leo and it proximity to the moon in its phase? Do you think Leo arrives at that position on the 23rd November on the first day of the Yellow Vest by accident? And what about the globe atlas depicted in the Hermit card. Does it not show a map of the outline of France and the UK cojoined. And why is there a black lightning bolt striking Alsace Lorraine.? And what does that say about Merkel… Read more »

Simon Hodges
Simon Hodges
Feb 2, 2019 11:31 AM

The United States of Europe was being planned by the Nazis as early as 1936 [1] “Above and beyond the concept of the nation-state, the idea of a new community will transform the living space given us all by history into a new spiritual realm… The new Europe of solidarity and cooperation among all its peoples, a Europe without unemployment, without monetary crises, … will find an assured foundation and rapidly increasing prosperity once national economic barriers are removed.” Arthus Seyss-Inquart, Minister of Security and the Interior in the post-Anschluss Nazi government, 1938, and later Prefect of Occuppied Holland – here he is addressing his Dutch subjects [2] “There must be a readiness to subordinate one’s own interests in certain cases to that of the European Community.” Walther Funk, Finince Minister in Hitler’s government, 1942. [3] “The solution to economic problems… with the eventual object of a European customs union… Read more »

Paul Carline
Paul Carline
Feb 3, 2019 11:44 AM
Reply to  Simon Hodges

Excellent supplementing and reinforcing information! Thanks!

Simon Hodges
Simon Hodges
Feb 3, 2019 12:14 PM
Reply to  Paul Carline

Dear Paul The phase know thy enemy springs to mind. There are too many Neo-Nazis hiding behind a liberal and moderate veneer when their politics are in fact anti-democratic, authoritarian, totalitarian and imperialist. This includes many who present themselves as Progressives and declare that there are no alternatives to globalism, neoliberalism and neoconservative imperialist foreign policy it seems. If you compare and contrast the Euston Manifesto with the Project for the New America Century (basically the prototype for globalist neoliberal imperialism) you will see that the EM effectively rewrote and reduplicated the foreign policies of the PNAC. Roughly half of that text is solely concerned with protecting Blair’s reputation in the embarrassing event that no WMD had been found in Iraq. It is more than curious that the PNAC was notionally shut down in 2006 the very same year that the EM was published and instantly popularised both in the… Read more »

olavleivar
olavleivar
Feb 2, 2019 11:28 AM

EXCELLENT ARTICLE ! … But …Some Observations :with Comments a. Did anyone notice the ETHNICITY of the Director of ” Freedom” House ? Or the ETHNICITY of the CHAIR of Trustees ? If NOT … I did and do … and so should YOU !: The same pattern can be observed in all other ” International Order ” Institutions ! Comment : The TRUTH is that United Kingdom and subsequently the USA are JEWISH RULED Nations and the People of these nations are used as CANNONFODDER for JEWISH INTERESTS …MINISCULE MINORITIES having URSURPED the BULK of WEALTH and POWER , Just like the SOVJET UNION was used …until some time in the 60 – 70ies in the 20th Century . And as the EU is transforming into … TODAY b.It is almost HILARIOUS to observe that anyone OPPOSING ” The International Order ” Institutions and Agendas immidiately is attacked ,… Read more »

Michael Needleman
Michael Needleman
Feb 2, 2019 11:16 AM

To anyone living here who is not a multi-millionaire, the UK’s 94% rating can only be seen as top quality satire.

George cornell
George cornell
Feb 2, 2019 12:50 PM

94%? Does Berlusconi actually live in a bunga-bungalow? Is there anything in the UK on the level?, would give a shorter answer.

Francis Lee
Francis Lee
Feb 2, 2019 11:05 AM

The problem with people who think they are free is that they are blissfully unaware that the opposite is in fact the case. Freedom is slavery okay! The people of Europe have lost their sovereignty to the hegemon, are under military occupation, political obligation, and even ideological occupation. Not that they are aware of any of this. It would be true to say that NATO policies of the US have been designed and worked to prevent independent action among the US allies/vassals. This can be taken further and postulate that the alliance policy has intentionally and systematically worked to turn Washington’s allies into clients/satellites. This is what Gaullists and leftists in Europe were objecting to and fighting against. A fight that was lost. The US has been slowly eroding the independence of Europe the social, legal, political in the Euro-Atlantic bloc have been increasingly aligned with and integrated into the… Read more »

BigB
BigB
Feb 2, 2019 1:05 PM
Reply to  Francis Lee

Francis Lee Exactly, a point I have been making for a while now. People do not understand the political concepts of autonomy, sovereignty, consent, and legitimation. Indeed, Paul could have made more of this in his informative article. When countries amalgamate into trade blocs, any autonomy and sovereignty is subjacent to the imposed rules of the bloc. The idea that the UK will be autonomous and sovereign in a Customs Union arrangement is a logical fallacy. A distinction that our leadership expects us not to be able to make. Another big deception going on in the UK is the inculcation of Parliamentary sovereignty – which it is not. We, the People are sovereign. Or we were, before we anti-constitutionally acceded to Europe. It may be academic: but I think the notions (as that is what they have been reduced to) of consent and legitimation should be studied. Weber/Habermas’ theory of… Read more »

Rhisiart Gwilym
Rhisiart Gwilym
Feb 3, 2019 10:39 AM
Reply to  BigB

Why do you think that we, the people(s) of the island of Britain, are sovereign, B? Where does it say that in our non-existent constitution? Whenever the topic comes up some pol or corpomedia hack usually starts bloviating about ultimate sovereignty resting with Paedominster, or Mrs. Windsor (aka Mrs. Saxe-Coburg-Gotha). We, the peoples of Britain are supposedly Mrs. Windsor’s ‘subjects’ – sic! If Britain is ever to see – credible – democracies arise amongst its peoples, we’re going to need a hefty input of Swiss arrangements here, including written constitutions; effective proportional representation; genuinely independent, non-commercial media that are constitutionally forbidden from being owned by foreign interests, or by any oligarch plutocrats, and which may need to be sustained by non-commercial, constitutionally-guaranteed subsidies not subject to the whims of any passing parliament, so vital is their function; and also we need mandatory – and binding! – referenda for any matter… Read more »

Paul Carline
Paul Carline
Feb 3, 2019 12:29 PM

Please have a look at the article on ‘Sovereignty’ on the UK Column website at: https://www.ukcolumn.org/article/fundamental-principles-our-constitution. Popular sovereignty is enshrined in both the Magna Carta and the Bill of Rights. Successive governments in the UK and elsewhere have for generations claimed the “democracy” title. A country is only a democracy if the institutions of ‘government’ have been specifically chosen by the people and if the powers and limitations on power of those institutions can be challenged and amended by the people. ‘The people’ exists before the state! A genuinely democratic constitution represents the choice of the people (usually a simple majority – as in Athenian democracy – but there is no reason why a two-thirds or four-fifths majority cannot be chosen to avoid the “tyranny of the majority” accusation) as to the kind of society they wish to live in and the rules they wish society to respect. Such a… Read more »

BigB
BigB
Feb 3, 2019 1:19 PM

“The English Constitution confers treaty making powers on only the Sovereign. The Sovereign cannot transfer those powers to a foreign power nor even, to our own parliament because they are mere servants of the Monarch. Sovereignty itself cannot be given away as it resides with the people who entrust it to the Monarch for his/her lifetime and the Monarch is obliged by law to pass that sovereignty on to any successor as it was received.” Advice from Lord Chancellor, Lord Kilmuir, to Edward Heath – on (the constitutional illegality of) joining the EEC Welcome to the 800 year debate as to who is the boss: the people, the crown, or parliament? The answer to the tri-partate system of rule is the Queen – but only as the plenipotential representative of the people (as confirmed in the Coronation Oath). The power of the people is held in trust by the monarchy,… Read more »

crank
crank
Feb 2, 2019 10:37 AM

It wasn’t so long ago that we were all being encouraged to get behind statements like this one:
‘ I am fine with giving up my freedom to defend democracy’
[some voxpop on the streets of London – post 7/7]

Let us not forget that there has not yet been a single significant prosecution for the crimes of 9/11, and that these people are innocent:.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/feb/02/why-cant-we-get-this-over-911-hearings-drag-on-guantanamo

There is only one rule in the ‘rules based order’:
do what the man with the gun tells you to do.

Yarkob
Yarkob
Feb 3, 2019 10:56 AM
Reply to  crank

i can’t remember who said it (Washington? Jackson?) and i cba to scroogle it, but it’s very apt:

“those who surrender liberty for temporary security deserve neither”

i’m paraphrasing of course, but you get the gist.

vexarb
vexarb
Feb 3, 2019 7:00 PM
Reply to  Yarkob

@Yarkob. First of a million www replies in 5 seconds:

Benjamin Franklin once said: “Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.” That quote often comes up in … concerns about government surveillance.

Terje M
Terje M
Feb 2, 2019 10:18 AM

“Rules-based” are weasel words…most listeners would associate the term with international law and the UN Charter. In fact, they mean something entirely different, more like “the arbitrary rules US/NATO make up on the spur of the moment when they want to attack someone.”

Western countries have no choice but to use the vaguer “rules-based international order”, since they routinely an blatantly breach the UN Charter – the real and binding rules for international conduct.

lundiel
lundiel
Feb 2, 2019 9:45 AM

I think “Freedom” has been quietly dropped because America pushed the envelope too far for European consumption.
“Freedom” for me, creates an image of armed school teachers. “Rules-based international order” is just another term for “managed democracy”.

harry stotle
harry stotle
Feb 2, 2019 10:03 AM
Reply to  lundiel

Nowadays freedom means freedom from responsibility.

The US commits serial war crimes yet is never held to account – as I say (below) the precedent for double standards is illustrated by Nuremberg.

Chilcot was a sham process all along, as were the official 9/11 investigations.

Meanwhile the corporate media quake in their boots should anyone whisper the name of cartoon right wingers like Tommy Robinson while cheering on real fascists as they seek to undermine countries that do not subscribe to the neocon agenda.

harry stotle
harry stotle
Feb 2, 2019 9:18 AM

A precursor to US exceptionalism, and asymmetrical power was Nuremberg.

One the one hand they wanted Nazis to atone for the crimes they committed while on the other turning a blind eye to those committed by the allies.

This cock-eyed view of morality allowed the US to incinerate of 250,000 Japenese civilians while triggering a wave of cancers and birth defects without understanding why the legitimacy of such an act should be subject to legal scrutiny.

These double standards have continued ever since – the logic of such an ideology allows the US to see the wrongs in the various targets they identify but no almost no insight into why they are the worlds leading terror state.

Francis Lee
Francis Lee
Feb 2, 2019 8:08 AM

Ukraine, partly free! What is this – satire!? It is a country ruled by various contending mafia-thug elites Kolomoisky, Poroshenko et al. and neo-nazi militias, Right Sektor, Svoboda, Patriots of the Ukraine. Europe’s first post-war neo-nazi state. Anyone with any sense is trying to get out.

George cornell
George cornell
Feb 2, 2019 12:06 PM
Reply to  Francis Lee

Of course they have freedom. Freedom from the inconvenient truths. Freedom from accountability. Freedom from insight. Freedom from hindsight.
Btw where is their gold? Not in the US is it?

eddie
eddie
Feb 2, 2019 4:54 PM
Reply to  George cornell

Yes. yes it is, along with Yat the Rat; the cookie queen’s annoited fellow Jew. Not that there is any connection, or anything wrong with that.

Schlüter
Schlüter
Feb 2, 2019 7:06 AM

See also:
„One Thing Must be Clear to the World: The US Power Elite Regards the Whole Globe as Their Colony!“: https://wipokuli.wordpress.com/2016/10/26/one-thing-must-be-clear-to-the-world-the-us-power-elite-regards-the-whole-globe-as-their-colony/
Have a good Weekend!

Archie1954
Archie1954
Feb 2, 2019 5:05 AM

Insouciance is deeply ingrained in the minds of the American public. As aresult the terms democracy and freedom continue to mutate. Now if you are not gunned down by the police, you live in a free and democratic nation. Obviously American Blacks don’t!

Gary Weglarz
Gary Weglarz
Feb 2, 2019 4:59 AM

A – “‘rules-based international order” – indeed! Where the “rules” apparently say the U.S. and the West can openly engage in coups to overthrow democratically elected governments who we in the U.S. disapprove of, international law be damned. I must admit that I have had to completely rethink my previous take on the Trump presidency. Soon after his election I found myself thinking that at least there is “one silver lining” to his election. That silver lining as I first saw it was that the Orange One is so odious and reprehensible that no European leaders would dare try to get the citizens of their nation to follow Trump into the next U.S. led regime change insanity. Then the open Venezuela coup is announced by the U.S., and what do European and other Western leaders do but line up like freaking sheep in support of the Orange One and in… Read more »

F
F
Feb 2, 2019 8:17 AM
Reply to  Gary Weglarz

My thoughts exactly. The euro elites are little more than Vichy subalterns to the elites on the other side of the pond. They will not change, they cannot. Like the Bourbons they have learned nothing and forgotten nothing. They are an anachronistic ex-imperial gofers who fall over themselves to do the bidding of their transatlantic masters – the second tier of the hegemonic structure of globalist imperialism. Moreover they simply stand there and let thereand let themselves be insulted, patronised and mocked by their masters. This has been illustrated to the wire tap on Merkel’s mobile and the ineffable Ms Nuland and her f*** the EU remarks.

mark
mark
Feb 3, 2019 1:05 PM
Reply to  F

Britain and all the other EU satrapies are more US satellites than the old East Germany was of the Soviet Union. That is literally true. East Germany occasionally showed some independence from Moscow. They went ahead and built the Berlin Wall even though Khruschev told them not to.

You hear people like Hague, Fox, Gove and the rest grovelling on their bellies to Uncle Sam and it’s just nauseating, lickspittle toadying. The US spits in Merkel’s face bugging her phone and she just smiles and pretends nothing happened. Trump brags that Saudi Arabia and South Korea are just US satellites who can’t do anything without his permission.

Brutally Remastered
Brutally Remastered
Feb 2, 2019 10:39 AM
Reply to  Gary Weglarz

And what would be your opinion on dialogue with North Korea?

Francis Lee
Francis Lee
Feb 2, 2019 11:12 AM

I don’t have any opinions on North Korea old chap, nor do I have any opinions of Paraguay, or Fiji, why should I. As long as they do not threaten my country’s strategic interests they can eat babies for breakfast as far as I am concerned.

This is called ‘Realism’ or the Westphalian system in the International Relations jargon. You should try it some time

padre
padre
Feb 2, 2019 11:42 AM
Reply to  Francis Lee

So, threatening “your country’s strategic interests” beats all?Have you considered that they may have their own interests, too?And what “strategic interest” does your country have in such a “shit hole country”, could it be their natural resources?

Francis Lee
Francis Lee
Feb 2, 2019 1:08 PM
Reply to  padre

Of course they have their own strategic interests, I never suggested that they didn’t and shouldn’t. I am just concerned that our interests do not clash. Every country has strategic interests and will be concerned to protect them if they have any sovereignty at all.

Tim Jenkins
Tim Jenkins
Feb 2, 2019 1:18 PM

Have you seen the price of Butter, Europe wide ? !

Will
Will
Feb 2, 2019 3:17 AM

The illusion of freedom will continue as long as it’s profitable to continue the illusion. At the point where the illusion becomes too expensive to maintain, they will just take down the scenery, they will pull back the curtains, they will move the tables and chairs out of the way and you will see the brick wall at the back of the theater.    

–Frank Zappa

Andrew Mcguiness
Andrew Mcguiness
Feb 2, 2019 7:17 PM
Reply to  Will

I sense that the time when the scenery comes down is not far off.

Gezzah Potts
Gezzah Potts
Feb 3, 2019 10:25 AM

Andrew McGuinness: sadly, agree. I think the shit is about to hit the fan, and many millions of people in the West are going to be rudely awakened from their fairytale illusions of how they Thought the World was…. Its going to be very bleak and bloody.

Antonym
Antonym
Feb 2, 2019 3:07 AM

How come state capitalist & one party ruled China managed to make trillions under this “US” rules based international order?

George cornell
George cornell
Feb 2, 2019 12:58 PM
Reply to  Antonym

See post 22 above, meant as a reply to you.

Tim Jenkins
Tim Jenkins
Feb 2, 2019 1:07 PM
Reply to  Antonym

Easy answer :- the Bilderberg NWO utilising the US government institutions as hypocritical vehicle & pretence, spouting Freedom House, in order to police & impose their corporate will globally & for the controlling NWO Khazarian Ashkenazi Mafia of Zion, (offering Jewish citizenship to almost all US politicians) , to try and infiltrate China by enticing them with bones & sweet GMO seed for Wetiko materialism … That’s how come , but then you knew that already. If not, you do now, lovely-jubbly. So the question is really, what does Antonym have against the Chinese raising their standard of living, playing the existing game of Zion, only better, and how come so many Chinese people have such a high average IQ , in comparison to say an Israeli or USA citizen , when throughout the 80’s, they were still over 900 million farmers , severely disadvantaged and numerically the chances were… Read more »