WAR WATCH WEDNESDAYS, AUGUST 24, 2022
Dan
Kovalik. The Plot to Scapegoat Russia:
How the CIA and the Deep State Have Conspired to Vilify Putin.
Tom Engelhardt. Tomgram: “Is the Never-Ending Story Ending?”
The Plot to Scapegoat Russia: How the CIA and the Deep State Have Conspired to Vilify Putin By Dan Kovalik, Introduction by David Talbot. Skyhorse, 2017.
Publisher’s Description
An in-depth look at the decades-long effort to escalate
hostilities with Russia and what it portends for the future.
Since 1945, the US has justified numerous wars, interventions, and military
build-ups based on the pretext of the Russian Red Menace, even after the Soviet
Union collapsed at the end of 1991 and Russia stopped being Red. In fact, the
two biggest post-war American conflicts, the Korean and Vietnam wars, were not,
as has been frequently claimed, about stopping Soviet aggression or even
influence, but about maintaining old colonial relationships. Similarly, many
lesser interventions and conflicts, such as those in Latin America, were also
based upon an alleged Soviet threat, which was greatly overblown or
nonexistent. And now the specter of a Russian Menace has been raised again in
the wake of Donald Trump’s election.
The Plot to Scapegoat Russia examines
the recent proliferation of stories, usually sourced from American state
actors, blaming and manipulating the threat of Russia, and the long history of
which this episode is but the latest chapter. It will show readers two key
things: (1) the ways in which the United States has needlessly provoked Russia,
especially after the collapse of the USSR, thereby squandering hopes for peace and
cooperation; and (2) how Americans have lost out from this missed opportunity,
and from decades of conflicts based upon false premises. These revelations,
amongst other, make The Plot to
Scapegoat Russia one of the timeliest reads of 2017.
WAR AND WARMING
Tomgram: Engelhardt, Is the Never-Ending Story Ending?
POSTED
ON AUGUST 11, 2022
The Decline and Fall of Everything (Including Me)
What Goes Up Must… Well, You Know…
[The conclusion: us gigantic military and climate
endgame] Admittedly, though I recently stumbled across something I
wrote in the 1990s that mentioned global warming, I only became strongly aware
of the phenomenon in this century as my own decline began (almost unnoticed by
me). Even when, at TomDispatch, I started writing fervently about
climate change, I must admit that I didn’t initially imagine myself living
through it in this fashion — as so many of us have in this globally overheated summer of 2022. Nor did I imagine
that such devastating fires, floods, droughts, and storms would become “normal” in my own lifetime. Nor,
I must admit, did I think then that the phenomenon might lead to a future
all-too-literal end point for humanity, what some scientists are starting to
term a “climate endgame” — in other words, a possible extinction
event.
And yet here we
are, in a democratic system under unbelievable stress, in a country with a
gigantic military (backed by a corporate weapons-making complex of almost
imaginable size and power) that’s proven incapable of winning anything of
significance, even if funded in a fashion that
once might have been hard to imagine in actual wartime. In a sense, its only
“success” might lie its remarkable ability to further fossil-fuelize the world. In other words, we
now live in an America coming apart at the seams at a moment when the oldest
story in human history might be changing, as we face the potential decline and
fall of everything.
One thing is
certain: as with all of us, when it comes to my personal story, there’s no
turning around my own decline and fall. When it comes to our country and the
world, however, the end of the story has yet to be written. The question is:
Will we find some way to write it that won’t end in the fall not just of this
imperial power but of humanity itself?
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