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jeudi, 02 octobre 2014

Mostra fotografica sul popolo karen

Documentaria: D'Annunzio a Fiume

Bon anniversaire Brigitte

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Bon anniversaire Brigitte

Le billet de Patrick Parment

Ex: http://synthesenationale.hautetfort.com

Cessons deux minutes dʼêtre sérieux et soyons futiles. Renvoyons les socialos-umpéistes dans les eaux fangeuses où se roule comme des porcs tout ce petit personnel qui sous Louis XIV nʼaurait tout juste été bon qu’à porter les sceaux dans les couloirs de Versailles pour que nous pissions en paix.

Non, l’événement du jour, c’est l’anniversaire de Brigitte Bardot. Quatre-vingt balais au compteur et une pugnacité jamais démentie. Non seulement la dame pense – et plutôt bien – mais encore elle pense tout haut ce que l’ensemble des Gaulois tait en général. Par lâcheté ? Allez savoir. Elle l’écrit même, ce qui lui vaut quelques ennuis avec la justice. Mais elle s’en fout ! Bon, d’accord, de temps en temps, avec ses animaux, elle nous gonfle, mais j’ai pris le parti depuis longtemps de tout lui pardonner. Il n’y a qu’une Bardot et... des millions de ploucs. Il faut tout pardonner à BB parce que les hommes de ma génération se sont quand même bien astiqués le poireau en fantasmant sur son corps de rêve. Elle a vraiment incarné la beauté dans ce qu’elle a de plus violent et de plus bestial.

BB, c’est tout de même autre chose que toutes ces pétasses qui se trémoussent dans des films sans intérêt tournés en général par des imbéciles, la fesse triste et le sein pendant... quand il y en a. Je parle, bien sûr, du cinéma français (Anémone et sa tête d’autruche, Casta, sa niaiserie et ses dents de travers ! pour ne citer qu’elles). Toutes ces petites connes n’inspirent aux foules qu’un sentiment de pitié, pas même une érection.

Tandis que Bardot, on se précipitait, et on aurait même payé pour remplacer Jean Gabin dans je ne sais quel navet ! Sortez vos DVD et regardez Babette s’en va en guerre, vous m’en direz des nouvelles. Bardot, c’est de la gonzesse, de la vraie, comme on les aime. Gainsbourg, qui était loin d’être un sot et qui avait du talent, ne s’y était pas trompé. Il était tombé dans le panneau, avant d’épouser sa planche à pain, et lui avait concocté des chansons qui prouvaient qu’il était soudain passé de la bandaison ordinaire au priapisme incontrôlé.

Bardot chantant, c’est tout d’un coup le technicolor qui jaillit dans votre vie, au risque de coller une torgnolle à votre bourgeoise dès fois qu’elle aurait l’audace de vous faire une crise de jalousie. Et puis Bardot, c’est le symbole d’une France qu’on a aimé, presque insouciante, avec ses clochers et ses curés en soutane, ses facteurs à vélo, ses gardes- champêtres roulant le tambour. Tout ça n’est pas de la nostalgie mais des images que nous renvoie Brigitte Bardot qui incarna une certaine image de la beauté française.

Bon anniversaire, Madame.

00:05 Publié dans Actualité, Cinéma | Lien permanent | Commentaires (0) | Tags : brigitte bardot, actualité, cinéma, france | |  del.icio.us | | Digg! Digg |  Facebook

A propos du dernier livre de Georges Feltin-Tracol

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A propos du dernier livre de Georges Feltin-Tracol, "En liberté surveillée"

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Europe maxima cliquez ici

 

Le 10 septembre 2014, le tribunal de Paris condamnait à des amendes avec sursis les vigiles de Notre-Dame et relaxait les Femen qui avaient détérioré les nouvelles cloches de la cathédrale. Le jour même à Saint-Étienne, le tribunal de police acquittait un curé poursuivi pour l’hébergement de « sans-papiers ». Quelques jours plus tard, tandis qu’Alain Soral se voyait condamné à 7 000 euros (soit 2 000 euros d’amende, 2 000 euros de dommage et intérêts et 3 000 euros de frais de justice) pour diffamation envers le F.N. Louis Aliot, le militant panafricaniste radical Kémi Séba était arrêté le 14 septembre et écroué pour purger – en régime d’isolement ! – une peine de deux mois de prison. Le 16 septembre dernier, en Bretagne, le procureur de la République obtint de lourdes peines – dont un an et demi de prison ferme – à l’encontre de quatre Bonnets rouges accusés de la destruction de radars automatiques et de portiques d’éco-taxe. Le 20 septembre, enfin, après l’incendie justifié du centre des impôts et des bureaux de la M.S.A. (Mutuelle sociale agricole) à Morlaix, le gouvernement de Manuel Valls somma l’appareil judiciaire de retrouver leurs auteurs écrasés par les charges, les normes, les oukases de la grande distribution parasitaire et le contre-coup des sanctions occidentales anti-russes. Dans le même temps, le Parlement discute d’un projet de loi anti-terroriste, soixante-dix ans après le triomphe en France des « terroristes »…

 

Tous ces exemples auraient pu figurer dans le nouvel essai de Georges Feltin-Tracol, En liberté surveillée. Comme l’indique le sous-titre, il s’agit d’un virulent « Réquisitoire contre un système liberticide ». L’ouvrage était attendu. Sa lecture ne déçoit pas. Sollicité par l’éditeur Roland Hélie au moment de l’affaire Dieudonné en janvier, le livre devait à l’origine s’appeler La Quenelle interdite. Mais en mobilisant une multitude de faits prélevés dans la presse officielle depuis plusieurs années, le rédacteur en chef du site Europe Maxima a très rapidement élargi son enquête et nous livre un diagnostic complet, édifiant et terrifiant d’une tendance lourde du monde moderne.


 

 

En liberté surveillée se compose de huit chapitres ainsi que d’une part entièrement dédiée aux notes et aux références. Si les sept premiers forment une sorte de généalogie du processus liberticide, le dernier examine les possibilités tangibles d’édification d’une alternative à la société carcérale voulue par le libéralisme mondialiste. Par ailleurs, l’intérêt de l’ouvrage montre que la puissante opposition à la loi Taubira sur le « mariage pour tous » et la féroce répression gouvernementale qui en découla, ne doit pas faire oublier que la lente éclipse des libertés françaises ne commence pas avec François Hollande. Leur sape systématique remonte aux présidences catastrophiques de Jacques Chirac, de Nicolas Sarkozy et de François Mitterrand sous laquelle fut adoptée l’abjecte loi Gayssot de 1990.

 

Georges Feltin-Tracol présente l’insigne mérite de mettre en perspective une longue et progressive dissolution qui correspond au transfert de l’action étatique de l’espace public en cours de privatisation vers le domaine privé personnel. « Si le sociétalisme et ses déclinaisons circonstancielles, le sécuritarisme et le gendérisme, constituent l’armature stratégique de l’oligarchie planétarienne, avance-t-il, la tactique bâtie sur le monde corrompu des médiats s’organise autour d’une conception singulière de la liberté d’opinion. Les bien-pensants aiment le début d’idées à la condition qu’ils agréent les idées présentées. Ils prêchent la tolérance, le vivre-ensemble, la liberté de parole, mais en même temps dénient toute expression à ceux qui exprimeraient avec vigueur, méthode et intelligence leurs divergences. La récente proposition de loi pénalisant les clients de prostituées le prouve amplement. » D’autres nombreux exemples d’intrusion étatique dans l’ordre de l’intime prouvent que « l’État incline trop à épier la vie privée de ses citoyens ».

 

L’auteur rappelle fort à propos que Jacques Chirac a inscrit dans la Constitution de la Ve République l’interdiction du rétablissement de la peine de mort et que le déplorable Nicolas Sarkozy n’hésita pas, ici, à pourchasser militants syndicaux, défenseurs d’une agriculture écologique et non-productiviste et victimes de l’insécurité comme René Galinier en appliquant des textes juridiques destinées à l’origine à combattre les terroristes ou la petite criminalité. Toutes les rombières retraitées de l’U.M.P. et les pauvres gars qui acclament le soi-disant retour de leur calamiteux champion à talons rehaussés devraient s’en souvenir. Or, naufrage de l’âge, ces futurs euthanasiés font preuve pour la circonstance d’Alzheimer politique.

 

Après avoir passé en revue les échecs récents de l’engagement politicien, du putsch envisagé ou des trois applications du gramscisme  (l’entrisme dans des partis de droite, le contrôle d’une rédaction de presse et l’usage technonumérique), le dernier chapitre dénonce d’abord les tentatives de récupération de la contestation populaire par les inévitables auxiliaires d’une « droite » servile. L’auteur récuse toute éventuelle et fallacieuse « union des droites » et rejette avec force une hypothétique union nationale, avant de tracer de stimulantes voies révolutionnaires favorables à une contre-société construite hors du cadre républicain français. Influencé par le concept d’hétérotopie cher à Michel Foucault, Georges Feltin-Tracol prolonge les travaux de Michel Drac sur la B.A.D. (base autonome durable) dans une version 2.0. « La B.A.D., relève-t-il, représente la genèse d’une autre politie, concurrente de l’État-nation fragmenté et de l’État pénal-carcéral programmé, l’embryon conceptuel d’une autochtonotopie, d’un lieu adapté par et pour les autochtones albo-européens. » Mais deux autres chapitres se révèlent particulièrement percutants. L’un décrit les différentes formes de l’« État profond » tant en France qu’aux États-Unis. L’autre dépeint un nouvel Occident qui, du fait de sa transformation en allié du Marché et du libéralisme, prend un contenu liquide, fluide, mouvant. L’auteur accole par conséquent au concept éculé d’Occident le terme de « Mer » afin de désigner cette mutation encouragée par les oligarchies transnationales : l’Occident-Mer.

 

Georges Feltin-Tracol revient en outre sur les sentences d’une justice gangrenée par des stipendiés du Nouveau Désordre mondial qui traquent Dieudonné, Alain Soral, Vincent Reynouard, René Galinier, Nicolas Bernard-Buss, etc., ainsi que tout opposant véritable au multiculturalisme, au libéralisme et au mondialisme. La partialité des jugements rendus fait qu’il n’a dorénavant aucune confiance dans la justice de son pays, ce qui témoigne d’un indéniable bon sens. Il attaque d’autres cibles que sont le gendérisme, terme qu’il préfère à « théorie du genre », le sociétalisme et le sécuritarisme. Le P.S. obéit depuis 1983 aux injonctions de la Finance internationale si bien qu’il a perdu son adjectif « socialiste » pour devenir « sociétaliste ». Ainsi a-t-il renié les ouvriers, les employés et les salariés pour désormais défendre les seules minorités allogènes et sexuelles. Ce choix sociétaliste converge vers un certain sécuritarisme, un autoritarisme ridicule au service du Capital anonyme. L’auteur n’accorde aucune confiance à la grotesque « droite » institutionnelle pour qui l’impératif de consommer exige la restriction concrète des libertés.

 

Lecteur des penseurs suisses Éric Werner et Bernard Wicht, il observe que les autorités cleptocratiques cherchent surtout à terroriser les honnête gens en laissant volontairement proliférer une petite délinquance qui pourrit la vie quotidienne. Mieux, « en pratiquant et en gagnant pour l’instant une effroyable guerre des classes à l’échelle planétaire, la ploutocratie réalise une véritable guerre des idées afin de promouvoir l’idéologie de l’indistinction. L’oligarchie et ses médias distillent subtilement auprès des populations hébétées une censure pernicieuse et une propagande insidieuse. Ils justifient ce discours réifiant et utilitariste par la célébration obligatoire du Progrès, de la  “ gouvernance ”, de l’égalitarisme et du dogme quasi-intangible des droits de l’homme. En réalité, insiste Georges Feltin-Tracol en citant Yvan Blot, la doxa droit-de-l’hommiste représente un magnifique  “ prétexte pour une intervention toujours plus grande de l’État et pour une restriction des libertés ”. »

 

Ces restrictions avérées de liberté passent aussi par la manipulation du droit et l’hypertrophie des groupes de pression, en particulier des vigilantes associations féministes qui poursuivent tout propos ou réflexion soi-disant sexiste. Elles s’en prennent à l’écrivain Robert Sabatier, au rappeur blanc Orelsan ou à une réclame radiophonique vantant les charmes physiques du département du Jura, mais se taisent à propos de la publicité pour la marque de café Senséo qui exprime une « violence subliminale envers l’homme […] flagrante ».

 

Georges Feltin-Tracol dénonce le rôle délétère et aliénant de l’argent. Dans l’Occident ultra-moderne, le fric est devenu un « super-flic » avec l’extension du paiement électronique et la généralisation de l’endettement des ménages. En s’appuyant sur de récents exemples argentin et chypriote, « la détention obligatoire d’un compte en banque susceptible d’accueillir une épargne abondante facilite la spoliation à venir par les banques et les États de cette même épargne. Le F.M.I. a proposé de saisir 10 % de l’épargne privée afin de sauver les États endettés. Le 11 décembre 2013, Bruxelles a accepté le principe d’une ponction (en fait, un vol légalisé) de 10 % sur tous les avoirs bancaires supérieurs à 100 000 euros dans le cas où la banque aurait 8 % de pertes ». Il est clair que « cette perte de liberté par l’endettement se mesure surtout aux États-Unis. Dans cette offensive contre les peuples, le crédit devient en effet une arme redoutable » parce que « l’hyper-classe veut disposer d’un moyen, à la fois coercitif, efficace et quasi-invisible et/ou indolore, de maîtrise des populations sans qu’elles s’en aperçoivent ».

 

En liberté surveillée est finalement un constat lucide d’un monde effrayant contre lequel s’élèvent de plus en plus des résistants déterminés. On y trouve bien sûr le courageux « artiviste » Dieudonné, mais Georges Feltin-Tracol se réfère à d’autres humoristes entrés en politique tels que l’Italien Beppe Grillo ou, guère connu en France, l’Islandais Jon Gnarr, maire de Reykjavik de 2010 à 2014. Les médias du Système liberticide clament sans cesse qu’on vivrait dans le meilleur des mondes libres. Mensonge éhonté puisque cet essai prouve que nous sommes pour l’heure dans le pire des  Systèmes possibles !

 

 

Georges Feltin-Tracol, En liberté surveillée. Réquisitoire contre un système liberticide, Les Bouquins de Synthèse nationale, 284 p., 23 € (+ 3 € de port), à commander à Synthèse nationale, 116, rue de Charenton, 75012 Paris, chèque à l’ordre de Synthèse nationale.

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Japan as an American Client State

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Japan as an American Client State

 

A military ambition and agenda, this provides much activist energy among America’s neoconservatives and their fellow travelers, which include sundry financial and commercial interests. Made up of many parts, like the recently established “Africom” (U.S. Africa Command), the comparable effort to contain/isolate/denigrate the two former communist enemy giants, China and Russia, may be considered a central aim.

It does not add up to a feasible strategy for long-term American interests, but few American initiatives have been so in the recent past. Since neoconservatives, ‘liberal hawks’ and neoliberals appear to have captured the State Department and White House, and their activism has already produced significant geopolitical instability, it would be no luxury to dig deeper in developments on the rather neglected Asian side of the globe.

The protracted overthrow in the course of 2010 of the first cabinet formed by the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) does not at first glance resemble what happened in Kiev on January 22nd 2014 – when Victoria Nuland & Co triggered, aided, and abetted an anti–Russian coup d’état. No snipers were involved. No deaths. No civil war against Japanese citizens who had supported a reformist program. It was a gentle overthrow. But an overthrow it was even so. And, importantly, while the Ukraine case served the elevation by consensus of Russia to being the new number one enemy of ‘the West’, the abrupt end to a new Japanese policy of rapprochement was the start of a fairly successful drive to create common imagery of China as a threat to its neighbors.

Back in September of 2009, Japan underwent a politically momentous change when a new ruling party came to power, thereby ending half a century of what had been in fact a ‘one-party democracy’. As the first serious opposition contender for government, the DPJ had won an overwhelming electoral victory with a strongly reformist manifesto. Its original, and at that time still essential, aim was to push for greater political control over a bureaucracy that is in many crucial ways politically unaccountable.

One of this new government’s first moves was to initiate a new China policy. Its main architect, Ichiro Ozawa, had filled several planes with writers, artists, and politicians to visit China for the specified purpose of improving “people to people and party to party” relations. At the same time, the prime minister of this first cabinet, Yukio Hatoyama, was openly declaring his intention to join other East Asian leaders in the formation of an Asean+3 community, consisting of the existing Asean grouping plus Korea, China and Japan. It is highly unlikely that the now diplomatically ruinous and possibly dangerous Sino-Japanese conflict over the Senkaku/Diyaou islands would have come into being if his cabinet had lasted.

As might have been expected, these unexpected Japanese initiatives created collective heartburn among Washington’s ‘Japan handlers’. Some were quoted by reporters as saying that perhaps they had all along been concerned about the wrong country; that Japan and not China ought to have been the focus of their anxieties.

What the DPJ intended to achieve, the creation of an effective center of political accountability capable of implementing truly new policy changes, did not interest the Japan handlers, and Obama never gave the impression that he had a clue of what was happening, or that it should ever be his concern. Japan’s new prime minister made three or four requests for a meeting with the then new president for a discussion on Asian developments, which would appear perfectly reasonable and even imperative, considering an earlier often repeated epithet for U.S.-Japan relations as being “the world’s most important bilateral relationship”. But while the requests for a one-on-one had gone through the proper diplomatic channels, they drew only a reponse in the form of scathing public remarks by an American official that Hatoyama should not think that he could help settle any domestic problems through a meeting with a very busy American president.

To understand what followed, and to make sense of this ‘regime change’ story, one must know a bit more about the intricacies of the Japanese power system, its odd relationship with that of the United States, and how these two interact. Because neither accord comfortably with models produced by various schools of international relations, and because they do not seem to make sense to media editors, these subjects hardly ever receive serious attention outside a small circle of authors who have made it their specialty.

A cardinal point is the odd division of labor between elected and career officials, which in the half century of formal LDP rule settled into a pattern in which the bureaucrats made policy and used the politicians in high office as brokers to settle turf wars or occasionally to administer a slight prodding to drive policy in a bureaucratically desired direction. One can, of course, find exceptions proving the rule. Those who remember the famous BBC comedy series “Yes Minister” and recognize some of this in their own countries, would still find it hard to believe the extent to which such a division of labor can be normalized.

The second cardinal point is that Japan does not function as an independent sovereign state. To find a proper term for the U.S.-Japan relationship is difficult since there has been nothing quite like it in history. Vassal comes to mind, of course, and client state is a useful characterization. Some would prefer protectorate, but the United States has less say over what goes on inside domestic political and economic Japan than is assumed with protectorates. It is in fact rather amazing to see the extent to which the Japanese elite in business, bureaucracy, and financial circles have maintained an economic system that is radically different from what Americans believe an economic system should look like.

But with respect to foreign relations Japan must toe the line. The unequal arrangement used to come with formidable advantages. Like the Europeans with their Atlanticism, the Japanese have not been required for half a century to produce political leaders capable of thinking strategically and dealing independently with a transforming world. Noticeably less so, even, than has been true for the Europeans. The readiness with which the United States has extended economic favors to Japan, to the detriment of its own global economic position, has been extraordinary. Japan would not have become the industrial power it remains up till today, had the United States not tolerated its structural protectionism, and allowed full-speed one-way expansion of Japanese market shares in the United States to the considerable disadvantage of American domestic industry. I cannot think of any other instance in history in which one large country has had it so easy in its diplomatic and economic interaction with the world, simply by relying on the power, goodwill and strategic calculations of another country, while at the same time itself remaining politically outside the international system. Other countries gradually became used to Japan’s near invisibility on the world diplomatic stage.

This passive comportment in world affairs, which over the years drew plenty of criticism from Washington, was a thorn in the side of quite a few Japanese, and Ozawa with Hatoyama were at the forefront of the political ranks eager to do something about it.

Throughout the Cold War, Washington’s determination to rely on having an obedient outpost close to the shores of the two huge Communist powers did not require much pleading or pushing, because Tokyo had, as a matter of course, decided that it shared this same Communist enemy with Washington. At the same time, the US-Japan Security Treaty did not constitute an alliance of a kind comparable to what, for instance, the member countries of NATO had entered into. To be precise, it was essentially a base lease agreement; one from which there was, for all practical purposes, no exit for Japan. The ‘status of forces agreement’ has not been reviewed since 1960.

The regime change drama can be said to have been prefigured shortly before the August 2009 elections that brought the DPJ to power. In January of that year Hillary Clinton came to Tokyo on her first mission as Obama’s Secretary of State to sign an agreement with the outgoing LDP administration (which knew it was stumbling on its last legs), reiterating what had been agreed on in October 2005 about a highly controversial planned new base for US Marines on Okinawa – a plan hatched by Donald Rumsfeld – which had earlier been forced down the throat of the LDP. The ruling party of the one-party democracy had applied a preferred method of Japanese politics when something embarrassingly awkward comes up: do nothing, and hope everyone will forget it. Clinton made clear that no matter what kind of government the Japanese electorate would choose, there could be no deviation from earlier arrangements. Her choice of American officials to deal with Japan, Kurt Campbell, Kevin Maher, and Wallace Gregson (all ‘alumni’ from the Pentagon) also indicated that she would not tolerate something that in Washington’s mind would register as Japanese backtracking.

This was a moment of great irony. Japan’s new leaders, who were in the process of establishing political control over a heretofore politically almost impenetrable bureaucracy, were now confronted with an American bureaucratic clique that lives a life of its own and was seemingly oblivious to regional developments in which Japan was bound to become less passive and politically isolated. As noted, the Japan handlers under Hillary Clinton came from the military, and an earlier generation of State Department diplomats with Japan experience appeared to have been squeezed out of the picture completely. As would soon become clear, the policymakers of the Obama administration were highly mistrustful of any ideas, never mind actual courses of action, that seemed in any way to alter the status quo in the region. In autumn 2009 US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates arrived to rub it in some more that Washington would not accept independent Japanese action, or anything that deviated from how the LDP had always handled things. To make that point clear he refused to attend the customary banquet organized in his honor.

Senior editors of Japan’s huge daily newspapers, who in normal unison do more than anyone to create political reality in the country, as well as senior bureaucrats with whom these editors normally cooperate, were ambivalent. One of the editors asked me at the time how long I thought the new government would have to accomplish something he compared to the difficulties faced by the Meiji reformers some 140 years earlier. I answered that it would be up to him and his colleagues. Even while experienced older bureaucrats were aware of the need for drastic institutional renewal, they were not happy with the new or adjusted priorities of their new putative political overseers. This became a particularly poignant issue with regard to relations across the Pacific.

Much of the international Japan coverage at that time was done out of Washington with journalists interviewing the Japan handlers, since the body of regular American correspondents in Tokyo had dwindled to a very few who permanently resided there. Like we have just seen happen with the coverage of the Ukraine crisis in European media, Japan’s newspapers were beginning to reflect the reality as created by American editors. Which meant that before long the large domestic newspapers were adopting the line that prime minister Hatoyama was undermining the U.S.-Japan relationship. At the same time veterans from the LDP, the ‘ruling party’ of the one-party democracy party that had been decisively defeated in the summer of 2009, were briefing their old political friends in Washington about the obvious inexperience and alleged incompetence of the new incumbents. By these means the story about a politically new Japan led to the propaganda line that Prime Minister Hatoyama was mishandling the crucial US-Japan relationship. A perfidious role was played by prominent Japanologists in American academia who appeared to overlook the importance of what Japan’s reformist politicians were attempting to achieve.

It is difficult to find another instance in which official Washington delivered insults so blatant to a country as to Japan under Hatoyama. Aside from his repeated formal requests for a meeting being ignored, the Japan handlers counseled Obama not to give the Japanese prime minister more than 10 minutes of his time during chance encounters at international meetings. Hillary Clinton put the Japanese Ambassador on the carpet with a reprimand addressed to Hatoyama for “lying” when the Japanese prime minister, after having sat next to her at a banquet in Copenhagen, told the Japanese media afterwards that his conversation with her had been positive. Japanese newspapers could not measure these things with their normal frames of reference, and began to copy a general notion of the Washington-inspired American media that Hatoyama was simply bad for transpacific relations.

It took snipers killing some hundred protesters and policemen to end the elected government in Kiev, as neonazis, ambitious oligarchs and thugs used that opportunity to hijack a revolutionary movement. On the other side of the Eurasian continent it took a clueless and cooperative Japanese media and a frustrated bureaucracy, already used to sabotaging DPJ wishes, to end the first cabinet of this reformist party, and with that bring an end to a genuinely different Japanese foreign policy inspired by a reassessment of long-term Japanese interests. Hatoyama did not have to flee like the elected president in Kiev almost four years later. He eventually simply stepped down. He did so in line with a custom whereby politicians who wish to accomplish something that is generally understood to be controversial and difficult will stake their political future on the outcome. In this case Hatoyama had walked into a trap. He was given to believe that an acceptable compromise solution was being arranged for the problem of the new Marine basis in Okinawa. As he told me himself about half a year later, with that he made the biggest mistake in his political life.

This is not how the newspapers have reported on it, and not how it has entered commonly understood recent history, but let this sink in: Washington managed, without the use of violence, to manipulate the Japanese political system into discarding a reformist cabinet. The party that had intended to begin clearing up dysfunctional political habits that had evolved over half a century of one-party rule lost its balance and bearings, and never recovered. Hatoyama’s successor, Kan Naoto, did not want the same thing happening to him, and distantiated himself from the foreign policy reformists, and his successor in turn, Yoshihiko Noda, helped realign Japan’s bureaucracy precisely to that of the United States where roughly it had been for half a century. By calling for an unnecessary election, which everyone knew the DPJ would lose, he brought the American-blessed LDP back to power to have Japan slide back into its normal client state condition, essentially answerable, even if only tacitly, to Washington’s wishes.

Where earlier a China policy of friendly relations was being forged, there was suddenly nothing. A political vacuum is ideal space for political mischief and Japan’s veteran mischief maker is Shintaro Ishihara, generally characterized as a far right politician, whose rise to high position was accelerated and punctuated by publicity stunts. In April 2012, toward the end of his 13 years as governor of Tokyo, he proposed that the metropolis nominally under his charge buy the uninhabited islands in the East China Sea, long the subject of a territorial dispute that was shelved when Japan and China normalized relations. Beijing took that opportunity to organize vehement anti–Japanese demonstrations, and relations predictably foundered. It had frequently gone that route before. Hyping anti-Japanese sentiment is a well-tried Chinese method of channeling domestic protest, diverting it from domestic problems which otherwise cause unrest. South Korea has sometimes done the same.

Top diplomats among the Chinese foreign policy officials were understandably incensed when faced with the fact that the rapprochement initiatives by a new government in Tokyo were simply killed off at a command from the United States. As with previous instances of diplomatic stalemate, the Chinese wonder to what extent they are indirectly talking with Washington, when they share a negotiating table with Japanese.

The last DPJ prime minister, Toshihiko Noda, who had forgotten or never understood the reformist origins of his party, subsequently ignored back channel communication from Beijing about how to solve the row without either country losing face. Since then Chinese conduct has been provocative, with Beijing annoying and offending Tokyo purposely through announcements about Chinese airspace and activities in the vicinity of the disputed islands.

If you begin the story about Sino-Japanese relations at that point you could perhaps endorse the current Prime Minister Abe’s vision of China as a significant problem, which he broadcasted to the world during the most recent Davos meeting. Other governments in the region share part of that vision, because Beijing has also been responding to Washington’s anti-Chinese involvement especially with Vietnam and the Philippines, its other neighbors in the Western Pacific.

The resulting anti–Chinese predisposition in the region perfectly suited the ‘pivot’, which has been Hillary Clinton’s program to develop greater muscle to curtail China’s influence. The American military, which maintains bases surrounding all of China’s coast, is not prepared to share power in the the Western Pacific, and Japan plays an important part in all this, even extending to current Prime Minister Abe’s reinterpretation of the famous pacifist clause in Japan’ constitution.

The countries that are part of what used to be called the free world on both sides of the Eurasian continent ought to be better aware of a political reality illustrated by the above details. They add up to a picture of a self-proclaimed order keeper with the right to ignore sovereignty and the right, or even the duty, to set things straight in other countries that just might in future develop a genuine challenge to its own mastery over the planet. On the European side this has been revealed in this year as a powerful brake on further development of economic relations between Russia and the member states of the European Union. On the Asian-Pacific side Japan was becoming a threat to the purposes of the ‘pivot’ toward Asia as it began working for better relations with China. Global diplomacy has gone out of the window in the meantime. Neither European countries nor Japan can, under current circumstances, engage properly with their gigantic neighbors. For a variety of reasons the powers that make a difference in the United States have demonstrated that they are comfortable with a reignited Cold War, this time without communism.

One need not delve deeply in the internet to find unequivocal repetition by American officials in positions of power of what has become known as the ‘Wolfowitz Doctrine’, according to which the United States ought not ever allow rivals to emerge to challenge its global dominance. It does not do diplomacy.

In Europe we can detect a certain degree of subconscious nostalgia for the Cold War. After all, it supplied for almost everyone of my generation, and the one after it, a fairly trustworthy handrail to steady oneself in moments of geopolitical turbulence. We grew up with the political epistemology it created; the source of knowledge about what was ultimately good or bad.

Hence it is easy to sit idly by while an even later and even less worldly-wise generation of politicians at the top responds to the seduction of a power that once represented the good guys, and was the main architect of the relatively peaceful and relatively stable post-World War II international order. It is seductive for Europeans to sit back and allow that power to continue taking the lead. Shared values, and all that sort of thing. How can one argue against such a perspective on planetary political reality today?

Think again. What should be pointed out is that those supposedly superior shared values are a crock of nonsense. But most importantly that full spectrum dominance does not constitute a feasible strategy; it is a dangerous fantasy among institutions that are not supervised by a politically effective coordinating center, hence are not on any leash. What they do is of a dangerous silliness rarely seen in history, at least for such an extended period. When we cheer NATO and its new initiatives for a rapid deployment force to be used potentially against the renewed enemy in Moscow, and when we cheer the supposedly great achievement of the European Union unanimously to endorse sanctions against that same new enemy, when we join the choir denouncing an imagined inherently aggressive China, we are encouraging a bunch of incompetent, politically immature zealots as they trigger chains of events whose likely dire consequences we could not possibly desire.

Karel van Wolferen is a Dutch journalist and retired professor at the University of Amsterdam. His book The Enigma of Japanese Power, first published in 1989, has sold well over 650,000 copies in eleven languages, and he has authored fifteen subsequent books on Japanese politics and society. As a foreign correspondent for NRC Handelsblad , one of Holland’s leading newspapers, he received the highest Dutch award for journalism, and over the years his articles have appeared in The New York Times , The Washington Post , The New Republic , The National Interest , Le Monde , and numerous other newspapers and magazines.

Washington’s Secret Agendas

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Washington’s Secret Agendas

One might think that by now even Americans would have caught on to the constant stream of false alarms that Washington sounds in order to deceive the people into supporting its hidden agendas.

The public fell for the lie that the Taliban in Afghanistan are terrorists allied with al Qaeda. Americans fought a war for 13 years that enriched Dick Cheney’s firm, Halliburton, and other private interests only to end in another Washington failure.

The public fell for the lie that Saddam Hussein in Iraq had “weapons of mass destruction” that were a threat to America and that if the US did not invade Iraq Americans risked a “mushroom cloud going up over an American city.” With the rise of ISIS, this long war apparently is far from over. Billions of dollars more in profits will pour into the coffers of the US military security complex as Washington fights those who are redrawing the false Middle East boundaries created by the British and French after WW I when the British and French seized territories of the former Ottoman Empire.

The American public fell for the lies told about Gaddafi in Libya. The formerly stable and prosperous country is now in chaos.

The American public fell for the lie that Iran has, or is building, nuclear weapons. Sanctioned and reviled by the West, Iran has shifted toward an Eastern orientation, thereby removing a principal oil producer from Western influence.

The public fell for the lie that Assad of Syria used “chemical weapons against his own people.” The jihadists that Washington sent to overthrow Assad have turned out to be, according to Washington’s propaganda, a threat to America.

The greatest threat to the world is Washington’s insistence on its hegemony. The ideology of a handful of neoconservatives is the basis for this insistence. We face the situation in which a handful of American neoconservative psychopaths claim to determine the fate of countries.

Many still believe Washington’s lies, but increasingly the world sees Washington as the greatest threat to peace and life on earth. The claim that America is “exceptional and indispensable” is used to justify Washington’s right to dictate to other countries.

The casualties of Washington’s bombings are invariably civilians, and the deaths will produce more recruits for ISIS. Already there are calls for Washington to reintroduce “boots on the ground” in Iraq. Otherwise, Western civilization is doomed, and our heads will be cut off. The newly created propaganda of a “Russian threat” requires more NATO spending and more military bases on Russia’s borders. A “quick reaction force” is being created to respond to a nonexistent threat of a Russian invasion of the Baltics, Poland, and Europe.

Usually it takes the American public a year, or two, three, or four to realize that it has been deceived by lies and propaganda, but by that time the public has swallowed a new set of lies and propaganda and is all concerned about the latest “threat.” The American public seems incapable of understanding that just as the first, second, third, fourth, and fifth, threat was a hoax, so is the sixth threat, and so will be the seventh, eighth, and ninth.

Moreover, none of these American military attacks on other countries has resulted in a better situation, as Vladimir Putin honestly states. Yet, the public and its representatives in Congress support each new military adventure despite the record of deception and failure.

Perhaps if Americans were taught their true history in place of idealistic fairy tales, they would be less gullible and less susceptible to government propaganda. I have recommended Oliver Stone and Peter Kuznick’s The Untold History of the US, Howard Zinn’s A People’s History of the US, and now I recommend Stephen Kinzer’s The Brothers, the story of the long rule of John Foster and Allen Dulles over the State Department and CIA and their demonization of reformist governments that they often succeeded in overthrowing. Kinzer’s history of the Dulles brothers’ plots to overthrow six governments provides insight into how Washington operates today.

In 1953 the Dulles brothers overthrew Iran’s elected leader, Mossadegh and imposed the Shah, thus poisoning American-Iranian relations through the present day. Americans might yet be led into a costly and pointless war with Iran, because of the Dulles brothers poisoning of relations in 1953.

The Dulles brothers overthrew Guatemala’s popular president Arbenz, because his land reform threatened the interest of the Dulles brothers’ Sullivan & Cromwell law firm’s United Fruit Company client. The brothers launched an amazing disinformation campaign depicting Arbenz as a dangerous communist who was a threat to Western civilization. The brothers enlisted dictators such as Somoza in Nicaragua and Batista in Cuba against Arbenz. The CIA organized air strikes and an invasion force. But nothing could happen until Arbenz’s strong support among the people in Guatemala could be shattered. The brothers arranged this through Cardinal Spellman, who enlisted Archbishop Rossell y Arellano. “A pastoral letter was read on April 9, 1954 in all Guatemalan churches.”

A masterpiece of propaganda, the pastoral letter misrepresented Arbenz as a dangerous communist who was the enemy of all Guatemalans. False radio broadcasts produced a fake reality of freedom fighter victories and army defections. Arbenz asked the UN to send fact finders, but Washington prevented that from happening. American journalists, with the exception of James Reston, supported the lies. Washington threatened and bought off Guatemala’s senior military commanders, who forced Arbenz to resign. The CIA’s chosen and well paid “liberator,” Col. Castillo Armas, was installed as Arbenz’s successor.

We recently witnessed a similar operation in Ukraine.

President Eisenhower thanked the CIA for averting “a Communist beachhead in our hemisphere,” and Secretary of State John Foster Dulles gave a national TV and radio address in which he declared that the events in Guatemala “expose the evil purpose of the Kremlin.” This despite the uncontested fact that the only outside power operating in Guatemala was the Dulles brothers.

What had really happened is that a democratic and reformist government was overthrown because it compensated United Fruit Company for the nationalization of the company’s fallow land at a value listed by the company on its tax returns. America’s leading law firm or perhaps more accurately, America’s foreign policy-maker, Sullivan & Cromwell, had no intention of permitting a democratic government to prevail over the interests of the law firm’s client, especially when senior partners of the firm controlled both overt and covert US foreign policy. The two brothers, whose family members were invested in the United Fruit Company, simply applied the resources of the CIA, State Department, and US media to the protection of their private interests. The extraordinary gullibility of the American people, the corrupt American media, and the indoctrinated and impotent Congress allowed the Dulles brothers to succeed in overthrowing a democracy.

Keep in mind that this use of the US government in behalf of private interests occurred 60 years ago long before the corrupt Clinton, George W. Bush, and Obama regimes. And no doubt in earlier times as well.

The Dulles brothers next intended victim was Ho Chi Minh. Ho, a nationalist leader, asked for America’s help in freeing Vietnam from French colonial rule. But John Foster Dulles, a self-righteous anti-communist, miscast Ho as a Communist Threat who was springing the domino theory on the Western innocents. Nationalism and anti-colonialism, Foster declared, were merely a cloak for communist subversion.

Paul Kattenburg, the State Department desk officer for Vietnam suggested that instead of war, the US should give Ho $500 million in reconstruction aid to rebuild the country from war and French misrule, which would free Ho from dependence on Russian and Chinese support, and, thereby, influence. Ho appealed to Washington several times, but the demonic inflexibility of the Dulles brothers prevented any sensible response. Instead, the hysteria whipped-up over the “communist threat” by the Dulles brothers landed the United States in the long, costly, fiasco known as the Vietnam War. Kattenburg later wrote that it was suicidal for the US “to cut out its eyes and ears, to castrate its analytic capacity, to shut itself off from the truth because of blind prejudice.” Unfortunately for Americans and the world, castrated analytic capacity is Washington’s strongest suit.

The Dulles brothers’ next targets were President Sukarno of Indonesia, Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba of Congo, and Fidel Castro. The plot against Castro was such a disastrous failure that it cost Allen Dulles his job. President Kennedy lost confidence in the agency and told his brother Bobby that after his reelection he was going to break the CIA into a thousand pieces. When President Kennedy removed Allen Dulles, the CIA understood the threat and struck first.

Warren Nutter, my Ph.D. dissertation chairman, later Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs, taught his students that for the US government to maintain the people’s trust, which democracy requires, the government’s policies must be affirmations of our principles and be openly communicated to the people. Hidden agendas, such as those of the Dulles brothers and the Clinton, Bush and Obama regimes, must rely on secrecy and manipulation and, thereby, arouse the distrust of the people. If Americans are too brainwashed to notice, many foreign nationals are not.

The US government’s secret agendas have cost Americans and many peoples in the world tremendously. Essentially, the Foster brothers created the Cold War with their secret agendas and anti-communist hysteria. Secret agendas committed Americans to long, costly, and unnecessary wars in Vietnam and the Middle East. Secret CIA and military agendas intending regime change in Cuba were blocked by President John F. Kennedy and resulted in the assassination of a president, who, for all his faults, was likely to have ended the Cold War twenty years before Ronald Reagan seized the opportunity.

Secret agendas have prevailed for so long that the American people themselves are now corrupted. As the saying goes, “a fish rots from the head.” The rot in Washington now permeates the country.

Le pacte d'Obama avec les Saoudiens et Al-Nosra

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Le pacte d'Obama avec les Saoudiens et Al-Nosra

Auteur : Moon of Alabama-Traduction SLT
 
Ex: http://zejournal.mobi
 
Obama le Malin

Selon le Wall Street Journal, Obama a fait un pacte avec les Saoudiens. Ils vont légitimer les attaques contre l'Etat islamique et al-Qaïda en Syrie (aka Jabhat al-Nusra) et le gouvernement Obama renversera plus tard le gouvernement syrien du président Assad. Le prince saoudien Bandar, qui approvisionnait les djihadistes, avait été évincé, mais à présent il est bien en cour, et les éditeurs néo-conservateurs de The Economist crient "victoire". Ils ont réussi à obtenir à ce que les Etats-Unis reviennent à nouveau dans leur guerre. Hourra !

Mais à ce que je comprends le rôle d'Obama dans cet accord est censé venir beaucoup plus tard. Il faudra un an pour former des insurgés "modérés, avalisés" en Arabie Saoudite et c'est seulement lorsque ceux-ci seront prêts, que le canard boiteux d'Obama, pourra (ou non) débuter son action militaire. Les électeurs US savent très bien qu'Obama tient toujours ses promesses (ou non). Une année peut être un temps assez long et qui sait ce qui va se passer avant.

L'urgence de l'accord avec les Saoudiens est peut-être survenue du fait que certaines personnes ont ressenti qu'il était maintenant nécessaire d'attaquer les dirigeants d'Al-Qaïda (Jabhat al-Nusra) en Syrie. Cela pourrait aussi provenir des scores faibles d'Obama dans les sondages et de son besoin de garder un Sénat où les Démocrates sont majoritaires après les élections de novembre. La seconde raison semble plus probable.

Pour justifier ce coup sur ce groupe ayant un grand leadership, cette action a dû être différenciée de l'action avec le groupe de "djihadistes modérés" de l'organisation Al-Nosra avec lequel il existe une coopération sur un certain nombre d'autres questions. Le groupe "Khorassan "a été inventé et une campagne de peur a été lancée pour justifier l'attaque. Les médias étatsuniens fort prévisibles ont tout gobé et ont propagé la propagande alarmiste des "responsables" au sujet de "Khorasan". Seulement après que l'attaque ait eu lieu, les doutes ont été autorisées à être diffusées :

Plusieurs des assistants de M. Obama ont déclaré mardi que les frappes aériennes contre les agents de Khorasan ont été lancées pour contrecarrer une attaque terroriste "imminente". Mais d'autres responsables étatsuniens ont déclaré que le complot était loin d'avoir été organisé, et qu'il n'y avait aucune indication que Khorasan ait planifié l'exécution d'un tel complot.

Selon certaines spéculations : Jabhat al-Nusra fait partie de l'organisation al-Qaïda. Elle a été dirigée par les vétérans d'Al-Qaïda qui avaient combattu en Afghanistan et au Pakistan mais sont venus en Syrie où l'insurrection a commencé. Les États-Unis ont rebaptisé ces anciens combattants par le nom de groupe "Khorassan" pour avoir une bonne raison de les éliminer. Leurs remplaçants pourraient bien être des locaux menant les groupes de rebelles en Syrie du sud et désireux de coopérer davantage avec USrael (raccourci entre USA et Israël, ndt). Une nouvelle version plus soft d'al-Qaïda.

L'ensemble de la stratégie déployée dans les différentes guerres par procuration en Syrie et en Irak menée par les forces atlantistes est devenue de plus en plus compliqué. Je ne serais pas étonné de voir Obama jeter l'éponge sur toute cette affaire. Après l'élection en novembre, il pourrait bien dire «stop» et laisser le chaos derrière lui.