Pranav wrote:arunsrinivasan wrote:Strategic climate change : K. Subrahmanyam
Read in full as usual great stuff from K Subrahmanyam
On the US side, there must be a clear realisation of the very serious blunders committed in the second half of the 20th century by their own strategic establishment.
While they continue propping up TSP, one cannot say that any realization has dawned.
I have a point of contention in KS's statement. He automatically assumes that the US has made 'very serious blunders'.
Could the US really stay stay as a super power, win the cold war, and impose its view of the market on the whole planet if it made these 'very serious blunders'?
No, these acts do not constitute 'very serious blunders' but are part of coordinated policy of balancing power in Asia.
1. The indiscriminate pactomania
exploited by dictators
Haha, the 'indiscriminate pactomania' was not exploited by dictators - it was forced down the throats of countries by an imperial power to exploit the natural resources of those countries. The US thinking was that since democratically elected governments will have to listen to their people and allocate these resources for thier benefit, it will leave less for the rapacious NY based elite. Hence, the US felt that 'local strongmen' would be better for the 'market'. Pinochet is a prime example of this thinking.
2. The
terrible blunder of not understanding the nationalist fervour of wartime ally Vietnamese leader Ho Chi Minh
The threat of communism was exagerated whenever US wanted to commit aggression. No, US was not threatened by communism, but by a different economic model that Vietnam was pursuing at that time. There was some chance of this model being successful, and the US was paranoid that this model would then be replicated across the region. They did not care whether this model was nationalistic or communist, just that it was not capitalist.
2. The
crass opportunism of the “best and the brightest” that killed millions of Vietnamese
US is run by a sociopathic elite that feels it has the right to manpulate the masses - their own and outsiders both. There is no 'crass opportunism' in them - this is their mentality.
3. The
toleration of the massacre of hundreds of thousands of Bangladeshis
Again, KS shows his tendency to wash away the crimes of the US by assuming innocence on the part of the US. The massacre of hundreds of thousands of Bangladeshis (many of them Hindus) was designed to create a mass influx into India (20 million came), which was designed to destabilize India and Indira Gandhi. Of course, Indira Gandhi put paid their plans by destroying pakistan itself. It is then that the internal destabilization started by the UK and US alliance. But that is another story.
4. The
compromises and alliance with Mao Zedong
What compromises? US wanted a counter weight to USSR, China asked for a price to be paid for its support for US policy and they got it. It was a deal, not a compromise.
5.
Connivance at the genocide of millions of Cambodians
6. The use of religious extremism
to fight Soviet forces in Afghanistan
7. The
use of nuclear proliferation to China and Pakistan as strategic policies
Note the sanitized language used in these three statements - in which the US is painted as a party which did not initiate these acts, although it surely benefited from them.