03-25-2010, 02:00 AM
Pioneer Op-Ed, 25 March 2010
For US, the world is a chessboard
For US, the world is a chessboard
Quote:Thursday, March 25, 2010
For US, world is a chessboard
Premen Addy
The Obama Administration is as much in need of healthcare as the American people. By supping with the Pakistani leadership without the prescriptive long spoon, the US President and his advisers are guaranteeing a mightier inferno for the AfPak landscape than the one consuming it. The price demanded by the Pakistani Government for past and present services rendered to the American imperium amounts to a brazen $ 35 billion, with a few nuclear power plants, squadrons of F-16s and other lethal weaponry thrown in for good measure.
How the discussions in the Oval Office of the White House pan out will be known soon enough, but the promised consummation of the India-US relationship is likely to remain the 21st centuryââ¬â¢s unfulfilled dream. Just as well, for tying the knot on the deck of another doomed Titanic ââ¬â Pakistan in this instance ââ¬â would hardly make good copy or a riveting film. However, the mystery of David Coleman Headley might, one day, do both, with its darkest secrets revealed and an Oscar to be won.
The world's ââ¬Ësole superpowerââ¬â¢, the prayerful refrain of acolytes of the living Moloch, bears more than a passing resemblance to Gulliver trussed up and bound to the ground by legions of Taliban and Al Qaeda Lilliputians in Afghanistan and Iraq and the earth beyond. Superpower hubris is no assurance of second sight. Mr George W Bush proclaimed a famous victory in Iraq from the deck of an American battleship and the pronouncement, in due course, crumbled to dust.
Newsweek reproduced a picture of the former US President savouring his triumph in 2004 against its report of the recently deemed success of an Iraqi general election. What price such traduced freedom? A broken nation boasting multitudes of orphaned cripples, thousands of dead and millions living as insecure refugees abroad; a country gifted with intermittent power and water by its mendacious occupier, its innards torn out, its confessional communities at each otherââ¬â¢s throats with bombs, bullets and anything else that came to hand.
Truth will out, but not clearly in the Anglo-American media. The fourth-rate estate has long been reduced to a complicit parody in a lacquered criminal syndicate. Their news coverage refracts the seamless engagement between what can be seen as the worldââ¬â¢s second-oldest profession with the worldââ¬â¢s oldest. Checks and balances are nursery rhymes for lulled innocents cutting their milk teeth at their motherââ¬â¢s breasts. Al Capone and Goebbels embodied fascismââ¬â¢s infancy, todayââ¬â¢s finished product boasts a corporate face.
International alignments, once cast in stone, are in flux. Nato, like Shelleyââ¬â¢s Ozymandias, could well become a half-buried trunkless head of stone in the sands of Araby. You wouldnââ¬â¢t have thought so leafing through the insouciance of Mr Zbigniew Brzezinski, the Polish American geostrategic guru hired by the Obama campaign team for the 2008 US presidential election, whose worldview may well be haunting the corridors of power in Washington, DC. As President Jimmy Carterââ¬â¢s National Security Adviser between 1976-80, his advice was inevitably coloured with the Poleââ¬â¢s primordial hatred of Russians.
Apropos of clandestine US activity in Afghanistan, which pre-dated the Soviet appearance in the country, he said: ââ¬ÅThis secret operation was an excellent idea. Its effect was to draw the Russians into the Afghan trap. You want me to regret that?ââ¬Â (Unholy Wars: Afghanistan, America and International Terrorism by John K Cooley). In his book, Cooley writes, ââ¬ÅBrzezinski, like President Carterââ¬â¢s CIA director Admiral Stansfield Turner ... freely acknowledged that the possible adverse consequences of the anti-Communist alliance with the Afghan Islamists (and shortly afterward, with their radical Muslim allies around the world) ââ¬â the growth of a new international terrorist movement and the global outreach of South Asian drug trafficking ââ¬â did not weigh heavily, if at all, in their calculations at the time.ââ¬Â
Years later, March 20, 2010, to be precise, The Times correspondent, Anthony Loyd, in Peshawar, described how a motley group of jihadis ââ¬â Arabs, Uzbeks and Pakistani Punjabis ââ¬â were giving the American and their allies a particularly hard time in Afghanistan. The 1,500 Uzbeks, apparently the most formidable of the lot, usually fought to the last man.
Three days later, on March 23, came a front-page Daily Telegraph report, with the headline: ââ¬ÅDirty nuclear bomb threat to Britainââ¬Â. Duncan Gardhamââ¬â¢s opening paragraph set the scene: ââ¬ÅBritain faces an increased threat of a nuclear attack by Al Qaeda terrorists following a rise in the trafficking of radiological material, a Government report has warned. Bomb makers who have been active in Afghanistan may already have the ability to produce a ââ¬Ëdirty bombââ¬â¢ using knowledge over the Internet. It is feared that terrorists could transport an improvised nuclear device up the Thames and detonate it in the heart of Londonââ¬Â and other British cities.
ââ¬ÅLord West, the Security Minister, also raised the possibility of terrorists using small small craft to enter ports and launch an attack similar to that in Mumbai in 2008 ... The terrorist group since then had approached Pakistani nuclear scientists, developed a device to produce hydrogen cyanide, which can be used in chemical warfare, and used explosives in Iraq combined with chlorine gas cylinders,ââ¬Â the report says. Frankensteinââ¬â¢s monster is now stalking its creator. President Barack Obama and his aides will have much to discuss with their Pakistani guests. If only the fly on the wall could speak and write proper English what a tale it would have to tell. <img src='http://www.india-forum.com/forums/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/rolleyes.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt='' />
Following the demise of the Soviet Union, Mr Brzezinski, inebriated by the chaos of the Yeltsin dispensation in Moscow, issued his projection of the future, The Great Chessboard. Eurasia, the subject of his title, with its oil and geostrategic location was preordained to be a giant American bailiwick. Controlled tenancies for Russia, India and China, etc, would form part of the Pax Americana. The bookââ¬â¢s sting came in its tail, the reference to ââ¬ÅChinaââ¬â¢s support for Pakistan (which) restrains Indiaââ¬â¢s ambitions to subordinate that country and offsets Indiaââ¬â¢s inclination to cooperate with Russia in regard to Afghanistan and Central Asiaââ¬Â.
Mr Brzezinski confides in his Chinese interlocutors in 1996 ââ¬â recalled in an extensive footnote in his book, published the following year ââ¬â on a possible US-China condominium for the region, inspiration, possibly, for Mr Obamaââ¬â¢s hint of G2 summits floated in Beijing last autumn. Its eccentricity is reminiscent of the Treaty of Tordesillas in 1494, whereby the Pope in Rome divided the newly discovered dominions of Asia and Africa between the Catholic Majesties of Spain and Portugal.
To George Nathaniel Curzon, player extraordinary of Kiplingââ¬â¢s Great Game, belongs surely the final word: ââ¬ÅTurkestan, Afghanistan, Transcaspia, Persia ... To me, I confess, these names are the pieces on a chessboard upon which is being played out a game for the dominion of the world.ââ¬Â This being 2010, checkmate, alas, it must be.