Sunday 1 January 2017

2016: The year Washington lost its mind


John Wight has written for newspapers and websites across the world, including the Independent, Morning Star, Huffington Post, Counterpunch, London Progressive Journal, and Foreign Policy Journal. He is also a regular commentator on RT and BBC Radio. John is currently working on a book exploring the role of the West in the Arab Spring. You can follow him on Twitter @JohnWight1
2016: The year Washington lost its mind
Seismic is the only word to describe 2016, especially when describing the US-Russia relationship.
Paraphrasing Gramsci, it was a year in which we witnessed the dying of the old world and the birth of the new. By no means, however, has the birth been painless. And nor is it complete.
Western hegemony – geopolitical, military, cultural, and economic – has never been so fiercely contested as it was in 2016. Surveying a year in which anti-Russian hysteria became the new normal in Washington, London, and Paris, not to mention across Eastern Europe on the part of governments for whom Russophobia was deployed as a convenient scapegoat to deflect from their own political and economic shortcomings, we are reminded no empire ever forgives its defeats.
If this past year was anything it was the year in which the final nail was hammered into the coffin of neoconservatism and its masters of the universe conceit. It saw humanity travel full circle from the starting point of the boast by US academic, Francis Fukuyama, that the demise of the Soviet Union heralded the End of History, wherein Western liberal democracy had triumphed and would now reign supreme forevermore.
Those who allowed themselves to luxuriate in this conceit have just lived through a year of unparalleled agony and anguish, defined by the collapse of this liberal order under the weight of the misery and despair it succeeded in sowing over the past decade and more at home and across the world.
For the first time since 9/11 - when war without end was declared by Western hawks in the cause not of security, democracy or human rights, but instead domination, hegemony, and unipolarity - their project of regime change was thwarted in Syria, though not without huge cost and suffering. It is a seminal defeat marked by the liberation of Aleppo, which was followed by trilateral talks between Iran, Russia, and Turkey with the objective of bringing the conflict to an end.
The exclusion of the US and European powers from these talks was hugely significant, evidence that solutions to crises created by Western hegemonic policies are increasingly to be found in the East rather than the West.
The election in November of Donald Trump as the 45th President of the United States, following in the wake of Brexit, confounded a Washington political and media establishment that had grown complacent over the years in a bubble of self-aggrandizement in which they had become detached from reality.
Indeed, their inability to come to terms with the shock was such that rather than look to their own failures, they sought to scapegoat Russia as the primary cause. Never mind the millions of Americans who opted to vote for a maverick billionaire businessman rather than a machine politician whose record has been a monument to mendacity. No, Trump’s election had nothing to do with them. It was all Russia’s doing.
In what can only be described as an insult to those voters and their democratic rights, no sooner had the election result been announced than the forces of hell were unleashed against Moscow, accused of hacking the DNC and passing the results on to Wikileaks, whose release of the so-called ‘Podesta emails’ provided not only the American public but also the entire world with an insight into the inner workings of what passes for democracy in Washington.
Just think about this for a moment. Russia, according to the DNC, Clinton’s supporters, the CIA, and many more besides, effectively forced millions of Americans to walk into a voting booth and vote for a candidate whose suitability for office was considered so outlandish that he was ridiculed throughout both the Republican primary process and ensuing presidential election campaign thereafter.
Such a rendering is so desperate and deluded it could only gain traction in a period of huge and momentous transformation, such as took place over 2016, involving the decline of what is and the rise of what will be. Over the past year the resulting flux and discord succeeded in turning rational human beings into irrational and paranoid wrecks, the very people who found themselves being swept away in the currents of historical change.
It was a year in which we witnessed countries responsible for the destruction of entire countries lecturing the world on the meaning of democracy and human rights. Russian President, Vladimir Putin, was depicted as an amalgam of every James Bond movie villain this decades-long movie franchise has unleashed. Meanwhile, rather than the largest and most populous country in Europe, with a history as rich in culture and civilization as any on the planet, Russia was reduced to a vast criminal enterprise as part of the same exercise in demonization.

It is recorded that in 476CE what was then known as the Western Roman Empire came to an end, after a century of successive ‘barbarian’ invasions finally succeeded in bringing it to its knees. The symbols of Rome’s power – in the form of the emperor’s imperial vestments, diadem, and purple cloak – were sent to Constantinople, the seat of power of the eastern half of the empire, to bring the curtain down on its 1000-year history. It was proof that no empire, regardless of its economic and military power, lasts forever.
Rome fell for the same reason that all empires fall over time – greed: greed for wealth, for power, and for domination. Our time is no different. The economic crash of 2008 was the result of greed in Wall Street and the City of London, the twin engines of Western economic growth and hegemony over so many decades. Allied to the triumphalism with which the demise of the Soviet Union was met in Washington and across the West in the early 1990s, the result was overreach.
In 2016, we witnessed the culmination of what has been a slow but inexorable decline in the West – a political order with no answers to the crises that they in their ideological fixation with domination and hegemony have caused. Blaming others rather than look in the mirror and accept responsibility was their only answer.
As the Roman philosopher Seneca reminds us, “For greed all nature is too little.”
Western ideologues take note.

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.

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