In a 30-minute interview with Sophie Shevardnadze at RT, Truthdig columnist
Chris Hedges discusses who will be the real loser in the 2016 U.S.
presidential race.
Sophie Shevardnadze:Chris Hedges, Pulitzer-prize
winning journalist, author, welcome to the show once again, great to have you
back. Hillary was seemingly cruising to victory just after the debates - some
polls gave her a 10 point lead - and now there’s virtually nothing separating
the candidates. Today, if you had a million bucks who’d you bet it on - Clinton
or Trump?
Chris Hedges: It’s impossible to
tell you, because it really will depend on the mood, on the emotions of the
voters on election day. That's all these campaigns are about, because they both
essentially are neo-liberal candidates who will do nothing to impede imperial
expansion and corporate power. The whole campaign has descended to, you know,
not surprisingly, to the level of a reality TV show, with presidential debates
featuring women who have accused former President Bill Clinton of sexual
assault being brought in by Donald Trump; videos - I'll go back to the
primaries - of the size of people's genitals. I mean, it's just appalling, but
all of that is emblematic of a political system in deep decay and one that no
longer revolves around fundamental issues. We know from the Wikileaks emails,
the John Podesta emails that were leaked from Hillary Clinton, that there was a
calculated effort on a part of a Clinton campaign to promote these fringe
candidates - like Trump, and they particularly wanted Trump, because the
difference between Hillary Clinton and a more mainstream Republican candidate,
like Jeb Bush, is so marginal. So if you had to ask me, I don't think Trump
will win, but I don't rule out the possibility that he will win - we have to
look at the Brexit polls in Britain...
SS: Right.
CH: ...And same kind of anger
is underway here.
SS: The FBI is extending
its investigation into the Clinton email case - after obtaining a warrant to
search the laptop of Clinton’s closest aide Huma Abedin. The Clinton campaign
says the move is political - is the FBI guilty of swaying the vote, like
Hillary suggests?
CH: To be fair to FBI, they
were put in a very difficult position - there are tens of thousands, they say
660,000 emails, we don't really know how many of those, but if the FBI made
this discovery and did not make it public, they would be accused, of course, of
aiding Clinton campaign. I don't know the motives, but I think we do have to
recognise that the FBI, I think, felt correctly, that given the volatility of
the campaign and the fact that they had, after the investigation of the Clinton
email - she had used a private server - while they certainly felt that it was
inappropriate to exonerate her of criminal activity that they felt kind of a
responsibility to be transparent.
SS: Another FBI investigation
showed that the bureau didn’t find any evidence that Trump is tied to the
Kremlin, like the Clinton campaign implied - has Hillary’s attempt to play the
Russian card failed?
CH: I don't know that it's
failed, because the media has been quite obsequious in terms of parroting back
this narrative, and one of the frustrations of the Wikileaks email dumps, the
John Podesta emails, he is her campaign manager, runs her campaign - is that
the contents were often overlooked to essentially ask the question: "Is
Russia trying to influence the elections?", and as a former investigative
reporter for the New York times, this is just not a legitimate question. I
spent many-many years, 15 years with the Times, I was elated all sorts of
information by all sorts of governments, from the French Intelligence agency to
the Israeli Secret Service, the Mossad, to the U.S. government - and these
people were not leaking it because they cared about democracy or an open
society, they were leaking this information because it was in their interest to
do so, and my job, as a reporter, was to determine whether this leaked
information was true or untrue - and that's really the only thing the reporter
should do with the leaked information on the Podesta emails. But one of the
things that as a reporter, as a former investigative reporter, that has
disturbed me is that they have - I'm talking about the press, especially about
the electronic, commercial corporate press - they have effectively ignored much
of what is in the emails to carry up this speculation. Meanwhile, of course,
nobody has offered us any evidence that the Trump campaign is linked in any way
to Russia or that Russia is responsible for the email dump.
SS: We’re used to the fact that
ordinary Americans don’t really care about foreign policy, but this campaign
has focused a lot on foreign issues and Russia in particular. Are candidates
trying to unite the nation by creating the image of a foreign threat?
CH: Yeah. It's very disturbing
on many levels, the kind of neo-conservative foreign policy cabal led by Robert
Kagan and others that is around Clinton. The very people who gave the
disastrous Iraq war, are now proposing policies to bait Russia. You know, it
makes absolutely no sense to those of us who spend as many, as I did, two
decades abroad as a foreign correspondent, except that it plays well
politically into this very stunted, peculiar, neocon vision of the world, and
that is that everybody out there only understands one language, and that's
force. That's how you see these 15 years now of war, the longest war in U.S.
history. It's been an utter disaster, utter failure, both in Iraq and
Afghanistan, and of course, Syria, and Libya - and yet, what's the response?
More bombs, more bombs, more bombs, which created the problems in the first
place.
SS:Yeah, and do Americans like
being scared by a foreign adversary?
CH: No, I don't think they
"like" it, but it's a very effective form of control. Fear works, and
Americans are hardly the only people to use it. Terrorism, the specter of
Russia...whatever it is! Fear is a form of social control, and when you have
essentially two political parties that are doing corporate bidding that serves
the interests of corporate global elites, at the expense of the citizens - they
need fear, they need to manufacture fear, and I think that's what we're seeing.
SS: Trump has said things along
the lines of ‘this election is rigged’ and he’s hinted that he may contend the
results, which is kind of like admitting he’ll be defeated. Is this talk
backfiring and scaring away voters? Why would people head to the ballots if
they think their voice doesn’t count anyway?
CH: The Trump's base, primarily
white lower-working class, which has been dispossessed through
de-industrialisation, is going to head to the polls. They are attempting to
work within the system. If the race is close and Trump loses, I think,
everything we have seen, given the volatility of Trump, suggests that he will
charge that the elections were rigged. We certainly have seen evidence now,
from in particular the leaked emails, of the rigging of the primaries on the
part of the Democratic National Committee, on behalf of the Clintons. It's
pretty clear that Nevada Caucus was stolen, they blocked independents from
voting in many of the primaries, in many of the states, and independents were
Bernie Sanders' primary base. We just saw a few days ago, a day or two ago,
that Clinton was actually leaked questions that would be given to her at a
staged... I mean, they call them "Townhalls", they're totally
Potemkin-like reality shows, totally scripted - so, it’s enough to look into
the inner workings to suggest that these people, the Clinton machine, the
Democratic party do not play fair. So, yeah, I think that that is the danger
and the danger becomes then, when enraged Trump supporters believe that the
system is rigged, the system is broken, it doesn't function fairly - and that
becomes dangerous, because these people will resort to kind of anarchic levels
of violence.
SS: Filmmaker Michael Moore,
who you can’t call a Republican-friendly figure exactly, called Trump “a human
Molotov cocktail” which desperate poor voters can throw at the system that
stole their lives from them. How come a Republican candidate is the candidate
of the dispossessed, shouldn’t Hillary be the one taking care of them?
CH: Yeah. That is the
whole idea, that a billionaire developer is somehow the voice of the dispossessed,
but he has tapped into this right-wing populism. This is coupled with a kind of
xenophobia, kind of exalted nationalism, and a statement - which is true, of
course - that the elites have betrayed the ordinary citizenry. So, when Donald
Trump goes to Michigan and stands before the executives from car manufacturers,
who are moving their plants over the border, courtesy of NAFTA, to Mexico, and
says that if you try to make cars in Mexico, I'll put a 35% tariff on it - this
is something that no candidate, in either party, has been saying, and there are
many-many really struggling... I mean, half of this country now lives in
poverty, people who have been waiting a long time for somebody to stand up and
defy these corporate executives and CEOs who have destroyed their lives, the
lives of their communities, destroyed the lives of their families. So, in that
sense, Trump is not a traditional Republican which is why the Republican
establishment itself has united with the Democratic establishment to try and destroy
the Trump presidency - much as in 1972, the left-wing insurgent candidate
George McGovern saw the establishment of the Democratic party unite with the
establishment of the Republican party to elect Richard Nixon.
SS: The election is estimated
to have cost 6.6 billion dollars so far -that’s including the House and Senate
campaign spending, and is likely to end up being even more pricey than that.
That’s the whole budget of Bahrain. Elections in India have four times as many
voters and cost one billion less. Is this price tag cutting off any truly
independent candidate, like Bernie Sanders?
CH: You can't compete, unless
you can raise that kind of money, unless you can get into debates. Bernie
Sanders actually raised significant sums, he didn't do it through corporations,
his average campaign contribution was $27 - but yeah, you can't play in this
game of political theater, unless you're bankrolled to the tune of hundreds of
millions of dollars. That is the part of the way they lock out third-party
candidates, like the Green party candidate Jill Stein.
SS:The Democratic party
managed to fend off an anti-system challenger - Sanders - how come the
Republicans couldn’t find anyone who could defeat Trump?
CH: Because the establishment
itself is so deeply hated, so when the Republican establishment finally did -
they didn't take him seriously in the beginning, and when they did turn on him,
they trotted out the former presidential candidate Mitt Romney to attack him,
and people just laughed. It's the Romneys, the Bushes, the Clintons, the
Obamas, it's that establishment that people are turning against - which is why
Hillary Clinton is having such a difficult time competing against such an
imbecilic, undisciplined and impulsive and, frankly, ignorant candidate.
SS: I'm just wondering -
why is the media, even the right-leaning media, which created Trump’s
phenomenon - turning on him in this campaign?
CH: Two reasons. One - he is
attacking the trade agreements, which is how the elites make their money, and
secondly, he's a public relations disaster for the U.S. I think those are the
two reasons. Maybe, the third reason is that they don't know what they're
getting with Trump - nobody knows what they're getting with Trump. Trump
doesn't know what he's getting with Trump, and they know that Clinton will
maintain both the imperial overreach and the design of the corporate state. So,
Clinton’s a sure bet and Trump is just too volatile a candidate, and that's why
the establishment has turned on him.
SS: PresidentObama has hit the
campaign trail to endorse Hillary Clinton - he’s warning that ‘all the progress
will go out the window if we don’t make the right choice’. Do you think
everything Obama achieved will really go out the window if Trump gets elected?
CH: I don't think Obama has
achieved very much. His healthcare program which is essentially forcing
citizens to buy defective corporate products and we're watching now massive
increases, on an average of 22%, and people that have the bronze plan,
different levels of plans cannot even afford the kinds of premiums and
copayments... - I mean, the whole system is a disaster. His assault on civil
liberties has been worse than under Bush, he has expanded imperial wars, in
places like Libya, create more failed states. I don't think Obama has much of a
legacy. He'll walk out and get rich and will start his own Foundation like the
Clintons - there's almost a complete continuity between Bush and Obama.
SS: A recent CNN ORC poll
says Obama’s approval rating is higher than at any time during his presidency -
why is he doing so great now that he’s leaving? Is that his Hillary campaigning
paying off?
CH: You know, these people run
very skilled public relations operations which revolve not around policy but
around creating manufactured personalities, and that has been very difficult
for Clinton - and that's why Clinton has the second-highest disapproval rating
of any Presidential candidate as far as we know in American history, with the
exception, of course, of the person she's competing against - Donald Trump. We
have to look at what American politics is - it's really about creating
feelings, emotions, getting voters to confuse how they are made to feel with
knowledge. It is not about actual policies, and both Michelle Obama who
has a very high kind of favourability rating and Barack Obama have been skilled
in doing that. It's much more difficult, that's part of the problem, for the
Clinton campaign.
SS: Looking back at the
beginning of Obama's presidency, the Nobel committee handed Obama the
peace prize in 2009 - not for his accomplishments, but for his
intentions. But the promised peace didn’t come to Afghanistan, didn’t come to
Iraq, we’re seeing the unravelling of other Middle Eastern states - did Obama’s
peace vision not only fail but make things worse?
CH: Oh yeah, of course, look at
Libya, look at Syria, look at Somalia, look at Iraq, look at Afghanistan, look
at Pakistan. No, it's a complete catastrophe. I've spent seven years in the
Middle East, I was the Middle East bureau chief for the New York Times, and
what we've done is, I would argue, the greatest strategic blunder in American
history, and it's one that Obama aided and abetted. The whole idea of him as a
peace candidate is... I mean, I kind of gave up on the Nobel Prize Committee, I
have no idea why this was done. As you correctly pointed out, he hadn't even
done anything.
SS: Was it a genuine inability
to make things better, were his hands tied?
CH: No. He was an establishment
candidate, he was selected, anointed and promoted by the Democratic Chicago
political machine, which is one of the dirtiest in the country, he got more
money in 2008 from Wall St. than the Republican candidate who was against him -
McCain. No, he's very cynical...bright, talented, unlike George Bush, but
deeply cynical candidate. He brought in the old establishment, including the
old Defence Secretary Robert Gates, who had been the Secretary of Defence under
Bush, he brought in old these figures like Larry Summers and Geithner who are
Wall St. marionettes. No, Obama knew very well what he was doing from the very
beginning and effectively... Look, he won Advertising Age's top annual award
which was "Marketer of the Year". His campaign did, because the
professionals knew just what he done - he functioned as a brand for the
corporate state, a very powerful and a very effective one.
SS: On the other hand America
has restored relations with Cuba and reached a nuclear deal with Iran - both
seemed unachievable just a couple of years ago. Do you count those as a Obama's
foreign policy successes?
CH: Yeah, they are foreign
policy successes, but we have to understand that the Pentagon had long fought
the neocons call for war with Iran, even under the Bush administration they put
a stop to it. So, there was no appetite within the American military
establishment for war with Iran anyway. So that wasn't really an option,
despite Israeli pressure. In terms of Cuba, it just got to the point of
absurdity - the boycott of Cuba, and we must also remember that the second
generation of Cuban Americans did not have that kind of hatred towards Fidel
Castro and towards the Cuban regime, and so it was politically safer for the
Democratic party because the new generation, just like the new second and third
generation of Jewish Americans don't have that loyalty to Israel - it wasn't as
politically volatile a decision.
SS:Obama made ‘global zero’ a
strategic objective - however he failed to get America to ban nuclear tests by
ratifying the Comprehensive Test Ban treaty, while the Bulletin of the Atomic
Scientists moved the Doomsday Clock to ‘three minutes to midnight’ - that is to
a nuclear war. Why did Obama’s promise to ‘reduce the role of nuclear weapons
in American foreign policy’ backfire?
CH: Because the
military-industrial establishment is so powerful in the United States that
politicians serve its interests. They don't dictate what the interests of that
industry is - officialy, it swallows about 53% of our discretionary budget, but
that, of course, masks huge other expenditures, including for our nuclear
weapon systems, which isn't counted for Veteran's affairs, which is huge for,
if you want to count, the security and surveillance state, which is officially
hidden, but probably at least a hundred billion dollars... We're starving the
rest of society to do that, and you can't fight these wars. Indeed, if you were
watching the Bernie Sander's campaign, Sanders did not take on imperial
adventurism or the military establishment - because you can't, within the
American political system - and Obama, I think, is an example of that.
SS: Police shootings of unarmed
black men have sparked massive protests and the Black lives matter movement -
does Obama being the first black president actually mean little for race troubles
in the U.S.?
CH: It means nothing, because
you have de-industrialised urban centres, i.e. places that once had factories
and jobs, which are now in ruins - you walk through them and it's boarded up
factories and pothole streets and crumbling infrastructure, dysfunctional
schools, and there are no jobs. So you have created mini police states in these
marginal communities, where police can serve, as we see, as Judge, Jury and
Executioner - three in one. Americans, almost all poor people of colour, are
shot by police in this country every day, and it's a form of social control,
along, of course, with mass incarceration. We have 25% of the world's prison
population and 4% of the world's population - most of those imprisoned are poor
people of colour. So, when you've taken away the possibility for jobs and with
it the possibilities for hope, for advancement, for inclusion within both the
economic and political system - then you need these very harsh forms of
controls in order to keep people, essentially, fenced in. That's why these
killings don't stop, it doesn't matter how many protests are carried out, and
Obama has quite sadly betrayed, if we go back especially to 2008 and even to
2012, his primary base - African-Americans voted in staggering numbers for
Obama, I think, 90% or something. Almost that high, and yet life for
African-Americans, I would argue, after 8 years of Obama, is worse than when he
took power.
SS: We've been talking to Chris
Hedges, author, Pulitzer-prize winning journalist, talking about the ups and
downs of 2016 U.S. Presidential Campaign, and the end of the Obama era as the
Americans are gearing up to choose their next President tomorrow. We'll of
course be watching the vote closely. That's it for this edition of SophieCo, I
will see you next time.
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