Election Interference vs Rand
Corporation Full Spectrum Assault on Russia
Americans have endured endless media
coverage about election interference as if that were some horrible class of
crime. But it really isn’t, and never has been.
The latest examples are Trump’s
weighing in to support Bibi Netanyahu for re-election, without which the
ex-general Benny Gantz running against him might have won. And then we have
Trump’s open support for Boris Johnson as PM for Britain; and all this reported
in the mass media with no sneaking around.
But there is something special about
foreign election interference in the minds of Americans. It is only bad when
Russia is alleged to have done it to the US; but not bad at all if the US does
it to any country it chooses. I don’t remember either the Israeli or British
public in a rage over Trump’s boosting a candidate. There is a parody quote
that describes this selective morality, a US motto of “We do unto others what
we do not want done to us.”
I don’t remember a word about this
double standard being taught to me at any time in my schooling. It seems we
free Americans are not free to know certain things about our own country that
might make us difficult to manage.
That might even be a crime now, and
no, I am not kidding. The laws criminalizing support for the purely political
BDS movement could easily be viewed as managing what Americans can and cannot
say about a foreign country, despite its being at the top of the list for
offensive intelligence operations inside the US.
I would not be surprised to see a law
passed someday making it a crime to talk about Israeli election interference
inside the US, how it is done right out in the open, with the Israeli Lobby not
the least bit worried about any investigations being launched.
Election rigging a major CIA activity
during the Cold War
During the Cold War, election
“monitoring” was one of the top tasks of the CIA, practiced on friend and foe
alike. Opposition candidates would receive hefty funding that “magically”
appeared out of nowhere, and the same for opposition media.
US-friendly candidates would be
groomed for future office, and their opponents would be attacked and
discouraged in a variety of ways, including such things as threats, mysterious
accidents, health issues and assassinations. Regime change has been a major
activity of US foreign policy, but the allegedly free Americans are not
supposed to know this. The reasons are always hidden behind the national
security mantra.
Isrealis have a free pass to
interfere in US elections
I hear that the Israelis have run
similar operations, in terms of grooming candidates for future office in the
US, by promoting their careers and polishing them up in the big pool of
Washington think tanks, where future Israeli spies, excuse me… I mean future
American leaders and top government officials are funneled into the staffing
recommendation of all new administrations.
And these people have no problem
getting good security checks, as pro-Israel candidates are “hands off” in terms
of any mention of a dual loyalty, or even alluding to the history Israel’s deep
penetration into our political fabric.
When it comes to US-interference
operations, foreign ones especially, much is secret, and even top secret; but
you will be surprised that sometimes it is openly published by the many think
tanks and geopolitical foundation mills that crank out strategy and policy
positions for top officials.
This Rand Corp summary report is a
must read
I chose this topic to write about due
to one such Rand Corporation report that caught my attention with its “catchy”
title, Overextending and Unbalancing Russia. Notice that the title is not referring to Russian
elections, even though one of its topics is on influencing elections. The
subtitle is a bit more bland, Assessing the impact of cost-imposing
options.
We know that a lot of defense
contractors participate in war-gaming contracts, but the title had more of an
economic, business sound to it. The report was a 2019 product, so I dived into
it, the public highlights summary of 12 pages, an acknowledgement to the
American people who paid for the report that few will ever read. The
introduction starts with:
This brief summarizes a
report that comprehensively examines nonviolent, cost-imposing options that the
United States and it allies could pursue across economic, political, and
military areas to stress—overextend and unbalance—Russia’s economy and armed
forces and the regime’s political standing at home and abroad…
In simple words, this is an economic
and military war-gaming document. The non-public version would be book-sized
and classified, of course.
The subject headings are: Economic
cost-imposing measures; geopolitical, ideological and informational; air and
space; maritime, land and multi-domain; and implications for the army. It is an
educational read, so do take advantage of a peek inside the belly of the regime
change beast.
Report Conclusions
Russia’s greatest vulnerability is
its economy, its greatest anxiety stems from the stability and durability of
the regime, and greatest strengths are in the military and info-war realms.
There is a sad thing missing in all
these endless strategy reports on how to remove any country’s leadership when
they are found not to be pro-American enough. None of these think tanks ever
produce a report on how to end the ceaseless competition with a country like
Russia, where we have ten times the defense speeding it has and would much
prefer to do business than make war. Russians know about war as few do.
I can remember that poignant brief
time when, after 9-11, the world, including Russia, reached out in support of
the US, when that incident was universally thought to have been a terrorist
act. It was felt that if such a thing could happen to the US, then it could
happen to any country.
There was an attitude of “we are all
in this together”. President George Bush spoke about Putin as his “good
friend”. Russia already had an extremism problem inside its borders and was
willing to share intelligence to help stop terrorists’ ability to travel around
under the radar.
Neither the US nor Russia are the
same countries they were back then. We are continuing to drift apart, even to
the point of throwing arms treaties out the door that took years to negotiate
and kept us all safer until now.
Where do we go from here?
In closing, I would ask the readers
to think about this issue of governments spending large amounts of funding on
destabilization efforts against their fellow UN-member states, when all have
taken a pledge to support UN principles in dealing with each other.
The founding principles of the UN are
now being completely ignored whenever they conflict with the “national
interests” of the unipolar-state crowd. A new international organization is
long past due, and should be one where rogue nations are thrown out when
necessary, for the security of all the others.
As international treaties and
agreements evaporate before our eyes, we see no push to build new institutions
to take their place. We are drifting in dangerous waters in the Gulf of Donald
Trump where anything can happen, and already has. I fear for the future.
Jim W. Dean, managing
editor for Veterans Today, producer/host of Heritage TV Atlanta, specially for
the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook”.
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