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john mad bolton has never met a war he didn’t like…..
"If Biden hadn't said anything about the possible deployment of Western troops in the past few months, it would have been better, for the security of Ukraine and for world peace", Bolton reportedly told RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland.
Former US National Security Adviser John Bolton raised eyebrows this week by telling a German publication that NATO and the US – under President Joe Biden – made a "big mistake" when they "repeatedly emphasised that there will be no intervention of any kind by Western troops in Ukraine".
Bolton was US ambassador to the United Nations under President George W. Bush, and served as national security adviser to former President Donald Trump.
He's returned to the public eye in the past few weeks with a range of hawkish TV appearances and an editorial in the New York Post branding what he called Biden's "decision to deny Ukraine fighter jets" as "indefensible".
His tenure as national security adviser was cut short in September 2019 when he was unceremoniously fired in a Twitter post in which Trump wrote that he'd "informed John Bolton last night that his services are no longer needed at the White House". Within months, Bolton was making appearances on political talk shows publicising his then-upcoming "tell-all" book in which he accused President Trump of wanting to "continue freezing $391 million in security assistance to Ukraine until officials there helped with investigations into Democrats including the Bidens". The claim played a key role in the first of President Trump's two impeachments, because it appeared to validate some of the still-unproven allegations of impropriety surrounding weapons shipments which Democrats in Congress wanted the president to send to the Ukrainian regime.
Axios insisted at the time that Bolton's claims "appear to have swayed more GOP senators in recent days, with some signalling they're more likely to vote for witnesses than before".
President Trump's response was immediate. The then-president promptly took to Twitter to allege that Bolton "begged" him for a job and that "frankly", if he had "listened to [Bolton], we would be in World War Six by now".
"For a guy who couldn't get approved for the ambassador to the U.N. years ago, couldn't get approved for anything since, 'begged' me for a non Senate approved job, which I gave him despite many saying 'Don't do it, sir,' takes the job, mistakenly says 'Libyan Model' on T.V., and many more mistakes of judgement, gets fired because frankly, if I listened to him, we would be in World War Six by now, and goes out and IMMEDIATELY writes a nasty & untrue book. All Classified National Security. Who would do this?"
Bolton's longstanding antipathy towards perceived enemy governments wasn't limited to the Russian leadership. "The president was angered by Bolton's opposition" to President Trump's proposed Afghanistan peace deal, PBS wrote at the time of Bolton's dismissal, and it reportedly wasn't the first time the two men clashed over Bolton's apparent refusal to cooperate with the White House's geopolitical vision.
Bolton "had become a vocal internal critic of potential talks between Trump and leaders of Iran" they said, and in 2018 he "masterminded a quiet campaign inside the administration and with allies abroad to persuade Trump to keep US forces in Syria".
It wasn't just the Trump crowd – Bolton's reputation for bellicosity earned him the ire of anti-intervention conservatives and liberals alike. John Bolton has never met a war he didn’t like. He never should have been National Security Adviser in the first place. — Elizabeth Warren (@SenWarren) September 10, 2019
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don’t let them…..
As with Iraq, there seems to be a coordinated mainstream media effort to drag America into a new war. Don’t let them.
by Peter Van Buren
Tomorrow is the 19th anniversary of Iraq War 2.0 — the one we fought over Saddam Hussein’s weapons of mass destruction. What have we learned over the almost two decades since?
While the actual Gotterdammerung for the new order took place just six months ago in Afghanistan as the last American troops clambered aboard their transports — with Washington seeming to abandon American citizens, a multi-million dollar embassy, and the Afghan people to their fates. The Afghan War did not begin under false pretenses as much as it began under no pretenses. Americans in 2001 would have supported carpet bombing Santa’s Workshop. Never mind we had been attacked by mostly Saudi operators, the blood letting would start in rural Afghanistan and the goal was some gumbo of revenge, stress relief, hunting down bin Laden in the wrong country, and maybe nation building, it didn’t matter.
But for Iraq, there had to be a seduction. There was no reason to invade it, so one had to be created. The Bush administration tried the generic “Saddam is pure evil” approach, a fixture of every recent American conflict. He gassed his own people, so it went (also tried later in Syria with Assad.) Also, Saddam was looking to move on NATO ally Turkey (substitute Poland in 2022.) But none of these stuck with the American public, so a narrative was cut from whole cloth: Saddam had weapons of mass destruction — WMDs, chemical and biological, soon enough nuclear. He was a madman who Had. To. Be. Stopped.
That this was completely untrue mattered not at all. The American MSM took up the story with great energy, first as stenographers for the Bush Administration fed by public statements, and then as amplifiers of the message fed by leaks by senior officials. At the same time, dissenting voices were stifled, including a number of whistleblowers who had been working inside Iraq and knew the weapons claims were a hoax. In an age before social media, the clampdown on other ideas was near total. When their true editor-in-chief George W. Bush stood up, a mix of Ben Bradley and Lou Grant, to proclaim “you were either with us or with the terrorists,” the media stifled dissent in its ranks nearly completely.
It became obvious from the initial days of the invasion there were no WMDs, but that mattered little. The WMDs were only the excuse to start the war. Once underway, the justification changed to regime change, democratization, nation building, and then as America’s own actions spawned an indigenous terrorist movement, fighting the indigenous terrorist movement. When all that devolved into open Sunni-Shia civil war in Iraq, the justification switched to stopping the civil war we had started. It was all a farce, with the media fanning the flames, rewriting its “takes”and creating new heroes (General David Petraeus) to replace the old heroes they had created who had failed (all the generals before Petraeus.) The New York Times issued a quiet mea culpa along the way and then like a couple caught having affairs who decided to stay married anyway, vowed never to speak of this again.
That mea culpa is worth a second look in light of Ukraine 2022. The Times wrote its reporting “depended at least in part on information from a circle of Iraqi informants, defectors and exiles bent on regime change in Iraq, people whose credibility has come under increasing public debate.” In other words, sources with an agenda of their own are not reliable. The Times noted that information from all sources was “insufficiently qualified or allowed to stand unchallenged. Looking back, we wish we had been more aggressive in re-examining the claims as new evidence emerged — or failed to emerge.” In other words, stenography is not good journalism. A reporter should ask questions, challenge veracity, and especially should do so as new information comes to light.
The NYT also said “Articles based on dire claims tended to get prominent display, while follow-up articles that called the original ones into question were sometimes buried. In some cases, there was no follow-up at all.” The memory hole.
Those are of course Journalism 101-level errors admitted to by arguably the most prestigious newspaper in the world. It would be easier to be more generous to the NYT (and of course they are just a placeholder for all Mainstream Media who committed the same sins) if they had not gone on to purposefully repeat many of the same crimes reporting on Libya and Syria, Russiagate, and now, the war in Ukraine.
The big change is that while in its previous abetting of propaganda, many in the media including the Times, took the side of the U.S. government in supporting war, in Ukraine they appear to be supporting the Ukrainian government. Much of the video and imagery out of Ukraine comes from the government and those anonymous sources of 2003 have been replaced by no real sourcing at all.
Here’s eight seconds of a tank blowing up. Where was it shot? When? Was the explosion caused by a mine, a missile, or something internal to the tank? In most cases the media has no idea of the answers. Even if they tumble on to the basic who-what-where, the exploding tank video is devoid of context. Was that the lead tank hit, blunting the Russian advance toward a village? Or was it a Russian tank that lingered in an open field and got picked off in a lucky shot, strategically without much consequence? It is just a little jolt for the viewer. Such videos were immensely popular among terrorists in Iraq; nearly every one captured had inspirational video on his phone of a U.S. vehicle being blown apart by a roadside IED. Now the same thing is on MSNBC for us.
Remember that stalled Russian convoy? The media stumbled on online photos of a Russian convoy some 40 miles long. Within hours those images became a story — the Russians had run out of gas just miles from Kiev, stalling their offensive. That soon led to think pieces claiming this was evidence of Russian military incompetency, corruption, and proof Ukraine would soon win.
It all fits with the narrative, which is that the U.S. needs to do something. The whole of the American media has laid itself available to funnel President Zelensky’s message Westward — go to war with Russia for the sake of the world. The message that seems to get lost is that at some point our “doing” (piping endless weapons into the country) may protract the war on the ground rather than end it, putting more Ukrainian lives at risk. If anything, getting both sides to the negotiating table to end the violence and hammer out a long term peace should be the story. But sadly, it is not. Instead, the war-fevered press corps hammer at the administration to talk more hawkishly and the chattering class demands that dissenters be investigated as foreign agents, detained by the military, even.
As with Iraq, there seems to be an effort at presenting a one-sided, coordinated narrative of a complex event with the potential end-game of dragging America into a new conflict. Will it work again this time? Let’s hope not.
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https://responsiblestatecraft.org/2022/03/18/iraq-war-lesson-the-seduction-may-be-sweet-but-hangover-is-hell/
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SEE ALSO: https://yourdemocracy.net/drupal/node/11276
and many articles on this subject on this site...
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bolton's shitty bottom..
John Bolton, the former National Security Advisor to US President Donald Trump, spoke to RT’s Oksana Boyko about why he believed Russia’s behavior in Ukraine was unjustified, unlike the many military campaigns the White House has waged over the years.
Bolton, the recurring joke goes, has never seen a US war that he didn’t like. At various points of time he advocated military actions against Iraq, Libya, Syria, Iran, North Korea, and Venezuela, to name a few. As part of the George W. Bush administration, he was instrumental in making the case for the 2003 invasion of Iraq under the claim that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction.[ see: https://yourdemocracy.net/drupal/node/11276. Please note that the US deception about Ukraine is more sophisticated but it is still massive deception]...
“Certainly, acting in self-defense is a legitimate use of force, nobody questions that. And I think the pre-emptive use of force against a real threat to the United States or its friends and allies in order to prevent devastation of innocent civilians is also justifiable,” he said during the interview.
He refused to apply the same logic to Russia’s attack against Ukraine, which Moscow said was meant to prevent creeping NATO expansion into Ukraine and disrupt Kiev’s plans to use force against the breakaway regions of Donetsk and Lugansk. Russian statements were a “pretext” for an unjustified act of aggression and attempted conquest, Bolton asserted.
“I think what [Russian President Vladimir Putin] thinks he is doing is making good on what he said in 2005 about reversing the breakup of the Soviet Union,” he said.
It was not clear which statement Bolton was referring to. In 2005, Russian leader Vladimir Putin famously called the collapse of the Communist superpower “the greatest geopolitical disaster of the 20th century” in the sense that it brought economic devastation and human misery to millions of its citizens. Putin has stated on several occasions that there was no way to restore the USSR.
When comparing the hostilities in Iraq and in Ukraine, Bolton refused to acknowledge that the death toll inflicted on civilians by Russia was smaller. On the contrary, “there are substantially greater civilian casualties in Ukraine,” he stated.
In both conflicts, the civilian casualty numbers remain murky. The Iraq Body Count database puts the number of civilians directly killed by US-led coalition forces in the deadliest first four weeks of the 2003 operation at, at least, 6842. The UN reported 726 civilian deaths in Ukraine between February 24 and March 15, not attributing the casualties to any warring party.
Bolton rejected the idea that the Russian military could be telling the truth when saying it was not using maximum force in Ukraine to prevent unnecessary casualties.
Russia’s “style of warfare is shocking to the rest of the world,” Bolton said. “This is a very brutal form of warfare and it’s not going to achieve Russia’s objectives, to say the least.” The pace of the offensive and high Russian casualties claimed by Ukraine are evidence of the “incompetence of its military and intelligence services,” he said.
The ex-official flat out refused to recognize reporting in TIME magazine on Ukraine’s problems with far-right groups and their role in encouraging and assisting like-minded radicals around the world.
“If I thought it was true, it would be a concern,” Bolton said of the reporting. “If you have this information and can verify it, then I think you need to present it and people can make up their own mind.” But even if it was true, he added, it has “nothing to do with the Russian invasion of Ukraine,”he said.
The US, on the other hand, was justified in its military operation in Syria because “terrorists supported by Iran, supported by the government of Syria were threatening to create an Islamic state that would have threatened the West as a whole,” he said.
The terrorist group Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS) rose to prominence in Iraq before taking over large sections of Syrian territory, becoming a major threat to the region and a global magnet for radical Islamists. It was a major threat to the Syrian government, as were rival jihadist groups.
The US keeps a military presence in Syria with a stated goal of preventing the resurgence of IS, but its broader policy towards the country is aimed at preventing Damascus from rebuilding the parts of the country under its control and reintegrating those that are not. Northeastern parts of Syria are controlled by US-backed predominantly Kurdish militias.
Watch the entire interview with John Bolton on RT.
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https://www.rt.com/news/552437-john-bolton-interview-ukraine/
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