Who, Precisely, Is Attacking the World?
The stuck pigs are squealing. To shift the onus from the U.S. State Department, Hillary Clinton paints WikiLeaks’ release of the “diplomatic cables” as an “attack on the international community.” To reveal truth is equivalent, in the eyes of the U.S. government, to an attack on the world.
It is WikiLeaks’ fault that all those U.S. diplomats wrote a quarter of a million undiplomatic messages about America’s allies, a.k.a. puppet states. It is also WikiLeaks’ fault that a member of the U.S. government could no longer stomach the cynical ways in which the U.S. government manipulates foreign governments to serve, not their own people, but American interests, and delivered the incriminating evidence to WikiLeaks.
The U.S. government actually thinks that it was WikiLeaks’ patriotic duty to return the evidence and to identify the leaker. After all, we mustn’t let the rest of the world find out what we are up to. They might stop believing our lies.
The influential German magazine Der Spiegel writes: “It is nothing short of a political meltdown for U.S. foreign policy.”
This might be more a hope than a reality. The “Soviet threat” during the second half of the 20th century enabled U.S. governments to create institutions that subordinated the interests of other countries to those of the U.S. government. After decades of following U.S. leadership, European “leaders” know no other way to act. Finding out that the boss badmouths and deceives them is unlikely to light a spirit of independence. At least not until America’s economic collapse becomes more noticeable.
The question is: how much will the press tell us about the documents? Spiegel itself has said that the magazine is permitting the U.S. government to censor, at least in part, what it prints about the leaked material. Most likely, this means the public will not learn the content of the 4,330 documents that “are so explosive that they are labeled ‘NOFORN,’” meaning that foreigners, including presidents, prime ministers, and security services that share information with the CIA are not permitted to read the documents. Possibly, also, the content of the 16,652 cables classified as “secret” will not be revealed to the public.
Most likely the press, considering their readers’ interests, will focus on gossip and the unflattering remarks Americans made about their foreign counterparts. It will be good for laughs. Also, the U.S. government will attempt to focus the media in ways that advance U.S. policies.
Indeed, it has already begun. On Nov. 29, National Public Radio emphasized that the cables showed that Iran was isolated even in the Muslim world, making it easier for the Israelis and Americans to attack. The leaked cables reveal that the president of Egypt, an American puppet, hates Iran, and the Saudi Arabian government has been long urging the U.S. government to attack Iran. In other words, Iran is so dangerous to the world that even its co-religionists want Iran wiped off the face of the earth.
NPR presented several nonobjective “Iranian experts” who denigrated Iran and its leadership and declared that the U.S. government, by resisting its Middle Eastern allies’ call for bombing Iran, was the moderate in the picture. The fact that President George W. Bush declared Iran to be a member of “the axis of evil” and threatened repeatedly to attack Iran and that President Obama has continued the threats – Adm. Michael Mullen, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, has just reiterated that the U.S. hasn’t taken the attack option off the table – are not regarded by American “Iran experts” as indications of anything other than American moderation.
Somehow it did not come across the NPR newscast that it is not Iran but Israel that routinely slaughters civilians in Lebanon, Gaza, and the West Bank, and that it is not Iran but the U.S. and its NATO mercenaries who slaughter civilians in Iraq, Afghanistan, Yemen, and Pakistan.
Iran has not invaded any of its neighbors, but the Americans are invading countries halfway around the globe.
The “Iranian experts” treated the Saudi and Egyptian rulers’ hatred of Iran as a vindication of the U.S. and Israeli governments’ demonization of Iran. Not a single “Iranian expert” was capable of pointing out that the tyrants who rule Egypt and Saudi Arabia fear Iran because the Iranian government represents the interests of Muslims, and the Saudi and Egyptian governments represent the interests of the Americans.
Think what it must feel like to be a tyrant suppressing the aspirations of your own people in order to serve the hegemony of a foreign country, while a nearby Muslim government strives to protect its people’s independence from foreign hegemony.
Undoubtedly, the tyrants become very anxious. What if their oppressed subjects get ideas? Little wonder the Saudi and Egyptian rulers want the Americans to eliminate the independent-minded country that is a bad example for Egyptian and Saudi subjects.
As long as the dollar has enough value that it can be used to purchase foreign governments, information damaging to the U.S. government is unlikely to have much affect. As Alain of Lille said a long time ago, “Money is all.”
Read more by Paul Craig Roberts
- The Shame of Being an American – February 16th, 2011
- Kleptocrats at Work – February 6th, 2011
- Things Have to Change in Order to Remain the Same – January 31st, 2011
- Western Civilization Has Shed Its Values – December 5th, 2010
- A Government Caught Up in Mendacity and Lies – December 1st, 2010





JLS
November 30th, 2010 at 10:45 pm
"As long as the dollar has enough value that it can be used to purchase foreign governments, information damaging to the U.S. government is unlikely to have much affect. As Alain of Lille said a long time ago, “Money is all.”"
It may not have enough value for much longer thanks to Mr. Bernanke and our endless hemorrghing of dollars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
MvGuy
November 30th, 2010 at 11:00 pm
Thank You Mr. Roberts for another clear-eyed look at our (U.S.] hegemonic dance of lies and death!!!!!!!
Anti_Govt_Rebel
December 1st, 2010 at 12:00 am
Mr. Roberts,
Please keep writing. We need more of your no-nonsense, straight talking columns to try to wake people up!
theothercanada
December 1st, 2010 at 12:29 am
It is very hopeful and uplifting to read journalist not infected by self-censorship.
Thank you.
keltrava
December 1st, 2010 at 1:16 am
The possibility has not yet been explored that those feeding back the Saudi, Egypt and other mid east states rulers statements are misrepresenting them to Washington as part of the Israeli agenda.
It would not surprise that the Saudi King and others come out saying they were deliberately misquoted.
Dan
December 1st, 2010 at 3:59 am
Bingo!
"Think what it must feel like to be a tyrant suppressing the aspirations of your own people in order to serve the hegemony of a foreign country, while a nearby Muslim government strives to protect its people’s independence from foreign hegemony."
NPR is enGrossed (pun intended) in sock puppet solipsism: a secondary reality of spin, hype, hand-to-mouth opportunism that provides a relaxing sense of security for its listeners. The sycophant tyrants must feel very abject and humiliated in the light of these revelations.
Roberts rules!
richard vajs
December 1st, 2010 at 4:33 am
NPR has become pathetic – a bunch of ham-and-eggers trying to keep their little jobs by sucking up to our fascist Establishment while trying to hold onto its liberal Yuppie image. The true importance of NPR is that it is the place for young, connected children of the wealthy to get their ticket punched as interns. That and as an economic boon to makers of tote bags and coffee mugs.
Ikram Ghouri
December 1st, 2010 at 4:43 am
There is time for change but i do wonder whether american bureaucraty is able to transform it,s mind set.
When a state is going to melt down their institution become rough and inefficient. Americans till today are purchasing the media and media war is going on e.g. CIA could not purchase a Muslim in Germany now they have tried their christian agents to blow two Mosques in Berlin. One graveyard mosque which is very beautiful and the other noor Mosques biggest centre in Berlin.
American administration should rethink their policies against Muslims around the world and even in america in which thousands of Muslims are sitting in jails wothout trial.
It will never serve american interest rather is counter productive.
Andrew
December 1st, 2010 at 5:45 am
"Iran is so dangerous to the world that even its co-religionists want Iran wiped off the face of the earth"
Hummm – Iran is Shiite and the Arab states are Sunni. To say they are co-relgionists is a bit like saying the Protestants and Catholics in Northern Ireland are co-religionists. 30 years plus of increasingly US financed terrorism in which the Thatcher governemt was nearly murdered lus hundreds of innocents murdered.
Popsiq
December 1st, 2010 at 7:30 am
For somebody who has actually been under sniper fire in Bosnia, the truth about wikileaks is not strained in hyperbole. Ms Clinton is a fatuous as any Buchco sakes rep or field agent, only slighly less effective.
She would recognize 'an attack on the international community' if ever there was one.
Roberto Bouret
December 1st, 2010 at 7:42 am
Hillary accusing Assange of attacking the world is like Al Capone accusing Robin Hood of stealing.
Bruce Moran
December 1st, 2010 at 9:24 am
This is getting way too rich. So, Empire America demands that Wikileaks return the info and identify the leaker. Hey Israel, you gonna return the info stolen by your spy. Johnathan Pollard? You know Empire America is going to demand the same from YOU!
Remember the Liberty.
RickR30
December 1st, 2010 at 10:41 am
Thanks to Antiwar for finally publishing an article by Mr. Roberts. I hope that we'll continue to see his work here. He is one of the most important minds.
It is no surprise that usrael manipulate the releases and what gets more attention. The fact that the whole Iran thing comes out first and most loudly is very telling. The zionist machinery won't stop with this nonsense until America invades the poor Iranians for no reason.
The question then becomes, what is israel going to do without Iran? Who are they going to demonize next? What government will we have to topple next to satisfy their insecurity, paranoia, and misanthropy?
Bruce Moran
December 1st, 2010 at 11:29 am
According to "A Clean Break", the neocon manual for Israel, it's Iraq, Iran, Syria.
liveload
December 1st, 2010 at 12:06 pm
It seems the siprnet became an echo chamber for the pro-Iran war idea. The problem is a lack of real intel assets in Iran, which itself is an issue with the current foreign policy. We can never get them to accept our demands as long as thier security is threatened. No amount of money, cajoling, bullying, or killing is going to change that. Anne W. Patterson's review of Pakistan proves in detail that our current framework fails to acheive its goals. That framework is dead as a viable concept. Getting a pro-US administration in power to work with has failed consistenly. No matter how much money, military, and time we throw at it, failing to address the security issues that generate the gravity in the region is our undoing almost everytime. Zhang summarized a sensible framework in his conversations with Gfoeller regarding Chinese aspirations in Kyrgystan. It's time we used this information dump to not only fire off broadsides at the current framework for foreign policy, but to also use that same information to formulate a sensible alternative going forward. The people who have the clarity and acumen for such thought are in many cases already in the employ of the USG. They just need their voices heard.
RickR30
December 1st, 2010 at 2:39 pm
Thanks. I forget to keep looking at that document. It's the manual the idiots in Washington must obey.
jeff_davis
December 1st, 2010 at 6:34 pm
"Think what it must feel like to be a tyrant suppressing the aspirations of your own people in order to serve the hegemony of a foreign country, while a nearby Muslim government strives to protect its people’s independence from foreign hegemony."
Or perhaps the Saudi and Egyptian leadership isn't really concerned about Iran at all, but are just willing if not anxious to tell the US what it wants to hear. "Stupid Americans. They're infested with Israeli agents who want America to do the heavy lifting and attack Iran for them. Best to be careful. Sooner or later the Jews will overreach,…again,… as they've done repeatedly for the last five-thousand years. As long as they have the power though, it's best we play it safe, and tell the Americans what they want to hear."
matt
December 2nd, 2010 at 11:14 am
el pais the spanish newspaper had todays edition to the wikileaks the whole newspapper was about it. need more people to start there own wikileaks for the globalist IMF to be known…….
VIVA WIKILEAKS AND FOUNDER……………………………
Brian McCandliss
December 2nd, 2010 at 2:23 pm
No one understands what's really going on here; America is a 150-year old oligarchy which serves the ruling interest, while acting in the People's name– when actually the "People" are those of the individual states, not the collective aggregate.
Everything that happens is thus the inevitable effect of politcal causation; and expecting different, is like expecting water to run uphill; it's sheer political illiteracy.
I guess people can either learn the real world, or continue in ignorance of these simple FACTS… and do the same wrong thing over and over, and expect it to end up RIGHT.
Carpenter
December 2nd, 2010 at 2:28 pm
Addendum to my last post:
I don't doubt that there is also some ethnic hatred here. The Persians in Iran, "Land of the Aryan" as the name means (which all Iranians make sure to remember, and will tell you if they trust you), look a whole lot better than Arabs. While maybe one in six Arab women look good, about half of Iranian women have somewhat attractive features. ENVY is a very big factor in politics.
Fun fact: out of all the groups of asylum seekers in Western Europe, only Iranian immigrants move on to college and university in the same proportion as native Westerners.
Brad Anderson
December 2nd, 2010 at 3:16 pm
Ok, newsflash: politicians succeed or fail on VOTES, not truth; same with the media, but with ratings. Therefore both will say anything that gets this for them.
That's why Obama wants to shut down the internet: because lies only work in the absence of FACTS.
Brad Anderson
December 2nd, 2010 at 3:46 pm
Neocons are find of whining how "Israel has a right to exist," meaning that the US has a duty to defend them at our own expense, even against terrorists. And the same with all the other meddling in the Middle East to achieve it.
But if I walk down a dark street in a bad part of Los Angeles with a million dollars in each hand, the government won't assign me a squadron against the certainty of muggers– and I'M an AMERICAN CITIZEN– IN AMERICA.
I guess we see where the fed's priorities lie: big oil and Zion.
My word to Isreal: "Sucks to be you; find a safer homeland, or protect the one you got BY YOURSELF, we're not your bodyguards."
My word to Big Oil: security is a cost-factor in ANY industry: BUY YOUR OWN.
My word to EVERYONE: ISLAM IS A PSYCHO CULT: face it, or face another 9/11.
Franktruth
February 20th, 2011 at 8:16 pm
Mr. Anderson points out the error of the United States government trying to do what it perceives as good. Governments cannot do good, they can only restrain evil. Both Neocons (Fascists) and Socialists try to use government to FORCE or MANIPULATE people to do what they consider to be good works.
Our founders knew that; that's why Article I section 8 of the U.S. Constitution exclusively lists the powers Congress has. It was understood by the Federalists that section 8 is a binding contract of limitation – what is not listed therein Congress cannot do. (See Federalist # 84 by Alexander Hamilton.) The Anti-federalists didn't buy the "binding contract of limitation" theory, convened an Article V (U.S. Constitution) amendment convention, and wrote the Bill of Rights specifically saying some things Congress CANNOT do.
Article I section 10 specifically lists what States CANNOT do.
George Washington, Andrew Johnson and Calvin Coolidge appear to be Chief Executives that most appreciated that central governments do the most good by restraining its own power, not wielding it.
Washington is credited to have said "Government is not reason; it is not eloquent; it is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master."
Johnson wrote: "Outside of the Constitution we have no legal authority more than private citizens, and within it we have only so much as that instrument gives us. This broad principle limits all our functions and applies to all subjects."
Calvin Coolidge said "The government of the United States is a device for maintaining in perpetuity the rights of the people, with the ultimate extinction of all privileged classes."
As one who firmly believes "Israel has a right to exist," I agree that Israel needs to "… protect the [homeland] you got BY YOURSELF…". Which would be much easier for them to do if the U.S. taxpayer sent NO FOREIGN AID to the United Nations, or any sovereign nation including Israel.