Time to Impeach Trump

 

 

by Gilbert Doctorow, Ph.D.

My political positions have very frequently been countercurrent.   When the Liberals were calling for Trump’s head, when Senator Charles Schumer and Representative Nancy Pelosi in Congress were preaching all-out obstructionism against the newly inaugurated President to thwart his policies, I was urging Progressives to lay down their pitchforks and try to deal constructively with the new administration for the good of the nation.

Now, in the past several weeks, in a belated show of bipartisanship, Democratic Party leaders have finally found a negotiating partner in Donald Trump, starting with relief to the “Dreamers” in the sphere of immigration policy and extending to the bill raising the national debt ceiling.  More deals are said to be underway. In theory, that is all to the good.

However, in the meantime this President demonstrated fulsomely in his speech to the General Assembly of the United Nations, that it is high time for him to go.   And that is not because of his widely discussed volatility, impulsiveness and narcissism.  It is because of his irremediable stupidity, primitivism and thuggery that are leading this country on a path to commit unspeakable horrors abroad.

To be sure, Trump’s shocking debut at the UN comes as the culmination of a lengthy decline in civilized behavior by our national leaders over the past two decades.

The swagger and bloated self-importance of George Bush did not itself come of a day.  At the start of his presidency, after 9/11 but before the fateful invasion of Iraq, Bush would make one or another outrageous, lying statement about international affairs, such as the “weapons of mass destruction” he alleged were retained by Saddam Hussein. Then he would pause and look into the camera with hesitation, as if wondering whether his whoppers would be swallowed by the public. Satisfied that he had gotten away with it, he resumed his rant.  That hint of self-doubt or fear of discovery disappeared with the years even as adversity on the battlefield and in the economy that his misguided, if not criminal acts gave rise to progressed apace. Bush limped along to the end of his second term none the wiser.

Our intellectual president Barack Obama, with his term on the Harvard Law Review as seeming proof of mental and cultural distinction, never did learn to behave in a statesmanlike manner.  From start to finish, he conducted himself with scandalous insouciance. His well-meaning arm over the shoulder of Queen Elizabeth, which the Brits saw through as disrespect for court decorum, his chewing gum while  standing before the public eye were noted by our commentators indulgently. They never noted, however, when he slipped beyond faux pas to openly insulting behavior towards leaders of the world’s great powers, when he issued slurs which in other people’s mouths would be denounced as a form of racism.

One such case occurred when Obama stood by the side of Chinese President Xi in the White House Rose Garden for a press briefing, and said that he would be watching closely to see that the Chinese implemented the actions that had been agreed upon.  Then there was his likening Putin to a misbehaving schoolboy, skulking at the back of the classroom. Or his description of the whole country, Russia, as a fading regional power that produced nothing that anyone wanted. This was gratuitously insulting, degrading and finally very primitive behavior for the leader of the world’s mightiest country. And the content of his remarks was based on verifiable untruths, if only he had taken care to do fact check.

However, all of these inexcusable verbal misdeeds of the recent past are nothing compared to what Donald Trump delivered on Tuesday during the 42-minute speech marking his debut at the General Assembly of the United Nations.

Trump’s vicious remarks directed at Iran and Venezuela may have been in line with the “Axis of Evil” speeches of George W. Bush.  But his threat to “totally destroy” North Korea, a country of 22 million, if it so much as “threatened” the United States and its allies went beyond incivility.

The name Adolph Hitler has come up repeatedly in American political discourse over many decades in a search for a likeness going beyond the pale. It was applied famously by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to Russian President Vladimir Putin when she sought to vilify the Russian leader as had never been done before even in the worst days of the original Cold War with the Soviet Union.

By his threats to annihilate a nation issued from the tribune of the world’s greatest forum for peace-making, Trump cast himself as a modern day Hitler.

Those of us who once backed Donald Trump on the basis of his promised normalization of relations with the world’s other nuclear superpower were initially confused and disappointed when he surrounded himself with Neocons, Liberal Interventionists and other advisers and implementers who proceeded to speak and act in ways that directly contradicted Trump’s promised changes to US foreign policy.

But now there is no room for confusion or indulgence.  We cannot point a finger at his defense secretary, “Mad Dog” Mattis, or at his Neocon ambassador to the UN, Nikki Haley, or at any of the generals propping him up from the right and the left.  This time it is the boss himself who spoke outrageously, who delivered what some media outlets properly called a “tirade” and others, more timidly spoke of as “bellicose.”  

What marked this speech from the long series of uncontrolled, self-indulgent tweets on foreign and domestic affairs from this President, was that it was precisely a scripted speech in which every word had obviously been weighed beforehand for its likely interpretation and public impact.  And it was the speech of a thug, of a dictator whose place in the world’s gallery of aggressors and war-makers is safely reserved.

On the day of the speech, major U.S. media contented themselves with quoting Donald’s more remarkable statements, starting with his threat to North Korea.  On day two, the editorial boards reached their conclusions on how to handle it and the remarks became more interesting and revealing. The New York Times, for example, allowed itself to point to the contradiction between Trump’s celebration of sovereign nation states, with their own traditions and patriotism and his call for regime change with respect to the three states singled out as “rogues” threatening the world order

Indeed, the sovereignty for some and not others approach on which the entire speech was built is a fault line of illogic in Trump’s thinking, if we divert ourselves with a rational analysis of what was an irrational speech.  The same fundamental contradiction was inherent in all of US foreign policy these past twenty-five years,  that of some farm animals being more equal than other farm animals, to put it in terms of George Orwell.  However, until now it was masked by the stress on universal values as the guide to foreign policy and as the justification for punishing evil-doers.  When that fig leaf is stripped away, when foreign policy is said to be built on principles of Realism and national interest, then the whole logic of might makes right, and US assertion of its right to be the world’s judge and jury is plain for all to see.

After he is removed from office on whatever grounds will do the trick, including phony charges of collusion with the Kremlin to win the presidential race, I wish Donald Trump a comfortable retirement to a bar stool at one of the lounges of Trump Tower, which is where he and his bombastic remarks truly belong.

 

 

© Gilbert Doctorow, 2017

 

    * * * *

 

 

 Gilbert Doctorow is an independent political analyst based in Brussels. His latest book Does Russia Have a Future? was published in August 2015. His forthcoming book Does the United States Have a Future? will be published in October 2017.

One thought on “Time to Impeach Trump

  1. Dear Dr. Doctorow,
    Having gone through similar transformations of basic attitude toward trump as you describe for yourself, I would underwrite your basic conclusion. — Remove from office on whatever grounds will do the trick. Unfortnately, the US is in such dire straights that even that will not “do the trick”. Instead, I suggest it is time to look away from the US Presidency, entirely, as in the sense of Trump’s “destroy N. Korea *entirely.*” Were the UN the set of a “world government”, one would have otherwise expected the gendarmes to immediate have arrested Trump or, since he had merely committed crimes in words, or announced his intentions to commit crimes, at least take him into custoday and then away, perhaps in a straightjacket to the appropriate institution, to be drugged there for his own safety.
    Historically speaking, of course, Trump’s crime was merely to have openly anounced the intent to commit crimes, whereas — as you point out — his predecessors did the same thing, explaining usually after the fact that they were motivated by the most sacrosanct of motives.
    As I suggest, look away from Trump, look away from the Presidency. — Ah, but the “Deep State” is against Trump? What nonsense. Without the “Deep State”, Trump would never have been elected. The Deep State itself is in dire straights. Were it merely a question of managing the “Continuity of Government,” were Trump a hindrance to that CoG, he could be impeached, assassinated, or he could just give up. No,this time it doesn’t matter, this time it is not a question of managing CoG. But CoG is in force. The entire political system of the US is shoved aside.
    Trump’s blustering, bluffing, his openly annunced criminality threats, are, on the one hand, “grandstanding” as “gaming.” But that is not solely because of Trump’s style, his “transactional” dealing-wheeling style of politics. Each time such occurs, it is public signalling on the part of the CoG/Deep State of the ultimate price they want to claim they *can extract*, be it N. Korea, Iran, Venezuela, Syria, or even Afghanistan and directly Russia and China. But the CoG regime likewise requires a step-by-step pragmatism. “Deconfliction” is still the game in Syria, but when and where the Americans/CoG make a move to reverse the achievements of the “axis of resistance,” the Russians are in a position to say “no, here you stop, here you can’t”. Up to now, the Americans/CoG has decided to back off, so let Trump denounce Assad as a “dictator.” Inconsequential. The CoG decides whether they want the Russians to bomb them, embedded as they are with their terrorist proxies, not Trump. Trump still thinks he “did right” by lobbing Tomahawks at a Syrian airbase, so his generals apparently don’t think it worthwhile to puncture his ego and maybe false-flag intelligence is just too complex. Inconsequential. He doesn’t decide anything.He is under control, which is not necessarily good news for the rest of us.
    The CoG has opened trip-wire “chicken games” across the entire globe. Unlike in the case of the years of Trump’s predecessors, there is no way to simply topple regimes, bomb at will etc. with impunity. Unlike longer term schemes and subversion plans, each of the “chicken games” is in an area that can spark global conflagration quickly, the tentacles of resistance are everywhere dense. The US is reduced to play only its “own interests”because anywhere they think that had friends, they hear “Ami go home.” Nothing the CoG does will come cheaply, and where they have no great record for “winning” anything anyway, their step-by-step pragmatism is discovering to them the immense cost of backlash (or what the Russians call “stepping on the same rake again”). The CoG no longer has the time, nor the much-spoken of “patience”, nor the means to scheme and plan long-term. The CoG is in dire straights.
    It is as if each step the CoG has taken were intended to prove that the US, in order to save itself, has to retreat within its borders as quickly as possible, because anything it does outside those borders will end in disaster for the US itself.
    So, does Trump himself realize that he is stepping on the same rake as his predecessors? Almost certainly not. But that is inconsequential. Trump speaks only for himself, as Rex Tillerson likes to say. Trump’s
    “base” hits the roof in hysteria when Tillerson says it. Inconsequential. Trump is simply drunk on the power he personally does not have by virtue of his office, and which he could not intellectually wield even if he had it, and he is drunk on a delusional power he believes his country still has. Perhaps he is so instructed by his generals, but they know better. Just watch what they are doing. Who cares what they say? Inconsequential.
    In any case, the US of A will not turn to civility and law by its own free choice. This is the US of A, after all. Maybe Trump will just get tired and go away. Inconsequential.

    Like

Comments are closed.