America’s Election Year Phantasmagoria Roger Franklin

https://quadrant.org.au/opinion/america/2024/02/joe-bidens-election-year-phantasmagoria/

EXCERPTS:

Just now, though, as the process of selecting America’s next president leaves the station and gathers speed towards the summer conventions and November, it might well be that only a writer with the eye of Thompson’s better years can do justice to the phantasmagoria unfolding from the southern border to the snowy north, New York’s courtrooms to the mob-looted stores of Oakland, Chicago, St Louis, Los Angeles and, well, just everywhere. There is no need to hit the hallucinogens; wide-eyed reality mocks illicit pharmacology’s fantasies and distortions.

Start with the Middle East, where the remains of three Americans killed over the weekend as they slept in their Jordan barracks will by now be in Germany and the care of Mortuary Affairs Specialists, the Pentagon’s in-house undertakers. The drone that did for them was launched by what the White House’s team of press-office obfuscators prefer to call “militants”, although there are times when reporters’ questions oblige them to preface that description with “Iran-backed”. Thompsonesque weirdness prevails in the Biden administration’s perception of the situation it is attempting with limited success to sell the American public. “We don’t want a war with Iran,” National Security Council flack John Kirby has repeatedly insisted, despite Iran quite clearly being very much at war with America.

Since early October, US bases in Iraq, Syria and Jordan have been targeted on a near daily schedule — some 160 times in a campaign which might well serve as the very definition of asymmetrical warfare. The drones Iran makes and supplies its proxies costs peanuts; the missiles that have destroyed all but a handful of those incoming threats cost millions and, worse, are said to have been used so often they are now in short supply. That tally of attacks, just by the way, doesn’t include what the Houthis of Yemen have been throwing at Red Sea shipping and, when the opportunity presents itself, US warships. Joe Biden’s response to all this? So far nothing but a series of ineffective air strikes on Yemen targets and his flacks’ vague promise that more action will be taken somewhere, somehow, to some extent.

“I don’t think we need a wider war in the Middle East,” Biden said on Tuesday, “that’s not what I’m looking for.” That comment, like all his interactions these days with the White House press corps, was delivered as he prepared to board the presidential helicopter, those words even harder to make out above the chopper’s turbines than the standard incoherence of any typical public appearance. Would he mount direct attacks on Iran, the reporters shouted? America’s commander in chief stumbled, then landed upon a jesuitical distinction. His “problem” , he said, was that Tehran had provided drones and missiles to those pesky “militants”. That Iran also funds and directs them, from Hamas in Gaza to Hezbollah’s various iterations in Lebanon and elsewhere, was nothing he thought worth mentioning or, just as likely, thought about at all.

Contrast that wait-and-see prevarication with, say, Ronald Reagan, who reacted to just one Iranian provocation, the 1988 mining of a US frigate in international waters, by sinking five of Tehran’s warships and pulverising a pair of former drilling rigs converted to offshore radar stations, That attack, Operation Preying Mantis, came just four days after the USS Samuel B Roberts was damaged and 10 crewmen injured. Or think — and Biden’s people would prefer you didn’t — of Donald Trump in 2020 and how the death of a single US contractor in Iraq prompted the retaliatory and immediate assassination of Revolutionary Guards’ chief Qasem Soleimani,  director of Iran’s regional catspaws. After both those US actions the mullahs made a point to mind their manners. With Biden they see no such need.

Neither comparison with previous presidents does Biden any credit, while the words of a third, Richard Nixon, best describe what Americans are seeing. “If, when the chips are down,” he said in defence of bombing Cambodia, “the world’s most powerful nation, the United States of America, acts like a pitiful, helpless giant, the forces of totalitarianism and anarchy will threaten free nations and free institutions throughout the world.”

Biden’s latest pitiful, helpless excuse for not confronting Iran is that he can’t act without congressional authorisation. That claim is nonsense, a flat-out lie as demonstrated by the first paragraph of the Pentagon statement announcing that Soleimani had been sent to frolic with his 72 virgins (emphasis added):

At the direction of the President, the U.S. military has taken decisive defensive action to protect U.S. personnel abroad by killing Qasem Soleimani, the head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Quds Force, a U.S.-designated Foreign Terrorist Organization. 

 

THE FEW Democrat congressmen prepared to go before the cameras and recite White House talking points present no better defence than their president. Putin and Xi, they suggest, want Tehran flattened to keep US attention deflected from Ukraine and Taiwan, so Biden is being very canny in not making their wish come true. As Trump never fails to mention on the stump, those countries’ borders are rated more important by the White House than America’s own. It’s an observation that resonates with anyone who has lately visited a big-city Walmart superstore for socks or undies, which are locked behind glass to foil shoplifting and looters. Likewise almost everything in the major drug-store chains, which have been pillaged so often by organised mob attacks that they are shutting what had been profit-generating locations before the current outbreak of nationwide lawlessness, as per the TV news clip below. Not all the looters are migrants, but many are.

In New York on the weekend, two NYPD uniformed cops were set upon by what news reports described as 11 undocumented aliens from a nearby migrant hotel, where city taxpayers foot the bill for their accommodation. In Chicago, police have just made multiple arrests stemming from the organised mob lootings of chain stores, again featuring miscreants straight from the border. In Denver, another proud and virtue-signalling “sanctuary city” until illegals began to pour in, the local hospital system is at breaking point  as city coffers empty, as the mayor put it, to clothe “people who arrive here in sandals and T-shirts”. Again, these human burdens have Mexican dust still fresh on their sneakers.

Asked by pollsters about the most pressing issues facing the nation, illegal immigration and border security lead the list by a country mile. Yet for reasons that invite talk of conspiracy, the Biden administration does nothing. Last week, the feds took Texas to court for attempting to close the border and won an injunction the Lone Star State has pointedly ignored. As with Iran, Biden & Co., have yet to do anything about such defiance, a reticence no doubt due to the prospect of footage showing federal troops clashing with state national guardsmen on the nightly news. Twenty-five GOP governors have either sent their own guardsmen to help Texas shut down the illegal crossings — 370,000 in December alone — or indicated they will do so if Washington attempts to use force. It is no exaggeration to say America has not seen such a clash between states and the federal government since South Carolina’s militia fired on Fort Sumter in 1861.

Biden denies it, but all this is his doing. Amongst his first actions, along with curtailing oil drilling and pipelines, was the scrapping of Trump’s border wall and revocation of policies that obliged asylum seekers to file applications and wait in Mexico for their visas. During his three years in office, somewhere between seven and nine million illegals have crossed the border. His pitiful excuse is that he has no power to enforce immigration laws because Congress won’t let him.

 

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