Death of a Myth
Americans need to wake up to the realities of a post-unipolar world before it’s too late.
(Photo by Ukrainian Presidential Press Office via Getty Images)
As we witness the collapse of various mainstream
narratives, especially those surrounding the U.S./NATO war with Russia
in Ukraine, Americans should begin to reassess their understanding of
U.S. national leadership. Most American citizens have no notion of the
great disparity between what their government does overseas and the
stories they hear from its mouthpieces. As a result, Americans
unwittingly support all sorts of foreign operations with little or no
understanding of what is actually going on. For years, they have been
misled by a non-stop propaganda campaign that is only now beginning to
crumble.
We are experiencing the death throes of the United States’ unipolar
hegemony over large parts of world. Until citizens begin to realize the
magnitude of their government’s policy deceptions, it will become
increasingly difficult to understand the United States’ changing global
position and adjust to the effects of the growing negative perception of
our country held by many people around the world.
Since World War II, and particularly after the collapse of the Soviet
Union, the United States was the dominant and unrivaled world power.
Instead of being a peacekeeper and honest “world's policeman,” the U.S.
has increasingly been a destabilizing bully. Many leaders worldwide have
been reluctant to speak up about the increasingly destructive nature of
U.S. foreign policy for fear of being punished. But as U.S. stature and
power declines, large parts of the world have been seeking arrangements
to protect themselves from U.S. predation.
Most Americans do not understand why such realignments are occurring,
thanks to a constant stream of propaganda about America being the “most
generous,” the “exceptional nation,” a “nation that sets aside its
interests for the benefit of the world,” an “important source of good”
around the globe as the “protector of the rules based order,” always
shouldering the heavy responsibility to protect the international system
and weak nations from bad actors, ad nauseam. According to a number of sources, U.S.-caused wars have been directly responsible for the deaths of more than 10 million
people since World War II. The neoconservatives will scoff at these
facts and their sources, but most of the rest of the world believes this
to be true.
Most Americans cannot accept these observations because they
contradict the narrative given them by the omnipresent state propaganda
machine. While the ever growing list
of American misdeeds abroad has for years been largely unchallenged at
home, it has become increasingly obvious to many across the globe.
Americans should take note. For example, the Chinese Foreign Ministry
has just published an overview
of what they see as U.S. misbehavior. The U.S. establishment and
well-meaning patriots may dismiss the Chinese observations, but they
ring true to many who live outside of the neoconservative propaganda
bubble.
Contrary to establishment mythology, the U.S. is famous for breaking
its promises, violating treaties, and abandoning agreements. The list is
long: the U.S.'s 1990 promise not to move NATO east into former Warsaw Convention countries, the abrogation of the ABM, INF, Open Skies, START treaties, the JCPOA, the agreement with Libya, and others. The U.S. has also repeatedly flouted international law by invading countries that do not bow to U.S. hegemony.
There are a number of U.S. agencies that covertly fund NGO election
interference operations. Most Americans have no idea that the Cold
War–era National Endowment for Democracy was created to influence elections in countries around the world, and has interfered in many. (The National Endowment for Democracy was spending money in Russia until the Russians expelled them.) Then there are the famous “Color Revolutions” sponsored by various U.S. agencies. Some estimate the U.S. has interfered in as many as fifty countries.
The days of pretending to ignore this destructive behavior are
drawing to a close. We are entering a period in which the populations of
many countries may decide that being subject to American hegemony is
not in their interests. Increasing numbers of countries have joined and
formed alternative alliances outside U.S. influence. SCO, BRICS+, OPEC+,
and others have experienced growing membership as countries that
believe their interests are better protected by these non-U.S.
affiliated alliances sign on.
The fallout of the tragic and unnecessary Ukraine war has accelerated
this movement to seek other cooperative associations. As America’s
European allies are learning, there can be huge political and economic
costs to being associated with the U.S. The populations of Europe have
watched their own economies suffer and paid dearly for energy because of
the ten rounds of self-destructive sanctions imposed on Russia.
The purveyor and protector of the "rules-based order" decided that
Germany should not import cheap Russian natural gas. America's president and a senior State Department official threatened
to cut off the pipeline supplying Russian natural gas if Russia did not
bow to Washington's wishes. Coincidentally, the Nord Stream gas
pipelines were blown up not long after. The U.S. Secretary of State said
the sabotage was an “opportunity,” and the assistant secretary of State appeared
to be satisfied. The neoconservatives lauding this act of terrorism
against an ally of the U.S. may believe pretending Washington was not
responsible will reassure America and Europe, but the rest of the world
believes otherwise.
Many will ignore or diminish the consequences of a possible U.S. role
in the destruction of the Nord Stream pipelines. But this addition to
the list of callous acts believed abroad to be perpetrated by the U.S.
further would undermine the narrative of America as the “generous
nation,” “leader of the free world,” “protector of the rules-based
order.” For years, these contradictions were skillfully finessed and
ignored by a compliant press and complicit institutions that profited
from these deceptions. But as the U.S. appears less powerful, the rest
of the world is beginning to take notice and are moving to seek other
protective friendships.
Less than two years ago, the “most powerful military in the history
of man” was chased out of Afghanistan by a group of ragtag militants
armed with small arms and mounted on donkeys, bicycles, and motor
scooters. The Taliban now has $80 billion worth of U.S. military
equipment our leaders left behind. The excuses may have been convincing
to the Washington elites and were sold strenuously by regime-aligned
media outlets. The rest of the world knows better. The old post-Vietnam
collapse tropes, claiming “we would have won if only we were really
allowed to fight,” ring hollow after twenty years, hundreds of thousands
killed and made homeless, and several trillion dollars spent on that
disaster.
Contrary to the many assertions that the Russians would collapse from
the shock and awe of the “sanctions from Hell,” the ruble has not
turned into rubble as Joe Biden predicted.
The U.S. and its NATO clients are running out of ammunition and arms to
send to Ukraine, which is being bled white at their behest. It appears
that Russia will steadily grind down the Ukrainian military. All of this
is reminiscent of World War I. The proto-neoconservatives sold that war
as a quick engagement that would be over by Christmas 1914. Four years later, 20 million
were dead and many more were wounded or displaced; subsequently most of
the European Christian monarchies collapsed, Russia descended into
communism's seventy-year nightmare, and the “War to End all Wars” to
make the world “safe for democracy” set the stage for the even more
horrific World War II.
A century later, we are sleepwalking into World War III. Americans
should ignore the state-sponsored propaganda (eerily similar to that
which led up to WWI), wake up, look at what their leaders have wrought,
and do all they can to end support for this cruel war before we face a
Great War–like conflagration or worse.