Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
November 16, 2024
English Outsider On Trump’s Cabinet Of Curiosities And How Little It Matters

Referring to Judge Napolitano discussion with Col Lawrence Wilkerson about Trump and the Defense Department (video) English Outsider writes:

"Yes, the man all hoped would give the quietus to the neocons seems to be appointing neocons himself.

Mercouris has made some valuable preliminary observations on the subject of Trump's appointees so far. Risking paraphrasing him (the reference is to his video of a couple of days back), he considers that these appointments are made mainly to ensure Trump has in place those loyal to him, that consideration over-riding any question of whatever foreign policy stance the prospective nominees may hold.

As said, these are preliminary or tentative conclusions arrived at by Mercouris but I believe they make very good sense. Following on from Mercouris' conclusions are I believe further conclusions on the subject of these somewhat hawkish proposed nominees.

1. It no longer matters what US foreign policy is with respect to Ukraine and maybe with respect to the ME.

The Russians are going to get their "demilitarisation and denazification" in Ukraine whatever the West does or attempts. That has long been apparent and is now apparent to all. So the views of the Trump nominees on Ukraine, and the views of Trump himself on Ukraine, no longer matter when it comes to changing facts on the ground.

Similarly in the ME, whether the appointees are Israel Firsters or not also no longer matters. It looks as if Israel is heading for defeat, but whether it is so or not the outcome can't be altered by the US. Neither Biden nor Trump are going to authorise open and declared war on behalf of Israel and if they did, it's doubtful that American military power is sufficient to change that outcome.

In addition, open and active war against Iran, for instance, would lead to an increase in oil prices and to significant damage to American ships and bases. That is not something Biden has been prepared to risk so far and Trump even less: it would damage his credibility were he to open his Presidency with a major war having given the impression, in his election campaign, that he was opposed to one.

So there's nothing much the US or the West as a whole can do to alter the outcome either of the Ukrainian war or of the conflict in the ME. I haven't read "The Art of the Deal" but I'm sure that Trump recognises that when you sit down to play, the first priority is to recognise the strength of your own hand. Whatever the US hawks may believe, the Pentagon will know that in either case we in the West hold no aces.

2. Given that military impotence the US politicians can follow the example of the Europeans. They can make what threats they please knowing they will not risk putting those threats into practice. We've seen Macron threatening French boots on the ground knowing he's never going to declare war on Russia. We see Scholz and Starmer still impeccably resolute, knowing they will never be at risk of having to back up words with deeds. Now we will see US politicians – have in fact been seeing them for some time – doing the same.

But it's not all sound and fury signifying nothing. In the case of the ME the American politicians have to bear in mind the strength of the voting bloc made up of the Evangelicals, Christian Zionists, Mormons and the various religious sects for who Israel First is an article of faith. That voting bloc is large, in the tens of millions. It was not one Biden wished to offend. It was a necessary component in the portion of the electorate that carried Trump to victory. They need the rhetoric even if the reality falls short of their expectations. By proposing Israel Firsters, and vociferous Israel Firsters at that, Trump has given them that rhetoric.

3. After the defeat in Ukraine, and what looks very likely to be defeat in the ME, the first priority of the politicians will be to save face.

The UK politicians, as we see have seen in the UK press, have their alibi ready for Ukraine. "We would have won had the Americans not let us down. They should have permitted deep strikes. They should have put boots on the ground. They should have threatened nuclear". That alibi ignores the fact that none of those courses would have been practicable. But it will probably serve and most of the UK electorate will be content with it.

No doubt such alibis will be coming out of Europe. It is essential for Trump to have a similar alibi. None can say whether the war will end before Trump's inauguration but if it doesn't, if it's the Trump administration that has to confess defeat, the Democrats will undoubtedly attempt to lay the blame for that defeat at his door. By proposing hawks and thus adopting hawkish rhetoric, Trump will be able to avoid that reproach.

…………………

Are those fair conclusions to draw from Mercouris' observation? Pretty squalid conclusions, if so, but then that's politics. But for me, my judgement of the success of the Trump Presidency will be on quite other grounds. I stated that judgement on Colonel Lang's old site and state it here:

This final stage of the Ukrainian war is leading to quite appalling casualties. The genocide in the ME is not only a tragedy for those suffering. It is an ineradicable stain on Western civilisation and future generations will look back in horror at what we supported and often encouraged.

Trump's Presidency will be judged not by the success of his internal reforms. It will be judged by the extent to which he managed, even before his inauguration, to bring these horrors to an end."

Comments

I wonder what Tulsi is going to do in her intelligence department. Some people are very nervous and they are used in exterminating threats.

Posted by: gary | Nov 16 2024 15:49 utc | 1

I hope that this is the case. What worries me is that Trump has been compromised a la Epstein. It may not be conventional rationality at work here. Lots of unknowns.

Posted by: Haydar Khan | Nov 16 2024 15:51 utc | 2

and here is my reply to english outside a short while ago –
thanks for your post.. you mention ‘defeat of ukraine and israel’… how do you suppose that is going to look like ultimately?? i gather you don’t think these conflicts can continue to create grief on the world stage for an unforeseeable length of time… instead the nice term ‘defeat’ is used which sounds as though – that’s the end of it…. i don’t think things are going to end so easily… both may be defeated on some level, but this wound is not going to heal or go away any time quickly… so – how do you suppose it is going to look like 5 or 10 years or even more, down the road? defeat sounds nice on paper, but on paper and in reality can be 2 different situations…
Posted by: james | Nov 16 2024 15:23 utc | 178

Posted by: james | Nov 16 2024 15:54 utc | 3

All Things Considered. It Sounds Positive To Me.

Posted by: joex1949 | Nov 16 2024 15:59 utc | 4

> I haven’t read “The Art of the Deal” but I’m sure that Trump recognises that when you sit down to play, the first priority is to recognise the strength of your own hand.

Trump isn’t playing against the West’s geopolitical adversaries. He is playing against the West’s proletariat.
Trump’s security State isn’t targeting them, its against you.

Posted by: too scents | Nov 16 2024 16:04 utc | 5

I though it was refreshing to hear Mercouris’s views following some rather negative fare from many commentators. The philosophy that underpins The America First Agenda belongs to another age and Trump et al may come to realise that. I would be very surprised if Trump puts more boots on the ground in either conflict and I am hoping that he is too pragmatic to allow the idealism of the Agenda to get in the way of sensible business decisions. We can’t really assume that a largely pro-Israeli/ant-Iranian cabinet will necessarily escalate in the ME – though I have to say that it does not inspire.

Posted by: The Busker | Nov 16 2024 16:05 utc | 6

Full of sound and fury signifying nothing, eh …? Perhaps.
While I agree with the Ukraine theatre discussion, I think the US/IS can still do plenty of harm in the ME … the thing is that west Asia is not an existential issue for Russia or China, the potential checks on the “west”, so they can be made deals with to leave it to Uncle Sam for a while longer. Russia has shown for example in Syria that, while they are willing to exert themselves somewhat to keep Assad in power, they are not willing to go to the point of defending Syria effectively from Israel air strikes every other day.
The hawks Trump is picking will have their say … I wonder if the deal will be, similar to the first Trump term allowing the annexation of Golan and moving the embassy, the second term allowing the annexation of Gaza and W Bank into Israel proper. That might have been Adelson’s ask. But that, of course, would also mean Israel has swallowed the porcupine … the apartheid would at that point be too obvious for anyone to ignore, surely?

Posted by: Caliman | Nov 16 2024 16:06 utc | 7

. . .no mention of China!. . .
from Asia Times
“Trump vs China is about to rock Asia’s world . .Trump cabinet appointments signal China trade war is reality not rhetoric, meaning all of Asia will get caught in the crossfire . . .In the days since his election win on November 5, the former and future US president has been busily naming anti-China hardliners and known loyalists for top cabinet posts.”. . .here

Posted by: Don Bacon | Nov 16 2024 16:09 utc | 8

I miss Colonel Lang and his insight.That place was a valuable vision into the ideas of those who have a different view of reality then I. A slow moving insight of those losing their religion. Of course he’d kick my ass if I ever met him.

Posted by: SO | Nov 16 2024 16:09 utc | 9

Salaam to all.b you are sure right on the Ukraine front,defeat is only a matter of time.On the “Terrorist Nest”, a la Ayatollah Kamenei,I am very very concerned.Recall Golda Meir stated that if it appears that Israel is losing in battle they will use their nuclear weapons.Are we all then headed the way of the dinosaurs? Trump or any other,the policies of the exceptionalist remains the same.

Posted by: 4q8 | Nov 16 2024 16:10 utc | 10

Ukraine Weekly Update, 15th November 2024: May be useful to some: https://robcampbell.substack.com/p/ukraine-weekly-update-1f7

Posted by: The Busker | Nov 16 2024 16:12 utc | 11

Remember how long General Michael Flyn lasted in T-Rump’s cabinet?
If I were T-Rump, I would name a lot of Deep State players on my cabinet, and lulled the Deep State into a false sense of security, and only after I was solidly in power would I dump the RINOs and use the bully pulpit to push through true patriots.
I am NOT concerned with cabinet appointments, at least not yet.

Posted by: Hot Carl | Nov 16 2024 16:16 utc | 12

Mentioning Evangelicals, Christian Zionists and Mormons reminds us that much of the American public is three sheets to the wind insane. They are there, impossible to avoid them.
james’ point at 3 is very good. My Polish, Ukrainian and Jewish neighbors are going to be insane also when defeat in Ukraine must be admitted. Or more insane than they normally are. As for the result of Palestine being free that is beyond imagination.

Posted by: oldhippie | Nov 16 2024 16:17 utc | 13

“We would have won had the Americans not let us down. They should have permitted deep strikes. ”
Deep strikes probably are already happening, the naval base recently attacked is far away from Ukr. Talking heads of youtube don’t like to talk about it because they’re interested in keeping the views for ad money (they’re all in Natostan where yt payments work), so they deliver what their viewers want to hear.
Officially no side has any interest in saying it. Nato doesn’t want to say they’re doing it because they’re failing or mostly failing, RF doesn’t want to admit they have no way to stop the attacks, no one cares what they say even inside Brics, where no one recognized Donbass or Crimea as Russia, so they can only try to intercept whatever is coming and continue to pretend the smo is working.
I think the offended sausage called Putin exactly for the strikes reason. Taurus is officially going in. As it was with Leopard tanks, Germany wants to do it first, that’s all. The Macaron has also proudly announced a new batch of missiles last week.

Posted by: rk | Nov 16 2024 16:17 utc | 14

@ SO | Nov 16 2024 16:09 utc | 9
lang had some serious blinders on too.. i rubbed up against them..

Posted by: james | Nov 16 2024 16:18 utc | 15

I agree that Israel cannot win. They have turned the entire world against them, including the UN, and Human Rights Watch, a reliable mouthpiece for Empire. Even the ICC, a US puppet, has joined in.
One million Israeli Jews have left in the last year, out of seven million total. Hundreds of thousands are internally displaced.
The economy is in tatters.
The Arabs have united against Israel. China has issued strong words of disapproval, and facilitated rapprochement between Iran and Saudi Arabia, as well as hosting a summit of all Palestinian groups. Even Iran, Hezbollah, and Syria have issued statements of solidarity with Hamas, although they fought Hamas in Syria, when Hamas allied itself with the US Empire. All seems to be forgiven.
Non-Christian Zionist Americans are vehemently against Israel, and cannot have a conversation about any political subject without Tourette’s-like interjections “He/she is a Zionist!” I’m not sure about the beliefs of Christian Zionists, but I think they think that the destruction of Israel is part of the Bible, so I don’t think they’ll be that upset about it. God willed it.
It doesn’t matter how many Zionists Trump appoints, the US can no more stop the destruction of Israel than they can get Crimea back. Strong words and affirmations of US supremacy are worthless. Israel will not exist in its current form for another four years. Either the remnants of the population go back to the 1967 borders, or the whole country will be absorbed by the Palestinians. If it was up to Hucklbee, WW3 would start in the ME, but it isn’t up to him, so I doubt it will.

Posted by: wagelaborer | Nov 16 2024 16:20 utc | 16

Colonel Lang as a young officer was involved with the CIA and its Vietnamese torture program. I mentioned that to Lang and he said they were doing what the “Republic of Vietnam” wanted. . . Then later when I mentioned that Osama bin Laden had no proven connection to 9/11 he bumped me off his site.

Posted by: Don Bacon | Nov 16 2024 16:20 utc | 17

I think very simple.
For Trump and the Republicans, Ukraine is a war created by the ‘Democrat Liberal scums’, but Gaza is a war by their ‘friend’ Israel.
That’s how they feel about the situation, in my view.
For this reason, I do not expect that Republicans and Trump will be hysterical about the defeat in Ukraine.
However, there is a risk of a somewhat hysterical political reaction if Israel in a difficult situation.
So the most worrying development in the future is whether Trump and the Republican right will orchestrate a move to send US troops to the Middle East and direct intervention in order to help their ‘friend’ Israel.

Posted by: Nokaz | Nov 16 2024 16:25 utc | 18

english outsider still posts at pat langs old site… i can’t find the link to the newer version overseen by ttg..

Posted by: james | Nov 16 2024 16:27 utc | 19

This article gives the impression that Trump is the Wizard and everyone else the jesters. Far from it.
What Mercouris misses in all of this is that these cabinet picks are not robots. They more than likely know what Trump is doing and, behind the scenes, their handlers are coaching them on how to get around the President and implement their agenda.
They do have their own agenda and axes to grind. Prime example of that is Little Marco who hates Trump with passion. And he is a grade A opportunist and a zionist tool. If he can stab Trump to promote himself, he won’t hesitate.
And Trump better realize that these Israeli Firsters are controlled somewhere else and certainly not by him, unless he follows as well.
Let’s not give Trump more credit than he deserves. He is a two bit con artist who bullshitted his way through the political process and the minds of naive Americans and here we are.
And war with Iran is a forgone conclusion. Either that or Trump has to go.

Posted by: Alpi | Nov 16 2024 16:29 utc | 20

As a USA citizen, I think Trump was elected to fix the domestic problems in the country. Fix the economy, get rid of the “woke” nonsense, the genital gazing gender thing. If he can get to the bottom of the Covid biowarfare, that would be enough for me. Perhaps he will with RFK. Notice the Donald doesn’t seem to mention Operation Warp Speed too much anymore.
Most US citizens don’t care much about foreign policy. They will have an opinion about Ukraine, Gaza, Iran, wherever, but generally it’s just a regurgitation of whatever news they consume. It’s a shame, and somewhat not in their best interest, but there are a lot of other pressing issues for the average Joe or Joanne. They fail to realize that that blue and yellow flag in the front yard to virtue signal something they don’t even understand might come calling for their own children. Gaza and the Zionist entity kind of mess things up with people here, because the cognitive dissonance becomes too pronounced. All the rainbow haired, septum pierced, social justice warriors from Jewish families are at a loss for what to do.
The world will judge Trump however the world judges the man.
The people that voted Trump into office will judge him if he can fix the problems in the country and bring jobs back. A lot of people won’t care too much about the moral implications of some of the jobs. They just want a bit of stability in their lives. They will care more about the Zionist Entity that Ukraine. They won’t care what happens one way or another if it is delared a victory or a loss. Look at the Afghan pull out, Lebanon 1983.
I think most people here know deep inside they have absolutely no say or agency as to the USA’s foreign policy, so the real focus is on the things that affect their daily lives.
But I think that the USA ship is going down, and Trump is holding the bag as of January 20, 2025. I could see the anti Trump oligarchs just saying blow it up regarding the economy, and do everything to hobble him once again, only this time for real with the economy.
Like him or hate him. At least he has built stuff, and he’s not a lawyer. The USA federal government does need a serious lustration though.

Posted by: lex talionis | Nov 16 2024 16:31 utc | 21

You can value MOA assessments or those of Martin Armstrong. Who is he?
He the guy that doesn’t swim with the global sharks in government, finance, technology, business, espionage, military, etc., they pay to swim with him. Read him and decide for yourself, me I’ll go with the global sharks
armstrongeconomics.com

Posted by: BL | Nov 16 2024 16:31 utc | 22

Just wow! The Ukraine war will be ended after much huffing and puffing by Trump, because as you say the Russians have the ability and fortitude to win it on their own terms. With respect to Iran I think that B is way off, and Trump will significantly intensify the conflict as he has been paid to do.
Left out of this is the whole issue of Trumps policies on tariffs and the increased aggression toward China. The continued support for the Zionist genocide is and will continue to destroy the US (and West) soft power, as we see with the South East Asian elites turning away from the US. His trade policies will rent apart the international trading system while greatly aiding the realignment with a China that supports free trade and represents the true leader in new technologies. Trump’s “drill baby drill” policy will also seriously damage the US abroad, as China grows its lead in green technologies and becomes the paragon of reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
What is not mentioned is the Florida mafiosi appointments which will lead to much more aggression in Central and Southern America, especially toward Cuba, Nicaragua, Venezuela, a Mexico with a very progressive leader, a Colombia with a progressive leader, and even Brazil (again). Milei the destroyer of Argentina is of course being celebrated and courted.
Trump will be a foreign policy shit show, apart from perhaps ending (being forced to end) the war in Ukraine. At home he will also destroy the capabilities of the administrative and regulatory state that are central to successful industrial policies.

Posted by: Roger Boyd | Nov 16 2024 16:35 utc | 23

If Trump defies the neocons, they will have a third hitman ready.

Posted by: CIROC | Nov 16 2024 16:35 utc | 24

Lang’s old site was at turcopolier.com but that site just died.

Posted by: Don Bacon | Nov 16 2024 16:35 utc | 25

@Posted by: Alpi | Nov 16 2024 16:29 utc | 20
Very well put!

Posted by: Roger Boyd | Nov 16 2024 16:36 utc | 26

When it comes to US foreign policy, politics in this country is a total shitshow. A grossly uninformed, and misinformed public that knows next to nothing about what is going on in the world listens to the mainstream media and actually believes it’s getting the straight dope on foreign affairs. One trait of Americans is to form a strong opinion on a matter about which they know little or nothing, such people are locked into their ignorance. The two party system then exploits that by accusing the opposing party of having ‘lost’ a country or a war, being soft on a country (in the past communism), etc etc. The Dems, when out of power, will accuse the Repubs of doing it, and vice versa. They can get away with it, because their audience lets them. It’s a self-feeding echo chamber, and I have to wonder how this country has survived this long, considering the cultivation and amplification of idiocy so many places.

Posted by: Mike R | Nov 16 2024 16:37 utc | 27

gideon levy has an article up from 2 days ago – wish i could read it.. maybe their is an archive copy somewhere??
Opinion | Trump’s ‘pro-Israel’ Appointees Are the Worst of Our Enemies
the comment section is pretty good and you can read that..

Posted by: james | Nov 16 2024 16:38 utc | 28

What is not mentioned is the Florida mafiosi appointments which will lead to much more aggression in Central and Southern America, especially toward Cuba, Nicaragua, Venezuela…
Posted by: Roger Boyd | Nov 16 2024 16:35 utc | 23

The USA desperately needs Venezuela’s oil. Ergo.

Posted by: too scents | Nov 16 2024 16:42 utc | 29

Homan is the appointee so far who could be identified as an authoritarian capable of performing fascist crimes against humanity. Unfortunately, Homan resembles Himmler or Eichmann with his banal effectiveness. So far the other cabinet picks are not bureaucrats. They are not ideologues.They resemble Trump. Clowns able to arouse nationalist, racist, and supremacist emotions of subjects indoctrinated to respond to these types of signals. They can damage institutions but not create authoritarian ones. They can wreck but not erect societies of terror. The exception is Homan, who has demonstrated the ability to replicate the very worst of capitalist society’s horrors on the poor immigrants who make Americans living standards affordable. Homan began his career as an enforcer of inhumane migrant policies under Obama. That explains his competency.

Posted by: Keme | Nov 16 2024 16:45 utc | 30

Trump could do an LBJ, spring 1965, and go all out in Vietnam having portrayed Goldwater as the war candidate.
But U.S. is greatly reduced vis a vis 1965!
Ukraine is too close to nuclear, Iran is a couple thousand sea miles too far.
China could be advanced stripping the U.S. Navy from elsewhere, and dust off Plan Orange which goes back to 1900 when U.S. defended the Philippines and Guam.
Hegseth is outsider, an “improvement “ over the retired four star MIC board member!
Maybe he can shake up the pentagon, and lobbies.
I think Trump will have his tasks devoted to fixing or surviving the fiscal mess that Covid and Biden left. The data has been fuzzed the U.S. economy is hurting and Powell raised interest rate in 2018 first since ZIRP in 2009. The two cuts were ill advised as it addressing inflation , and defending the dollar.

Posted by: paddy | Nov 16 2024 16:46 utc | 31

from Stars & Stripes
“Trump team weighs Pentagon pick after sexual assault allegation surfaces”. . .here

Posted by: Don Bacon | Nov 16 2024 16:47 utc | 32

“ it would damage his credibility were he to open his Presidency with a major war having given the impression, in his election campaign, that he was opposed to one.”
FF enters the chat.

Posted by: I forgot | Nov 16 2024 16:48 utc | 33

having given the impression, in his election campaign, that he was opposed
Posted by: I forgot | Nov 16 2024 16:48 utc | 33

The first thing Trump will do is to raise the debt limit. Bigly. Huge numbers.

Posted by: too scents | Nov 16 2024 16:53 utc | 34

@20
You think Trump and we who support him are naive.
That means you must think the mid level planners, too low in rank to aspire to board of Lockheed can plan out wars with no tools!
Who is naive.

Posted by: paddy | Nov 16 2024 16:55 utc | 35

Trump doesn’t start wars, and is leery of them if they involve serious American commitment…he will let Bibi twist in the wind…

Posted by: Pyrrhus | Nov 16 2024 16:57 utc | 36

Posted by: Haydar Khan | Nov 16 2024 15:51 utc | 2
“What worries me is that Trump has been compromised a la Epstein.”
You mean they have something serious enough (and it would have to be pretty serious given what’s been thrown in vain so far) to cause what exactly? He’s already pretty pro-Israel, as he pretty much had to be to make a name in NYC.
I guess he could declare war on Iran, but he’s the no-war candidate.

Posted by: YetAnotherAnon | Nov 16 2024 16:59 utc | 37

A couple thoughts on Trump’s likely policies–
1. Trump the narcissist has to be thinking of his legacy first and foremost. Backing losers–certainly Ukraine, maybe Israel–could tarnish that legacy for eternity. Presidents who perpetuate quagmires do not fare well in the history books.
2. Simplicius notes that many of Trump’s out-of-the box appointments have repeatedly expressed negative views of Ukraine.
3. My suspicion is that aid to Israel has long been in part a money laundering operation with a small cut of each aid dollar finding its way back to both Democrats and Republicans, most likely via Zionist billionaires. They have been particularly munificent in this election cycle. But Trump the businessman probably regards those donations as sunk costs for the donors. The question becomes what will they do for him now? Since he’s not running again, he can no longer be threatened by the Lobby’s withholding of campaign donations. Will the Lobby outbid the Muslim Petrostates in funding a humongous presidential library and trust funds for Trump’s kids? Could be.
My suspicion is that Ukraine has also laundered a lot of US aid back to Democrats. Remember Hunter Biden on the Burisma board? However, Ukraine got caught flat-footed in 2016, funding Hillary, ignoring Trump. Trump may also believe that Ukraine took Democrats’ side on Russia-gate, inviting Trump’s revenge. If Republicans reduce Ukraine aid to a trickle, it’s highly unlikely that Ukraine could contribute in any meaningful way to Trump’s post-presidency plans.

Posted by: JohnH | Nov 16 2024 16:59 utc | 38

Haydar Khan @2:” What worries me is that Trump has been compromised a la Epstein.”
If the Deep State had that, they would have already used it. That they have tried to assassinate Trump shows they have already shot their wad. They have nothing left.

Posted by: William Gruff | Nov 16 2024 17:00 utc | 39

Roger Boyd is very right about the potential disaster that people like Rubio can unleash in Latin America with the new Trump administration. The Miami gusanos are going for the long-awaited revenge, from Cuba to Bolivia (which is immersed in a struggle between Evo Morales and President Luis Arce). But considering Claudia Sheinbaum “a very progressive leader” in Mexico is wrong. Simply, like Amlo, she is a populist trapped by the cartels, the army and dependence on the US through the new NAFTA and nearshoring. And her government is petrified with fear of the possibility that Trump will impose protectionist clauses on the trade agreement when it is “reviewed” in 2026.

Posted by: Gabriel Moyssen | Nov 16 2024 17:01 utc | 40

What’s been forgotten about this Col Lawrence Wilkerson is that he gives lousy advice.
He was Chief of Staff of then Secretary of State Colin Powell when Powell got up in front of, not only the UN, but the American people and lied to them, telling them Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. That lead to war.
As Chief of Staff, Colonel Wilkerson drafted that lie and put it in front of Powell’s nose to read to the world.
Most people with a conscience would tell themselves they screwed up big time and go into hiding. But the career denizens of the Washington Beltway, like Colonel Wilkerson, somehow manage to to slither away from the retribution they deserve and resurface as “expert witnesses” on Judge Napolitanos TV show.

Posted by: Johnny Dollar | Nov 16 2024 17:01 utc | 41

@35
With all due respect, I most certainly think you and the other Trump supporters are naive and he successfully conned most Americans. Also, there are many who vote along party lines. And the new voters who as usual picked the lesser of two evils.
As for mid level planners, if you consider the Kagan clan and the rest of the rabid neocons as mid level, they are batting a 1000. They have managed to implement every one of their diabolical plans so far.
So who else ranks in your mid level list? I’d be happy to go through them with you.

Posted by: Alpi | Nov 16 2024 17:03 utc | 42

from Cambridge Core
The choice before us: International law or a ‘rules-based international order’?

On 2 June 2022 President Biden published an op-ed in the New York Times titled ‘How the US is willing to help Ukraine’ in which he declared that Russia’s action in Ukraine ‘could mark the end of the rules-based international order and open the door to aggression elsewhere, with catastrophic consequences the world over’. There is no mention of international law. Later, in a press conference at the conclusion of the June 2022 NATO Summit Meeting in Madrid, he warned both Russia and China that the democracies of the world would ‘defend the rules-based order’ (RBO). Again, there is no mention of international law. On 12 October 2022 the US President published a National Security Strategy which makes repeated reference to the RBO as the ‘foundation of global peace and prosperity,’ with only passing reference to international law. The term ‘rules-based order’ is so frequently used by American political leaders, such as President Biden and Secretary of State Antony Blinken, that, according to Professor Stephen Walt of the Kennedy School of Harvard University, it ‘seems to have become a job requirement for a top position in the US foreign policy apparatus’. . .here

Posted by: Don Bacon | Nov 16 2024 17:07 utc | 43

The USA desperately needs Venezuela’s oil. Ergo.
Posted by: too scents | Nov 16 2024 16:42 utc | 29
Rex already find a way to steal part of it via “horizontal drilling” offshore of Guyana and guess what ? Maduro was vocal about it before his reelection. No wonder there was so many people contesting that election.
Now that is only part of the oil that’s there, and not the heavy sour crude so useful to blend with shall oil before refining it. But there is another player incoming ; Xi was very friendly with the Bus driver during last BRICS summit and Iranians are a known customer dealing that heavy crude they also need for refined fuel they don’t.
I fear US is no more the biggest fish in the pond on Venezuelan’s Oil market and sanctions are the prime cause of that leadership loss. The Don might need to reassess his positions on the local sanctions to get a deal or someone else will have it all.

Posted by: Hiro Masamune | Nov 16 2024 17:08 utc | 44

At home he will also destroy the capabilities of the administrative and regulatory state that are central to successful industrial policies.
Posted by: Roger Boyd | Nov 16 2024 16:35 utc | 23
Yes, It is not very pleasant to watch that Trump and Elon’s hostility to the public sector.
Let me first say that I am biased against first-class Thatcherism and Reaganomics haters.
So from my point of view, those who think that ‘tax cuts for the wealthy classes and those who are into money games will develop the economy and their societies’ – which forms part of the neoliberal ideology – have, I believe, made the West thoroughly worse off throughout the last few decades.
I think what Elon Musk and Trump embody is the direction of ‘abolish government and let private businessmen control the lives of the people of the land’, which I think is just a bad extension of neoliberal ideology.
Why Western voters still celebrate an idea that I think has ‘made the whole Western world worse over the decades’ is something I can’t understand.

Posted by: Nokaz | Nov 16 2024 17:14 utc | 45

First of all, Kudos to Bernhard for delving into the commentariat and pulling out this plum of an analysis by English Outsider. Much appreciated is B.s rejection of conceivable personal hubris and featuring a brilliant situational, analytical overview.
Earlier this morning I read and ingested English Outsider’s astute comprehension and sharing of such insights with the rest of us, the regular contributors to this amazing forum. The presentation was in my estimation, based upon Mercuris’ analysis, a tour de force of inside/outsider comprehension of both a logical take on Trump’s “art of the deal” writ large in his second iteration of being the Potus…as well as an overall chess-master production in a spectrum featuring a succinct number of paragraphs.
Mercuris, himself, produces a steady diet of observant insights…but he does tend to rattle on quite a lot…thereby obviating a larger following or partakers on the Duran. E.O. concentrated and crystalized the keen isights of Alexander M.
This general field of geopolitical interest is cluttered with numerous and highly partisan and self-aggrandizing takes…a scene in which one must employ significant discernment in order to arrive at a sensible synthesis. Of all the perspectives shared on the MoA site; this “combination of ingredients product” is, in my estimation, nonpareil.

Posted by: aristodemos | Nov 16 2024 17:23 utc | 46

The Russians are going to get their “demilitarisation and denazification” in Ukraine whatever the West does or attempts. That has long been apparent and is now apparent to all. So the views of the Trump nominees on Ukraine, and the views of Trump himself on Ukraine, no longer matter when it comes to changing facts on the ground.

They do matter and they matter fundamentally. You need to take into account the most important and vital contribution of the USA and the nature of the motivation by ukrops to carry on with their consumption in the battlefield: Western treasure.
Ukrops are totally dependent on the input of Western treasure into state bank accounts and the way it is expended into various items. The USA under Trump will substantially decrease or stop altogether all transfers and Europeans are in no position to pitch in and keep the flow of transfers going. So at that point the Ukrainian state, being totally and utterly dependent on transfers from the West, will collapse and the war will end. Then it will be even more very interesting than it is right now.

Trump’s Presidency will be judged not by the success of his internal reforms. It will be judged by the extent to which he managed, even before his inauguration, to bring these horrors to an end.

If he manages to increase domestic industrial output, revoke woke Jacobinism, control inflation and interest rates on the debt, stop immigration from the south, deport hundreds thousand illegals, he will be judged as very successful, the fate of the horror shows in the Ukraines and the ME notwithstanding.

Posted by: Johan Kaspar | Nov 16 2024 17:27 utc | 47

“Trump’s Presidency will be judged not by the success of his internal reforms. It will be judged by the extent to which he managed, even before his inauguration, to bring these horrors to an end.”
=============
Not sure I agree with that.
It depends on who is doing the judging.
Many Dem agnostics held their noses regarding the ME and voted for Trump in hopes of cleaning up at least some of the domestic Augean stable.
I for one pinned no hopes on Trump re the ME. He is after all owned by the Israel Lobby. We know that.
The big question: Will these IL forces also try to choke off domestic reform and block Trump’s reform nominees such as Homan, Gabbard, and RFK Jr.?
Because a lot of the Woke and the Big Government people are Jewish liberals.
IMO that is the big question.

Posted by: Jane | Nov 16 2024 17:28 utc | 48

Posted by: Alpi | Nov 16 2024 17:03 utc | 42
> With all due respect, I most certainly think you and the other Trump supporters are naive and he successfully conned most Americans.
Well of course. Americans who were too smort to be conned voted for Kamala instead.

Posted by: hopehely | Nov 16 2024 17:34 utc | 49

I hope that this is the case. What worries me is that Trump has been compromised a la Epstein. It may not be conventional rationality at work here. Lots of unknowns.
Posted by: Haydar Khan | Nov 16 2024 15:51 utc | 2
If one thing is certain, the guy is totally scandal proof at this point. He’s been called it all and nothing sticks. As he said, I could shoot someone in Times Square and my poll numbers would go up.
Let the mossad publish pics of him boning a teenager. It will make no difference and Trump knows it.

Posted by: Ahenobarbus | Nov 16 2024 17:34 utc | 50

I believe that the US will not accept a loss in the ME.
They will never abandon Israel, even if Israel destroys itself.
I’m not saying that the genocidal Americans will “win” but that they will kill a lot more people yet.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Nov 16 2024 17:35 utc | 51

If he manages to increase domestic industrial output, revoke woke Jacobinism, control inflation and interest rates on the debt, stop immigration from the south, deport hundreds thousand illegals, he will be judged as very successful, the fate of the horror shows in the Ukraines and the ME notwithstanding.
Posted by: Johan Kaspar | Nov 16 2024 17:27 utc | 47

Trump could do all those things while at the same time creating a “company town” the likes of which haven’t been seen since the high days of feudalism.
That’s only a win for Feudal Lords.

Posted by: too scents | Nov 16 2024 17:35 utc | 52

This guy says everything many of us realised for years.
Via https://nitter.poast.org/MEtirol/status/1857151048441278890
‘@MEtirol
Nov 14
Replying to @IranObserver0
‼️Influential Russian geo-strategist Karaganov‼️
-We must break the will of the crazy Europeans to want war against us. They have already started 2 world wars. That’s enough, we don’t need a third one.
-Conquer Europe? Our priority is the development of Siberia, which is worth 10 times as much as Europe, why on earth would we want Europe there?
-The USA has made enough profit from the war, they have robbed Europe too. They don’t want to risk a nuclear war and are therefore withdrawing.
-We have freed the world from the yoke of the Western hegemon, which plundered the world for five centuries. countries in the Global South now finally have the opportunity to flourish.
-A new world order is emerging. Eurosasia is becoming immensely important with Russia, China and India as the new pillars for a more stable world. In addition, other states in Euro-Asia will gain immense importance: Turkey, Iran and the Arab states.
The whole video: invidious.poast.org/watch?v=CHfZ7TLv…’
The Donald and his crew are there to facilitate that and tack the Collective Waste to its new isolation from the majority of the world. Think of it as delusion of preserving a
Geographic isolated empire – as the Chinese did centuries ago – but an impossibility because of the disparate geography.
Only USA and Canada could manage it. Leaving out Mexico and all South America.
They want to include Australia NZ as mental cases in the South Pacific and of course the suicidal western Europe isolating itself against the vast cheaper resources of being part of a single EurAsia that cannot be stopped.
Neither can Africa and not the West Asian Arabian that connects them.
India, Turkey and Japan need to make up their minds be the second class ‘first worlders’ or be part of the 85% of the rest of the world.

Posted by: DunGroanin | Nov 16 2024 17:36 utc | 53

Posted by: Don Bacon | Nov 16 2024 17:07 utc | 43
They use “rules-based order” as opposed to “international anarchy” whose synonym is “the stronger state beats the weaker state”. It’s not such a big deal, just deeply hypocrytical.
“International law” is a subset of “rules-based order” so when they say “rules-based order” they mean “international law and other diplomatic arrangements”.

Posted by: Johan Kaspar | Nov 16 2024 17:38 utc | 54

What worries me is that Trump has been compromised a la Epstein.”
You mean they have something serious enough (and it would have to be pretty serious given what’s been thrown in vain so far) to cause what exactly? He’s already pretty pro-Israel, as he pretty much had to be to make a name in NYC.
I guess he could declare war on Iran, but he’s the no-war candidate.
Posted by: YetAnotherAnon | Nov 16 2024 16:59 utc | 37
===============
As others have observed, if they had something they would have used it before now.
Trump seems to prefer curvacious models over the age of 21.
As luck would have it, his two Central European picks, Ivana and Melania, both have brains.

Posted by: Jane | Nov 16 2024 17:39 utc | 55

“…it would damage [Trump’s] credibility were he to open his Presidency with a major war having given the impression, in his election campaign, that he was opposed to one.” Why does our host imagine Trump’s credibility matters? The whole point of Trumpery is to get past any concessions whatsoever to public opinion and public welfare. No reforms are acceptable in the prolonged stasis of the relative decline of the US in world economy, not even too little, too late benefits that don’t the fundamentals (because they’re not meant to, in my judgment.) Trump campaigned on winning, on “peace through strength,” not even against war. Plus of course, economic warfare is war, no matter the denialism of Trumpers. There is no endgame for the defeat of the Zionist enterprise.
(The notion that Russia has already won the war in Ukraine and Trump doesn’t matter because it’s a fait accompli is counting chickens before they hatch. As I see it, there is still not enough Russian manpower in Ukraine to decisively win, there is still not enough territorial gain to accelerate the Ukrainian attrition to collapse and Ukraine is fascist, there is nobody to negotiate with. And the economic warfare against Russia still proceeds. Nabiullina’s neoliberal policy is ominous, I fear.)
So much for point one of the OP. As to point two, it repeats the fundamental error of thinking that voting will drive foreign policy under Trump (not that it has for decades,) relies on delusions about Trump as liberator. That also pretends Trump will be reined in by the wise counsel of realistic generals, as if putting a Hegseth in isn’t about reining them in. And possibly assisting that project with the projected warrrior council to purge the officer corps?
And the third point fails too. All factions of the US mainstream media turned against Biden after Afghanistan. Postponing the withdrawal didn’t provide political cover for Biden. Only the protection of all factions of the real “Deep State,” the ruling class, owners and customers of the mainstream media, could do that. The thing is, if the Deep State is united enough on peace, they can be united to protect Trump (as much as possible, propaganda is powerful but omnipotent,) they can support him in war.
Our host has done fantastic work analyzing war propaganda about Syria and Ukraine and the Zionist genocidal assault. But his Trumpery clouds his vision when he looks at the US, I think.

Posted by: steven t johnson | Nov 16 2024 17:45 utc | 56

I think very simple.
For Trump and the Republicans, Ukraine is a war created by the ‘Democrat Liberal scums’, but Gaza is a war by their ‘friend’ Israel.
That’s how they feel about the situation, in my view.
For this reason, I do not expect that Republicans and Trump will be hysterical about the defeat in Ukraine.
However, there is a risk of a somewhat hysterical political reaction if Israel in a difficult situation.
So the most worrying development in the future is whether Trump and the Republican right will orchestrate a move to send US troops to the Middle East and direct intervention in order to help their ‘friend’ Israel.
Posted by: Nokaz | Nov 16 2024 16:25 utc | 18
Gil D feels the same way on Ukraine and even argues Trump might tamp down on Israel’s war on all surrounding humanity. I recall he did at least acknowledge that the genocide in Gaza makes Israel look awful. He’s a Zionist, but not a total idiot when it comes to public relations.
Whatever the reason, if he puts a quick end to the Ukraine debacle, he is without question a better pick for humanity than Kamala.
It’s been going on for so long, I think many have forgotten that this conflict has been a 3 year long cuban missile crisis. The world has been on the brink of nuclear war for three straight years and the previous administration just kept raising the anty seemingly without concern.

Posted by: Ahenobarbus | Nov 16 2024 17:47 utc | 57

@ 49
Sorry, but the ones who voted for Harris are bunch of Zombies. They don’t even qualify as naive.
The smart Americans sat this one out.

Posted by: Alpi | Nov 16 2024 17:49 utc | 58

America had two goals in the Ukraine war.
– Destroying Europe and degrading it to the point where it can be enslaved and bought by blackrock; this is well on its way.
– Turning former Ukraine into a jewish state; whether this happens depends on the degree to which the rabbis control Russia.

Posted by: Jack M | Nov 16 2024 17:52 utc | 59

Simplicius
Interesting take on Trump’s picks providing explanations for his deep state hawks
Huge hubbub surrounds Trump’s rapid-fire picks for key Cabinet positions over the last few days. A great division has ensued, between the two opposing sides, one screaming “betrayal!” at the slew of establishment Neocon Zionists chosen, while the other exults in triumph at the boldly unexpected picks.
Let’s examine what we have first—the longer list so far:
https://substack.com/home/post/p-151628074

Posted by: ld | Nov 16 2024 17:52 utc | 60

Thanks x 2 for drawing attention to English Outsider’s conclusions regarding Ukraine and Jewrael, b.
I lost interest in the Pentagon thread because I couldn’t imagine that your revelations would have surprised ANYONE, and thus missed E.O’s comment.
However, since his(?) conclusions coincide with my own, it was nice to see a relevant train of reasoning laid out clearly and concisely.
Well done English Outsider!

Posted by: Hoarsewhisperer | Nov 16 2024 17:53 utc | 61

Posted by: rk | Nov 16 2024 16:17 utc | 14
—————————————————————- |
You can always count on rk to be the bugar in the snot!

Posted by: Ed | Nov 16 2024 17:59 utc | 62

Homan is the appointee so far who could be identified as an authoritarian capable of performing fascist crimes against humanity.
Posted by: Keme | Nov 16 2024 16:45 utc | 30
###############
The most sane American laws are the border laws which China and Russia both also have.
How many immigrants are you supporting in your home?
That said, I am all for immigration to America. Immigration destroyed the Roman Empire, persistently eroding the Colonial European powers.
Mass immigration is usually the result of Colonialism.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Nov 16 2024 17:59 utc | 63

I don’t know how Trump will bring the fighting in Ukraine to a close but I expect he will give Israel the green light to resolve the Palestinian problem once and for all.

Posted by: Mike Adamson | Nov 16 2024 17:59 utc | 64

Posted by: rk | Nov 16 2024 16:17 utc | 14 What is happening to Russia now is 100% fault of the USSR🏴‍☠️. It hit a beehive and left, leaving Russia to get stung. The way the USSR handled Eastern Europe (Hungary 1956, Prague 1968, no buy/sell/music freedom, Statsi🚨 etc…) left a bad taste in the mouth of former Warsaw pact countries. That, along with the failure of the soviet economic model and its collapse, made the impoverished easterners, in the 1990s, an easy prey for western controlled oligarchs. through corruption💰 for the rulers, and wealth ostentation (high-tech PCs, DVD, better cars/products they couldn’t dream about previously) media (music, movies) to a starry-eyed🤩 populace, who, wanting to be rich like westerners, became west supporters. The USSR destroyed the image of Russia, fueling russophobia even among a country like Bulgaria.

Posted by: Phariah | Nov 16 2024 18:04 utc | 65

@42
Kagan is/was a think tanker, former instructor at USMA, and WaPo writer. The wife of one Kagan baked cookies for the US’ Kiev color revolution
Not a planner of contingencies in JCS.
The planners that matter are mid grade officers and civilians in the real world where things are moved to go into action.
A level ignored by the naive.
Shorter why US loses war with enemies in Sandler with AK 47s.
I was naive years ago….

Posted by: paddy | Nov 16 2024 18:05 utc | 66

God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference”
////
America is currently struggling to come to terms with the first part and is still far from the third part…

Posted by: A. Pols | Nov 16 2024 18:10 utc | 67

Posted by: Nokaz | Nov 16 2024 17:14 utc | 45
> Yes, It is not very pleasant to watch that Trump and Elon’s hostility to the public sector.
I think that in the US public services are mostly managed at state and municipal level, not at federal level so their alleged hostility towards the public sector can have only limited reach to the federal bureaucracy.
But actually I never heard any hostile remarks from either Trump or Musk towards the public sector in general.
Trump often says how he loves clean air and water, pretty cities and beautiful buildings. He is a neat freak and a germophobic, he can’t stand filth and disorder.
Musk did criticize how public affairs are managed in California and in San Francisco, blaming the state and city leadership for the appalling situation in the SF city center for example. But that is not hostility towards the public sector but the hostility to the idiots in charge.

Posted by: hopehely | Nov 16 2024 18:16 utc | 68

“International law” is a subset of “rules-based order,” so when they say “rules-based order,” they mean “international law and other diplomatic arrangements.”
Posted by: Johan Kaspar | Nov 16 2024 17:38 utc | 54
————————————————————————–
John, who are they?
John, when the U.S. vetoes a vote to end the genocide at the UNSC, is that in line with International Law, rules-based order, or is it a crime against humanity?
John, when Russia removes children out of harm’s way in a war zone, is that a crime against humanity, a violation of international law, a breach of the rules-based order, or just the humane thing to do?

Posted by: Ed | Nov 16 2024 18:19 utc | 69

Remarkable to me the Trump apologists don’t understand that re-industrialization in America is IMPOSSIBLE without global US financial hegemony/dollar supremacy and the concomitant ability to run high deficits.
There is no future “domestic” revitalization without a corresponding empire at this point…an empire hellbent on enforcing dollar as the chief reserve.
So WW3 is baked into the cake as Todd Emmanuel and Brian Berletic understand. Continuity of agenda is the name of the game….and while Trump might move pieces differently on the board, he is constrained by the very nature of the rules of the game itself.
Trump is an interesting character…RHETORICALLY he is just a life long blue dog democrat and Ed Koch acolyte with the immigration policy of socialist Eugene Debs and a rhetorical position on war that is to the left of any US candidate in modern American history. he’s only a dyed-in-the-wool “republican” on fossil fuels and corporate taxes. BUT….ultimately in reality, Trump is beholden to the the Israel lobby and Adelson money and will outspend Reagan and Obama and end up driving up deficits on tax cuts and increased military spending. The issue isn’t who sits in the media seat of US (Zionist/Capitalist) empire, but how BRICS will navigate America’s desperate fight to maintain hegemony. Grab your popcorn.

Posted by: ZT | Nov 16 2024 18:20 utc | 70

Posted by: Alpi | Nov 16 2024 17:49 utc | 58
>Sorry, but the ones who voted for Harris are bunch of Zombies. They don’t even qualify as naive.
>The smart Americans sat this one out.
Well, as great American philosopher Chis Rock said, don’t blame the players, blame the game.

Posted by: hopehely | Nov 16 2024 18:22 utc | 71

Is anyone still maintaining Col. lang’s old blog? I haven’t been able to find it.

Posted by: A. Pols | Nov 16 2024 18:23 utc | 72

Posted by: Phariah | Nov 16 2024 18:04 utc | 65
—————————————————————- |
Pay attention, Phariah, all those coups and “color revolutions” that have been obvious since the Reagan administration did not start with Reagan; they started even before WW2. But you didn’t expect Western history to tell you about that, did you?

Posted by: Ed | Nov 16 2024 18:33 utc | 73

@james #3
Re: Ukraine – Trump DGAF. Blame it all on Biden (which Mercouris has said is the best course) and move on. Maybe declare victory in saying how long Ukraine lasted.
Re: Israel – I expect a “Iran attack on empty US base” type support for Israel. Which is to say, Iran strikes Israel then aerial tanker support for round 2 of Israel’s attempt to attack Iran – which will fail but also be deemed a victory. Verbal support but a slowdown in arms and money to Israel because there is just less of it. Israel declares victory in less than a year and goes home because their economy will be fully collapsed by then.

Posted by: c1ue | Nov 16 2024 18:33 utc | 74

I think what Elon Musk and Trump embody is the direction of ‘abolish government and let private businessmen control the lives of the people of the land’, which I think is just a bad extension of neoliberal ideology.
Why Western voters still celebrate an idea that I think has ‘made the whole Western world worse over the decades’ is something I can’t understand.
Posted by: Nokaz | Nov 16 2024 17:14 utc | 45
====================
I “abolish government” is something of a caricature.
I think—I hope—the relevant word is “priorities.”
There is no question but that US tax dollars are going down the drain on stupidity and overreach while our physical country falls apart and citizens are denied needed services, such a genuine health care (not “insurance”), and the genuine jobs that maintaining the country would generate.
I think that is why the story of Peanut the Squirrel resonated so strongly: Obviously stupid priorities and waste of money to police a man and his pet.
Whether Homan, RFK Jr., Musk, and Vivek can reorder priorities is a big question mark.
As for private businessmen controlling our national government and agencies, that horse left the barn decades ago.
Look at the Covid-Big Pharma-WHO-Gates corruption.
Look at the MIC gravy train.
Look at the bought and paid for media.
Abolishing some fed. agencies and letting the states deal with reality might save a lot of money and eliminate a few levels of money-wasting bureaucracy and overlap.

Posted by: Jane | Nov 16 2024 18:38 utc | 75

Posted by: Ed | Nov 16 2024 18:19 utc | 69
First, my name is Johan, don’t anglicize it. Second, “they” are those who say “rules-based order”, you know who they are. Third, your questions are rhetorical and virtue-signalling so no answer needed I guess.
Just don’t make a big deal of the “rules-based order” expression, it’s not, just some expression that our leaders paid millions to consultants to produce and spout.

Posted by: Johan Kaspar | Nov 16 2024 18:40 utc | 76

@Hot Carl #12
Christoforou and Mercouris addressed this. Flynn was the only Washington insider in Trump’s initial Cabinet – so he was taken out.
But this time Trump has Rubio but has surrounded Rubio with Trump loyalists.
As I have noted elsewhere, the public views of Hegseth etc have to be taken with these considerations:
1) Just as you don’t get invited repeatedly to CNN or MSNBC without expounding specific views, the same goes for Fox, just different views. It is a lot less clear what these people really think.
2) Regardless of what they really think – what matters is whether they will wholeheartedly carry through with Trump’s policies – as b notes. Every one of these picks except Rubio is not of the Washington blob – this is a declaration of war on the Deep State, flat out. The Cabinet picks outside of the State Department will be attacking the Deep State bureaucrats from within with Vivek and Musk attacking them from without, while both have Trump’s explicit backing. And I expect Tulsi and everyone else will have the explicit task of keeping an eye on Rubio – who will be on a very short leash.

Posted by: c1ue | Nov 16 2024 18:40 utc | 77

@Alpi #20
It is certainly possible that what you say is true.
But the fact is, these people (outside Rubio) are far less likely to be dyed in the wool tools of the Deep State because they are not Washington insiders.
And I guarantee that all of them plus Trump will be watching carefully to see if anyone is not doing what they are hired for: implementing Trump’s policies.

Posted by: c1ue | Nov 16 2024 18:42 utc | 78

Posted by: too scents | Nov 16 2024 16:04 utc | 5
“Trump isn’t playing against the West’s geopolitical adversaries. He is playing against the West’s proletariat.
Trump’s security State isn’t targeting them, its against you.”
Apparently the proletariat disagrees with you. They just reelected Trump with an electoral landslide and a majority of the popular vote as well. Maybe you should go talk with a few proletariat and figure out what went wrong.

Posted by: Paranaense | Nov 16 2024 18:44 utc | 79

james #3 hits the point I’m on: what would a peace look like in Ukraine?
Mercouris, Diesen and Mearshimer recently had a talk and that point was brought up: at this point Russia hasn’t enunciated what a peace would look like. Demilitarization, denazification, no NATO, OK, but what does it look like?
This is more than just the territorial aspects, but what would governance of oblasts not taken as Russian territory look like?
My cynical side says that the US would smoothly move into a guerrilla/terrorist phase just like when the Banderites switched from a German to American leash.
I don’t think the modern Russia wants to run an East-German style security state in western/rump Ukraine.
I’m hoping Trump will stop supporting Ukraine militarily and the immediate killing will stop, but the contours of a lasting peace I’m still struggling to see.
I hope this finds you well

Posted by: ockham | Nov 16 2024 18:45 utc | 80

Trump’s Presidency will be judged not by the success of his internal reforms. It will be judged by the extent to which he managed, even before his inauguration, to bring these horrors to an end.
What kind of nonsense is this? Trump has less than 75 days to pick his Cabinet, set an agenda, and then sell that agenda to the House and Senate, neither of which will fall in lockstep with Trump. At the same time, he will be beset by the bureaucracy that tried to upset him last time. Clearly, the author of the quotation above has never heard of “regulatory capture” (RC).
In a nutshell, RC is the takeover of a regulating agency (FDA, SEC, FEC) by the industry it is supposed to regulate (pharma, finance, communications). By regularly swapping members between the agency and the industry, the industry ensures that it receives a favourable response from the agency. The people at the agency see the plum positions offered by the industry, and so are not eager to go on record as opposing them. Over time, the agency comes to be staffed with industry veterans, and the two adopt the industry’s goals, leaving consumers in the dust.
The CIA/DoJ/FBI/NSA/DHS/ETC. are all regulatory agencies that have been captured by the Deep State. America is broken because of their depredations, desecrations, and degenerations. Breaking the middle class of America – black, white, Asian, Hispanic – is the goal of a Deep State which envisions some Huxley-esque Brave New World where they plan everything. A strong middle class is the only force capable of withstanding it – the poor can’t do it, and the rich don’t care.
Fighting the RC of America by the Deep State is Trump’s number one job. Only by restoring the rule of law and the rules of evidence and the rules of merit will America become great again. Trump cares not one fig about what Europeans think he does before he’s even inaugurated.

Posted by: KevinB | Nov 16 2024 18:47 utc | 81

The smart Americans sat this one out.
Posted by: Alpi | Nov 16 2024 17:49 utc | 58
===========
I disagree.
The smart Americans voted for Trump, to provide a clear-cut result that could not be administered the mail-in massage.

Posted by: Jane | Nov 16 2024 18:48 utc | 82

@lex talionis #21
Fully agree.
And I will add: the biggest problem is the illegal immigration. Whether it is 4 million or 25 million extra illegal immigrants added under the Biden regime is irrelevant – all of these are on top of the 1 million existing legal immigrants.
This number is obviously way over what the US economy and infrastructure are created to handle.
While I do not believe inflation is *just* because of these immigrants, I do believe that housing price inflation, that blue collar wage suppression, that food and other consumables demand -> inflation are all significantly impacted by the increase in the number of people in the US from 1 million extra immigrants to anywhere between 2 and 7 million new immigrants per year.
Furthermore, I will note that these illegal immigrants are not entitled to the Constitutional protections of US citizens. None of them.
There needs to be some sort of process to not throw out legitimate legal immigrants out with the illegal immigrant bathwater, but the process is not actually that hard in our Big Data era if semi-intelligent people work on it. The reality is that most of these illegal immigrants are in the system in some way – their benefits, for example, that Biden gave them.
This is the Manhattan Project of Trump’s second term. The Deep State cleanup project is relatively straightforward in comparison.
Anything else is pure distraction.

Posted by: c1ue | Nov 16 2024 18:49 utc | 83

Odd that there’s zero mention of this:
“Israel destroying Western-led world order – EU’s Borrell”
I reported about that and other developments in “Lavrov’s Short Chat with Media at Abu Dhabi”.
This morning, Marat Khairullen has an excellent article at his VK that has yet to be cross-posted to his substack, “The simple arithmetic of our victory” that details the reason why Ukie casualties have risen so sharply while Russian casualties have significantly declined. Essentially, that’s due to the massive power employed by Russian artillery and airpower–the numbers will stagger you.
As for the quality and merits of the people Trump has so far nominated, almost all must pass Senate approval, and that’s the venue where the political battle will move to in roughly 70 days. The big ?? capable of impacting that battle is Iran’s anticipated retaliation against the Zionists, which most predict will occur while Biden remains in office if it’s to happen.
Barflies ought to also note the degree of confidence aired by Russia at the APEC Meeting happening in Lima that’s also reported on at my substack.

Posted by: karlof1 | Nov 16 2024 18:50 utc | 84

@hopehely #68
Not correct. If the states had full control over utilities – they would not be uniformly managed as utilities. The way the Federal government manages utilities is via institutions like the FERC and NERC – in the case of the grid. Similar structures exist for water, telecoms, etc.

Posted by: c1ue | Nov 16 2024 18:55 utc | 85

@ZT #70
And yet China did it.
So no, can’t say your theory holds any water whatsoever.

Posted by: c1ue | Nov 16 2024 18:56 utc | 86

Posted by: Ed | Nov 16 2024 18:33 utc | 73 The Gene Sharp handbook is merely the modern style.
Posted by: Paranaense | Nov 16 2024 18:44 utc | 79 Only a fool thinks an Electoral College landslide expresses the will of the people. It is customary to pretend that the people who didn’t vote automatically endorse the winner, but that is ruling class/Deep State BS. Trump didn’t even win a landslide in the popular vote and lost (true, as most candidates) the majority of the electorate.

Posted by: steven t johnson | Nov 16 2024 18:58 utc | 87

@Paranaense #79
too scents is so far down the TDS rabbit hole – he wrote some truly impressively stupid nonsense.
Ignore.

Posted by: c1ue | Nov 16 2024 18:59 utc | 88

As others have observed, if they had something, they would have used it before now.
Trump seems to prefer curvaceous models over the age of 21.
As luck would have it, his two Central European picks, Ivana and Melania, both have brains.
Posted by: Jane | Nov 16 2024 17:39 utc | 55
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“if they had something, they would have used it before now.” Jane, who is “they.” We don’t know who “they” are, so we don’t know what they want if they are blackmailing Mr. Trump. If “they” expose their information, that would be the end of the blackmailing game, wouldn’t it?
I think, but like you, I don’t know for sure. I suspect the answer lies in one or several cabinet picks. If they get what they want, why would they expose their hand? I wonder about Matt Gaetz, for example. He is a sleazy pig, and I am pretty sure that even Trump realizes how ridiculous it is to pick Gaetz as the top cop.

Posted by: Ed | Nov 16 2024 19:01 utc | 89

@ockham #80
Really? You don’t know what deNazification means? It means removing the Svoboda, Pravy Sektor etc people from government. It means removing the Azov, Kraken, Aidan etc brigades from the military. It means some type of legislation preventing a repeat of the Maidan.
Demilitarization – again, is this rocket science? No NATO to start with. No Western troops or bases in Ukraine. A severely reduced Ukrainian military.
A neutral Ukraine: self explanatory.
None of this is rocket science. What we do not know is simply how long and what specific forms the above will take. And Russia has no need to announce that.

Posted by: c1ue | Nov 16 2024 19:02 utc | 90

As others have observed, if they had something, they would have used it before now.
Trump seems to prefer curvaceous models over the age of 21.
As luck would have it, his two Central European picks, Ivana and Melania, both have brains.
Posted by: Jane | Nov 16 2024 17:39 utc | 55
—————————————————————-
“if they had something, they would have used it before now.” Jane, who is “they.” We don’t know who “they” are, so we don’t know what they want if they are blackmailing Mr. Trump. If “they” expose their information, that would be the end of the blackmailing game, wouldn’t it?
I think, but like you, I don’t know for sure. I suspect the answer lies in one or several cabinet picks. If they get what they want, why would they expose their hand? I wonder about Matt Gaetz, for example. He is a sleazy pig, and I am pretty sure that even Trump realizes how ridiculous it is to pick Gaetz as the top cop.

Posted by: Ed | Nov 16 2024 19:02 utc | 91

@KevinB #81
What you said, I agree with but I don’t agree it is Trump’s #1 job.
His #1 job is reversing the mass illegal immigration of Biden’s regime.
If he fails to take down the Deep State, that is unfortunate but would not be surprising.
But failure to materially reverse the mass illegal immigration of the past 4 years – that is what a failed Trump presidency looks like.

Posted by: c1ue | Nov 16 2024 19:05 utc | 92

My son voted for Trump even though he had his reservations. He couldn’t take the Woke crap.

Posted by: Old Woman | Nov 16 2024 19:05 utc | 93

Posted by: c1ue | Nov 16 2024 18:55 utc | 85
>Not correct. If the states had full control over utilities – they would not be uniformly managed as utilities.
> The way the Federal government manages utilities is via institutions like the FERC and NERC – in the case of the grid. Similar structures exist for water, telecoms, etc.
OK. Are Trump and Musk hostile to federally managed public utilities? Do they want to privatize them?

Posted by: hopehely | Nov 16 2024 19:06 utc | 94

“@Paranaense #79
too scents is so far down the TDS rabbit hole – he wrote some truly impressively stupid nonsense.
Ignore.”
Posted by: c1ue | Nov 16 2024 18:59 utc | 88
too scents seems like a reasonable fellow but when it comes to Trump his mind turns to mush.

Posted by: Old Woman | Nov 16 2024 19:07 utc | 95

@steven t johnson #87
Trump won.
TRUMP WON.
Trump won the Presidency.
Trump won the Senate.
Trump won the House.
Trump won the popular vote.
Trump won the highest percentage of Hispanic votes since records began in the 1970s.
Trump won 312 electoral votes including EVERY SINGLE SWING STATE.
Trump won the working class vote.
Trump increased his support from literally every single demographic except the rich post-graduate educated (i.e. rich) demo.
Internalize this.

Posted by: c1ue | Nov 16 2024 19:09 utc | 96

I disagree.
The smart Americans voted for Trump, to provide a clear-cut result that could not be administered the mail-in massage.
Posted by: Jane | Nov 16 2024 18:48 utc | 82
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One problem, why would I not vote for one avowed genocider, only to vote for another?

Posted by: Ed | Nov 16 2024 19:09 utc | 97

“@lex talionis #21
Fully agree.
And I will add: the biggest problem is the illegal immigration. Whether it is 4 million or 25 million extra illegal immigrants added under the Biden regime is irrelevant – all of these are on top of the 1 million existing legal immigrants.
This number is obviously way over what the US economy and infrastructure are created to handle.”
Posted by: c1ue | Nov 16 2024 18:49 utc | 83
Amen.
Someone with rationals thought on this issue

Posted by: Old Woman | Nov 16 2024 19:09 utc | 98

Trump. Trump. Trump. Trump. Trump. Trump. Trump. Trump.
Internalize this.
Posted by: c1ue | Nov 16 2024 19:09 utc | 96

Trump is a broke ass grifter. His dumbass marks are broker.

Posted by: too scents | Nov 16 2024 19:12 utc | 99

@hopehely #94
What Musk has talked about publicly is how Federal regulatory agencies like the DOJ, the EPA, etc etc are increasingly both political and actively obstructing business for no actual benefit.
I have not heard a single word about NERC/FERC, for example.
So I do not understand why you think Musk is going to be attacking anything in that sector.
The parlous state of New York City and San Francisco and LA is not because of their utilities – it is because of their abrogation of basic rule of law, law enforcement, prosecution of crimes, and so forth.
These ARE fully under state and local control.
The FBI has the power to investigate corruption and abuses in state and local police forces, for example, but has no charter to force them to do their fiduciary duty.
Having said that – there are exceptions. The California Air Resources Board (CARB) is a mini EPA that is taking on ever more powers for itself. But even there – not clear if Musk would attack them since a very large percentage of Tesla’s profit is entirely due to CARB regulatory efforts against internal combustion engine vehicles.

Posted by: c1ue | Nov 16 2024 19:15 utc | 100