I have big reservations about Gabbard as a politician. Her continuing friendliness to Hindu fundamentalism and her apparent Islamophobia add up to what looks too much like a "War on Terror" foreign policy orientation for my liking.
But if you're going to accuse someone of being a Russian agent or puppet or something similar, whether directly or by heavy-handed insinuation, you should be able to point to something more substantial than some foreign policy position that may not be in direct opposition to the Russian government's position of the moment. And since we know from what's in the public record about Russian political propaganda efforts in US elections that they try to spread confusion on all sides, it's likely that every member of Congress takes some political position that Russian bots propagate to someone on some platform.
The spread of political ideas and philosophies has never been limited to official political boundaries. And all of foreign policy from whatever ideological viewpoint involves with making choices about which other nations' political positions one approves or wants to work with and those one prefers to oppose. Every international treaty is a formal recognition of shared positions by the participating nations on the subject of the treaty.
That's why I find myself asking questions like this into the Twitter chaos:
When we are talking about direct violations of American election law, such as the one documented in the now infamous summary of President Trump's call with the Ukrainian President released by Trump's own White House, that really is pretty straightforward. Dubious business and financial arrangements, domestic as well as foreign, and self-dealing in violation of the Emoluments Clause, are real issues for the Trump family. (And the Bush family, too!)
In Hillary Clinton pushes theory that Russia is "grooming" Tulsi Gabbard — who hits back on Twitter Salon 10/18/2019, Igor Derysh writes, "CNN commentator Bakari Sellers declared that Gabbard is the 'antithesis' of what the Democratic field stands for and claimed 'there is no question that Tulsi Gabbard … is a puppet for the Russian government'." One would hope that people making such a charge can show more than vague suspicions to back that up.
On the other hand, lazy thinking about foreign policy is lazy thinking, whatever country's momentary position may happen to correlate with it.
That struck me in this commentary on the current crisis in northern Syria from Maximilian Popp. He's one of the authors of a story in the current print addition of Der Spiegel (43:2019), "Der Machtwechsel". According to him, Vladimir Putin now personally controls Syria. Popp gives a video commentary in Europas Versagen, that indulges in some surprisingly simplistic assumptions. Am I exaggerating? Here is my transcript and English translation from the German:
Eigentlich ist der Krieg jetzt für Assad und für allem auch für Putin gewonnen. Der Westen hat kapituliert, die USA ist zurückgezogen, die Europäer spielen ohnehin keine Rolle. Die Autokraten, spricht Putin, Assad und Tayyip Erdoğan teilen Syrien jetzt unter sich auf.The idea that the US had a certain amount of control over the self-administered Kurdish area prior to Trump greenlighting Turkey's invasion is probably a bit of a stretch. The US troops were there as a material sign that the US policy was for both Assad and Turkey to not attack the Kurds.
Bis vor eine Woche, bis vor dem Einmarsch der Türkei in Nordösten Syriens, kontrolliert die YPG, also die Kurden, ein Drittel syrischen Staatgebietes. And da sie war mit den USA verbündet waren, kann man sagen auch die USA hatten eine gewisse Kontrolle über diese Region. Das gilt jetzt nicht mehr. Die Kurden haben um sich vor Erdoğan zu schützen, Assad zurück zu Hilfe [gerufen?].
Assads Truppen sind einmarschiert, damit ist das Projekt der kurdischen Selbstverwaltung gescheitert. Und Assad ist wieder am Ruder, kann aber allein nicht regieren. Er ist abhängig von Putin, seiner Schutzmacht. Putin ist der eigentliche Herrscher über Syrien, und in Wahrheit passiert in Syrien was Putin will.
Das gilt für Assad aber auch für Erdoğan. Der Erdoğan bekommt seine Pufferzone, die er auch mit dieser Invasion anstrebte nur dann wenn Putin es zulässt. ...
Dann man muss sich erinnern, Assad ist der, wurde ich sagen, schlimmste Diktator, größte Massenmörder, des 21.Jahrhunderts. Und mit Hilfe Putins, und mit Hilfe einer rücklosen Kriegführung, eine Reihe von Kriegsverbrechen, ist den Beide gelungen, ihrer Macht zu konsolidieren. Assad ist jetzt stärker als je zuvor. Und das ist ein Trauerspiel, das ist eine Tragödie für die Menschen Syrien, aber auch alle die an Demokratie, Rechtstaatlichkeit und Gerechtigkeit glauben. [meine Hervorhebungen]
[In fact, the war is now won for Assad and, above all, for Putin. The West has capitulated, the US has withdrawn, the Europeans are not playing a role anyway. The autocrats, Putin, Assad and Tayyip Erdoğan are now dividing Syria among themselves.
Until a week ago, before Turkey invaded northern Syria, the YPG, i.e. the Kurds, controlled a third of Syria's territory. And since it was allied with the US, one can say the US also had some control over this region. That is no longer the case. The Kurds have called Assad back to help in order to protect themselves from Erdoğan.
Assad's forces have invaded, so the project of Kurdish self-government has failed. And Assad is back at the helm, but cannot govern alone. He is dependent on Putin, his protective power. Putin is the real ruler of Syria, and the truth is that what Putin wants is happening in Syria.
This applies to Assad, but also to Erdoğan. Erdoğan will get his buffer zone, which he sought with this invasion, only if Putin allows it. ...
Then you have to remember, Assad is the, I would say, the worst dictator, the greatest mass murderer, of the 21st century. And with the help of Putin, and with the help of a ruthless brand of warfare, a series of war crimes, both have succeeded in consolidating their power. Assad is stronger than ever. And this is a tragedy for the people of Syria, but also for all those who believe in democracy, the rule of law and justice.] {my emphasis}
But Putin is the real ruler of Syria? This is fantasy land. As the Spiegel article reports, Russia has also been playing a complicated diplomatic-military game involving Turkey, Syria, and the Kurds. There are a lot of things that can go wrong. Syria has reportedly agreed with the Kurdish YPG to attack the Islamist-fundamentalist anti-Assad rebels in Erbil province, which can easily exacerbate the refugee problem for Turkey and potentially Europe. Erdoğan is scheduled to meet with Putin in Moscow this week. (Turkey's Erdogan to travel to Russia for talks with Putin Aljazeera 10/18/2019)
Russia has an economy around the size of Italy's. Its military budget is reportedly a little more than that of Germany and France combined. Their occupation of Crimea and support for separatists in Ukraine is straining their resources. They have a quite a long border with China, with whom they currently have peaceful relations but they also know they have to be prepared to defend that border. Yes, Russia has nuclear weapons, and the whole world urgently needs to take nuclear nonproliferation and arms reduction much more seriously.
But political commentators need to look at maps sometimes. Does it look like Syria is closer to the US or to Russia? EU and NATO members Greece and Bulgaria are kind of close. Greece, Italy, and other EU nations are affected by the massive refugee crisis the Syrian civil war has caused. So is Turkey, which is Syria's direct neighbor and a NATO member.
But whatever regional security interests Russia perceives that require involving itself in the multiple conflicts in Syria, it's certainly not controlling events there. The far more economically and militarily powerful United States found that remaking Iraq, Syria, and even Iran according to its liking - the dream of the neocons backing the disastrous Iraq War - has turned out to be remarkably complicated.
And when it comes to identifying what "Russian talking points" are, the current Syria-Turkey-Kurdish situation offers quite a few possibilities. The Russians have provided aid to the Kurds, and the Syrians who are supported by Russia are also teaming with the Russians to attack the Islamist anti-Assad rebels in Idlib. That may not entirely please currently Russia-friendly Turkey, which has provided support for just such anti-Assad rebels in the past. Plus, Russia-friendly Turkey is currently invading Russia-friendly Syria in violation of international law which all United Nations members including the US recognize as legitimate. Turkey is a NATO ally of the US. And the Kurds were informal US allies two weeks or so ago.
So I'm pretty sure that someone can be pro- or anti-Assad, pro- or anti-Turkey, pro- or anti-Kurds, pro- or anti- the anti-Assad rebels in Idlib that may be pro-Turkey and/or pro-US or used to be, and still manage to be using Russian, Turkish, Kurdish, US, and/or Syrian talking points at the same time.
And at the same time you might find yourself also agreeing with an awful guy like Pat Buchanan. And maybe disagreeing at the same time, too. (Is Putin Really the New King of the Middle East? The American Conservative 10/18/2019)
Also, a week from now, there could be a whole set of new talking points.
It's not an argument for ignoring the Syrian situation just because it's complicated. It's important for Americans, not least because it seems for the moment to have raised the possibility of actually impeaching Trump and remove him from office. I'm just saying we shouldn't be relying or dumb or simplistic assumptions about it. Unless you're Donald Trump, in which case you really can't make any different kind of assumptions.
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