Submitted by Alastair Crooke,
Walter Kirn, an American novelist and cultural critic, in his 2009 memoir, Lost in the Meritocracy, described how, after a sojourn at Oxford, he came to be a member of โthe class that runs thingsโ โ the one that โwrites the headlines, and the stories under themโ. It was the account of a middle-class kid from Minnesota trying desperately to fit into the รฉlite world, and then to his surprise, realising that he didnโt want to fit in at all.
Now 61, Kirn has a newsletter on Substack and co-hosts a lively podcast devoted in large part to critiquing โestablishment liberalismโ. His contrarian drift has made him more vocal about his distrust of รฉlite institutions โ as he wrote in 2022:
โFor years now, the answer, in every situationโโRussiagate,โ COVID, Ukraineโhas been more censorship, more silencing, more division, more scapegoating. Itโs almost as if these are goals in themselves โ and the cascade of emergencies mere excuses for them. Hate is always the way,โ
Kirnโs politics, a friend of his suggested, was โold-school liberal,โ underscoring that it was the other โso-called liberalsโ who had changed: โIโve been told repeatedly in the last year that free speech is a right-wing issue; I wouldnโt call [Kirn] Conservative. I would just say heโs a free-thinker, nonconformist, iconoclasticโ, the friend said.
To understand Kirnโs contrarian turn โ and to make sense of todayโs form of American politics โ it is necessary to understand one key term. It is not found in standard textbooks, but is central to the new playbook of power: the โwhole of societyโ.
โThe term was popularised roughly a decade ago by the Obama administration, which liked that its bland, technocratic appearance could be used as cover to erect a mechanism for a governance โwhole-of-societyโ approachโ โ one that asserts that as actors โ media, NGOs,corporations and philanthropist institutions โ interact with public officials to play a critical role not just in setting the public agenda, but in enforcing public decisions.
Jacob Siegel has explained the historical development of the โwhole of societyโ approach during the Obama administrationโs attempt to pivot in the โwar on terrorโ to what it called โCVEโ โ countering violent extremism. The idea was to surveil the American peopleโs online behaviour in order to identify those who may, at some unspecified time in the future, โcommit a crimeโ.
Inherent to the concept of the potential โviolent extremistโ who has, as yet, committed no crime, is a weaponised vagueness: โA cloud of suspicion that hangs over anyone who challenges the prevailing ideological narrativesโ.
โWhat the various iterations of this whole-of-society approach have in common is their disregard for democratic process and the right to free association โ their embrace of social media surveillance, and their repeated failure to deliver results โฆโ.
Aaron Kheriaty writes:
โMore recently, the whole of society political machinery facilitated the overnight flip from Joe Biden to Kamala Harris, with news media and party supporters turning on a dime when instructed to do soโdemocratic primary voters โbe damnedโ. This happened not because of the personalities of the candidates involved, but on the orders of party leadership. The actual nominees are fungible, and entirely replaceable, functionaries, serving the interests of the ruling party โฆ The party was delivered to her because she was selected by its leaders to act as its figurehead. That real achievement belongs not to Harris, but to the party-stateโ.
What has this to do with Geo-politics โ and whether there will be war between Iran and Israel?
Well, quite a lot.
It is not just western domestic politics that has been shaped by the Obama CVE totalising mechanics.
The โparty-stateโ machinery (Kheriatyโs term) for geo-politics has also been co-opted:
โTo avoid the appearance of totalitarian overreach in such effortsโ, Kheriaty argues,โthe party requires an endless supply of causes โฆ that party officers use as pretexts to demand ideological alignment across public and private sector institutions. These causes come in roughly two forms: the urgent existential crisis (examples include COVID and the much-hyped threat of Russian disinformation) โ and victim groups supposedly in need of the partyโs protectionโ.
โItโs almost as if these are goals in themselves โ and the cascade of emergencies mere excuses for them. Hate is always the wayโ, Kirn underlines.
Just to be clear, the implication is that all geo-strategic critics of the party-stateโs ideological alignment must be jointly and collectively treated as potentially dangerous extremists. Russia, China, Iran and North Korea therefore are bound together as presenting a single obnoxious extremism that stands in opposition to โOur Democracyโ; versus โOur Free Speechโ and versus โOur Expert Consensusโ.
So, if the move to war against one extremist (i.e. versus Iran) is โacclaimedโ by 58 standing ovations in the joint session of Congress last month, then further debate is unnecessary โ any more than Kamala Harrisโ nomination as Presidential candidate needs to be endorsed through primary voting:
Candidate Harris told hecklers on Wednesday, chanting about genocide in Gaza, โto pipe downโ โ unless they โwant Trump to winโ. Tribal norms must not be challenged (even for genocide).
Sandra Parker, Chairwoman of the political advocacy arm for the three thousand members of Christians United for Israel (CUFI) was advising on correct talking points, the Times of Israel reports:
โThe rise of Republican far right-wingers who spurn decades of (bi-partisan) pro-Israel orthodoxies, favouring isolationism and resurrecting anti-Jewish tropes is alarming pro-Israel evangelicals and their Jewish alliesโฆ The break with decades of assertive foreign policy was evident last year when Sen. Josh Hawley derided the โliberal empireโ that he dismissively characterised as bipartisan โNeoconservatives on the right, and liberal globalists on the left: Together they make up what you might call the uniparty, the DC establishment that transcends all changing administrationsโโ.
At the CUFI talking points conference, the fear of increased isolation on the Right was the issue:
โYouโre going to see that adversaries will see the U.S. as in retreatโ โ should isolationists get the upper hand: Activists were advised to push back: Should lawmakers claim that NATO expansion is what triggered Russiaโs invasion of Ukraine: โShould anybody begin to make the argument that the reason the Russians have moved in on Ukraine โ is because of NATO enlargement โ can I just say that this is the age-old โblame America trope,โโ the Chair advised the assembled delegates.
โThey have the strain of isolationism thatโs โ โLetโs just do China and forget about Iran, forget about Russia, letโs just do one thingโ โ but it doesnโt work that way,โ said Boris Zilberman, director of policy and strategy for the CUFI Action Fund. Instead, he described โan intricate fabric of bad actors working hand in handโ.
So, to get to the bottom of this western mind-management in which appearance and reality are cut from the same cloth of hostile extremism: Iran, Russia and China are โcut from itโ likewise.
Plainly put, the import of this โbehavioural-engineering enterprise (it no longer having much to do with the truth, no longer having much to do with your right to desire what you wish โ or not desire what you donโt wish)โ โ is, as Kirn says: โeveryone is in on the gameโ. โThe corporate and state interests donโt believe you are wanting the right thingsโyou might want Donald Trumpโ or, that you arenโt wanting the things you should want moreโ (such as seeing Putin removed).
If this โwhole of societyโ machinery is understood correctly in the wider world, then the likes of Iran or Hizbullah are forced to take note that war in the Middle East inevitably may bleed across into wider war against Russia โ and have adverse ramifications for China, too.
That is not because it makes sense. It doesnโt. But it is because the ideological needs of โwhole of societyโ foreign-policy hinge on simplistic โmoralโ narratives: Ones that express emotional attitudes, rather than argued propositions.
Netanyahu went to Washington to lay out the case for all-out war on Iran โ a moral war of civilisation versus the Barbarians, he said. He was applauded for his stance. He returned to Israel and immediately provoked Hizbullah, Iran and Hamas in a way that dishonoured and humiliated both โ knowing well that it would draw a riposte that would most likely lead to wider war.
Clearly Netanyahu, backed by a plurality of Israelis, wants an Armageddon (with full U.S. support, of course). He has the U.S., he thinks, exactly where he wants it. Netanyahu has only to escalate in one way or another โ and Washington, he calculates (rightly or wrongly), will be compelled to follow.
Is this why Iran is taking its time? The calculus on an initial riposte to Israel is โone thingโ, but how then might Netanyahu retaliate in Iran and Lebanon? That can be altogether an โother thingโ. There have been hints of nuclear weapons being deployed (in both instances). There is however nothing solid, to this latter rumour.
Further, how might Israel respond towards Russia in Syria, or might the U.S. react through escalation in Ukraine? After all, Moscow has assisted Iran with its air defences (just as the West is assisting Ukraine against Russia).
Many imponderables.
Yet, one thing is clear (as former Russian President Medvedev noted recently): โthe knot is tighteningโ in the Middle East. Escalation is across all the fronts. War, Medvedev suggested, may be โthe only way this knot will be cutโ.
Iran must think that appeasing western pleas in the wake of the Israeli assassination of Iranian officials at their Damascus Consulate was a mistake. Netanyahu did not appreciate Iranโs moderation. He doubled-down on war, making it inevitable, sooner or later.
Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ZeroHedge.
Source: ZeroHedge News
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