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Este blog trata basicamente de ideias, se possível inteligentes, para pessoas inteligentes. Ele também se ocupa de ideias aplicadas à política, em especial à política econômica. Ele constitui uma tentativa de manter um pensamento crítico e independente sobre livros, sobre questões culturais em geral, focando numa discussão bem informada sobre temas de relações internacionais e de política externa do Brasil. Para meus livros e ensaios ver o website: www.pralmeida.org. Para a maior parte de meus textos, ver minha página na plataforma Academia.edu, link: https://itamaraty.academia.edu/PauloRobertodeAlmeida.

Mostrando postagens com marcador Timothy Snyder. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Timothy Snyder. Mostrar todas as postagens

segunda-feira, 17 de fevereiro de 2025

Uma história alternativa de Munique 1938 e dos Sudetos 1939 - Timothy Snyder (Thinking about…)

 Appeasement at Munich

World Wars, Past and Possible

As American and Russian negotiators converge today in Munich for a major security conference, carrying in their briefcases various plans about Ukraine without Ukraine, the temptation is to recall another meeting in that city. Appeasement of the aggressor seems to be the plan now, as it was with Germany in 1938.

But the resemblances between that moment and this go deeper, and it worth pausing to consider them. The symmetry between Germany-Czechoslovakia in 1938 and Russia-Ukraine in 2022 is uncanny, and pausing for a moment on the resemblances might help us to take a broader view of today. We are prisoners, now more than ever, of the rumors and disinformation and emotions of the moment. History can give us at least a calmer perspective. And so consider:

Hitler denied the legitimacy of the Czechoslovak state. As German chancellor, he systematically denied that it had a right to exist. Although its leaders were democratically elected, he claimed that they had no right to rule. Because its people spoke various languages, he claimed that there was no such thing as a body of Czechoslovak citizens. Hitler argued that Czechoslovakia itself was artificial, the result of a historical turning point that never should have happened, the settlement after the First World War. He claimed that the existence of national minority gave him the right to intervene in Czechoslovak politics. In May 1938, he ordered his army to make preparations for a quick strike on Czechoslovakia. He also activiated his agents inside the country. On September 12thHitler gave a rousing speech to Germans about the entirely fictional extermination of the German minority in Czechoslovakia. We know what comes next: Britain and France, together with Germany and Italy, decided in Munich on September 30ththat Czechoslovakia should cede crucial border territories to Germany. These were the most defensible parts of the country. Czechoslovakia’s leaders, although they were not consulted, chose to accept the partition of their country.

To see where we are now, it might help, though, to imagine how things might have gone differently. And so, a counterfactual paragraph, in italics:

Czechoslovak’s leaders chose to resist. Though President Benes was generally expected to flee to a foreign capital and form a government in exile, he remained in Prague. His position was stronger than it might have seemed. Although it was a new state and little known to the European powers, Czechoslovakia was a successful democracy and an industrial power. It had the best arms industry in Europe, and a series of fortifications improved the natural defense provided by the mountain range on its border with Germany. Although in the capitals of Europe, the wise heads expected the Germans to reach Prague in three days, in fact the Wehrmacht stuttered in the mountains. The Sudeten War was underway. European public opinion turned against the aggressors. Germany was forced to bring troops from other sectors, and then to mobilize more soldiers. In the midst of a war with an unsure outcome, this was unpopular. Seeing the success of the Czechoslovak resistance, the British and the French began to provide aid, financial and then military. The Americans helped the British to help the Czechoslovaks. France reoccupied the territories that it had allowed Germany to take a few years earlier. A year into what was called the Sudetenland War, Hitler decided that he needed a quick victory to secure his domestic position and intimidate the European powers. Under the cover of another mobilization, he ordered an invasion of Poland’s Baltic territories. But he was unable to keep the operation a secret. Germans began to protest. The Poles had time to move troops from their eastern border. Hitler had to call off the operation. Meanwhile, the Czechoslovaks exploited the chaos to launch a series of paratroop drops behind German lines. Germans took to the streets to demand peace. The Sudeten War was over.

To be sure, we cannot say in detail what might have been. Had Czechoslovakia resisted, however, we can be reasonably confident that there would have been no Second World War, at least not of the sort that Europe experienced beginning in September 1939.

A war against Czechoslovakia in 1938 really would have been hard going for the Germans. Hitler was not bluffing, but his army was not ready. The partition of Czechoslovakia without a fight made matters much easier for him. When Germany invaded Poland in September 1939, it used intact Czechoslovakia tanks and other Czechoslovak arms. He also controlled Czechoslovak economic and human resources. Had Czechoslovakia resisted, that would not have been the case. Even assuming that Czechoslovakia were eventually defeated by Germany, there is no way Germany would have been able to move so quickly against Poland. Also: when Germany invaded Poland in September 1939, it depended on its alliance with the Soviet Union, sealed that August in agreements remembered as the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. Had Czechoslovakia resisted, the much harder for the Soviets to have chosen that most active form of appeasement of the Nazis. It is not clear that Germany would have dared to invade Poland at all without Soviet support.

So it does seem reasonable to presume, at a minimum, that Germany would have been, at the very least, slowed down, and denied the prestige and self-confidence that came from the succeeding lightening victories over Poland in 1939 and then France in 1940. Czechoslovak resistance would have made appeasement of Hitler, until then the major drift of European policy, all but impossible.

Now let us consider some of the deeper resemblances between 1938 and 2022. The coincidence of two meetings at Munich is part of two longer stories, eerily similar.

Putin denied the legitimacy of the Ukrainian state. Although its leaders were democratically elected, he claimed that they had no right to rule. Because its people spoke various languages, he claimed that there was no such thing as a body of Ukrainian citizens. Hitler argued that Ukraine itself was artificial, the result of a historical turning point that never should have happened, the collapse of the Soviet Union. He claimed that the existence of national minority gave him the right to intervene in Ukraine politics. At some point in 2021, he ordered his army to make preparations for a quick strike on Ukraine. He also activated his agents inside the country. In a series of speeches that December, Putin provided pretexts for a coming invasion of Ukraine.

Here the timeline turns in a different way. Something happened in early 2022 that few people beyond Ukraine expected to happen.

Ukraine’s leaders chose to resist. Though President Zelens’kyi was generally expected to flee to a foreign capital and form a government in exile, he remained in Kyiv. His position was stronger than it might have seemed. Although it was a new state and little known to the European powers, Ukraine was a democracy and an industrial power. It had one of the best arms industries in Europe, and its commanders had a plan to allow Russian forces to penetrate and then to surround and destroy them. Although the wise heads in Moscow and Washington expected the Russians to reach Kyiv in three days, in fact the Russians were defeated at Kharkiv and Kyiv, although they made meaningful gains in the southeast. By the end of 2022 Ukraine had taken back about half the territories Russia took in the first weeks of the war. European public opinion turned against the aggressors. Appeasement of Russia became difficult. Russia was forced to bring troops from other sectors, and then to seek help from China, Iran, and North Korea.

No italics this time: that is how it happened. And these events give us a sense of what we have to lose.

Three years in, the outcome of the war remains uncertain. What is certain is that no wider war began. Ukraine has destroyed much of the Russian armed forces, and drawn Russian troops away from NATO borders. With some help from allies, it is, in effect, fulfilling the entire NATO mission with its own armed forces, and without NATO membership. Indirectly but meaningfully, Ukraine contributed to the fall of Assad in Syria, by drawing away the Russian air forces and other forces. 

Ukraine also, by resisting, has made less likely other wars of aggression. Although this went largely unnoticed, the Ukrainians also held back nuclear proliferation. Russia used nuclear bluffs throughout the war. By ignoring them and resisting a conventional invasion with conventional power, Ukraine communicated to the world that nuclear weapons were not necessary to resist a nuclear power. That, like so much else, depended upon Ukraine’s continuing ability to fight.

Although one can never be sure exactly where a counter-factual example leads, the events in Czechoslovakia in 1938 help to clarify the stakes of the war in Ukraine. In the first case, a timeline led to a world war, because unnecessary concessions to Hitler created opportunities he would not otherwise have had. The Czechoslovaks, of course, were not chiefly to blame. Had Britain and France not joined Italy and Germany in the Munich agreement, it would have been far easier for Czechoslovakia to resist. In my view, Czechoslovakia still might have done so, and in so doing would have prevented a world war. But it is important to see that the great powers also bear responsibility.

Had Czechoslovakia acted to prevent a world war, it is very unlikely that anyone’s imagination would have reached that far. It is very unlikely that anyone would have thanked to Czechoslovaks for preventing what did not happen. History would have recorded instead a Sudeten War, or a Central European War, or something along those lines. This is worth bearing in mind. We do not appreciate what the Ukrainians have prevented. We lack the imagination, or perhaps the generosity, that is needed to see our own interests.

A mile marker in southern Ukraine. TS, 2/2025

No one in the heights of Musk-Trump, I would suppose, gives a thought to what would have happened had Ukraine not resisted, or what will happen if American policy makes that resistance impossible. For whatever reason, most of the high officials in the Trump administration have taken something that resembles Russia’s view of the war. But Russia can only win if it is appeased, which is to say helped. Three years in, Americans seem to be rushing to Munich appease the aggressor. (Except for Secretary of State Marco Rubio, whose plane, it is reported, had a mechanical problem.)

One way to consider the current state of events is this: the Ukrainians have kept us in a kind of suspended 1938, a 1938 that has lasted three years. The year 1938 was far from ideal, but it was much better than 1939, and world war. By resisting, essentially on their own, the Ukrainians have created a timeline that would not otherwise have existed. The rest of us, although we live in that timeline, have done little to deserve it.

Whatever the Trump administration’s other motives in appeasing Russia, that lack of appreciation is among them. Trump himself, his vice-president, the man who holds power (Musk), and their milieux in general all tend to treat Ukraine as a kind of irritant, as a problem rather than as a solution. They are very far away from understanding that Ukraine has held off chaos and war well beyond its borders. Or, perhaps, in some cases, they blame Ukraine for that very achievement, because what they want is war and chaos. 

However that may be, Trump’s policy, at least in the last few days, has been a race to appeasement. He has tried to make it normal to speak to Putin. His administration has publicly said what Ukraine has to do. And, again, whatever the motives, the operative logic is one of appeasement: granting land to the aggressor, reducing the sovereignty of the country attacked.

History can help us to remember certain patterns of causality. It can also, perhaps more importantly, remind us that many things are possible, including things that, for better or worse, did not actually happen. Upon the decisions of a few people at a critical time can hang the passage of one chain of events to another.

Any irony will be lost on American and Russian negotiators at Munich. Russian diplomats have been trained to believe that 1938 was directed against the Soviet Union, and thus that they were the true victims — which is pretty much the Putinist interpretation of history in general. The people who instructed the American team is unlikely to know what happened in Munich in September 1938, sad to say.

But one does not need irony, or even history, to see the essentially logical problem of appeasing Putin now. 

Russia is the aggressor. Russia says openly that its war aims extend far beyond what it has achieved now. Russia has an interest in a pause in the war because it is doing poorly and because its leaders believe, reasonably, that a ceasefire will end US support of Ukraine, distract the Europeans, and make it harder for Ukraine to mobilize its population and resources a second time for a later Russian strike. Russia also naturally has an interest in American leaders putatively granting it Ukrainian territory, including territory which it does not even occupy. This sets a precedent that international law does not matter and/or that Ukraine is not a legitimate state protected by such law.

Appeasing Russia, if it leads to Russian victory now or later, could very well create the conditions for a world war. A Russia that destroys Ukraine, in effect with American assistance, would be a very different country. Ukrainian resources, like Czechoslovakia resources in 1938, would make of the aggressor a much stronger power. This is an uncomfortable point, but one that must be considered. Ukraine has the best army in Europe, and the most battle-hardened one. It is the only country in the West to have fought a major war in this decade. It is innovating faster than others can copy. All of this, and the agriculture, and the minerals, and the ports, can be lost to Russia. And then, after a time of course, Europe faces a far more powerful country, one made for war, one whose leaders believe that war works. 

A Russian victory, especially one enabled by American diplomacy, opens the world not just to further Russian aggression in Europe, but to wars of aggression everywhere. It also almost certainly means nuclear proliferation, since future aggressors and those who fear them will both learn the lesson that nuclear weapons are necessary.

The Russo-Ukrainian War is horrible, and should be brought to an end. But appeasement is an apparent shortcut that leads to longer and bloodier conflict. It would not be that difficult, at least in normal conditions, to apply American power to end Russia’s war in Ukraine. The logic is simple: make things harder for Russia, and make things easier for Ukraine. 

At the moment, American policy is the opposite. 

Musk-Trump is making it harder for the Ukrainians to keep us in our extended 1938. Of course, that does not mean that American policy will be consistent, let alone succeed. The war cannot actually be halted without Ukrainian and indeed European participation. The desire for a quick resolution is more likely than not to lead to unexpected consequences, for which the Americans will likely lack the patience.The desire for a quick deal leads to a haste that overlooks important aspects of the problem. 

Given the general level of distress across the federal government, it is hard to imagine that the Americans are very well prepared for these meetings — although the Russians will be. The Americans cannot get official planes off the ground. Lower-ranking officials are right now trying to qualify the more radically appeasing concessions that Trump and his secretaries of defense and state have made in public. The American vice-president was going to meet with the Ukrainian president at Munich. But then again now perhaps he is not. There is a distressing “who knows” quality to all of this.

But however things turn out, the first American move under Musk-Trump has been to endorse appeasement. Knowingly or not, and I do not presume to say which, that choice pushes us one step towards 1939. 

11:35am Munich time, 14 February 2025

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Russo e americanos falam sobre a Ucrânia sem os ucranianos - Timothy Snyder (Thinking About, via Revista ID)

 

Russos e americanos falam sobre a Ucrânia sem os ucranianos

Timothy Snyder, Thinking About (17/02/2025)

Amanhã na Ucrânia, soldados russos atacarão ucranianos. Drones, bombas e foguetes russos atingirão lares ucranianos. Uma guerra criminosa de agressão continuará.

Amanhã, na Arábia Saudita, autoridades russas discutirão o futuro da Ucrânia com um punhado de americanos, delegados por um presidente que simpatiza com a visão russa da guerra. Os russos terão o luxo de falar sobre a Ucrânia sem a presença de ucranianos.

As manchetes são sobre “negociações de paz”. Mas o que realmente está acontecendo? Como devemos pensar sobre esse encontro incomum na Arábia Saudita?

Aqui estão dez sugestões, extraídas de anos de trabalho nas relações entre os três países e de algumas observações pessoais recentes na Conferência de Segurança de Munique.

1. Seja crítico com as palavras oferecidas. Questione a palavra “paz”. O termo usado na mídia é “negociações de paz”. Os Estados Unidos e a Rússia não estão em guerra. A Rússia está em guerra com a Ucrânia, mas a Ucrânia não é convidada para essas negociações. As autoridades russas, por sua vez, geralmente não falam de paz. Elas apresentam as negociações com os Estados Unidos como um golpe geopolítico, o que não é a mesma coisa. Os mais altos funcionários russos declararam repetidamente que seus objetivos de guerra na Ucrânia são maximalistas, incluindo a destruição do país. Observadores informados geralmente tomam como certo que a Rússia usaria um cessar-fogo para distrair os Estados Unidos e a Europa, desmobilizar a Ucrânia e atacar novamente. Este não é um plano que os russos estão trabalhando muito para disfarçar. É um ponto simples, mas sempre vale a pena fazer: pode realmente haver paz amanhã na Ucrânia, se a Rússia simplesmente removesse sua força de invasão.

2. Considere as horríveis táticas de negociação dos Estados Unidos. Elas são tão desastrosamente ruins que colocam em questão se essas conversas podem realmente ser consideradas negociações. Trump e todos ao seu redor continuam enfatizando que os Estados Unidos estão com pressa. Mas nenhum negociador faria isso. Admitir urgência concede ao outro lado a facilidade de arrastar os pés para obter concessões. E estas já estão em oferta! Membros da administração Trump e o próprio Trump continuam concedendo pontos essenciais à Rússia antes de quaisquer conversas reais e em público (território, filiação à OTAN, momento das eleições, até mesmo a existência da Ucrânia) — questões que não são apenas essenciais para a Ucrânia, mas elementares para a soberania ucraniana. A única maneira de tal comportamento americano fazer sentido é se considerarmos que os americanos estão negociando como russos. Mas se todos na Arábia Saudita estiverem do mesmo lado, estas não são negociações. "Conversas" são mais seguras.

3. Não se esqueça de que a lei e a ética são parte da realidade. Os Estados Unidos escolheram negociar com os agressores (o presidente da Federação Russa foi indiciado por crimes de guerra) em vez de apoiar as vítimas. Ao estender a mão para Vladimir Putin, Donald Trump acabou com o isolamento internacional do líder russo. Ao falar de Putin como alguém que supostamente quer a paz em vez de como o agressor na guerra mais sangrenta desde 1945, ou como alguém que foi indiciado por crimes de guerra, Trump está buscando limpar a mancha moral da pessoa que quebrou a mais fundamental das leis internacionais ao invadir outro país. Mesmo que as negociações não tenham outras consequências, a reabilitação de Putin por Trump é significativa para a Rússia.

4. Enfatize a ausência da Ucrânia. É um truísmo da história internacional, assim como senso comum simples, que se você não está à mesa, então você está no menu. Discussões com a Rússia sobre a Ucrânia sem a Ucrânia criam uma situação estrutural na qual os interesses básicos da Ucrânia e dos ucranianos não podem ser representados. Nenhuma analogia histórica é perfeita, é claro; mas precedentes para tal tratamento na Europa incluem os acordos de Munique de 1938 e o pacto Molotov-Ribbentrop de 1939. Um registro mais longo pode ser encontrado na história do colonialismo.

5. Lembre-se de que a Ucrânia é um estado soberano e vítima da guerra. A combinação de pompa e mistério em torno dessas conversas eleva seus participantes aos atores centrais da história. Se a narrativa da cúpula for feita de forma descuidada, pode criar a impressão de que a Rússia e os Estados Unidos de alguma forma têm autoridade para decidir o futuro da Ucrânia. É bem possível que eles tentem forçar a Ucrânia a fazer coisas, usando coerção ou chantagem, e deve ficar claro que isso está implícito em qualquer acordo sobre a Ucrânia sem a Ucrânia. Nenhum acordo entre a Rússia e os Estados Unidos tem aplicação legal para a Ucrânia. Certamente vale a pena saber e mencionar que a Ucrânia construiu pacientemente um consenso em torno de sua própria fórmula de paz. Vale a pena revisar, mesmo que seja apenas para conhecimento prévio das questões básicas.

6. Considere o que sabemos sobre poder. Na guerra, há vencedores e perdedores. Os agressores fazem as pazes quando lhes parece que sua agressão não é mais do seu interesse. Falar é incidental a isso. É bastante surpreendente ouvir o pessoal de Trump, que fala tanto sobre força , repetidamente fazendo o ponto de acampamento de verão de esquerda de que tudo o que realmente precisamos para a paz é nos reunirmos e conversarmos. Se o governo Trump levasse a sério a ideia de chegar à paz rapidamente, eles pressionariam a Rússia e acelerariam o apoio à Ucrânia. Como não estão fazendo nenhuma dessas coisas, eles ou não entendem o poder ou não estão almejando a paz.

7. Resista à propaganda russa. Para a Rússia, essas conversas são uma ocasião para espalhar sua linha. Os propagandistas russos terão coisas a dizer sobre a legitimidade do estado ucraniano, os padrões da história ucraniana, as pessoas que governam a Ucrânia e assim por diante. As conversas serão a ocasião para tentar fazer com que repórteres internacionais repitam essas alegações.

8. Seja crítico da propaganda americana também. Os russos gostam de espalhar histórias sobre suposto desperdício na Ucrânia. O pessoal de Trump tem seu próprio uso para isso. Isso se encaixa em seu senso de queixa, que é como eles abordam todos os assuntos. O pessoal de Trump se concentra na ideia de "recuperar os custos" da ajuda dos EUA à Ucrânia. Isso não é sério e enganoso. O principal problema orçamentário dos EUA é que os ricos não pagam sua parte dos impostos. Toda a conversa dessa administração dominada por bilionários sobre recuperação de custos é duvidosa apenas por esse motivo. A maior parte da contribuição militar americana para a Ucrânia fica nos Estados Unidos, mantendo as fábricas funcionando e pagando os trabalhadores americanos. Em geral, as armas que os EUA enviaram para a Ucrânia eram obsoletas e teriam sido destruídas, a custos para o contribuinte americano, sem nunca terem sido usadas. Os EUA contribuíram menos para a Ucrânia do que a Europa. Como uma porcentagem do PIB, os EUA estão muito, muito atrás dos países que o pessoal de Trump critica implacavelmente. O custo efetivo para os europeus tem sido, de fato, muito maior, já que as sanções à Rússia importavam muito mais para as economias europeias do que para a economia dos EUA. Os custos essenciais da guerra na Ucrânia foram pagos pelos ucranianos, não apenas em enormes perdas econômicas, mas em milhões de migrações forçadas, centenas de milhares de feridos e dezenas de milhares de vidas perdidas. Ao resistir à Rússia, a Ucrânia também forneceu tremendos benefícios econômicos e de segurança aos Estados Unidos. O que os Estados Unidos aprenderam com os ucranianos sobre a guerra moderna — e esse é apenas um dos muitos benefícios — justifica facilmente os custos, mesmo nos termos de segurança mais restritos.

9. Pese as vulnerabilidades de Trump. Por décadas, Trump tende a repetir o que os líderes soviéticos e russos dizem. Ele fala com Putin regularmente e expressa seu fascínio. Ele repete pontos de discussão russos sobre a guerra. A noção de que a guerra é custosa para os Estados Unidos é um ponto em que a propaganda putinista e trumpista se sobrepõe, e parece direcionada a uma das obsessões de Trump de que ele está sendo enganado. A Ucrânia, é claro, é a parte que sofreu os custos econômicos. Mas redefinir a guerra como uma oportunidade para os Estados Unidos ganharem dinheiro parece projetado para manipular Trump.

10. Reflita sobre o colonialismo. A guerra da Rússia contra a Ucrânia tem sido obviamente colonial, em todos os sentidos da palavra. Moscou nega que a Ucrânia seja um estado, que os ucranianos sejam um povo, que seus líderes eleitos sejam legítimos. Uma guerra envolta em tal ideologia colonial permite a exploração de recursos ucranianos roubados, incluindo crianças roubadas. Nas últimas semanas, os americanos começaram a falar com grande interesse sobre os recursos minerais da Ucrânia. Na Conferência de Segurança de Munique, os americanos pediram ao presidente ucraniano que cedesse metade da riqueza mineral de seu país para sempre em troca de um tapinha na cabeça hoje. Pode muito bem ser que os Estados Unidos pretendam usar a ameaça de violência russa para apreender a riqueza ucraniana — "poderíamos parar a guerra, mas precisamos de seus recursos primeiro". Uma extorsão de proteção, em outras palavras.

Então: ao repetir a noção de “negociações de paz”, não estaríamos contribuindo para uma farsa? Dos fatos observados acima, três possíveis enquadramentos das negociações russo-americanas emergem. Primeiro, os americanos querem sinceramente a paz, mas são simplesmente incrivelmente incompetentes. Segundo, a incompetência é proposital; o jogo é manipulado para gerar um acordo entre a Rússia e os EUA que é inaceitável para a Ucrânia. Terceiro, Putin e Trump já elaboraram planos comuns para a dominação colonial da Ucrânia, e as negociações apenas fornecem cobertura.

Revista ID é uma publicação apoiada pelos leitores.

domingo, 2 de fevereiro de 2025

A destruição dos EUA por Trump e sua tropa - Timothy Snyder

The Logic of Destruction

And how to resist it

What is a country? The way its people govern themselves. America exists because its people elect those who make and execute laws. The assumption of a democracy is that individuals have dignity and rights that they realize and protect by acting together.

The people who now dominate the executive branch of the government deny all of this, and are acting, quite deliberately, to destroy the nation. For them, only a few people, the very wealthy with a certain worldview, have rights, and the first among these is to dominate. 

For them, there is no such thing as an America, or Americans, or democracy, or citizens, and they act accordingly. Now that the oligarchs and their clients are inside the federal government, they are moving, illegally and unconstitutionally, to take over its institutions.

The parts of the government that work to implement laws have been maligned for decades. Americans have been told that the people who provide them with services are conspirators within a “deep state.” We have been instructed that the billionaires are the heroes.

All of this work was preparatory to the coup that is going on now. The federal government has immense capacity and control over trillions of dollars. That power was a cocreation of the American people. It belongs to them. The oligarchs around Trump are working now to take it for themselves.

Theirs is a logic of destruction. It is very hard to create a large, legitimate, functioning government. The oligarchs have no plan to govern. They will take what they can, and disable the rest. The destruction is the point. They don’t want to control the existing order. They want disorder in which their relative power will grow. 

Think of the federal government as a car. You might have thought that the election was like getting the car serviced. Instead, when you come into the shop, the mechanics, who somehow don’t look like mechanics, tell you that they have taken the parts of your car that work and sold them and kept the money. And that this was the most efficient thing to do. And that you should thank them.

The gap between the oligarchs’ wealth and everyone else’s will grow. Knowing what they themselves will do and when, they will have bet against the stock market in advance of Trump’s deliberately destructive tariffs, and will be ready to tell everyone to buy the crypto they already own. But that is just tomorrow and the day after.

In general, the economic collapse they plan is more like a reverse flood from the Book of Genesis, in which the righteous will all be submerged while the very worst ride Satan’s ark. The self-chosen few will ride out the forty days and forty night. When the waters subside, they will be alone to dominate. 

photo of turn on post lamp

Trump’s tariffs (which are also likely illegal) are there to make us poor. Trump’s attacks on America’s closest friends, countries such as Canada and Denmark, are there to make enemies of countries where constitutionalism works and people are prosperous. As their country is destroyed, Americans must be denied the idea that anything else is possible.

Deportations are a spectacle to turn Americans against one another, to make us afraid, and to get us to see pain and camps as normal. They also create busy-work for law enforcement, locating the “criminals” in workplaces across the country, as the crime of the century takes place at the very center of power. 

The best people in American federal law enforcement, national security, and national intelligence are being fired. The reasons given for this are DEI and trumpwashing the past. Of course, if you fire everyone who was concerned in some way with the investigations of January 6th or of Russia, that will be much or even most of the FBI. Those are bad reasons, but the reality is worse: the aim is lawlessness: to get the police and the patriots out of the way.

In the logic of destruction, there is no need to rebuild afterwards. In this chaos, the oligarchs will tell us that there is no choice but to have a strong man in charge. It can be a befuddled Trump signing ever larger pieces of paper for the cameras, or a conniving Vance who, unlike Trump, has always known the plot. Or someone else.

After we are all poor and isolated, the logic goes, we will be consoled by the thought that there is at least a human being to whom we can appeal. We will settle for a kind of anthropological minimum, wishful contact with the strong man. As in Russia, pathetic video selfies sent to the Leader will be the extent of politics.

For the men currently pillaging the federal government, the data from those video selfies is more important than the people who will make them. The new world they imagine is not just anti-American but anti-human. The people are just data, means to the end of accumulating wealth.

They see themselves as the servants of the freedom of the chosen few, but in fact they are possessed, like millennia of tyrants before them, of fantastic dreams: they will live forever, they will go to Mars. None of that will happen; they will die here on Earth, with the rest of us, their only legacy, if we let it happen, one of ruins. They are god-level brainrotted.

The attempt by the oligarchs to destroy our government is illegal, unconstitutional, and more than a little mad. The people in charge, though, are very intelligent politically, and have a plan. I describe it not because it must succeed but because it must be described so that we can make it fail. This will require clarity, and speed, and coalitions. I try to capture the mood in my little book On Tyranny. Here are a few ideas.

If you voted Republican, and you care about your country, please act rather than rationalize. Unless you cast your ballot so that South African oligarchs could steal your data, your money, your country, and your future, make it known to your elected officials that you wanted something else. And get ready to protest with people with whom you otherwise disagree.

Almost everything that has happened during this attempted takeover is illegal. Lawsuits can be filed and courts can order that executive orders be halted. This is crucial work.

Much of what is happening, though, involves private individuals whose names are not even known, and who have no legal authority, wandering through government offices and issuing orders beyond even the questionable authority of executive orders. Their idea is that they will be immunized by their boldness. This must be proven wrong.

Some of this will reach the Supreme Court quickly. I am under no illusion that the majority of justices care about the rule of law. They know, however, that our belief in it makes their office something other than the undignified handmaiden of oligarchy. If they legalize the coup, they are irrelevant forever.

Individual Democrats in the Senate and House have legal and institutional tools to slow down the attempted oligarchical takeover. There should also be legislation. It might take a moment, but even Republican leaders might recognize that the Senate and House will no longer matter in a post-American oligarchy without citizens.

Trump should obviously be impeached. Either he has lost control, or he is using his power to do obviously illegal things. If Republicans have a sense of where this is going, there could be the votes for an impeachment and prosecution. 

Those considering impeachment should also include Vance. He is closer to the relevant oligarchs than Trump, and more likely to be aware of the logic of destruction than he. The oligarchs have likely factored in, or perhaps even want, the impeachment and prosecution of Trump. Unlike Vance, Trump has charisma and followers, and could theoretically resist them. He won’t; but he poses a hypothetical risk to the oligarchs that Vance does not.

Democrats who serve in state office as governors have a chance to profile themselves, or more importantly to profile an America that still works. Attorneys general in states have a chance to enforce state laws, which will no doubt have been broken.

The Democratic Party has a talented new chair. Democrats will need instruments of active opposition, such as a People’s Cabinet, in which prominent Democrats take responsibility for following government departments. It would be really helpful to have someone who can report to the press and the people what is happening inside Justice, Defense, Transportation, and the Treasury, and all the others, starting this week.

Federal workers should stay in office, if they can, for as long as they can. This is not political, but existential, for them and for all of us. They will have a better chance of getting jobs afterwards if they are fired. And the logic of their firing is to make the whole government fail. The more this can be slowed down, the longer the rest of us have to get traction.

And companies? As every CEO knows, the workings of markets depend upon the government creating a fair playing field. The ongoing takeover will make life impossible for all but a few companies. Can American companies responsibly pay taxes to a US Treasury controlled by their private competitors? Tesla paid no federal tax at all in 2024. Should other companies pay taxes that, for all they know, will just enrich Tesla’s owner? 

Commentators should please stop using words such as “digital” and “progress” and “efficiency” and “vision” when describing this coup attempt. The plotting oligarchs have legacy money from an earlier era of software, which they are now seeking to leverage, using destructive political techniques, to destroy human institutions. That’s it. They are offering no future beyond acting out their midlife crises on the rest of us. It is demeaning to pretend that they represent something besides a logic of destruction.

As for the rest of us: Make sure you are talking to people and doing something. The logic of “move fast and break things,” like the logic of all coups, is to gain quick dramatic successes that deter and demoralize and create the impression of inevitability. Nothing is inevitable. Do not be alone and do not be dismayed. Find someone who is doing something you admire and join them. 

What is a country? The way its people govern themselves. Sometimes self-government just means elections. And sometimes it means recognizing the deeper dignity and meaning of what it means to be a people. That means speaking up, standing out, and protesting. We can only be free together.

Thinking about... is a reader-supported publication.

sábado, 7 de dezembro de 2024

A secretária de Trump para a Inteligência Nacional dos EUA: seria como ter Lavrov no comando - Timothy Snyder

 Mais uma indicação de Trump para destruir o que resta de governo democrático

Tulsi Gabbard Holds the Knife

An Operation We Might Not Survive

Imagine that the day has come for your brain surgery. You are lying, immobilized and vulnerable, on the operating table. Something is wrong, but you hope that it can be repaired. As the anesthesia sets in, you reflect. To be sure, your brain hasn't always performed the way you wished it had. You have made some mistakes, and done some stupid things, regrettable things, wrong things. But still, it is the brain that allows for a reconsideration of all that, to adjust, to have some hope and some possibility of doing better next time. Your brain keeps you going, keeps you in touch with the world. Hopefully, yours can be repaired, and you can get back to thinking, being, becoming. You could get better. As darkness descends, you catch a glimpse of a person dressed as a surgeon, approaching your head with a knife and a smile. It's Tulsi Gabbard. Hope gives way to horror.

This dark fantasy suggests, on a very small scale, the national trauma that lies before us. Gabbard is Donald Trump's choice to operate American intelligence. In the intelligence system, a kind of national brain, the Director of National Intelligence oversees and coordinates the work of agencies charged with knowing the world, protecting the integrity of digital systems, anticipating and preventing terrorism, and evaluating national security threats. Gabbard is the opposite of qualified for such a role: she is a disinformer and as an apologist for the war crimes of dictatorships.

Gabbard appears on the world stage as a defender of a million violent deaths. 

She is an apologist for two of the great atrocities of the century: the Russian-Syrian suppression of the Syrian opposition to the Bashar al-Assad dictatorship, which has taken about half a million lives, most of them civilians, some of them by chemical weapons; and the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which has also taken about half a million lives, and has brought the destruction of whole cities, the kidnapping of children, mass torture, and the large-scale execution of civilians.

That is it. That is her profile. Disinformer and apologist. Beyond the United States, in the larger world that US intelligence agencies are tasked to understand, she is associated with her pro-Assad and pro-Putin positions. (In third place, I suppose, would be her propensity to provide the Chinese state media with useful sound bites).

Until 2014, Gabbard said nothing remarkable about foreign affairs. In 2015, just before Putin intervened to save Assad, she began her extraordinary journey of apology for atrocity. In September of that year, Putin sent Russian mercenaries, soldiers, and airmen to Syria to defend Assad. The great advantage Putin could bring to Assad was to multiply the regime's air strikes, which were turned against hospitals and other civilian targets. Hospitals were and remain a Russian specialty.

a destroyed building in a city

In June 2015, as a congresswoman from Hawai'i, Gabbard visited Syria. During her stay, she was introduced to girls who had been burned from head to toe by a regime air strike. Her reaction to the situation, according to her translator, was to try to persuade the girls that they had been injured not by Syrian forces, but by the resistance. But this was impossible. Only Syria (at the time of her visit) and Russia (beginning weeks later) were flying planes and dropping bombs. 

Either Gabbard was catastrophically uninformed about the most basic elements of the theater of war she was visiting, or she was consciously spreading disinformation. Those are the two possibilities. The first is disqualifying; the second is worse.

And if she was spreading disinformation consciously, she was also doing so with a pathological ruthlessness. Anyone who would lie to the child victims of an air strike to their burned faces would lie to anyone about anything. In January 2017, she visited Syria again, this time to speak to Assad. She began thereafter to deny that his regime had used chemical weapons on its own people. That was a very big lie.

In Washington, in speeches in Congress, Gabbard showed an uncanny ability to turn almost any issue into a justification for defending the Assad regime. In 2016, concern for Christians in Syria was a pretext to defend the Assad regime. In 2017, she presented worries about terrorism as a reason to defend of the Assad regime. In 2018, the anniversary of 9/11 was her prompt for defending the Assad regime. In 2019, she found her way from the genocide of Armenians a century earlier to the need to defend the Assad regime. She even worked hard to segue from the lack of affordable housing in Hawai'i to the need to defend the Assad regime. Gabbard's support of Assad was so well known that her colleagues, Republican and Democratic alike, were worried that she would reveal the identity of a Syrian photographer brought to Congress to testify about Assad's atrocities.

For Russia, Syria was a testing ground for Ukraine. The atrocities perpetrated by Russians in Syria were repeated in Ukraine. In 2021, the largest donor to Gabbard’s PAC was an apologist for Putin. When the Russian full-scale invasion of Ukraine began in February of the following year, Gabbard, a consumer of Russian propaganda, was immediately ready as a channel for the Russian line, including obvious Russian disinformation. Again and again, over and over, her public statements were strikingly similar to Putin’s,

Amidst the farrago of lies that Russia used to justify its full-scale invasion invasion was the completely bogus claim that Ukraine was site of American biolabs that were testing which infections would be most harmful to Slavs (and thus Russians). This lie originates in Russia and was spread by Russian media, along with some Chinese and Syrian echo chambers, and with a setof western helpers -- one of whom was Tulsi Gabbard. She also urged, "in the spirit of Aloha," that Ukraine react to the invasion by surrendering its sovereignty to Russia. She later justified Russia's invasion of Ukraine by the notion, common in Moscow, that Russia was the victim of American attempts to overthrow Putin. She was specifically thanked by Russian state media for defending Russian war propaganda.

To be sure, the wars and the regions are complex. Even if Assad falls, as now looks increasingly likely, Syria will be a mess, with unsavory and dangerous people in power. There is, of course, room for disagreement about American foreign policy, including with respect to Assad and Putin and their twinned atrocities. That can all be taken for granted, and provides no excuse whatever for Gabbard's very unusual behavior. It is strange, to say the least, that Gabbard says nothing about these regimes that they have not first said about themselves, and that she uses her platform to spread their own very specific disinformation.

One feature of disinformation is that it is factually incorrect: and so the very least (or most?) that can be said about Gabbard is that she consistently wrong on matters of the greatest moral and political significance. But the other element of disinformation is that it is consciously and maliciously designed to confuse. These memes (biolabs!) are tested and perfected before they are released. Disinformation is the opposite of an innocent mistake: it is concocted to make rational reflection and sensible policy difficult. Disinformation, in other words, is a weapon that one regime tries to spread within another society or -- in the dream of a hostile spy chief -- within another society's intelligence service. That is part of what Gabbard offers America’s enemies, and it is bad enough, because it means that systems meant to protect Americans instead put them in danger. It goes without saying that American allies would be unable to cooperate with the United States, and that patriotic intelligence officers would resign in droves. Informers around the world would cease their work. The US government would be cut off from the world. 

As Director of National Intelligence, Gabbard would do enormous harm, unwillingly or willingly. She is not just completely unqualified for this role -- she is anti-qualified. She is just the sort of person enemies of the American republic would want in this job. This is not a hypothetical -- Gabbard is the specific person that actual enemies of the United States do want in the job. The Russian media refers to Tulsi Gabbard as a "Russian agent" and as "girlfriend," with good reason.

Gabbard is worse than unfit. Her public record is as a disinformer and apologist for mass murderers. And there is nothing on the other side of the ledger. There are no positive qualifications. (Yes, she wrote a bestselling book. It became a bestseller because she scammed her followers into donating to a PAC which bought the book in bulk.) 

Gabbard is just as qualified to operate on your brain as she is to operate the national intelligence services. Would you let her? She clearly wants to take up the knife. Whose idea, one wonders, was that?

Imagine, because it is true, that the day will soon come when we name the person who will operate the national intelligence services. To be sure, like our own minds, the intelligence services of the United States haven't always performed well. There have been mistakes, and manipulation, and downright evil. But there has also been learning, and some recent, impressive showings, as in the precise and public prediction of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Intelligence services are a central part of government. Just as a brain might need surgery, American intelligence needs reform. But it does not need to be butchered for the pleasure of enemies.

Thinking about... is a reader-supported publication.