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US takes a break from condemning tyranny to celebrate Obama’s Saudi visit

Hasbara Buster

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US takes a break from condemning tyranny to celebrate Obama’s Saudi visit

By Glenn Greenwald, The Intercept

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US President Barack Obama (right) and Saudi King Abdullah share a laugh as they speak to the media after their meeting in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington on June 29, 2010.

Selecting the year’s single most brazen example of political self-delusion is never easy, but if forced to choose for 2013, I’d pick British Prime Minister David Cameron’s public condemnation of George Galloway.The Scottish MP had stood to question Cameron about the UK’s military support for Syrian rebels. As is typical for Western discourse, criticizing Western government militarism was immediately equated with support for whatever tyrants those governments happened to be opposing at the time: “Some things come and go,” proclaimed the prime minister, “but there is one thing that is certain: wherever there is a brutal Arab dictator in the world, he will have the support of [Galloway].”

What made Cameron’s statement so notable wasn’t the trite tactic of depicting opposition to Western intervention as tantamount to support for dictators. That’s far too common to be noteworthy (if you oppose the war in Iraq, you are pro-Saddam; if you oppose intervention in Libya, you love Gaddafi, if you oppose US involvement in Ukraine, you’re a shill for Putin, etc. etc.). What was so remarkable is that David Cameron – the person accusing Galloway of supporting every “brutal Arab dictator” he can find – is easily one of the world’s most loyal, constant, and generous supporters of the most brutal Arab despots. He has continuously lavished money, diplomatic support, arms and all sorts of obsequious praise on intensely repressive regimes in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Oman, and Egypt. That this steadfast supporter of the worst Arab dictators could parade around accusing others of supporting bad Arab regimes was about as stunning a display of Western self-delusion as I could have imagined…

Until this week. Tommy Vietor was President Obama’s National Security Council spokesman during the first term. He left to form a consulting firm (along with Obama’s former speechwriter Jon Favreau) that trades on his White House connections by forming messaging and communications strategies for corporations that have extensive business with the government, although he still literally adorns the walls of his home with multiple large posters of President Obama. Vietor’s function, which he performs quite faithfully, is simple: to express and embody the most conventional, defining views of official imperial Washington about itself.

On Monday, Vietor took to Twitter to try to publicly embarrass Oliver Stone for expressing support for the Maduro government in Venezuela: “@TheOliverStone how can you support Maduro when he’s illegally jailing leaders like LeopoldoLopez?

This, of course, is nothing more than the long-standing favored tactic of official Washington: cynically feigning concern for human rights as a means to undermine the governments that do not comply with US dictates. To the Tommy Vietors of the world, the Maduro government isn’t bad because it “illegally jails opposition leaders”; it’s bad because it opposes US policy, refuses to obey US dictates, and defeats neo-liberal, US-subservient candidates in popular elections. That’s all obvious.

But what never ceases to amaze me is the ability of the Tommy Vietors – like David Cameron before him – to convince first themselves, and then others, that they are able to issue these denunciations without instantly being driven from the public square in shame. The very same person invoking human rights concerns to publicly condemn Stone for supporting the democratically elected government of Venezuela spent years working to support and prop up far more brutal, vicious, oppressive tyrannies, ones never elected to anything.

The Obama administration for which Vietor was a spokesman repeatedly supplied arms to the regime in Bahrain as they brutally crushed democratic protesters. They vigorously supported the repellent Mubarak regime, the long-time US ally, until his downfall became inevitable; Hillary Clinton, upon being named Secretary of State, gushed: “I really consider President and Mrs. Mubarak to be friends of my family.” Obama has continually embraced the anti-democratic (Persian) Gulf monarchs ruling Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, and Kuwait. And all of that is independent of the unparalleled political, financial, diplomatic and military support with which the US lavishes Israel as it engaged in all sorts of decades-long occupation, repression and aggression.

And then there’s the closest US ally of them all, which also just happens to be one of the world’s most brutally repressive regimes: the House of Saud. During Vietor’s tenure, the administration revealed “plans to offer advanced aircraft to Saudi Arabia worth up to $60 billion, the largest US arms deal ever, and is in talks with the kingdom about potential naval and missile-defense upgrades that could be worth tens of billions of dollars more.” Five months ago, the Pentagon announced “plans to sell Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates $10.8 billion in advanced weaponry, including air-launched cruise missiles and precision munitions,” a package that “includes the first US sales to Middle East allies of new Raytheon and Boeing weapons that can be launched at a distance from Saudi F-15 and UAE F-16 fighters.” The Obama White House has repeatedly affirmed its “strong partnership” with the Saudi tyranny.

Today (Friday), Obama arrives in Riyadh to assure the Saudi monarchs that the US is as committed as ever to its close partnership in the wake of Saudi anxiety. He’ll meet with King Abdullah, “the president’s third official meeting with the king in six years.” The purpose of this trip: “trying to smooth relations with Saudi Arabia without making the longtime US ally seem like an afterthought.” Indeed, “top presidential advisors say the visit is an ‘investment’ in one of the most important US relationships in the Middle East.”

If you want to justify all of this by cynically arguing that it benefits the US to support repressive and brutal tyrannies, go ahead. At least that’s an honest posture. But don’t run around acting as though the US is some sort of stalwart opponent of political repression and human rights violations when the exact opposite is so plainly true. And if you’re someone who has worked extensively to provide the world’s worst regimes with all sorts of vital support, don’t hold yourself out as the leader of the mob condemning others for expressing support for far more benign governments.

PressTV - US takes a break from condemning tyranny to celebrate Obama’s Saudi visit
 
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US is a completely morally bankrupt society.

They are now visiting an absolute dictatorship and have the nerve to condemn other countries that do not have elections just because they are not puppets of the US.
 
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US is a completely morally bankrupt society.

They are now visiting an absolute dictatorship and have the nerve to condemn other countries that do not have elections just because they are not puppets of the US.
Interesting.:lol:
 
. . .
US is a completely morally bankrupt society.

They are now visiting an absolute dictatorship and have the nerve to condemn other countries that do not have elections just because they are not puppets of the US.
Did you condemn US for our state visits to China, starting with Nixon back in 1972 ?
 
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The US never considered China to be a close ally.
Irrelevant.

If it is morally atrocious for US to visit one dictatorship, then it is morally atrocious for US to visit another. China may not be a close ally to US on a philosophical and principle foundation, but China is a close economic partner. We can go back to WW II where the US allied with Russia, another dictatorship. Look at your EU and its close economic relationship with Rusia, now that Russia just annexed Crimea. China claimed to be Marxist, yet it is not morally atrocious for China to be an economic partner with a capitalist country like US ?

Bottom line is this: We play the hands, or rather the dictatorships, we are dealt. But for you intellectually dishonest lot, only the US deserves condemnation. This is the reason why the Americans on this forum do not take your ilk's criticisms seriously.
 
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Irrelevant.

If it is morally atrocious for US to visit one dictatorship, then it is morally atrocious for US to visit another. China may not be a close ally to US on a philosophical and principle foundation, but China is a close economic partner. We can go back to WW II where the US allied with Russia, another dictatorship. Look at your EU and its close economic relationship with Rusia, now that Russia just annexed Crimea. China claimed to be Marxist, yet it is not morally atrocious for China to be an economic partner with a capitalist country like US ?

Bottom line is this: We play the hands, or rather the dictatorships, we are dealt. But for you intellectually dishonest lot, only the US deserves condemnation. This is the reason why the Americans on this forum do not take your ilk's criticisms seriously.
Typical hypocritical.Isn't that obvious?
 
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