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Indybay Feature

How Democrats and Progressives Undermined the Potential of the Biden-Putin Summit

by Norman Solomon
Echoing the warmongers
No matter what happens at Wednesday’s summit between Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin in Geneva, a grim reality is that Democratic Party leaders have already hobbled its potential to move the world away from the worsening dangers of nuclear war . After nearly five years of straining to depict Donald Trump as some kind of Russian agent -- a depiction that squandered vast quantities of messaging without electoral benefits -- most Democrats in Congress are now locked into a modern Cold War mentality that endangers human survival.

In the new light of atomic weaponry, Albert Einstein warned against “the outmoded concept of narrow nationalisms.” But the concept is flourishing as both parties strive to outdo each other in vilifying Russia as a locus of evil. Rather than coming to terms with the imperative for détente between the two countries that brandish more than 90 percent of the world’s nuclear warheads, the Democratic leadership at both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue has been heightening the bilateral tensions that increase the chances of thermonuclear holocaust.

President Biden has excelled at gratuitous and dangerous rhetoric about Russia. As this spring began, he declared on national television that President Putin is “a killer” -- and boasted that he told the Russian leader that he has “no soul” while visiting the Kremlin in 2011. It was a repeat of a boast that Biden could not resist publicly making while he was vice president in 2014 and again while out of office in 2017 . Such bombast conveys a distinct lack of interest in genuine diplomacy needed to avert nuclear war.

Meanwhile, what about self-described progressives who see themselves as a counterweight to the Democratic Party establishment? For the most part, they remained silent if not actively portraying Russia as a mortal enemy of the United States. Even renowned antiwar voices in Congress were not immune to party-driven jingoism.

Never mind that the structurally malign forces of corporate America -- and the numerous right-wing billionaires heavily invested in ongoing assaults on democracy -- appreciated the focus on Russia instead of on their own oligarchic power. And never mind that, throughout the Trump years, the protracted anti-Russia frenzy was often a diversion away from attention to the numerous specific threats to electoral democracy in the United States.

Two years ago, when the Voting Rights Alliance drew up a list of “ 61 Forms of Voter Suppression ,” not one of those forms had anything to do with Russia.

Capacities to educate, agitate and organize against the profuse forms of voter suppression were hampered by the likes of MSNBC star Rachel Maddow, whose extreme fixation on Russian evils would have been merely farcical if not so damaging. Year after year, she virtually ignored a wide range of catastrophic U.S. government policies while largely devoting her widely watched program to stoking hostility toward Russia. Maddow became a favorite of many progressives who viewed her show as a fount of wisdom.

Progressives -- who are supposed to oppose the kind of “narrow nationalisms” that Einstein warned against at the dawn of the nuclear age -- mostly steered clear of challenging the anti-Russia orthodoxy that emerged as an ostensible way of resisting the horrific Trump presidency. Routinely, many accepted and internalized the scapegoating of Russia that was standard fare of mainstream media outlets -- which did little to shed light on how threats to democracy in the United States were overwhelmingly homegrown, rooted in corporate power.

Now, on the verge of the Biden-Putin summit, U.S. media outlets are overflowing with calls to confront Russia as well as China, pounding on themes sure to delight investors in Pentagon contracting firms. Leading Democrats and Republicans are in step with reporters and pundits beating Cold War drums. How much closer do they want the Doomsday Clock to get to midnight before they call off their zeal to excite narrow nationalisms?

It scarcely seems to matter to anti-Russia zealots, whether “progressive” or not, that the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists began this year with an ominous warning : “By our estimation, the potential for the world to stumble into nuclear war -- an ever-present danger over the last 75 years -- increased in 2020. An extremely dangerous global failure to address existential threats -- what we called ‘the new abnormal’ in 2019 -- tightened its grip in the nuclear realm in the past year, increasing the likelihood of catastrophe.”

Far from the maddening crowd of reckless cold warriors, the American Committee for U.S.-Russia Accord released an open letter last week that made basic sense for the future of humanity: “The dangerous and in many ways unprecedented deterioration in relations between the United States and the Russian Federation must come to an end if we are to leave a safer world for future generations. . . . We believe that the time has come to resurrect diplomacy, restore and maintain a dialogue on nuclear risks that’s insulated from our political differences like we did during the Cold War. Without communication, this increases the likelihood of escalation to nuclear use in a moment of crisis.”

It’s a sad irony that such clarity and wisdom can scarcely be found among prominent Democrats in Congress, or among many of the groups that do great progressive work when focused on domestic issues. The recent fear-mongering over Russia has been a factor in refusals to embrace the anti-militarist message of Martin Luther King’s final year .

In the United States, the political context of the Biden-Putin summit should have included widespread progressive support for genuine diplomacy with Russia. Instead, overall, progressives went along with Democratic Party leaders and corporate liberal media as they fueled the momentum toward a nuclear doomsday.

___________________________

Norman Solomon is the national director of RootsAction.org and the author of many books including War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death . He was a Bernie Sanders delegate from California to the 2016 and 2020 Democratic National Conventions. Solomon is the founder and executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy.
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by DLi
It's part of the NeoLiberal/Imperialist narrative to set up 2 false choices: conservatives vs."progressives," by defining what "progressive" means: support for American Exceptionalism, especially in foreign affairs! In other words, anyone(and especially, any leader of a socialist or even simply,anti-Imperialist country)who opposes the unilateral "sole Superpower") is automatically defined as an "anti-democratic" or "authoritarian" regime that needs either Yankee intervention(in the form of NED-led "regime change", or actual military invasion and/or occupation. And the entire "Corporate-bin-Laden" media, including PBS, NPR and sometimes even "progressive" outlets like DemocracyNow, have been co-opted to essentially act as mouthpieces for the US/NATO/G7(Gang of Seven) worldview of the primacy of Private Capital, i.e., the "natural" world order of the Wall Street-Pentagon ruling cabal.
Given that restrictive definition, true progressives, or anti-imperialists, must reject the labeling of all those pro-U.S. empire apparatchiks/pundits as real progressives! Until we can free ourselves from this NeoLib false narrative, we'll be forever fighting each other, while letting the real Robber Barons run wild with their uni-polar world perspective.
Peace, Aloha & Imua!
by We Remember
We remember Democrat Pres. Woodrow Wilson, Pres. 1913-1921, as follows:

We remember Democrat Woodrow Wilson’s support of the 1918 anti-communist, anti-Russian Revolution invasion by the capitalist European powers with American troops (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_and_the_Russian_Revolution);

We remember Democrat Woodrow Wilson illegally invaded Haiti in 1915 and brought the US into World War 1 in 1917, a war of imperialist rivalries;

We remember Democrat Woodrow Wilson’s anti-immigrant, anti-labor and anti-communist Sedition Act of 1917, Espionage Act of 1918, and Palmer Raids of 1919 and 1920;

We remember the viciously racist Democrat Wilson’s promotion of segregation in the federal government and the fact that he was an admirer of the racist, murderous Ku Klux Klan (See https://charlesohalloranboyd.wordpress.com/2013/09/30/woodrow-wilson-most-anti-black-president-of-the-20th-century/, https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2015/11/wilson-legacy-racism/417549/)

The Republicans are just as anti-Russian for the same war profiteering reason, but some seem to have a sense of self-preservation when confronted with reality. One of the worst Republicans, Ronald Reagan, is referred to in the above-cited letter at https://usrussiaaccord.org/open-letter-from-the-american-committee-for-us-russia-accord/,
as follows:
"ii. President Biden should invite President Putin to join him in reaffirming the declaration first made by President Reagan and Soviet leader Gorbachev at their 1985 summit in Geneva that “A nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought.” This went a long way during the Cold War to reassure the peoples of the two countries and the world that even though we had deep differences we were committed to never fighting a nuclear war. It would go a long way to do the same today."

The other two points in the above letter are worth reading here because they remind us of what we once had in diplomatic relations and cultural exchanges with the Soviet Union until the CIA destroyed it in 1991:

"i. We urge the Biden Administration to reopen the Consulates and reverse its recent decision to halt Visa services for most Russians."

"iii. Reengage with Russia. Restore wide contacts, scientific, medical, educational, cultural and environmental exchanges. Expand people-to-people citizen diplomacy, Track II, Track 1.5 and governmental diplomatic initiatives. In this regard, it is worth recalling that another of our board members, former US Senator Bill Bradley, was the guiding force behind the Future Leaders Exchange (FLEX), based on his conviction that “the best way to ensure long-lasting peace and understanding between the U.S. and Eurasia is to enable young people to learn about democracy firsthand through experiencing it”."

Since we are reopening the economy, how about inviting the gorgeous Russian ballet, the Bolshoi and the Kirov, and the Moiseyev dancers to tour the US? We enjoyed these ballet companies in the US, including in San Francisco, in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, along with violinists David and Igor Oistrakh, pianists Emil Gilels and Sviatoslav Richter and many more.

Pres. Biden needs to be reminded that it was the Red Army that saved all our lives as it was the Red Army that defeated the Nazis at Stalingrad (August 1942-February 1943), the turning point of WW2, almost single-handedly, as American Lend Lease aid arrived after that battle, and it was the Red Army that was the first to enter and liberate Berlin (May 2, 1945). It was also the Red Army that liberated the Auschwitz concentration camp (January 27, 1945).

Vladimir Putin, age 68, lost family members in WW2. His brother died in the Siege of Leningrad, Sept 1941 to Jan 1944. As wikipedia states:
Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin was born on 7 October 1952 in Leningrad, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union (now Saint Petersburg, Russia),[21][22] the youngest of three children of Vladimir Spiridonovich Putin (1911–1999) and Maria Ivanovna Putina (née Shelomova; 1911–1998). Spiridon Putin, Vladimir Putin's grandfather, was a cook to Vladimir Lenin.[23][24] Putin's birth was preceded by the deaths of two brothers, Viktor and Albert, born in the mid-1930s. Albert died in infancy and Viktor died of diphtheria during the Siege of Leningrad by Nazi Germany's forces in World War II.[25] Putin's mother was a factory worker and his father was a conscript in the Soviet Navy, serving in the submarine fleet in the early 1930s. Early in World War II, his father served in the destruction battalion of the NKVD.[26][27][28] Later, he was transferred to the regular army and was severely wounded in 1942.[29] Putin's maternal grandmother was killed by the German occupiers of Tver region in 1941, and his maternal uncles disappeared on the Eastern Front during World War."
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vladimir_Putin

The Russian economy was revived by Putin, after the disastrous attempt to restore capitalism in Russia under US puppet Boris Yeltsin. Yeltsin's term was 1991-1999. As the above wiki states:
"During his first tenure as president, the Russian economy grew for eight straight years, with GDP measured by purchasing power increasing by 72%, real incomes increased by a factor of 2.5, real wages more than tripled; unemployment and poverty more than halved and the Russians' self-assessed life satisfaction rose significantly.[10] The growth was a result of a fivefold increase in the price of oil and gas, which constitute the majority of Russian exports, recovery from the post-Communist depression and financial crises, a rise in foreign investment,[11] and prudent economic and fiscal policies."

Putin is no communist and the anti-gay marriage law that Russia now has is despicable. However, he does have the support of his people and he knows his country's history. Pres Biden and the Democratic-Republican war machine are about to get a lesson on the necessity of peace. For those of us who remember the Cold War, this is an old movie. I can hardly wait for the detente part, with the cultural exchanges.
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