About one hundred years ago, Germany’s leaders, then
at war with Russia, decided to undermine the Russian government by infecting it
with the political equivalent of a dread disease. To do this, they put Vladimir
Ilyich Lenin on a train and sent him off to Petrograd. According to British
historian Edward Crankshaw, the Germans saw Lenin as “one more bacillus to let
loose in tottering and exhausted Russia to spread infection.” The German scheme
worked. Within a year Lenin took over Russia and pulled out of the war against
Germany.
And now Putin, it seems, has followed the German example
by helping put Trump in control of the U.S. Will Putin’s plan work as well as
the Germans’ scheme worked a century ago? And, by the way, given Putin’s hatred
of the U.S., why are so many Republicans loyally supporting Donald Trump, a
leader whom Putin, by his own words, wanted to see in the White House? Where
does your ultimate loyalty lie, Republicans – with the U.S. or with the GOP? Or
are you just throwing our well-being under the bus for the sake of your
personal careers?
TRUMP: Well, I mean he may feel
that way. He’s sees what’s going on, I guess, if you look at what’s happening
in Los Angeles, where it’s so sad to look, and what’s happening in San
Francisco and a couple of other cities, which are run by an extraordinary group
of liberal people.
What an idiot.
But more to the point, what a pathetic excuse for a defender of American values. He apparently doesn’t know what Putin and other authoritarians mean when they use the phrase “western liberalism.”
Note to Trump: It means democracy and you are failing to
defend it.
We can think of the democratic alliance as including North American,
European, and Pacific rim democracies like Japan and Australia, as well as
those nations in Latin America, Africa, and Asia whose governments embody
“Western-style liberalism.” Traditionally, the U.S. has played a central role in
this liberal-democratic coalition, but today, with Trump in the White House, it
cannot. And, consequently, the entire coalition is starting to come loose. God
help us if it falls apart completely.What we are about to face is a kind of World War III. This war will most likely not involve massive armies and navies maneuvering across oceans and continents. It will be focused on cyber warfare and a general struggle for influence through economic means and control of information. Trump, who is widely despised in the world at large, is not a positive force on the side of democracy in this struggle. Quite the opposite.
Democracy’s main adversary these days is not Putin, but rather Chinese President Xi Jinping. Like Putin, Xi Jinping hopes to see democracy decline. China’s rapid economic growth and increasingly aggressive international posture has made it the primary opposition to the worldwide spread of democracy. If the American-led coalition of democracies holds together, the anti-democratic push of Xi Jinping will fail. But if the coalition falls apart, as it has been starting to do under Trump, Chinese authoritarianism will most likely prevail.
The ideal scenario right now, as I see it, is for Trump to be replaced in January 2021 by a leader who believes in America’s traditional role as a leading defender of institutions like freedom of the press, independent judiciaries, and national leaders who are accountable to voters. With such an American leader, and, given enough time, Xi Jinping’s (and Putin’s) war against democracy will probably fail.
Since World War II, the world’s democracies have generally held the high ground, both morally and economically. I realize I have to disregard, for the sake of this brief argument, a host of bad actions by the western democracies. But I hope a brief mention of colonialism, Vietnam, and Iraq will suffice for the moment as acknowledgement of this bad behavior. But even given these sins, I believe the world will be much better served in the future if “Western-style liberalism” holds its own against the current authoritarian thrust.
A better world would be one in which China, Russia, and other governments join the established democracies on the high ground and we all find issues to argue about that do not include “whether or not individuals should be jailed or murdered for criticizing their leaders.” Such a world is not an impossibility, but it can only come into being when Donald Trump, with all his moral and intellectual failings, gets out of the way.
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