|
RONRIDENOUR.COM |
Home |
About Ron Ridenour |
Articles |
Themes |
Poems |
Short stories |
Books |
Links |
Search |
Contact |
Dansk |
Español |
If Vladimir Putin really wanted to hurt the United States he’d send Russian bombers to drop copies of Ron Ridenour’s "The Russian Peace Threat: Pentagon on Alert" on schools throughout America.
Chronicling US crimes and obstructions against peace for over 100 years,
this Tsar Bomba of a book ranges over the 1918 US invasion of Russia,
US capitalism’s neverending collaborations with fascists and takfiris,
the Cuban Missile Crisis, JFK’s assassination, Soviet involvement
in Afghanistan and the momentous year 2001 when Vladimir Putin offered
to align Russia’s foreign policy with the US only to get repaid
by the US serving notice that it would withdraw from the Anti-Ballistic
Missile Treaty, setting off a new arms race. (Your humble reviewer believes
that the only reason for the US to leave the ABM Treaty is that Dick
— the real “decider” — Cheney decided that a
nuclear war could be fought and “won.”)
Aside from an exciting account of the Russian revolution, there’s
little in the book about Russia’s domestic affairs over the past
century. Instead, Russia and the US are contrasted in their foreign
policies and dealings with each other. The chief takeaway is that Soviet
and Russian leaders from Stalin to Khrushchev to Brezhnev to Gorbachev
to Putin were/are a whole lot more cautious, practical and less ideological
than their US counterparts. (Fidel Castro wanted the Soviets to leave
tactical nuclear weapons in Cuba but the Russian leadership overruled
it for the sake of peace. Russia played an instrumental role in the
Iran nuke deal and, of course, convinced Assad to destroy Syria’s
chemical weapons.) The worldwide “communist conspiracy”
was largely a mirage covering up a reality of the US continually poking
the Russian bear with fascists on its western border and Islamic fanatics
on its southern border.
Ridenour has been something of a Zelig-like figure on the left: one
of 4,000 people that Nixon put on a list to be rounded up and incarcerated
in a concentration camp and also a target of dirty tricks instigated
by the FBI and the LAPD. He reported from the 1973 Wounded Knee occupation,
lived for years in Cuba (writing for Prensa Latina) and once, during
an anti-war protest with Jane Fonda and Tom Hayden, witnessed the LAPD
beat up wheelchair-bound Ron Kovic with blackjacks.
The timeliness and necessity of Russian Peace Threat was shown on February
12 when the Smithsonian magazine published an Uncle Sam-splainin’
articleabout the US invading Russia in 1918. The article worried itself
with the problems of the US invaders rather than pointing out the criminality
and real reason for the invasion. US troops, says the headline, were
just “caught up” in this war — pure happenstance that
they were thousands of miles from the US, killing innocent Russians
defending their homeland. But, as Ridenhour meticulously details, the
truth is that the international capitalist class was terrified of the
success of the Russian Revolution and doing everything and anything
to keep it from spreading, strangling it in its “cradle”
as the racist war criminal Winston Churchill said.
Capitalism is always and forever the most insecure system — it
knows perfectly well how unjust it is. Nowhere in the Smithsonian article
is it mentioned that the US destroyed 25 villages in the Russian Amur
district alone or that America’s democracy-spreaders burned the
peaceful village of Ivanovka to ground, killing 1,300 inhabitants.
One of my favorite parts of Russian Peace Threat is the blow
by blow account of how Cuba defeated the United States of Satan at the
Bay of Pigs. It reminded me of Marx’s description of the communards
in the Paris Commune. Also gripping is the story of Russian submarine
Captain Vasili Arkhipov, sometimes called “the man who saved the
world” because of his cool-headed actions during the Cuban Missile
Crisis. As Ridenour details, there’s actually a lot more to this
story of nuclear-armed Russian submarines off the Cuban coast during
the crisis. Cut off from all communication with the world, the submarines
had no clear orders when to fire their nuclear torpedos, besides being
pounded by depth charges and unsure if war had started between the US
and Russia.
Interestingly, the Cuban leadership always had a more positive view
of JFK than one would think considering that, of the 638 US-sponsored
assassination attempts on Castro’s life, 42 came under Kennedy’s
presidency. (Reagan led with 194, followed closely by Nixon with 184.
Even the pious homebuilder Jimmy Carter tried 64 times to kill Castro.)
Bobby Kennedy is quoted as suggesting a “Remember the Maine”
false flag in order to launch another invasion of Cuba. And JFK, just
10 days before he died, approved a CIA plan for destroying Cuba’s
largest oil refinery, a large electrical plant, sugar refineries, railroad
bridges, harbor facilities and the underwater demolition of docks and
ships. Yet the Cuban leadership’s overall view was that JFK had
to appease crazy US generals and CIA officials.
Bobby Kennedy suggesting a “Remember the Maine” false flag
might come as a surprise to many but is completely in line with the
history of the US ruling class. Ridenour ticks off the list of false
flags, skullduggery and psy-ops: the “Maine,” the Gulf of
Tonkin, Operation Northwoods, Operation Mongoose, COINTELPRO, Operation
Mockingbird, the tale of Iraqi soldiers throwing Kuwaiti babies out
of incubators and Gaddafi’s Viagra-popping “black African
mercenaries” raping their way across north Africa on their way
to Europe until mercifully euthanized by NATO bombs.
Immense lies have to be told repeatedly to prep the US working class
for war. Reading the list makes me wonder why many left-ish pundits
are so incurious about 9/11 — about why, for example, World Trade
Center Building 7 fell for two seconds in freefall into its own footprint
even though no planes touched it. Considering how monolithically deceitful
the corporate media is on Syria or Venezuela, is it paranoid or just
common sense to believe that Operation Mockingbird (or something like
it) is still going on?
Another stand out chapter concerns the Soviet “invasion”
of Afghanistan in the 1980s. With the US arming, funding and training
Islamic fanatics in the countryside, the progressive government in Kabul
begged Soviet leaders for 20 months to come to their aid. Russian leaders
resisted and were bitterly divided — some, like Alexei Kosygin,
foresaw the disaster to come for Russia — but they finally assented
and, as the architect of the chaos and bloodshed Zbigniew Brzezinski
said, “We gave the Russians their own Vietnam.” (Here, too,
we see the Soviet leaders’ preference for caution and practicality
rather than ideology. This time it was in the person of Leonid Brezhnev
who urged Afghan President Taraki to go slower on social reforms to
get more public support for them from conservative Afghanis.)
It appears that Syria, Iran and Russia are driving the US out of Syria
but it’s well worth pondering Afghanistan then and Syria now when
the US can bring the world’s deadliest weapon — the US dollar’s
reserve currency status — and almost unlimited resources to bear
on any conflict. (Trump said in December that he’s getting out
of Syria but ever since he said it, the US has increased both personnel
and war material in Syria.)
Ridenour notes that the US and Britain have used the Muslim Brotherhood
and assorted takfiris for almost 100 years to divide and conquer Southwest
Asia. Brainwashed Americans will be surprised to learn that Afghan women
could vote, be politicians, were most of the nation’s teachers,
allowed full education, worked in most trades and decided whom to marry
and what to wear — and all of that (and more) is what the US destroyed
because Brzezinski wanted to give Russia its “own Vietnam.”
The US modus operandi is to do exactly opposite of what it says, in
other words: “help” means “destroy” —
something that Venezuelans are currently getting very familiar with.
There’s so much more in Russian Peace Threat: General
Smedley Butler exposing the “banker’s plot” to overthrow
FDR, the US/Russian space race, the 2014 US-funded overthrow of the
Ukrainian government and the 1990s disintegration of the Soviet Union
which is now looking like one of the greatest disasters in working class
history, not just because of the suffering and shortened lives of the
Russian people but because it turned Uncle Scam loose to wreak unbridled
havoc on the world.
How important, interesting and useful is Ridenour’s Russian
Peace Threat? Look at the photo below of all the pages I turned
down. (An index would have made it even more useful!) With Russia moving
its borders closer and closer to US military bases (ha, ha), the US
placing missile launchers with both defensive and offensive capabilities
in eastern Europe, the Russians countering with the development of hypersonic
weapons, the shortening of the time either side has to decide whether
to launch nuclear missiles, the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists’
Doomsday Clock now at two minutes to midnight, the eagle and bear parrying
and squaring off in the Ukraine and Syria and, perhaps, now in Venezuela
— well, this is the right book at the right time for explaining
much of the current world.
Copyright © 2006-2012 Ronridenour.com