Secretary of State Blinken
Throws Down the Gauntlet to China and Russia… Again
by Rick Rozoff Posted on April 12, 2021
https://original.antiwar.com/Rick_Rozoff/2021/04/11/secretary-of-state-blinken-throws-down-the-gauntlet-to-china-and-russia-again/
America began a new week
with Secretary of State Anthony Blinken appearing on
NBC’s Meet the Press with Chuck Todd. One might forgive a
traveler from another land or time forming the impression that almost all U.S.
television news, cable, and network alike consisted of different channels
of Voice of the White House. (Or the Pentagon Broadcasting
Service.) Being the foreign policy chief of the Biden-Harris
administration, Blinken was treated with the utmost deference except when he
appeared to be slipping away from saber-rattling and toward some facsimile of
diplomacy, as will be seen below. In return, Blinken endearingly addressed Todd
as Chuck. The direct address with the personal touch didn’t prevent Todd from
goading Blinken on to new heights of obloquy and hostility toward Russia and
China, though. Asking the tough questions is how the likes of Todd would phrase
it, no doubt.
Perhaps the first third of
the program focused on Covid-19 and what Blinken matter of factly referred to
COVAX, though it’s doubtful many viewers had heard the term before. Even in
that context he didn’t let slip the opportunity to deliver himself of this
chastisement:
“I think China knows that
in the early stages of Covid, it didn’t do what it needed to do, which was to,
in real-time, give access to international experts, in real-time to share
information, in real-time to provide real transparency. And one result of that
failure is that the vaccine – the virus, excuse me, got out of hand faster and
with, I think, much more egregious results than it might otherwise.”
Nothing more perturbing
than an egregious virus.
Without blinking an eyelid
Todd then fired this question at his guest:
“Are we prepared to defend
Taiwan militarily?”
Quite a segue from the
Coronavirus. In fact, as will be seen, Todd regularly prompted, and prodded,
Blinken into making bellicose statements in relation to China and Russia, at
one point questioning the resolve if not the manhood of his guest.
Blinken responded in the
manner he was primed to: “So, Chuck, what we’ve seen, and what is of real
concern to us is increasingly aggressive actions by the government in Beijing
directed at Taiwan, raising tensions in the Straits. And we have a commitment
to Taiwan under the Taiwan Relations Act….And all I can tell you is it would be
a serious mistake for anyone to try to change the existing status quo by
force.”
He repeated the last line
twice in the interview, as he did a comparable one directed toward Russia.
Todd then raised the ante
by stating: “I understand that. So it does sound like you’re saying that, look,
we have commitments. And if China does try something in Taiwan, we will
militarily respond?”
No subtlety there. Recall
he was speaking to what is traditionally described as the U.S.’s top diplomat
yet he eliminated all intermediate steps and measures to push for the military
necessity. Blinken answered by again asserting “it would be a serious mistake
for anyone to try to change that status quo by force.”
Todd then chided, really
reproached, Blinken by saying that as the U.S. hasn’t been confrontational
enough with Russia over the Donbas and Crimea then China will question
America’s commitment to defending Taiwan. The secretary hastened to disabuse
Todd of any notion that he wasn’t as assertive as Todd would want him to be in
saying, “the United States…led a very significant international effort to
impose real costs and sanctions on Russia for its aggression in Crimea, in the
Donbas.”
Afraid that he couldn’t
coax any more aggressive and threatening content from his guest, Todd followed
up Blinken’s assurances with: “How’s that worked out? In fairness, sir?”
The point is transparent
that if Washington would be more confrontational with Russia, up to and
including with military force, China would get the message that it’s prepared
to go to war against it as well.
Blinken fumbled for a
minute and Todd, nothing loath, intensified the demand for confrontation with
Russia over Ukraine with, “I mean, it hasn’t worked out very well.”
That last sentence
succeeded in coaxing out of Blinken (most likely it was meant to assign him the
role of a reluctant advocate of the military option) the reaction he was aiming
at: “If Russia acts recklessly, or aggressively, there will be costs, there
will be consequences.”
Still not content with his
efforts to push the world’s two major nuclear powers further down the path of
no return, Todd didn’t relent and offered this: “Mr. Secretary, what you just
outlined on Russia sounds like the exact same policy the Obama-Biden
administration had towards Russia on this. That was – that has not positioned
Russia to be better actors. That didn’t – that policy, arguably, didn’t work.
We’re not saying that Trump’s policy worked either. What do you say to that?”
Nothing short of Blinken
announcing that the U.S. was bombing Moscow in five minutes would have slaked
Todd’s insatiable thirst for a U.S.-Russia showdown. The Punch and Judy show
continued with Blinken repeating again in relation to Russia what he had said
regarding China twice as well, that “when it comes to Russia’s actions,
there’ll be costs and consequences if it acts recklessly and aggressively….”
Once again with no
approximation or pretense of transition, Todd blurted out:
“You said that China’s
treatment of the Uyghurs was, quote, ‘an effort to commit genocide.’ And I
guess I’ve got to ask it this way: How do you justify doing business with China
or any country that you believe is committing genocide?”
Blinken complied with:
“When it comes to what we’re seeing from the government in Beijing, including
with regard to the Uyghurs and the actions, it’s taken in Xinjiang, yes, I think
that’s, that’s exactly the right description….”
He added that he was
prepared to work with China on other matters “even as we stand resolutely
against egregious violations of human rights or in this case, acts of
genocide.”
The two then moved on to
Afghanistan concerning which Blinken at NATO headquarters last month repeated
the NATO bromide about “we went in together, we’ll come out together.” That is,
the upcoming twentieth anniversary of the invasion and occupation of the nation
by the U.S. and NATO will not be the last one.
Though no two cases are
exactly alike, the irony of threatening one fellow nuclear power – Russia – for
obstructing the reunification of Ukraine while threatening another – China –
for seeking reunification of its country seems rather contradictory. The
country the U.S. identifies as its closest ally in the world has for decades the occupied territory it seized from its neighbors and treats a religious and ethnic
minority within that territory in a manner some would compare to Todd’s and
Blinken’s characterization of China’s treatment of its Uyghurs. That country
wasn’t mentioned in the Meet the Press episode. It’s never
been told that “it would be a serious mistake for anyone to try to change the
existing status quo by force” or “If [it] acts recklessly, or aggressively,
there will be costs, there will be consequences.”
No, those threats are
reserved for Russia and China. When Blinken arrives at NATO headquarters later
this week to join Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin the anti-Russian and
anti-Chinese rhetoric will be ratcheted up yet more.
Rick Rozoff has been
involved in anti-war and anti-interventionist work in various capacities for
forty years. He lives in Chicago, Illinois. He is the manager of Stop NATO. This originally appeared at Anti-Bellum.
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