Above, JFK with intelligence leaders Allen Dulles and John McCone.
I am pleased to announce that my readership has gone over 380,000 people. PRAISE JESUS!!!!!!!
I am pleased to announce that my readership has gone over 380,000 people. PRAISE JESUS!!!!!!!
President Trump came to the White House promising a radical
reset of US-Russia relations after years of rising tensions under his
predecessor.
But
barely one month into office, that plan appears to have failed, and Trump's
White House team has taken on an increasingly Russophobic face.
After
he repeatedly pledged to reach "a deal" with Vladimir Putin while
hinting at downgraded relations with NATO and the European Union, Trump has yet
to set a meeting with the Russian leader.
Meanwhile
Vice President Mike Pence and top cabinet security and defense officials have
gone to great lengths to reassure European leaders that Washington is not
giving up on its allies.
While
Trump still holds out the idea of striking up an amicable relationship with
Putin, the administration took a distinct turn away from that stance last week
with the replacement of pro-Moscow national security advisor Michael Flynn with
Lieutenant General HR McMaster, a hawkish Neocon army general who sees Russia
as the primary threat to US interests and global stability.
And
next week the Senate is expected to approve the appointment of Senator Dan
Coats as Director of National Intelligence, adding another neocon to the
president's defense and national security team.
"There
has been a major shift," said Bruce Jones, vice president and director for
foreign policy at the Brookings Institution think tank in Washington.
"My
sense is at least we've seen an evolution to an approach that is more sensitive
to the threat Russia poses to Europe and the US."
Jake
Sullivan, the former national security adviser to vice president Joe Biden,
said the White House policy situation is "still unsettled."
However,
he said, McMaster's arrival in Flynn's place "could tip the balance."
Trump
has long expressed admiration for Putin and other hard-as-nails Russian
autocrats.
But
his hope of launching into the presidency with a new approach to Russia has
been set back by scandals that have allowed critics to paint him as
suspiciously soft on Moscow: the intelligence conclusion that Russia interfered
in the US election to hurt Trump's rival Hillary Clinton; alleged links between
some of his campaign advisers and Russian intelligence; and the need to fire
Flynn over his private discussions on sanctions with Russia's ambassador.
Indeed. I believe was a victim of a neocon coup.
The
seeming slowdown or shift in his stance was most noteworthy, Jones said, with
efforts in the past two weeks to assuage nervous European leaders over the new
Washington administration's intentions.
During
the campaign Trump had repeatedly criticized NATO and suggested the core
Atlantic Alliance may have passed its expiration date.
But
last week Pence declared at a high-level Munich security conference, with
German leader Angela Merkel in the audience, that the administration remains committed to
strong transatlantic ties.
"The
United States is and will always be your greatest ally. Be assured that
President Trump and our people are truly devoted to our transatlantic
union," he said.
Days
earlier new Pentagon chief James Mattis told officials in Brussels that the
NATO alliance was "fundamental bedrock" for the United States.
Trump's
efforts to strike a new footing with Moscow have not gone away, and he and his
close advisor Steve Bannon still set the agenda.
They
have suggested a readiness to lighten tough sanctions placed on Russia by the
previous administration over its seizure of Crimea in exchange for cooperation
elsewhere, particularly in fighting Islamic terrorism.
"If
we could get along, it would be a positive thing, not a negative thing,"
Trump reiterated in a press conference on February 16.
"It
would be much easier for me to be tough on Russia, but then we're not going to
make a deal."
Taking
on anti-Moscow hardliners could help Trump pursue overtures with Putin from a
position of strength, analysts say.
Trump
can still get on the phone with Putin from time to time and do deals." However, I fear Trump's administration is following the path of John Kennedy's administration that started off with the CIA bungling the Bay of Pigs invasion in Cuba. Globalist Allen Dulles led the intelligence cabal against JFK that ultimately cost JFK his life and his administration.
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