Foreign nations probably won’t trust Western governments again, but we shouldn’t either
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — There’s a direct link between the sheep-in-headlights look on the
face of U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken in the wake of the U.S. and NATO
drawdown of the war in Afghanistan and the righteous scolding by Canadian Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau of citizens who fail to obey government’s will and risk
being punished and segregated from daily life for opting not to take the
COVID-19 jab.
The end of the war in Afghanistan and Western governments’ behavior toward their
citizens amid the pandemic both underscore the same issues: ineptitude,
corruption, lack of trust, blind followers and, ultimately, the risk of
deception.
Critics are describing the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan as a fiasco. But
what if the real problem is that it went mostly according to plan?
Did you catch the look on Blinken’s face as he made the rounds on TV news
programs just as it became clear that the Taliban was taking over Afghanistan
after more than 20 years of U.S. and NATO occupation? As he was being challenged
on the chaotic nature of the drawdown, Blinken seemed surprised. It was hard to
tell what he found so stunning — the actual chaos that was ensuing or that those
challenging him were so surprised this is what it would look like. Pentagon
press secretary John Kirby declined to say that the Taliban advances surprised
the Biden administration. How could it have been a surprise? This was the actual
plan.
Perhaps the real issue is that the American government didn’t properly prepare
its citizens for the optics of withdrawal, leading them to believe in a fairy
tale. After all, U.S. officials had been negotiating a deal with the Taliban the
last few years, excluding the puppet Afghan government they claimed to support,
knowing full well this would be the end result. The puppet government knew it
too, which is why the army abandoned ship along with its weapons. Everyone
seemed to be in the loop except for the general public, which was caught off
guard and somehow believed in the government’s fairy tales of saving the world
through permanent occupation.
It didn’t take a cynic to understand two things: that the U.S. and its allies
couldn’t stay in Afghanistan forever, shedding blood on foreign soil for
increasingly little in return; and that they day they decided to cut their
losses, we’d finally realize the extent of how little had been accomplished in
Afghanistan despite what had been sold to us over the years in order to keep the
spending party going.
When the music eventually stopped on the charade, it would become clear that a
few defense contractors got rich at the expense of lost lives, and that the
narrative of democracy-building as a justification for continued occupation
would prove to be a lie.
So what exactly is the link between that fiasco and the one we’re all current
living with the COVID-19 crisis? We’re dealing with the exact same governments
that stage-managed the war in Afghanistan, only this time we’re all smack in the
middle of their battlefield. Just replace the military-industrial complex with
the medical-industrial complex. And rather than national security officials
peddling narratives, it’s health officials. But it’s still the same governments
running the war on the virus, armed with jabs rather than bombs, assuring us —
much like they did the Afghan people — that if we just listened to them, trusted
them and did what they want, they’d save us.
Canada’s Trudeau, who just launched a reelection campaign that’s going to amount
to a referendum on his government’s handling of the pandemic, has already
announced his intentions should he win at the polls on Sept. 20.
“If you don’t want to get vaccinated, that’s your choice, but don’t think you
can get on a plane or a train beside vaccinated people and put them at risk,”
Trudeau said during a recent appearance.
Apparently, he forgot that vaccinated people can catch and transmit the virus,
so the vaccine isn’t the magic bullet he’s making it out to be. Despite this
inconvenient fact, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has just given full
approval to the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine, even though clinical trials
won’t end until January 2023. The move gives Biden, Trudeau and their European
allies an excuse to move forward with vaccine mandates, even as drug safety
advocates in the British Medical Journal decry a lack of transparency and due
process.
So do we trust our governments like the Afghans did? Do we take their assertions
as gospel and place our well-being in their hands? What’s our recourse if
they’re wrong? Because these are the exact same people in whom the Afghans
believed right up until they found themselves desperately clinging to the wings
of evacuation planes.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN