Paul Craig Roberts has a new book collecting essays from February 2014 to July 2015. I don't know about others but I get excited when he puts out a new book, collection or otherwise. It is history in the making, and he writes matter-of-factly and often impeccably. His previous collection was 'How America Was Lost" with select articles from August 2008 to December 2013. Of course, most or all of his work can be found online, from both books. The focus of this collection is on America's grandstanding against Russia.
I read the forward, a taste:
[quote author=The Neoconservative Threat to World Order]
To guard against History having second thoughts, the neo-conservatives established the "first objective of US foreign and military policy to be "to prevent the re-emergence of a new rival, either on the territory of the former Soviet Union or elsewhere, that poses a threat [to US unilateral action] on the order of that posed formerly by the Soviet Union ..." [/quote]
The quoted portion within the quote above was written by Paul Wolfowitz who was Undersecretary of Defense in 1992, and then apparently rewritten, as Roberts goes on to explain, to look more diplomatic.
[quote author=The Neoconservative Threat to World Order]
A "hostile power" is a country sufficiently strong to have a foreign policy independent from Washington's. ...
Possibly NATO's demise might result from the EU policy of looting its own member states ... Instead of helping Greece, the EU is helping Wall Street and speculators, who have bought up the Greek debt at pennies on the dollar, seeking to make enormous profits by forcing Greece to pay the full face value of its bonds, not to creditors but to speculators.[/quote]
Interesting that he posits the shortsighted (wishful thinking) greed of the elites could be their downfall, specifically when they impress their greed upon the people they are supposedly protecting and 'funding.' Perhaps the house of cards that comes crashing down on them in the end is exactly this unfettered greed, when it inevitably becomes unsustainable.
I read the forward, a taste:
[quote author=The Neoconservative Threat to World Order]
To guard against History having second thoughts, the neo-conservatives established the "first objective of US foreign and military policy to be "to prevent the re-emergence of a new rival, either on the territory of the former Soviet Union or elsewhere, that poses a threat [to US unilateral action] on the order of that posed formerly by the Soviet Union ..." [/quote]
The quoted portion within the quote above was written by Paul Wolfowitz who was Undersecretary of Defense in 1992, and then apparently rewritten, as Roberts goes on to explain, to look more diplomatic.
[quote author=The Neoconservative Threat to World Order]
A "hostile power" is a country sufficiently strong to have a foreign policy independent from Washington's. ...
Possibly NATO's demise might result from the EU policy of looting its own member states ... Instead of helping Greece, the EU is helping Wall Street and speculators, who have bought up the Greek debt at pennies on the dollar, seeking to make enormous profits by forcing Greece to pay the full face value of its bonds, not to creditors but to speculators.[/quote]
Interesting that he posits the shortsighted (wishful thinking) greed of the elites could be their downfall, specifically when they impress their greed upon the people they are supposedly protecting and 'funding.' Perhaps the house of cards that comes crashing down on them in the end is exactly this unfettered greed, when it inevitably becomes unsustainable.