Appeasement, Donnie Style

Federal workers are now on twelve hour shifts to clean up the algae bloom in Trump’s “pristine” reflection pool in front of the Lincoln Memorial. There probably could be no better metaphor for his administration. 14 million dollars on a no-bid contract to do, according to Trump, what no other president in history has done. To help kill the algae, the workers reportedly are also putting a 12 percent solution of hydrogen peroxide into the water where the bottom is painted “American flag blue”. Hydrogen peroxide in solutions over 10 percent acts as a paint remover. (photo-Facebook)

And it’s 1,2,3 what’re we fightin’ for? Don’t ask me, I don’t give a damn, next stop is ol’ Iran. And it’s 5,6,7 open up the pearly gates! Well, there ain’t no time to wonder why, Whoopee we’re all gonna die!

With apologies to Country Joe and the Fish for altering their 1969 “I-Feel-Like-I’m-Fixin-To-Die-Rag” sometimes known as the “Vietnam Song” written by Country Joe McDonald.

What a week it has been. It is hard to keep track of it all, but foremost on my mind is the debacle that took place this week as we acceded to all of Iran’s demands to end the war of choice started by Trump. As I wrote earlier this week, the U.S. is the clear loser, no matter what kind of happy face Trump and his flunkies try to paint on it. To me, it is not even obvious that the terms of the agreement will last very long. The Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) that Trump ceremonially signed with his trademark sharpie in the palace at Versailles France (oh, the historical irony) technically is not a treaty. It is supposed to be the framework for a more permanent peace agreement to be hammered out over the next sixty days. However, Trump and his administration are talking about it as if everything is already complete. If this is the end of it, then Iran got everything it wanted and the U.S. got nothing other than vague promises.

Indeed, there may be nothing more. In what can only be described as a fluid situation (government speak for nobody knows exactly what is going on), the follow on talks were postponed by Iran. They claim violations of the MOU are happening, especially on the part of Israel which was not a formal participant in the agreement. According to the MOU, the sixty day window started when the MOU was signed. All of this is to say, it reinforces my feeling that there may not be much in the way of formal negotiations to solidify the terms of the MOU.

There are fourteen points in the MOU which can be found here. In every detail, it is a humiliating end to a war that achieved nothing. While I am glad to see the fighting stop and an argument can be made that a bad deal is better than no deal, it is a clear sign of Trump’s ineptitude and preference to only look out for himself. The MOU achieves none of the alleged goals that were presented as the reason to go to war. The great victory the Trump administration is celebrating only requires Iran to open the Strait of Hormuz, which was open to free navigation before the war began. As spelled out in the MOU, Iran will allow “the safe passage of commercial vessels with no charge, for 60 days only, from the Persian Gulf to the Sea of Oman and vice versa.” (Emphasis added.) After 60 days they can consult with Oman to define the future administration of the strait which will surely include some form of fees to allow safe passage. Iran only reiterated its long standing position that they promise not to develop a nuclear weapon, a position they have espoused for decades. That is it. There are no provisions for inspections or otherwise monitoring Iran’s nuclear stockpile. Meanwhile, the U.S. lifts all of its sanctions and will work to lift international sanctions immediately which means Iran can get its oil to market at market prices where before, when they had to smuggle it out, they sold the oil at a discount. At current prices, that means Iran will earn about 105 billion dollars a year. Additionally, the U.S. will unfreeze Iranian assets and work to institute a 300 billion dollar “invest fund” for Iran to rebuild. None of those things will be monitored under this agreement. The MOU says nothing about Iran’s missile and drone programs or stopping its support for terrorists and proxies such as Hamas and Hezbollah. Guess where those billions will go.

In essence, the MOU is a multi-billion dollar payment to get Iran to re-open the strait for 60 days. Coupled with vague promises to negotiate a more permanent deal to control Iranian nuclear stockpiles. We are worse off than we were before the war. Not to mention that we threw Israel under the bus by including Lebanon in the agreement without consulting Israel.

Thirteen U.S. service members, 165 young Iranian school girls and their teachers, thousands of civilians throughout the Middle East, all dead. Roughly 400 U.S. service members wounded. Iranian citizens yearning to throw out their oppressors were abandoned. (Trump told them in January that “Help is on its way!”) Billions and billions of dollars spent. Everything wasted for no discernible purpose.

From a purely historical viewpoint, the U.S. again had to relearn a lesson that has been tested many times since World War II. Wars cannot be won by air power alone, no matter how grand, courageous or incredible our air forces and personnel may be. Ground troops have to be used at some point or the enemy can just wait out the onslaught. The Battle of Britain in 1940 showed that the first time around and we have relearned the lesson over and over since then. If your war aims are “unconditional surrender” — which Trump demanded at the start of the war — then ground troops are needed. If a nation does not want to do that — and thank goodness we did not put troops into Iran — then you may have tactical or operational success but not strategic success. It also says something about the will of those involved in the fighting. A nation may have tremendous military capabilities, but if there is not the will to fight at any cost, success is going to be relative.

Trump did tell the truth in one way. During a press conference at the G-7 conference in Evian, France this week he said, “I didn’t want to see economic catastrophe. If you kept this going, that could have happened. But all I know is, every time we talked about the possibility of peace, the stock market shot up like a rocket ship.” Trump went on to say that he stopped the fighting, “rather than possibly going into a depression, rather than having your favorite president be Herbert Hoover, he was always the one I didn’t want to be.” In other words, he admitted that his economy was not “golden” and that things could get even worse if the war continued. Specifically, the economic impact of the war was intolerable and that the world was facing a severe shortage of oil. At the G-7 conference on June 17, he said if he hadn’t agreed to the MOU, the U.S. “would run out of [oil] reserves in about four weeks.”

Hold on a second. About those ballistic missiles. Did Trump let Iran keep their missile programs? The ones that Secretary of Defense Hegseth said that the goal of the war was to “destroy Iranian offensive missiles, destroy Iranian missile production.” Yes. Apparently the Iranians can keep their ballistic missiles and programs because, otherwise, it wouldn’t be fair. But I will let Trump explain it. “I mean, they have to have some because other people have some. You’ve got to have some,” Trump went on: “‘Sir, you shouldn’t let them have any missiles.’ I said, ‘Well, what am I going to do? I’m going to let Saudi Arabia have missiles, but they can’t have them?’ ‘Yes, sir.’ It can’t — doesn’t work that way,” Trump said. 

So there you go.

The war did not weaken the Iranian regime or strengthen the U.S. Gulf states will now have to deal with a revitalized Iran that keeps its war making capability and is now richer, stronger and tougher with the knowledge that it can survive an American attack.

On a brighter note, the Obama Center officially opened yesterday. All living presidents and their wives — except for the current one — attended the joyous celebration surrounding the opening. It reminded me of what America can be when we stick to our values and traditions.

And Happy Juneteenth!


A Tough Week For the USA

President Xi Jinping of China greets Donald Trump in Beijing. Trump tried his “yank-shake” handshake as he arrived in Tiananmen Square to meet with Xi. It did not work as Xi stood calmly but firmly. Trump ended up tapping his hand multiple times and held his hand a remarkably long time. It seemed a test of wills that Xi appeared to win. That was the first of many wins for China during the summit. (Photo by AJP/Getty)

Last week Trump travelled to China for a long planned summit with Xi Jinping. It did not go well. One of many such failures as the war of choice against Iran continues, the Strait of Hormuz remains closed, prices continue to rise, Trump remains fixated on his ballroom, arch and reflection pool, and we learned of his plans to use the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to create a slush fund with taxpayer money to raise a private army to do his bidding in the lead up to the mid-term elections. Just another week in May under the Trump regime.

Nearly every analyst and former U.S. government diplomat not on Fox News deemed Trump’s visit to China as an unmitigated humiliation. The Chinese did what they do very well by putting on a great show for Trump that included everything from military units in formation to young children waving flags and singing. Trump soaked it all in with undisguised glee while at every turn doing all that he could to flatter, praise and openly admire Xi in hopes of being his friend. Meanwhile, Xi unemotionally but firmly stuck to substance and his talking points in taking Trump to the woodshed and stealing his lunch money. The entire visit was staged to show that China is an ascending power and that the U.S. is a declining power. So long world stage — Trump is now just another actor on display, no longer considered the world’s most important figure in the nation no longer considered the most formidable on earth. What happened in China not only demonstrated strength in their declaring that they are now a power to be reckoned with, but it also strengthened the perception throughout the world, for enemies and allies and friends, that Trump is no longer to be feared or taken seriously. Move along folks, nothing to see here. Or as I heard from my days living in Texas, Trump proved that he is “all hat and no cattle.”

It started when Xi warned Trump publicly not to fall into the “Thucydides Trap.” For those who may have slept through their western civilization courses in school, Thucydides was a Greek historian analyzing the Peloponnesian War between Athens and Sparta in ancient Greece. The theory is that when a rising power, in this case Athens, threatens a ruling power, here Sparta, it leads to war. The modern theory came from the Harvard professor Graham Allison who studied multiple historical examples and concluded that it is possible to avoid the “trap” through cooperation, communication and co-existence such as between the USSR and US during the cold war. Unfortunately, Trump seems naturally unable to cooperate, communicate or co-exist with anyone.

Xi was clearly telling Trump, publicly, that China was at least an equal power to the U.S. He was warning Trump that China was willing to fight for their future and would not be cowed by the United States. Where does it most immediately apply? With Taiwan. China claims that Taiwan is part of the People’s Republic of China, not an independent democratic state. China fully intends to integrate Taiwan into their country. (See what happened with Hong Kong.) The only issue is when and how. U.S. policy regarding Taiwan for decades, under Democrat and Republican administrations, has been one of strategic ambiguity. That means that we recognize a “One China Policy” whereby China includes Taiwan but we do not endorse China’s claim nor intend to facilitate their taking over the island. Indeed, we provide weapons to Taiwan in order for them to maintain their self-defense, we will not let China dictate those arms sales, we will not be an intermediary between China and Taiwan and we will continue to recognize Taiwan’s sovereignty.

During Trump’s visit Xi explicitly, and again, importantly publicly, declared that the Thucydides Trap may be Taiwan if the U.S. did not allow China to take it over. Specifically Xi said, “the Taiwan question is the most important issue in China-US relations. If mishandled, the two nations could collide or even come into conflict, pushing the entire China-US relationship into a highly perilous situation.” In diplomatic speak he is telling Trump to buzz off and let them have their way with Taiwan. Amazingly, Trump briefed Xi on an impending 14 billion dollar arms sale to Taiwan and asked for his assessment (permission?) about going ahead with it. Trump said he considered the sale to be a “bargaining chip.” To make matters worse, on Fox News in response to questions about Taiwan he said, “We’re supposed to travel 9,500 miles to fight a war? I’m not looking for that.” Taiwan is about 7,800 miles from Washington D.C. (Oh yeah. Tehran is about 6,400 miles.)

In sum, Trump treats democracies (Ukraine, Taiwan) like parasites to be ignored or given over to dictatorial states (Russia, China) whose leaders he considers to be his friends and bows to whatever directions they give him.

Meanwhile, the war of choice against Iran may or may not be over. Apparently Trump is bored with the whole thing and he must think that if he just ignores it, it will all go away. It is not. The Strait of Hormuz is still closed to most traffic. Trump asked Xi to help get the Strait open again and was politely rebuffed. Xi is not about to help out as they have their own special relationship with Iran. Besides, why help your opposition when they are slowly being degraded militarily and economically in a war that they started. He is not going to rescue us from our own mistake. Most economists clearly state that the worst economic impact of the war is yet to come — even if the war ended today. Like it or not, we are stuck in the Middle East, even as our Arab friends are looking around for someone other than the U.S. to ally themselves with as they slowly realize that Trump could care less about their future.

Iran? Taiwan? Economic hardship for Americans? Trump could care less. He even said so last week. On his way to depart for the China trip a reporter asked him about the plight of the average American consumer who is struggling due to the impact from the war in Iran. His response? “I don’t think about Americans’ financial situations, I don’t think about anybody.” What he does think about is his ballroom, arch and reflection pool. He is still seeking one billion taxpayer dollars for his ballroom and construction is continuing. He has hit a temporary setback as the Senate Parliamentarian ruled the current bill out of order for a simple majority vote. It will require sixty Senators to approve it. I do not expect that to impact Trump’s plans. The survey teams were out this week scoping and testing the soil at the site of Trump’s proposed arch, even as numerous groups work in court to stop it. Trump tried to attach its construction to already approved contracts for the White House itself, even though they are at least a mile apart and have no actual relation to each other. No law, rule or regulation is going to stand in his way. The two million dollar renovation of the reflection pool that went in a no bid contract to one of his friends has now burned through over thirteen million dollars of taxpayer money and is behind schedule. Of course it is.

This week we also discovered another of the many Trump schemes to enrich himself and to consolidate his power. Besides his wealth increasing by about five billion dollars since being elected in 2024 — I am sure there is no insider trading or conflicts of interest involved at all — you may recall that Trump, as president, is suing the IRS for ten billion taxpayer dollars. Apparently there are negotiations underway where Trump will forgo the ten billion for 1,776,000,000 taxpayer dollars. (Get it? Ha ha. I cannot make this stuff up.) The 1.7 billion will go to a “Truth and Justice Commission” to pay reparations to all of those who suffered from the “weaponization” of the Department of Justice (DOJ) during the Biden Administration. Besides the fact that only Congress can authorize and appropriate the use of taxpayer dollars, and the fact that Trump is once again negotiating with himself to see how much money he can walk away with, there are several other wildly disquieting issues surrounding this scheme. One is reportedly that in return for the new agreement, Trump, his family and all of his organizations, entities and enterprises can never ever again be audited by the IRS. I am sure that is totally on the up and up. But it gets worse.

Among those explicitly discussed as recipients of payouts are the roughly 1500 rebels that invaded the seat of government, mauled law enforcement officers and tried to overthrow an election and were convicted or pleaded guilty for their crimes. Trump pardoned them for doing his bidding and now he wants to pay them. Hold that thought. Under the proposal, there would be five Commissioners, four of whom would be appointed by the Attorney General, and Trump could dismiss any one of them or all of them without cause. All proceedings would be classified and not reviewable by any entity except Trump. The amounts and individuals or entities receiving payouts would not be disclosed. Trump himself would not be eligible for a payout, but his family and any Trump businesses or other organizations would be eligible. In other words, a Trump slush fund to use as he wants at taxpayer expense.

It is easy to see this as a viable way to raise a private army to wreak havoc before, during or after the upcoming elections. He did it once, but now he can promise them pardons and a payout for committing their crimes. Untouchable. None of us are stupid enough to think that no one would take up the offer. It is scary.

Tomorrow starts another week. Let us hope that Congress and the courts curtail or stop this reckless abuse of presidential power. Countries around the world have come to see Trump for who he really is and have stopped being impressed by his bullying and false bravado. There is no substance there and they are moving on. Let us hope that our fellow citizens realize the same things.