strategic-culture.org
<https://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2021/02/15/cultural-deafness-defines
-the-west/>  


Cultural Deafness Defines the West


Alastair Crooke

28-35 minutes

  _____  



February 15, 2021

C Photo: REUTERS/Tom Brenner

The élites come to believe their narrative - forgetting that it was
conceived as an illusion created to capture the imagination within their
society.

Pat Buchanan is absolutely right - that when it comes to insurrections,
history depends on who writes
<https://triblive.com/opinion/pat-buchanan-of-rioters-protesters-and-patriot
s/>  the narrative. Usually that falls to the oligarchic class; (should they
ultimately prevail.) Yet, I recall quite a few 'terrorists' who subsequently
to were become widely-courted 'statesmen'. So the wheel of passing time
turns - and turns about, again.

Of course, fixing a narrative - an unchallengeable reality, that is
perceived to be too secure, too highly invested to fail - does not mean it
will not go unchallenged. There is an old British expression that well
describes its' colonial experience of (silent) challenge to its then
dominant 'narrative' (both in Ireland and India inter alia). It was known as
'dumb insolence'. That is, when the performance of individual acts of
rebellion are both too costly personally and pointless, that the silent,
sourly expression of dumb contempt for their 'overlords' says it all. It
infuriated the British commanding class by its daily reminder of their
legitimacy deficit. Gandhi took it to the heights. And it his narrative
ultimately, that is the one better remembered in history.

With global Big Tech's control of narrative, however, we have entered into
an entirely different order of things, to those early British efforts at
keeping down dissidence - as Harvard Business School Professor Shoshana
Zuboff succinctly notes
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/29/opinion/sunday/facebook-surveillance-soc
iety-technology.html> :

"Over the last two decades, I've observed the consequences of our surprising
metamorphosis into surveillance empires powered by global architectures of
behavioural monitoring, analysis, targeting and prediction - that I have
called surveillance capitalism. On the strength of their surveillance
capabilities and for the sake of their surveillance profits, the new empires
engineered a fundamentally anti-democratic epistemic coup, marked by
unprecedented concentrations of knowledge about us and the unaccountable
power that accrues to such knowledge."

Narrative control has now jumped the shark:

"This is the essence of the epistemic coup. They claim the authority to
decide who knows . [and] which now vies with democracy over the fundamental
rights and principles that will define our social order in this century.
Will the growing recognition of this other coup . finally force us to reckon
with the inconvenient truth that has loomed over the last two decades? We
may have democracy, or we may have surveillance society, but we cannot have
both." (Emphasis added).

This clearly represents a quite different magnitude of 'control' - and when
allied with the West's counter-insurgency techniques of 'terrorist'
narrative disruption, honed during the 'Great War on Terrorism' - is a
formidable tool for curbing dissent domestically, as well as externally.

Yet it has a fundamental weakness.

Quite simply, that being so invested, so immersed, in one particular
'reality', others' 'truths' then will not - cannot - be heard. They do not
stand out proud above the endless flat plain of consensual discourse. They
cannot penetrate the hardened shell of a prevailing narrative bubble, or
claim the attention of élites so invested in managing their own version of
reality
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/02/technology/biden-reality-crisis-misinfor
mation.html?referringSource=articleShare> .

The 'Big Weakness'? The élites come to believe their own narratives -
forgetting that the narrative was conceived as an illusion, one among
others, created to capture the imagination within their society (not
others').

They lose the ability to stand apart, and see themselves - as others see
them. They become so enraptured by the virtue of their version of the world,
that they lose all ability to empathise or accept others' truths. They
cannot hear the signals. The point here, is that in that talking past (and
not listening) to other states, the latters' motives and intentions will be
mis-construed - sometimes tragically so.

Examples are legion, but the Biden Administration's perception that time was
frozen - from the moment of Obama's departure from office - and somehow
defrosted on 20 January, just in time for Biden to pick up on that earlier
era (as if time was uninterrupted), marks one example of a belief in one's
own meme. Whilst the EU's unfeigned amazement - and anger - at being
described 'as an unreliable partner' by FM Lavrov in Moscow, is just another
example of how élites have become remote from the real world and captive to
their own self-perception.

"America is back" to lead, and 'to set the rules of the road' for the rest
of the world, may be intended to radiate U.S. strength, but rather, it
suggests a tenuous grasp of the realities facing the U.S.: America's
relations with Europe and Asia were growing increasingly distant well before
Biden entered the White House - and, therefore, from before Trump's
(purposefully disruptive) term, too.

Why then is the U.S. so consistently in denial about this?

On the one hand, after seven decades of global primacy, there is inevitably
a certain inertia <https://unherd.com/2021/02/americas-age-of-isolation/>
that would hinder any dominant power from registering and assimilating the
significant changes of the recent past. However, for the U.S., another
factor helps explain its' 'tin ear': It is the wider Establishment's
fixation on preventing the 2020 presidential election from validating the
previous one's results. That really overrode all else. Nothing else
mattered. The focus was so all-consuming it obscured notice of the world
changing - right there - outside of their windows.

This is not unique to America. It is easy to understand why the EU was so
blind-sided by FM Lavrov's labelling of the EU as 'unreliable partner'
(which it patently has been). As former Greek FM, Yanis Varoufakis has
written from his own experience of trying to get the EU to listen to his
detailed summaries and proposals in respect to his country's financial
crisis: 'They (the Euro Group) just sat grim-faced, taking not one jot of
notice: I might as well have sung the Swedish national anthem, for all the
attention they gave to my contributions', Varoufakis later related. His
experience was standard EU modus operandi. The EU does not do 'negotiation'.
Supplicants, whether Greece or Britain, must accept EU values - and its
'club house-rules'.

The High Representative Borrell, arrived with his long list of complaints,
culled from 27 states (some of which have a historical list of complaints
against Russia). He read the demands, and no doubt, expected Lavrov, like
Varoufakis, to sit quietly, as he accepted the reprimands - and the 'club
rules' appropriate to any aspirant contemplating some sort of working
relationship with the worlds' 'biggest consumer market'. This is the EU
culture.

And then, the following infamous press conference at which the EU was called
'unreliable'. Anyone who has attended a EU decision-making making body,
knows the protocol - but let a former EU high official describe it:
<https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v42/n24/perry-anderson/the-european-coup>
The Council handles Chefsachen - the stuff of high politics, not low
regulation - in closed sessions. At these, van Middelaar can report, all 28
heads of government (pre-Brexit) call each other by their first names, and
may find themselves agreeing to decisions they had never even imagined
beforehand - before emerging together for a beaming 'family photograph' in
front of the cameras of the one thousand reporters assembled to hear their
tidings, whose presence makes 'failure impossible', since every summit (with
just one upsetting exception) ends with a message of common hope and
resolve.

Lavrov, like some 'rough-diamond' distant family relative, didn't know to
behave in polite EU society; you don't call the EU names. Oh no!

Varoufakis explains
<https://magazine.newstatesman.com/editions/com.progressivemediagroup.newsta
tesman.issue.NS202105/data/213210/index.html> : "Unlike nation states that
emerge as stabilisers of conflicts between social classes and groups, the EU
was created as a cartel with a remit to stabilise the profit margins of the
large, central European corporations. (It began life as the European Coal
and Steel Community). "Seen through this prism, the EU's stubborn
faithfulness to failed practices begins to make sense. Cartels are
reasonably good at distributing monopoly profits between oligarchs, but
terrible at distributing losses". We also know that, unlike proper states,
cartels will resist any democratisation or outside input into their tight
circle of decision-making.

This incident in Moscow might all be faintly amusing, except for the fact
that it underlines how Brussels' navel-gazing (in a separate way to that of
Team Biden), produces a similar result: It becomes out of touch with the
world beyond. It 'listens', but does not hear. The West's hostile strategy
to Russia, as Pepe Escobar has observed
<https://asiatimes.com/2021/02/why-russia-is-driving-the-west-crazy/>  in
his strategic analysis of Russia's position, is conditioned on the notion
that Russia has nowhere else to go - and therefore must feel pleased and
honoured by the notion of the EU condescending to push-out an 'octopus
tentacle' towards Eurasia. Whereas, now, with the centre of geo-economic
gravity shifting to China and East Asia, it is realistically more a question
of whether the Greater Eurasian heartland, with its 2.2 billion population,
feels it worthwhile to extend its tentacle out towards the rule-bound EU.

This is no small matter: The EU having a hissy-fit over Lavrov's put-down of
the EU in Moscow is one thing. The potential however, for the U.S. to
listen, but not hear, on Russia and China, is quite another. Mis-hearing,
mis-conceiving these two states, touches on matters of war and peace.

Cultural Deafness Defines the West 

The élites come to believe their narrative - forgetting that it was
conceived as an illusion created to capture the imagination within their
society.

Pat Buchanan is absolutely right - that when it comes to insurrections,
history depends on who writes
<https://triblive.com/opinion/pat-buchanan-of-rioters-protesters-and-patriot
s/>  the narrative. Usually that falls to the oligarchic class; (should they
ultimately prevail.) Yet, I recall quite a few 'terrorists' who subsequently
to were become widely-courted 'statesmen'. So the wheel of passing time
turns - and turns about, again.

Of course, fixing a narrative - an unchallengeable reality, that is
perceived to be too secure, too highly invested to fail - does not mean it
will not go unchallenged. There is an old British expression that well
describes its' colonial experience of (silent) challenge to its then
dominant 'narrative' (both in Ireland and India inter alia). It was known as
'dumb insolence'. That is, when the performance of individual acts of
rebellion are both too costly personally and pointless, that the silent,
sourly expression of dumb contempt for their 'overlords' says it all. It
infuriated the British commanding class by its daily reminder of their
legitimacy deficit. Gandhi took it to the heights. And it his narrative
ultimately, that is the one better remembered in history.

With global Big Tech's control of narrative, however, we have entered into
an entirely different order of things, to those early British efforts at
keeping down dissidence - as Harvard Business School Professor Shoshana
Zuboff succinctly notes
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/29/opinion/sunday/facebook-surveillance-soc
iety-technology.html> :

"Over the last two decades, I've observed the consequences of our surprising
metamorphosis into surveillance empires powered by global architectures of
behavioural monitoring, analysis, targeting and prediction - that I have
called surveillance capitalism. On the strength of their surveillance
capabilities and for the sake of their surveillance profits, the new empires
engineered a fundamentally anti-democratic epistemic coup, marked by
unprecedented concentrations of knowledge about us and the unaccountable
power that accrues to such knowledge."

Narrative control has now jumped the shark:

"This is the essence of the epistemic coup. They claim the authority to
decide who knows . [and] which now vies with democracy over the fundamental
rights and principles that will define our social order in this century.
Will the growing recognition of this other coup . finally force us to reckon
with the inconvenient truth that has loomed over the last two decades? We
may have democracy, or we may have surveillance society, but we cannot have
both." (Emphasis added).

This clearly represents a quite different magnitude of 'control' - and when
allied with the West's counter-insurgency techniques of 'terrorist'
narrative disruption, honed during the 'Great War on Terrorism' - is a
formidable tool for curbing dissent domestically, as well as externally.

Yet it has a fundamental weakness.

Quite simply, that being so invested, so immersed, in one particular
'reality', others' 'truths' then will not - cannot - be heard. They do not
stand out proud above the endless flat plain of consensual discourse. They
cannot penetrate the hardened shell of a prevailing narrative bubble, or
claim the attention of élites so invested in managing their own version of
reality
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/02/technology/biden-reality-crisis-misinfor
mation.html?referringSource=articleShare> .

The 'Big Weakness'? The élites come to believe their own narratives -
forgetting that the narrative was conceived as an illusion, one among
others, created to capture the imagination within their society (not
others').

They lose the ability to stand apart, and see themselves - as others see
them. They become so enraptured by the virtue of their version of the world,
that they lose all ability to empathise or accept others' truths. They
cannot hear the signals. The point here, is that in that talking past (and
not listening) to other states, the latters' motives and intentions will be
mis-construed - sometimes tragically so.

Examples are legion, but the Biden Administration's perception that time was
frozen - from the moment of Obama's departure from office - and somehow
defrosted on 20 January, just in time for Biden to pick up on that earlier
era (as if time was uninterrupted), marks one example of a belief in one's
own meme. Whilst the EU's unfeigned amazement - and anger - at being
described 'as an unreliable partner' by FM Lavrov in Moscow, is just another
example of how élites have become remote from the real world and captive to
their own self-perception.

"America is back" to lead, and 'to set the rules of the road' for the rest
of the world, may be intended to radiate U.S. strength, but rather, it
suggests a tenuous grasp of the realities facing the U.S.: America's
relations with Europe and Asia were growing increasingly distant well before
Biden entered the White House - and, therefore, from before Trump's
(purposefully disruptive) term, too.

Why then is the U.S. so consistently in denial about this?

On the one hand, after seven decades of global primacy, there is inevitably
a certain inertia <https://unherd.com/2021/02/americas-age-of-isolation/>
that would hinder any dominant power from registering and assimilating the
significant changes of the recent past. However, for the U.S., another
factor helps explain its' 'tin ear': It is the wider Establishment's
fixation on preventing the 2020 presidential election from validating the
previous one's results. That really overrode all else. Nothing else
mattered. The focus was so all-consuming it obscured notice of the world
changing - right there - outside of their windows.

This is not unique to America. It is easy to understand why the EU was so
blind-sided by FM Lavrov's labelling of the EU as 'unreliable partner'
(which it patently has been). As former Greek FM, Yanis Varoufakis has
written from his own experience of trying to get the EU to listen to his
detailed summaries and proposals in respect to his country's financial
crisis: 'They (the Euro Group) just sat grim-faced, taking not one jot of
notice: I might as well have sung the Swedish national anthem, for all the
attention they gave to my contributions', Varoufakis later related. His
experience was standard EU modus operandi. The EU does not do 'negotiation'.
Supplicants, whether Greece or Britain, must accept EU values - and its
'club house-rules'.

The High Representative Borrell, arrived with his long list of complaints,
culled from 27 states (some of which have a historical list of complaints
against Russia). He read the demands, and no doubt, expected Lavrov, like
Varoufakis, to sit quietly, as he accepted the reprimands - and the 'club
rules' appropriate to any aspirant contemplating some sort of working
relationship with the worlds' 'biggest consumer market'. This is the EU
culture.

And then, the following infamous press conference at which the EU was called
'unreliable'. Anyone who has attended a EU decision-making making body,
knows the protocol - but let a former EU high official describe it:
<https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v42/n24/perry-anderson/the-european-coup>
The Council handles Chefsachen - the stuff of high politics, not low
regulation - in closed sessions. At these, van Middelaar can report, all 28
heads of government (pre-Brexit) call each other by their first names, and
may find themselves agreeing to decisions they had never even imagined
beforehand - before emerging together for a beaming 'family photograph' in
front of the cameras of the one thousand reporters assembled to hear their
tidings, whose presence makes 'failure impossible', since every summit (with
just one upsetting exception) ends with a message of common hope and
resolve.

Lavrov, like some 'rough-diamond' distant family relative, didn't know to
behave in polite EU society; you don't call the EU names. Oh no!

Varoufakis explains
<https://magazine.newstatesman.com/editions/com.progressivemediagroup.newsta
tesman.issue.NS202105/data/213210/index.html> : "Unlike nation states that
emerge as stabilisers of conflicts between social classes and groups, the EU
was created as a cartel with a remit to stabilise the profit margins of the
large, central European corporations. (It began life as the European Coal
and Steel Community). "Seen through this prism, the EU's stubborn
faithfulness to failed practices begins to make sense. Cartels are
reasonably good at distributing monopoly profits between oligarchs, but
terrible at distributing losses". We also know that, unlike proper states,
cartels will resist any democratisation or outside input into their tight
circle of decision-making.

This incident in Moscow might all be faintly amusing, except for the fact
that it underlines how Brussels' navel-gazing (in a separate way to that of
Team Biden), produces a similar result: It becomes out of touch with the
world beyond. It 'listens', but does not hear. The West's hostile strategy
to Russia, as Pepe Escobar has observed
<https://asiatimes.com/2021/02/why-russia-is-driving-the-west-crazy/>  in
his strategic analysis of Russia's position, is conditioned on the notion
that Russia has nowhere else to go - and therefore must feel pleased and
honoured by the notion of the EU condescending to push-out an 'octopus
tentacle' towards Eurasia. Whereas, now, with the centre of geo-economic
gravity shifting to China and East Asia, it is realistically more a question
of whether the Greater Eurasian heartland, with its 2.2 billion population,
feels it worthwhile to extend its tentacle out towards the rule-bound EU.

This is no small matter: The EU having a hissy-fit over Lavrov's put-down of
the EU in Moscow is one thing. The potential however, for the U.S. to
listen, but not hear, on Russia and China, is quite another. Mis-hearing,
mis-conceiving these two states, touches on matters of war and peace.

The élites come to believe their narrative - forgetting that it was
conceived as an illusion created to capture the imagination within their
society.

Pat Buchanan is absolutely right - that when it comes to insurrections,
history depends on who writes
<https://triblive.com/opinion/pat-buchanan-of-rioters-protesters-and-patriot
s/>  the narrative. Usually that falls to the oligarchic class; (should they
ultimately prevail.) Yet, I recall quite a few 'terrorists' who subsequently
to were become widely-courted 'statesmen'. So the wheel of passing time
turns - and turns about, again.

Of course, fixing a narrative - an unchallengeable reality, that is
perceived to be too secure, too highly invested to fail - does not mean it
will not go unchallenged. There is an old British expression that well
describes its' colonial experience of (silent) challenge to its then
dominant 'narrative' (both in Ireland and India inter alia). It was known as
'dumb insolence'. That is, when the performance of individual acts of
rebellion are both too costly personally and pointless, that the silent,
sourly expression of dumb contempt for their 'overlords' says it all. It
infuriated the British commanding class by its daily reminder of their
legitimacy deficit. Gandhi took it to the heights. And it his narrative
ultimately, that is the one better remembered in history.

With global Big Tech's control of narrative, however, we have entered into
an entirely different order of things, to those early British efforts at
keeping down dissidence - as Harvard Business School Professor Shoshana
Zuboff succinctly notes
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/29/opinion/sunday/facebook-surveillance-soc
iety-technology.html> :

"Over the last two decades, I've observed the consequences of our surprising
metamorphosis into surveillance empires powered by global architectures of
behavioural monitoring, analysis, targeting and prediction - that I have
called surveillance capitalism. On the strength of their surveillance
capabilities and for the sake of their surveillance profits, the new empires
engineered a fundamentally anti-democratic epistemic coup, marked by
unprecedented concentrations of knowledge about us and the unaccountable
power that accrues to such knowledge."

Narrative control has now jumped the shark:

"This is the essence of the epistemic coup. They claim the authority to
decide who knows . [and] which now vies with democracy over the fundamental
rights and principles that will define our social order in this century.
Will the growing recognition of this other coup . finally force us to reckon
with the inconvenient truth that has loomed over the last two decades? We
may have democracy, or we may have surveillance society, but we cannot have
both." (Emphasis added).

This clearly represents a quite different magnitude of 'control' - and when
allied with the West's counter-insurgency techniques of 'terrorist'
narrative disruption, honed during the 'Great War on Terrorism' - is a
formidable tool for curbing dissent domestically, as well as externally.

Yet it has a fundamental weakness.

Quite simply, that being so invested, so immersed, in one particular
'reality', others' 'truths' then will not - cannot - be heard. They do not
stand out proud above the endless flat plain of consensual discourse. They
cannot penetrate the hardened shell of a prevailing narrative bubble, or
claim the attention of élites so invested in managing their own version of
reality
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/02/technology/biden-reality-crisis-misinfor
mation.html?referringSource=articleShare> .

The 'Big Weakness'? The élites come to believe their own narratives -
forgetting that the narrative was conceived as an illusion, one among
others, created to capture the imagination within their society (not
others').

They lose the ability to stand apart, and see themselves - as others see
them. They become so enraptured by the virtue of their version of the world,
that they lose all ability to empathise or accept others' truths. They
cannot hear the signals. The point here, is that in that talking past (and
not listening) to other states, the latters' motives and intentions will be
mis-construed - sometimes tragically so.

Examples are legion, but the Biden Administration's perception that time was
frozen - from the moment of Obama's departure from office - and somehow
defrosted on 20 January, just in time for Biden to pick up on that earlier
era (as if time was uninterrupted), marks one example of a belief in one's
own meme. Whilst the EU's unfeigned amazement - and anger - at being
described 'as an unreliable partner' by FM Lavrov in Moscow, is just another
example of how élites have become remote from the real world and captive to
their own self-perception.

"America is back" to lead, and 'to set the rules of the road' for the rest
of the world, may be intended to radiate U.S. strength, but rather, it
suggests a tenuous grasp of the realities facing the U.S.: America's
relations with Europe and Asia were growing increasingly distant well before
Biden entered the White House - and, therefore, from before Trump's
(purposefully disruptive) term, too.

Why then is the U.S. so consistently in denial about this?

On the one hand, after seven decades of global primacy, there is inevitably
a certain inertia <https://unherd.com/2021/02/americas-age-of-isolation/>
that would hinder any dominant power from registering and assimilating the
significant changes of the recent past. However, for the U.S., another
factor helps explain its' 'tin ear': It is the wider Establishment's
fixation on preventing the 2020 presidential election from validating the
previous one's results. That really overrode all else. Nothing else
mattered. The focus was so all-consuming it obscured notice of the world
changing - right there - outside of their windows.

This is not unique to America. It is easy to understand why the EU was so
blind-sided by FM Lavrov's labelling of the EU as 'unreliable partner'
(which it patently has been). As former Greek FM, Yanis Varoufakis has
written from his own experience of trying to get the EU to listen to his
detailed summaries and proposals in respect to his country's financial
crisis: 'They (the Euro Group) just sat grim-faced, taking not one jot of
notice: I might as well have sung the Swedish national anthem, for all the
attention they gave to my contributions', Varoufakis later related. His
experience was standard EU modus operandi. The EU does not do 'negotiation'.
Supplicants, whether Greece or Britain, must accept EU values - and its
'club house-rules'.

The High Representative Borrell, arrived with his long list of complaints,
culled from 27 states (some of which have a historical list of complaints
against Russia). He read the demands, and no doubt, expected Lavrov, like
Varoufakis, to sit quietly, as he accepted the reprimands - and the 'club
rules' appropriate to any aspirant contemplating some sort of working
relationship with the worlds' 'biggest consumer market'. This is the EU
culture.

And then, the following infamous press conference at which the EU was called
'unreliable'. Anyone who has attended a EU decision-making making body,
knows the protocol - but let a former EU high official describe it:
<https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v42/n24/perry-anderson/the-european-coup>
The Council handles Chefsachen - the stuff of high politics, not low
regulation - in closed sessions. At these, van Middelaar can report, all 28
heads of government (pre-Brexit) call each other by their first names, and
may find themselves agreeing to decisions they had never even imagined
beforehand - before emerging together for a beaming 'family photograph' in
front of the cameras of the one thousand reporters assembled to hear their
tidings, whose presence makes 'failure impossible', since every summit (with
just one upsetting exception) ends with a message of common hope and
resolve.

Lavrov, like some 'rough-diamond' distant family relative, didn't know to
behave in polite EU society; you don't call the EU names. Oh no!

Varoufakis explains
<https://magazine.newstatesman.com/editions/com.progressivemediagroup.newsta
tesman.issue.NS202105/data/213210/index.html> : "Unlike nation states that
emerge as stabilisers of conflicts between social classes and groups, the EU
was created as a cartel with a remit to stabilise the profit margins of the
large, central European corporations. (It began life as the European Coal
and Steel Community). "Seen through this prism, the EU's stubborn
faithfulness to failed practices begins to make sense. Cartels are
reasonably good at distributing monopoly profits between oligarchs, but
terrible at distributing losses". We also know that, unlike proper states,
cartels will resist any democratisation or outside input into their tight
circle of decision-making.

This incident in Moscow might all be faintly amusing, except for the fact
that it underlines how Brussels' navel-gazing (in a separate way to that of
Team Biden), produces a similar result: It becomes out of touch with the
world beyond. It 'listens', but does not hear. The West's hostile strategy
to Russia, as Pepe Escobar has observed
<https://asiatimes.com/2021/02/why-russia-is-driving-the-west-crazy/>  in
his strategic analysis of Russia's position, is conditioned on the notion
that Russia has nowhere else to go - and therefore must feel pleased and
honoured by the notion of the EU condescending to push-out an 'octopus
tentacle' towards Eurasia. Whereas, now, with the centre of geo-economic
gravity shifting to China and East Asia, it is realistically more a question
of whether the Greater Eurasian heartland, with its 2.2 billion population,
feels it worthwhile to extend its tentacle out towards the rule-bound EU.

This is no small matter: The EU having a hissy-fit over Lavrov's put-down of
the EU in Moscow is one thing. The potential however, for the U.S. to
listen, but not hear, on Russia and China, is quite another. Mis-hearing,
mis-conceiving these two states, touches on matters of war and peace.

The views of individual contributors do not necessarily represent those of
the Strategic Culture Foundation. 



Print this article

Alastair Crooke

Former British diplomat, founder and director of the Beirut-based Conflicts
Forum. 

 

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