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Pagliacci, Trumpiacci and a Foreign Policy of
Scary Clowns
By Ben
Tanosborn
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
August 15, 2017
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Whether one loves or despises any singular choice in
President Trump’s cabinet, I have come to realize that some of us had a
glimmer of hope in the possibility Rex Tillerson would have a chance to
become US’ most successful secretary of state in three decades. A
glimmer cut short, however, in the reality of Tillerson being sandwiched
between a narcissist clown as a boss and a bipartite Congress obsessed
with empire as its mission; coupled, of course, with a neocon hawkish
ideology in both State Department and Pentagon – ideology that has
operated on autopilot for over two decades no matter the circumstances
or which party occupied the White House. Simply put, Secretary
of State Tillerson, a good pick for a difficult job, was placed in the
diplomatic arena flanked by a pack of creepy clowns to keep him in
check, including the nascent political figure, Nikki Haley, our strident
ambassador to the UN. Allow me a short introduction before I
characterize Tillerson as a furtive hope. Leoncavallo’s opera,
Pagliacci (Clowns), debuted a century and a quarter ago to a
much-delighted public amid accusations of plagiarism against its author.
A psychiatrist friend once told me that the abnormal fear of clowns,
coulrophobia, had been exacerbated by this opera and subsequent literary
and theatrical spin-offs that made “the creepy clown” or “the killer
clown” a fearful character, particularly in the United States.
Americans’ fear of clowns (at about 12%) – surpassed only by the fear of
public speaking (74%), the fear of death (68%) and the fear of spiders
(31%) – is claimed to have surpassed all others, including darkness
(11%), heights (10%) and social situations (8%). Our very own American
creepy clowns travel with a variety of circuses, the scariest among them
doing their acts under religious and political tents in the uniquely
American carnival atmosphere which permeates in religious revivals and
political campaigns. And so it came to pass in this 2015-6
presidential campaign, and our presumed choice between two totally
unfunny clowns (Hillary and Donald) promoted by the sempiternal rule of
money, that duped-Americans helped elect an unqualified, boorish
president now miss-governing at will; a creepy clown living up to the
full his title of “leader of the freak world.” Truth be said,
Trump’s takeover of the White House, and the governing drama which has
followed in the past six months, is more than a reenactment of
Pagliacci’s clowns with just five characters in the plot. Trumpiacci,
the saga of our new governing clowns, is writing itself into a libretto
far more complex, with a menagerie of characters seeming to be stepping
out of not just the opera Pagliacci but also Mario Puzo’s crime novel,
The Godfather. Such colorful cast is giving Trumpiacci great success in
news-entertainment, perfect material for an opera, a movie or a Broadway
play, but unfortunately pointing to a tragic drama, a reality play, with
an unresolved denouement cynically painting political America as a
garbage dump, far removed from past and proud democratic traditions.
Tragi-comically, in a stage of a diminished, tarnished America, we
are confronted with the portrayal of “La Famiglia Trump” as America’s
self-designated rescue-and-cleanup team claiming as its mission nothing
less than the draining of Washington’s political swamp. And, we must
add, with a most colorful cast to perform this task: Padre Trump, Bella
Neddaka, Tardo Donio, Piu Tardo Erico, Consigliere Jaredo; and a
support cast of dozens headed by Chiacchierona Keliana, Portavoce Sean,
Short-Skirmish Tonio Scaramucci, and a string of generals, soldiers, and
capos. An epic reality show tailor-made to meet the Donald’s
ego-caressing demands, while unfortunately poised to provoke the
patriarch’s downfall in this All-American morality play. Back
to Tillerson and the stinky mess that Trump and the governing
establishment have placed in his hands, with stipulations and restraints
only a blinded leadership would impose if expecting a reasonable
probability of success. Front and center: North Korea; Russia; Iran;
the cauldron in the Middle East and Southwest Asia; Venezuela… plus an
eroding de-friending of traditional allies. Trying to resolve any and
all of these problems in un-holocaustic ways requires in most instances
unconditional dialogue; something that the US has been unwilling to
accept, still thinking of itself at its imperialistic apogee, something
in obvious disconnect to today’s economic and military realities.
The specter of a nuclear North Korea is not just the product of
three generations of hate from the Kim-clan and its current
despot-in-chief, Kim Jong Un. The US, in its imposed role of “regional
military protector” has become, in perception and reality, a fearful
predator for Pyongyang’s regime. Neither China, nor the recent UN
sanctions against North Korea, will bring a long term solution to this
problem… a problem that needs to be addressed by China, Japan, and the
two Koreas, independent of America’s tentacles in the Far East. Rest
assured that North Korea is not going to give up its peace-equalizer, so
why not let Tillerson engage Jong Un and find out, first hand, what it
takes to make nice and coexist. There are no other rational options to
choose from. That unconditional dialogue would serve all well if
made as prologue to each and every negotiation, religiously applied to
all confrontations where the US has interests at stake. Perhaps
it’s my collegial affinity towards another engineer that makes me think
of Rex Tillerson as a probable problem-solver, in contrast to the parade
of carny-barkers and political ideologues that have been piloting a
state department, or thinking they had, while navigating with an
immutable foreign policy set on autopilot. Our adversarial relationship
with Russia, Iran and other nations (or peoples) is only different in
how we perceive the degree of danger for us; North Korea headlining the
problem du jour. Should we allow ourselves to fathom the idea
that maybe an honest, apolitical engineer can bring about unconditional
dialogue that can draw the blueprints for getting along? Why must
Russia be treated as an adversary instead of a potential partner? Or
Iran, for that matter? And why are we so intent in following a policy in
the Middle East and Southwest Asia where the basic precepts invite
failure? During the presidential campaign Trump asked blacks
for their vote saying, “What have you got to lose?” We could have the
same request by asking Trump to give Tillerson a free hand in dealing
with North Korea and the Russian Federation… the question this time
directed to all Americans, “What have we got to lose?”
***
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