RACKET
.....Despite the US mobilizing the summation of its media power and pouring
millions of dollars into the opposition party, including the creation and
perpetuation of fake-NGOs such as Bersih and the Merdeka Center, Malaysian
Prime Minister Najib Razak sailed to a comfortable victory in this year's
general elections. The cheap veneer has begun peeling away from America's
"democracy promotion" racket, leaving its proxies exposed and
frantic, and America's hegemonic ambitions across Asia in serious question.
WALL STREET and London's
hegemonic ambitions in Asia, centered around installing proxy regimes across
Southeast Asia and using the supranational ASEAN bloc to encircle and contain
China, suffered a serious blow this week when Western-proxy and Malaysian
opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim's party lost in general elections.
While Anwar Ibrahim's
opposition party, Pakatan Rakyat (PR) or "People's Alliance,"
attempted to run on an anti-corruption platform, its campaign instead resembled
verbatim attempts by the West to subvert governments politically around the
world, including most recently in Venezuela, and in Russia in 2012.
Just as in Russia where
so-called "independent" election monitor GOLOS turned out to be fullyfunded by the US State Department through the National Endowment for Democracy
(NED), Malaysia's so-called election monitor, the Merdeka Center for Opinion
Research, is likewise funded directly by the US through NED. Despite this,
Western media outlets, in pursuit of promoting the Western-backed People's
Alliance, has repeatedly referred to Merdeka as "independent."
The BBC in its article,
"Malaysia election sees record turnout," lays out the well-rehearsed
cries of "stolen elections" used by the West to undermine the
legitimacy of polls it fears its proxy candidates may lose - with the US-fundedMerdeka Center cited in attempts to bolster these claims. Their foreign funding
and compromised objectivity is never mentioned (emphasis added) :
Allegations of election
fraud surfaced before the election. Some of those who voted in advance told BBC
News that indelible ink - supposed to last for days - easily washed off.
"The indelible ink can
be washed off easily, with just water, in a few seconds," one voter, Lo,
told BBC News from Skudai.
Another voter wrote:
"Marked with "indelible ink" and voted at 10:00. Have already
cleaned off the ink by 12:00. If I was also registered under a different name
and ID number at a neighbouring constituency, I would be able to vote again
before 17:00!"
The opposition has also
accused the government of funding flights for supporters to key states, which
the government denies.
Independent pollster Merdeka
Center has received unconfirmed reports of foreign nationals being given IDs
and allowed to vote.
However, an election
monitoring organization funded by a foreign government which openly seeks to
remove the current ruling party from Malaysia in favor of long-time Wall Street
servant Anwar Ibrahim is most certainly not "independent."
The ties between Anwar
Ibrahim's "People's Alliance" and the US State Department don't end
with the Merdeka Center, but continue into the opposition's street movement,
"Bersih." Claiming to fight for "clean and fair" elections,
Bersih in reality is a vehicle designed to mobilize street protests on behalf
of Anwar's opposition party.
Bersih's alleged leader,
Ambiga Sreenevasan, has admitted herself that her organization has received
cash directly from the United States via the National Endowment for Democracy's
National Democratic Institute (NDI), and convicted criminal George Soros' Open
Society.
The Malaysian Insider
reported on June 27, 2011 that Bersih leader Ambiga Sreenevassan:
"...admitted to Bersih
receiving some money from two US organisations — the National Democratic
Institute (NDI) and Open Society Institute (OSI) — for other projects, which
she stressed were unrelated to the July 9 march."
A visit to the NDI website
revealed indeed that funding and training had been provided by the US
organization - before NDI took down the information and replaced it with a more
benign version purged entirely of any mention of Bersih. For funding Ambiga
claims is innocuous, the NDI's rushed obfuscation of any ties to her
organization suggests something far more sinister at play.
PROOF....
NDI's website before taking down any mention to Malaysia's Bersih movement.
....
The substantial, yet
carefully obfuscated support the West has lent Anwar should be of no surprise
to those familiar with Anwar's history. That Anwar Ibrahim himself was Chairman
of the Development Committee of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund
(IMF) in 1998, held lecturing positions at the School of Advanced International
Studies at Johns Hopkins University, was a consultant to the World Bank, and a
panelist at the Neo-Con lined National Endowment for Democracy's
"Democracy Award" and a panelist at a NED donation ceremony - the very
same US organization funding and supporting Bersih and so-called
"independent" election monitor Merdeka - paints a picture of an
opposition running for office in Malaysia, not for the Malaysian people, but
clearly for the corporate financier interests of Wall Street and London.
PANELIST
...Taken from the US National Endowment for Democracy's 2007 Democracy Award
event held in Washington D.C., Anwar Ibrahim can be seen to the far left and
participated as a "panelist." It is no surprise that NED is now
subsidizing his bid to worm his way back into power in Malaysia.
In reality, Bersih's
leadership along with Anwar and their host of foreign sponsors are attempting
to galvanize the very real grievances of the Malaysian people and exploit them
to propel themselves into power. While many may be tempted to suggest that
"clean and fair elections" truly are Bersih and Anwar's goal, and
that US funding via NED's NDI and convicted criminal, billionaire bankster
George Soros' Open Society are entirely innocuous, a thorough examination of
these organizations, how they operate, and their admitted agenda reveals the
proverbial cliff Anwar and Bersih are leading their followers and the nation of
Malaysia over.
As Bersih predictably
mobilizes in the streets on behalf of Anwar's opposition party in the wake of
their collective failure during Malaysia's 2013 general elections, it is
important for Malaysians to understand the true nature of the Western
organizations funding their attempts to politically undermine the ruling party
and divide Malaysians against each other, and exactly why this is being done in
the greater context of US hegemony in Asia.
Anwar & Bersih's US
State Department Backers
The US State Department's
NED and NDI are most certainly not benevolent promoters of democracy and
freedom. A quick look at NED's board of directors reveals a milieu of
corporate-fascists and warmongers:
William Galston: Brookings
Institution (board of trustees can be found on page 35 here).
Moises Naim: Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace (corporate funding here).
Robert Miller: corporate
lawyer.
Larry Liebenow: US Chamber
of Commerce (a chief proponent of SOPA, ACTA, and CISPA), Center for
International Private Enterprise (CIPE).
Anne-Marie Slaughter: US
State Department, Council on Foreign Relations (corporate members here),
director of Citigroup, McDonald's Corporation, and Political Strategies
Advisory Group.
Richard Gephardt: US
Representative, Boeing lobbyist, Goldman Sachs, Visa, Ameren Corp, and Waste
Management Inc lobbyist, corporate consultant, consultant & now director of
Ford Motor Company, supporter of the military invasion and occupation of Iraq
in 2003.
Marilyn Carlson Nelson: CEO
of Carlson, director of Exxon Mobil.
Stephen Sestanovich: US
State Department, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, CFR.
Judy Shelton: director of
Hilton Hotels Corporation & Atlantic Coast Airlines.
Francis Fukuyama: Neo-Con,
pro-war, pro-hegmonic PNAC signatory
Zalmay Khalilzad: Neo-Con,
pro-war, pro-hegmonic PNAC signatory
Will Marshall: Neo-Con,
pro-war, pro-hegmonic PNAC signatory
Vin Weber: Neo-Con, pro-war,
pro-hegmonic PNAC signatory
Does Boeing, Goldman Sachs,
Exxon, the SOPA, ACTA, CISPA-sponsoring US Chamber of Commerce, and America's
warmongering Neo-Con establishment care about promoting democracy in Malaysia?
Or in expanding their corporate-financier interests in Asia under the guise of
promoting democracy? Clearly the latter.
The NDI, which Bersih leader
Ambiga Sreenevasan herself admits funds her organization, is likewise chaired
by an unsavory collection of corporate fascist interests.
Some select members include:
Robin Carnahan: Formally of
the Export-Import Bank of the United States where she "explored innovative
ways to help American companies increase their sale of goods and services
abroad." The NDI's meddling in foreign nations, particularly in elections
on behalf of pro-West candidates favoring free-trade, and Carnahan's previous ties
to a bank that sought to expand corporate interests overseas constitutes an
alarming conflict of interests.
Richard Blum: An investment
banker with Blum Capital, CB Richard Ellis. Engaged in war profiteering along
side the Neo-Con infested Carlyle Group, when both acquired shares in EG&G
which was then awarded a $600 million military contract during the opening
phases of the Iraq invasion.
Bernard W. Aronson: Founder of ACON Investments. Prior to that,
he was an adviser to Goldman Sachs, and serves on the boards of directors of
Fifth & Pacific Companies, Royal Caribbean International, Hyatt Hotels
Corporation, and Chroma Oil & Gas, Northern Tier Energy. Aronson is also a
member of the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) which in turn represents the
collective interests of some of the largest corporations on Earth.
Sam Gejdenson: NDI's profile
claims Gejdenson is "in charge of"
Sam Gejdenson International, which proclaims on its website
"Commerce Without Borders," or in other words, big-business
monopolies via free-trade. In his autobiographical profile, he claims to have
promoted US exports as a Democrat on the House International Relations
Committee. Here is yet another case of conflicting interests between NDI's
meddling in foreign politics and board members previously involved in
"promoting US exports."
Nancy H. Rubin: CFR member.
Vali Nasr: CFR member and a
senior fellow at the big-oil, big-banker Belfer Center at Harvard.
Rich Verma: A partner in the
Washington office of Steptoe & Johnson LLP - an international corporate and
governmental legal firm representing for Verma, a multitude of conflicting
interests and potential improprieties. Setptoe & Johnson is active in many
of the nations the NDI is operating in, opening the door for manipulation on
both sides to favor the other.
Lynda Thomas: A private
investor, formally a senior manager/CPA at Deloitte Haskins & Sells in New
York, and Coopers & Lybrand Deloitte in London. Among her clients were
international banks.
Maurice Tempelsman: Chairman
of the board of directors of Lazare Kaplan International Inc., the largest
cutter and polisher of “ideal cut” diamonds in the United States. Also senior
partner at Leon Tempelsman & Son, involved in mining, investments and business
development and minerals trading in Europe, Russia, Africa, Latin America,
Canada and Asia. Yet another immense potential for conflicting interests, where
Tempelsman stands to directly gain financially and politically by manipulating
foreign governments via the NDI.
Elaine K. Shocas: President
of Madeleine Albright, Inc., a private investment firm. She was chief of staff
to the U.S. Department of State and the U.S. Mission to the United Nations
during Madeleine Albright's tenure as Secretary of State and Ambassador to the
United Nation, illustrating a particularly dizzying "revolving door"
between big-government and big-business.
Madeleine K. Albright: Chair
of Albright Stonebridge Group and Chair of Albright Capital Management LLC, an
investment advisory firm - directly affiliated with fellow NDI board member
Elaine Shocas, representing an incestuous business/government relationship with
overt conflicts of interest. Albright infamously stated that sanctions against
Iraq which directly led to the starvation and death of half a million children
"was worth it."
The average Malaysian,
disenfranchised with the ruling government as they may be, cannot possibly
believe these people are funding and propping up clearly disingenuous NGOs in
direct support of a compromised Anwar Ibrahim, for the best interests of
Malaysia.
The end game for the US with
an Anwar Ibrahim/People's Alliance-led government, is a Malaysia that
capitulates to both US free trade schemes and US foreign policy. In Malaysia's
case, this will leave the extensive economic independence achieved since
escaping out from under British rule, gutted, while the nation's resources are
steered away from domestic development and toward a proxy confrontation with
China, just as is already being done in Korea, Japan, and the Philippines.
Stitching ASEAN Together
with Proxy Regimes to Fight China
GULLIVER'S
....Lemuel Gulliver on the island of Lilliput, having been overtaken while
asleep by ropes and stakes by the diminutive but numerous Lilliputians. Western
corporate-financier interests envision organizing Southeast Asia into a
supranational bloc, ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations), to use the
smaller nations as a combined front to "tie down" China in a similar
manner. Unlike in the story "Gulliver's Travels," China may well
break free of its binds and stomp the Lilliputian leaders flat for their
belligerence.
....
That the US goal is to use
Malaysia and other Southeast Asian nations against China is not merely
speculation. It is the foundation of a long-documented conspiracy dating back
as far as 1997, and reaffirmed by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton as
recently as 2011.
In 1997, Fortune 500-funded
(page 19) Brookings Institution policy scribe Robert Kagan penned, "What
China Knows That We Don't: The Case for a New Strategy of Containment,"
which spells out the policy Wall Street and London were already in the process
of implementing even then, albeit in a somewhat more nebulous manner. In his
essay, Kagan literally states (emphasis added):
The present world order
serves the needs of the United States and its allies, which constructed it. And
it is poorly suited to the needs of a Chinese dictatorship trying to maintain
power at home and increase its clout abroad. Chinese leaders chafe at the
constraints on them and worry that they must change the rules of the
international system before the international system changes them.
Here, Kagan openly admits
that the "world order," or the "international order," is
simply American-run global hegemony, dictated by US interests. These interests,
it should be kept in mind, are not those of the American people, but of the
immense corporate-financier interests of the Anglo-American establishment.
Kagan continues (emphasis added):
In truth, the debate over
whether we should or should not contain China is a bit silly. We are already
containing China -- not always consciously and not entirely successfully, but
enough to annoy Chinese leaders and be an obstacle to their ambitions. When the
Chinese used military maneuvers and ballistic-missile tests last March to
intimidate Taiwanese voters, the United States responded by sending the Seventh
Fleet.
By this show of force, the
U.S. demonstrated to Taiwan, Japan, and the rest of our Asian allies that our
role as their defender in the region had not diminished as much as they might
have feared. Thus, in response to a single Chinese exercise of muscle, the
links of containment became visible and were tightened.
The new China hands insist
that the United States needs to explain to the Chinese that its goal is merely,
as [Robert] Zoellick writes, to avoid "the domination of East Asia by any
power or group of powers hostile to the United States." Our treaties with
Japan, South Korea, the Philippines, Thailand, and Australia, and our naval and
military forces in the region, aim only at regional stability, not aggressive
encirclement.
But the Chinese understand
U.S. interests perfectly well, perhaps better than we do. While they welcome
the U.S. presence as a check on Japan, the nation they fear most, they can see
clearly that America's military and diplomatic efforts in the region severely
limit their own ability to become the region's hegemon. According to Thomas J.
Christensen, who spent several months interviewing Chinese military and
civilian government analysts, Chinese leaders worry that they will "play
Gulliver to Southeast Asia's Lilliputians, with the United States supplying the
rope and stakes."
Indeed, the United States blocks
Chinese ambitions merely by supporting what we like to call "international
norms" of behavior. Christensen points out that Chinese strategic thinkers
consider "complaints about China's violations of international norms"
to be part of "an integrated Western strategy, led by Washington, to
prevent China from becoming a great power.
What Kagan is talking about
is maintaining American preeminence across all of Asia and producing a strategy
of tension to divide and limit the power of any single player vis-a-vis Wall
Street and London's hegemony. Kagan would continue (emphasis added):
The changes in the external
and internal behavior of the Soviet Union in the late 1980s resulted at least
in part from an American strategy that might be called "integration
through containment and pressure for change."
Such a strategy needs to be
applied to China today. As long as China maintains its present form of
government, it cannot be peacefully integrated into the international order.
For China's current leaders,
it is too risky to play by our rules -- yet our unwillingness to force them to
play by our rules is too risky for the health of the international order. The
United States cannot and should not be willing to upset the international order
in the mistaken belief that accommodation is the best way to avoid a
confrontation with China.
We should hold the line
instead and work for political change in Beijing. That means strengthening our
military capabilities in the region, improving our security ties with friends
and allies, and making clear that we will respond, with force if necessary,
when China uses military intimidation or aggression to achieve its regional
ambitions.
It also means not trading
with the Chinese military or doing business with firms the military owns or
operates. And it means imposing stiff sanctions when we catch China engaging in
nuclear proliferation.
A successful containment
strategy will require increasing, not decreasing, our overall defense
capabilities. Eyre Crowe warned in 1907 that "the more we talk of the
necessity of economising on our armaments, the more firmly will the Germans
believe that we are tiring of the struggle, and that they will win by going
on."
Today, the perception of our
military decline is already shaping Chinese calculations. In 1992, an internal
Chinese government document said that America's "strength is in relative
decline and that there are limits to what it can do." This perception
needs to be dispelled as quickly as possible.
Kagan's talk of "responding"
to China's expansion is clearly manifested today in a series of proxy conflicts
growing between US-backed Japan, and the US-backed Philippines, and to a lesser
extent between North and South Korea, and even beginning to show in Myanmar. The
governments of these nations have capitulated to US interests and their
eagerness to play the role of America's proxies in the region, even at their
own cost, is not a surprise. To expand this, however, the US fully plans on
integrating Southeast Asia, installing proxy regimes, and likewise turning
their resources and people against China.
In 2011, then Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton unveiled the capstone to Kagan's 1997 conspiracy. She
published in Foreign Policy magazine, a piece titled, "America's Pacific
Century" where she explicitly states:
In the next 10 years, we
need to be smart and systematic about where we invest time and energy, so that
we put ourselves in the best position to sustain our leadership, secure our
interests, and advance our values. One of the most important tasks of American
statecraft over the next decade will therefore be to lock in a substantially
increased investment -diplomatic, economic, strategic, and otherwise - in the
Asia-Pacific region.
To "sustain our
leadership," "secure our interests," and "advance our
values," are clearly hegemonic statements, and indicates that the US' goal
for "substantially increased investment," including buying off NGOs
and opposition parties in Malaysia, seeks to directly serve US leadership,
interests, and "values," not
within US borders, but outside them, and specifically across all of Asia.
Clinton continues:
At a time when the region is
building a more mature security and economic architecture to promote stability
and prosperity, U.S. commitment there is essential.
It will help build that
architecture and pay dividends for continued American leadership well into this
century, just as our post-World War II commitment to building a comprehensive
and lasting transatlantic network of institutions and relationships has paid
off many times over -- and continues to do so.
The "architecture"
referred to is the supranational ASEAN bloc - and again Clinton confirms that
the US' commitment to this process is designed not to lift up Asia, but to
maintain its own hegemony across the region, and around the world.
Clinton then openly admits
that the US seeks to exploit Asia's economic growth:
Harnessing Asia's growth and
dynamism is central to American economic and strategic interests and a key
priority for President Obama. Open markets in Asia provide the United States
with unprecedented opportunities for investment, trade, and access to
cutting-edge technology. Our economic recovery at home will depend on exports
and the ability of American firms to tap into the vast and growing consumer
base of Asia.
Of course, the purpose of an
economy is to meet the needs of those who live within it. The Asian economy
therefore ought to serve the needs and interests of Asians - not a hegemonic
empire on the other side of the Pacific. Clinton's piece could easily double as
a declaration by England's King George and his intentions toward emptying out
the New World.
And no empire is complete
without establishing a permanent military garrison on newly claimed territory.
Clinton explains (emphasis added):
With this in mind, our work
will proceed along six key lines of action: strengthening bilateral security
alliances; deepening our working relationships with emerging powers, including
with China; engaging with regional multilateral institutions; expanding trade
and investment; forging a broad-based military presence; and advancing
democracy and human rights.
And of course, by
"advancing democracy and human rights," Clinton means the
continuation of funding faux-NGOs that disingenuously leverage human rights and
democracy promotion to politically undermine targeted governments in pursuit of
installing more obedient proxy regimes.
The piece is lengthy, and
while a lot of readers may be tempted to gloss over some of the uglier, overtly
imperial aspects of Clinton's statement, the proof of America's true intentions
in Asia can be seen clearly manifested today, with the intentional
encouragement of provocations between North and South Korea, an expanding
confrontation between China and US proxies, Japan and the Philippines, and with
mobs taking to the streets in Malaysia in hopes of overturning an election
US-proxy Anwar Ibrahim had no chance of winning.
Clean & Fair Elections?
While the battle cry for
Anwar Ibrahim, his People's Alliance, and Bersih have been "clean and fair
elections," in reality, allegations of fraud began long before the
elections even started. This was not because Anwar's opposition party had
evidence of such fraud - instead, this was to implant the idea into people's
minds long before the elections, deeply enough to justify claims of stolen
elections no matter how the polls eventually turned out.
At one point during the
elections, before ballots were even counted, Anwar Ibrahim declared victory - a
move that analysts across the region noted was provocative, dangerous, and
incredibly irresponsible. Again, there could not have been any evidence that
Anwar won, because ballots had not yet been counted. It was again a move meant
to manipulate the public and set the stage for contesting Anwar's inevitable
loss - in the streets with mobs and chaos in typical Western-backed color
revolution style.
One must seriously ask
themselves, considering Anwar's foreign backers, those backers' own stated
intentions for Asia, and Anwar's irresponsible, baseless claims before, during,
and after the elections - what is "clean and fair" about any of this?
Anwar Ibrahim is a fraud, an
overt proxy of foreign interests. His satellite NGOs, including the insidious
Bersih movement openly funded by foreign corporate-financier interests, and the
equally insidious polling NGO Merdeka who portrays itself as
"independent" despite being funded directly by a foreign government,
are likewise frauds - drawing in well-intentioned people through slick
marketing, just as cigarette companies do.
And like cigarette companies
who sell what is for millions essentially a slow, painful, humiliating death
sentence that will leave one broken financially and spiritually before ultimately
outright killing them, Anwar's US-backed opposition is also selling Malaysia a
slow, painful, humiliating death. Unfortunately, also like cigarettes,
well-intentioned but impressionable people have not gathered all of the facts,
and have instead have based their support on only the marketing, gimmicks,
slogans, and tricks of a well-oiled, manipulative political machine.
For that folly, Malaysia may
pay a heavy price one day - but for Anwar and his opposition party today, they
have lost the elections, and the cheap veneer of America's "democracy
promotion" racket is quickly peeling away. For now, America has tripped in
mid-pivot toward its hegemonic agenda in Asia, with Malaysia's ruling
government providing a model for other nations in the region to follow, should
they be interested in sovereignty and independent progress - no matter how
flawed or slow it may be. (LAND DESTROYER)
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