
- Stopping crimes against peace
Princeton law professor Richard Falk talks ahead of Nuclear Age Peace Foundation Event
by Mark M. Whitehurst / Voice April 2, 2026
The 21st Frank K. Kelly Lecture, hosted by the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, presented at the Music Academy of the West at 6 p.m. on April 7. Law professor Richard Falk will speak at the event. (Photo courtesy the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation)
Every person deserves peace, security, and freedom, values that underpin international law. A lecture on humanity’s future by Princeton professor of law Richard Falk will support and develop this idea as he explores the United States’ current disregard for prudence, law, morality, and its complicity in Israel’s genocidal and militaristic approach not only in relation to Occupied Palestine, but also to the Middle East as a region.
This talk will be the 21st Frank K. Kelly Lecture, hosted by the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation and presented at the Music Academy of the West at 6 p.m. on April 7.
Prof. Falk took time to be interviewed by VOICE Magazine, answering questions associated with his upcoming Frank K. Kelly Lecture. His responses have been edited for length.
VOICE: How have sovereignty and international law been impacted by the current attempts to justify regime change as part of a new world order?
Prof. Falk: In modern international law, as summarized in the UN Charter with respect to issues of peace and security, regime change by intervention is never legal unless authorized by the Security Council in the context of peace and security. Under normal circumstances, the UN is itself prohibited from intervention in the internal affairs of any sovereign state unless overridden by threats to international peace and security. Such a limitation was inserted in the Charter as a repudiation of the practice in the colonial era of invoking ‘humanitarian intervention’ to carry out the political agenda of European colonial powers and regional hegemons in states of the Global South.
VOICE: What is the relationship between the International Criminal Court and the United Nations?
Falk: The ICC is based on the Rome Statute that sets up the legal framework for tribunal operations, including its scope of authority, but as a treaty it is binding only on those states that agree to become Parties. This is unlike the International Court of Justice (ICJ) that is an organic part of the UN, and states by becoming Members of the UN automatically become parties to the Statute that frames ICJ undertakings.
This elementary distinction is an introduction to the operation of the two tribunals, which proceed along quite different lines.
The ICC was early discredited by seeming to concentrate its activities to violations of international criminal law on the basis of judicially approved recommendations of the Prosecutor to proceed with an investigation of alleged criminality on the part exclusively of leaders in African countries. Whereas the scope of ICJ activity is to resolve legal disputes among sovereign states, the ICC addresses crimes of individuals acting on behalf of the state.
Both judicial bodies are without direct enforcement capabilities, with the ICJ depending on the SC, and the ICC depending on the implementation of its criminal proceedings through the cooperation of those states that are parties to the Rome Statute, and can issue arrest warrants for accused individuals even if their nationality is of a state not party to the ICC, provided that the crimes prosecuted occurred on the territory of a party. In the highest profile case in ICC’s history, brought against top Israeli and Hamas leaders, crimes justifying the prosecution were alleged to be committed in Palestine, which despite being occupied, was considered a sovereign state.
The implementation of the Arrest Warrants calling for the arrests of PM Netanyahu and former Minister of Defense Gallant have not been acted upon, including by parties to the Rome Statute, leaving implementation in a grey zone of voluntary law enforcement.
Both tribunals have performed in accord with admirable professional standards of judicial practice in their several decisions since October 7, both provisionally in relation to alleged Israel violations of the Genocide Convention and as to the legality of Israel’s continued occupation of Palestinian Territories (West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem) that began as a result of the outcome of the 1967 War.
VOICE: Do you think the UN Security Council will refer recent acts of aggression by the US and Israel to the ICC? What would be the implications of this?
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Falk: It is impossible to expect such a referral. We need to remember that the SC cannot act without the unanimous support of the five permanent members of the SC, three of whom are NATO members supportive of the aggression to varying degrees. And even if these governments were to be swayed by public opinion in their countries it is unrealistic to suppose that the US Government would vote in favor of such a referral.
As mentioned, the ICC is not institutionally part of the UN, and it is not clear that even if there was support from the P5 it would have any formal impact. It is possible to envision that the ICC Prosecutor might recommend to ICC judges that they authorize an investigation of the charges of aggression, and if found persuasive, that arrest warrants be issued for the respective heads of state, and possibly other officials or even officials of corporate entities.
As the experience of earlier arrest warrants against Netanyahu and Gallant illustrate, respect for ICC arrest warrants is essentially voluntary and not likely to be implemented against leading figures of powerful countries. The ICC, unlike the ICJ, can only proceed against individuals and lacks jurisdiction to take formal legal action against governments, corporations, and financial institutions.
In sum, the ICC path to accountability is not promising. More constructive avenues to achieve some kind of legal assessment might result from the formation of a civil society or peoples’ tribunal. I served as President of the Gaza Tribunal that gathered evidence, presented expert and survivor testimonies and concluded its inquiries with a strong decision by a Jury of Conscience composed of respected political, cultural, and scholarly personalities. Smaller tribunals in Canada and the UK have critically examined allegations of complicity in the furtherance of Israel’s international crimes in Gaza.
VOICE: What are the reasons why the US, Israel, and Iran are not members of the ICC?
Falk: My response is no more than a speculation based on public postures. I think the basic reason is the awareness that their respective foreign policy positions are controversial from the perspective of international criminal law. These three governments for somewhat different reasons are not prepared to subject their strategic priorities or national security to legal or criminal scrutiny.
VOICE: How has the policing power of the UN evolved and what are the future prospects of this power?
Falk: From the time the UN was established until the present, the policing or enforcement capabilities of the Organization was made dependent on decisions of the Security Council, which gives only the five winners of World War II a right of veto, as prominently used by the US and its NATO allies during the Israel assault upon Gaza, to shield Israel from censure, law enforcement, and accountability.
It is again relevant to interpreting the outbreak of the present Iran War. Once again the political organs of the UN, the SC and General Assembly, have been essentially silent in the face of aggression, and the violation of the core norm of the UN Charter, prohibiting aggressive uses of force have been so far completely neutralized. And even the GA, which lacks enforcement or accountability authority, has lacked the political will to confront outright aggression. This unlawful start of the Iran War resembles what was called at the Nuremberg trials after World War II ‘Crimes against Peace.’
Voice: Would you share any suggestions for how our country or the individuals who read this interview should proceed to support Peace?
Falk: Let your conscience be your guide, as shaped by a knowledge of how ‘wars of choice’ as the New York Times described the present Iran War, so far causing death, suffering, and devastation to Iran and several of its neighbors. This leads to anti-American rage among people everywhere, causing bitter divisions even here. Even the New York Times referred to the Iran War as ‘the ultimate war of choice.’ I call it an unprovoked war of aggression that is likely to make even more stressed the internal situation of multiple hardships being endured by the Iranian people, and to spread disorder throughout the region, and beyond.
U.S. warmaking since World War II has produced few benefits and much grief and destruction. It is time to bring war under control before it dooms the future of humanity. This will only happen when enough people take action that overwhelms special interests and militarism that now shape our foreign policy.
Voice: Are there any precedents for the kind of changed needed to move forward?
Falk: When a situation arises where a state pursues internal and external against the will of the people, opposition in the form of nonviolent protest initiatives often can achieve goals related to peace and justice. This happened in the U.S. at the latter stages of the Vietnam War. Finally exerting enough pressure to produce a transition to peace for this country and an era of reconstruction for Vietnam. Another example is the surprising success of the anti-apartheid movement that was aided by nonviolent solidarity movements around the world including cultural and sports boycotts, divestment campaigns, and alienation in international relations.
The weight of these pressures brought an unexpected change of policy by the ruling South African white leadership that brought racism to an end, and a transition to a constitutional democracy, while far from perfect, is an inspiring improvement over apartheid or a bloody race war. Such a possibility exists for the American people at this time to end its participation in the Iran War, and at the same time adjust its relationship with Israel by reference to law and justice. Although we can know the future, we can know and act to achieve a future that will be shaped by values rather than by the strategic calculations of unaccountable bureaucrats. As many moral giants of our world have insisted upon we must dedicate themselves to ‘peace by peaceful means’ and not take refuge by silently crouching beneath the weight of state propaganda.
Professor Richard Falk is the Albert G. Milbank Professor Emeritus of International Law at Princeton University. He was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 2023. He has served as chair of Global Law, Faculty of Law, at Queen Mary University, London and co-Director of its Centre of Environmental Justice and Crime; Research Associate at the Orfalea Center of Global Studies at the UC Santa Barbara; and Fellow of the Tellus Institute. He directed the project on Global Climate Change, Human Security, and Democracy at UCSB and formerly was the director of the North American group in the World Order Models Project. Between 2008 and 2014, Falk served as UN Special Rapporteur on the human rights situation in the Palestinian territories. Falk is the author or editor of more than 75 books. In 2022, Professor Falk authored Protecting Human Rights in Occupied Palestine: Working Through the United Nations in collaboration with John Dugard and Michael Lynk. He is Senior Vice President of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.
This article originally appeared in Voice Magazine.
In Praise of the Syria Withdrawal
29 Dec[Prefatory Note:The following interview, to be published in Counterpunchwas conducted by Daniel Falcone on December 20, 2018. Trump’s withdrawal of American troops from Syria that defied the bipartisan consensus that has shaped U.S. foreign policy since 1945 poses the biggest challenge to the Trump presidency, especially as it shook Israel’s confidence and coincides with woes of Wall Street. In coming weeks it should become clear whether the American version of the deep state remains asleep or perceives this ‘watershed moment’ (Friedman) as the opportunity to restore confidence in the pre-Trump version of world order.]
In Praise of the Syria Withdrawal
Q1: As an expert on American foreign policy what is the true meaning and significance of trump pulling ground troops out of Syria. Is it this simple and straightforward?
Of course, with Trump we never know either the real motivation for an apparently abrupt decision of this sort or whether in the next day or so it might be reversed in an equally abrupt manner. It all depends on how the winds of his imperial ego are blowing. And this is not a reassuring awareness in the nuclear age. Gareth Porter, a reliable commentator on what goes on in Washington, has insisted that the decision was not abrupt, but long in the works, reflecting Trump’s correct insistence that the American military presence in the Middle East was not worth the costs or burdens, having little capacity to control political outcomes.
With Trump we should also assume that egocentric motivations of the moment are part of the story. We do know that such an inflammatory decision shifts attention away, at least briefly, from the Mueller developments that seem more threatening to Trump’s comfort zone day by day. Beyond these explanations, Trump can accurately claim that he is fulfilling one of his most emphatic pledges of his 2016 presidential campaign, namely, offering scathing criticism of costly interventions in the Middle East as the basis for his commitment to bring American troops home very soon. Such a pledge made a great deal of sense as the American experience with military interventions was a record of unacknowledged failure with a learning curve that hovered around zero.
The unprovoked attack on Iraq in 2003 followed by a prolonged occupation, was a flagrant violation of the prohibition on aggressive war, the core principle of the UN Charter and modern international law. It was also the cause of massive suffering and devastation, resulting in internal strife and constant chaos. The mindless occupation policy imposed by the United States deliberately inflamed sectarian tensions in Iraq, which in turn spread Sunni/Shi’ia turmoil throughout the region.
Geopolitically, as well, the Iraq War illustrated the dysfunctional nature of such uses of international force even when the superior military capabilities of the United States are brought to bear. A central strategic goal of the intervention was to weaken the regional footprint of Iran by placing a Western-oriented government on the Iranian border of a country ready and willing to have American military bases on its territory. The main effect of the American intervention and extended presence was the reverse of what was intended. Iranian regional influence in part because the American occupation approach sought to disempower the Sunni dominance that had been associated with Saddam Hussein’s regime and put in its place an Iran-oriented Shi’ite leadership. The Iraqi negative reactions to the Trump Christmas visit to American troops suggested that the U.S. presence in Iraq is far from secure, and continues to be an affront to Iraqi nationalism.
A further result of the purge of Sunni elements in the upper echelons of the Iraqi armed forces soon after the occupation began in 2003 was the formation of ISIS as a terrorist organization committed to the expulsion of the occupying forces from the Middle East and spreading governance under the auspices of radical Islamic leadership. In retrospect the real irony is that Saddam Hussein’s regime, although repressive and repulsive, was far preferable for the Iraqi people and even for American strategic goals in the Middle East than was the unlawful intervention and bungled occupation if unintended consequences are taken into account. Our war planners never were willing to come to terms with this systemic series of miscalculations, and more or less arrayed themselves beneath the notorious banner, ‘mission accomplished’ unfurled to honor the presence of George W. Bush on an American aircraft carrier. Although this banner was mocked due to the resistance encountered in the course of the occupation, it had a second life through the unwillingness of the national security establishment in Washington to heed the lessons of the Iraq failure. Rather than learning from failure, the experience was pushed aside and effectively forgotten.
Trump claims that his policies for the past two years have defeated ISIS, making it prudent and appropriate from a national security perspective to withdraw American ground forces at this time. The claim as to ISIS is disputed by the entire defense establishment in the U.S., and seems to have contributed to the Secretary of Defense, General James Mattis, decision to submit a thinly veiled criticism of Trump’s withdrawal approach on strategic grounds, stressing especially the importance of acting in concert with allies. The decision has also been criticized as abandoning Syrian Kurds to the tender mercies of Assad’s regime and Erdogan’s Turkey. For the governments in Damascus and Ankara, the Kurds, while allied with the U.S. in its anti-ISIS campaign, pose threats to the territorial integrity and political stability of both Syria and Turkey. Such criticisms are suspect, assuming that on balance the American military presence in Syria, although small, played a positive stabilizing role. If my assessment is correct there is never an appropriate moment for withdrawing a combat presence from an overseas country previously the scene of an American intervention. We need to remember that this military involvement in Syria was already almost twice as long as World War II, with no convenient end in sight.
Q2: How do you assesses the mainstream agenda setting media’s response to trump’s latest foreign policy decision regarding Syria?
My impression is that the media response has so far been dominated by the sort of bipartisan approach that earlier underpinned American foreign policy during the Cold War and produced the ‘Washington Consensus’ that provided ideological coherence for the neoliberal version of economic globalization. During the Cold War this militarization of foreign policy led to a series of interventions on the geopolitical periphery, culminating in the Vietnam War. With respect to the world economy, a capital-driven approach to economic policy that was largely indifferent to the human consequences of market forces resulted in gross inequities with respect to the distribution of the benefits of economic growth or its damaging ecological side effects. The experience of widening disparities of wealth and income became a structural feature of the world economy, and seems closely connected to the rage expressed by those multitudes. A majority of persons quite reasonably feel victimized by the policies accepted by the entire policy establishment, whether they identify as Democrats, Republicans, or independents. This rage has been translated into various forms of political frustration, including giving rise to an electoral tidal wave in the leading constitutional democracies around the entire world that brought to power demagogic figures whose defining message was to pose as enemies of the established order. In Trump’s case, he sloganized this hostility by a campaign promise ‘to drain the swamp.’ This political spectacle is enacted in various ways reflecting the distinctiveness of the autocrat and the particularities of each set of national circumstances.
In the American case, Trump’s approach has been to weaken constitutional structures of government, while strengthening the grip of Wall Street on the American economy via massive tax cuts for the wealthy and the dramatic weakening of regulatory authority with respect to labor practices and environmental protection.
The Syrian withdrawal decision is perceived as one more unacceptable consensus-disruptive move by Trump that includes a repudiation of one the pillars of the Cold War Era, namely, tight alliances epitomized by NATO. Such a unilateral move by Trump without any reliance on prior consultations with leading allies is seen as a further blow to American leadership of the Western democracies. The fact that the Trump decision was publicly endorsed by Putin at a time when Western elites are urging a more confrontational approach to Russia is taken by the media as a further sign that the U.S. is in a go it alone foreign policy.
The Mattis resignation letter very effectively encouraged the media to react in this manner. It challenges Trump in all but name, complaining both about alliance disruption and the failure to heed the views of those who opposed the Syrian pullout. He is obviously upset that his own advice, and that of his high-ranking colleagues, was ignored. His letter reminds readers of his extensive professional experience and knowledge that is relevant to understanding both the Syrian reality and the implausibility of claiming that ISIS is defeated. In essence, he deplores the military withdrawal from Syria, insisting that it will be of help to America’s principal rivals in the world, Russia and China, “whose strategic interests are increasingly in tension with ours.” The following sentence in the Mattis letter could have been written in the midst of the Cold War: “It is clear that China and Russia..want to shape a world consistent with their authoritarian model—gaining veto authority over other nations’ economic, diplomatic, and security decisions—to promote their own interests at the expense of their neighbors, America and our allies.” Mattis perceives the world as an arena for continuous geopolitical rivalry where a militarily proactive global posture is the only acceptable approach for the United States and the West.
It is not only that most influential media outlets side with the critics of this Trump initiative, but their failure to convey the rationale justifying his decision beyond saying that he is fulfilling a campaign pledge or shifting the national conversation away from the Special Counsel. If Trump follows up the withdrawal with a termination of air strikes in Syria, and makes a significant use of the funds saved by foregoing military operations to hasten a Syrian recovery from seven years of devastation, massive human displacement, and incredible civilian suffering, the policy should be acknowledged as a constructive and long overdue move then in a demilitarizing direction that begins to undo the immeasurable harm done by the Iraq War that commenced in March 2003, and was an assault on the international legal order, including the UN, from the outset.
I would predict that the national security establishment will condemn even this evidence of a serious shift toward disengagement from Middle East turmoil as an unwelcome retreat from American leadership, and a form of encouragement to its adversaries and rivals to take more risks to expand their zones of influence. If this is so, the mainstream media is sure to follow along, nightly parading a series of retired generals who bemoan this renunciation of the U.S. global security role of the past half century of a ‘forever war.’ What may be worse is the failure to treat the issue as even debatable. There is no media effort to balance criticism of Trump’s decision by presenting progressive voices drawn from civilian society.
It is common for media pundits to question policy choices so long as they do not touch the fundamental guidelines of structure and geopolitical priorities that have shaped the American global role ever since 1945. These fundamentals include the Atlantic Alliance as embodied in NATO, market-oriented constitutionalism as embedded in the neoliberal credo, and the globe-girdling military presence as typified by more than 800 overseas military bases, a sizable naval operation patrolling in every ocean, and a capability to wage hyper war from any point in space. The media will not challenge those that defend this security structure, and even Fox News and the Murdoch media outlets can be expected to be neutral, departing from their habitual acceptance of whatever Trump does.
It is not surprising that CNN news anchors such as Don Lemon or Chris Cuomo almost salivated in response to the Mattis letter, reading it aloud as if it was an instant classic in political rhetoric to be compared with the Gettysburg Address. Their anti-Trump animus was so intense that they did not even express any skepticism about Mattis’ geopolitical hubris in the letter that seemed both dated and overly belligerent. His words: “the US remains the indispensable nation in the free world.” Really. Such an opinion is not widely shared in most parts of the world. Many people and foreign leaders now worry far more about what the United States does than they do about China and Russia.
In my view the anti-Trump media frenzy does reflect well-grounded worries about Trump’s style and substance, yet it is failing to expose the citizenry to pluralist views, especially in foreign policy by shutting out almost completely progressive voices. The media may not be guilty of spreading fake news, but it is guilty of partisanship, ideological conformity, and hostility to critics on the left. In fact, the media blurs the issue by misleadingly treating the center and the liberal establishment as ‘the left.’
Q3: What are the important implications for the Syria pull out that coincides with harsh treatment of Iran? Does this negate any positive steps with Middle East diplomacy?
At this point it is difficult to tell whether the Syrian withdrawal will intensify Trump’s anti-Iran policy or lead to its weakening, and even its gradual abandonment. It seems as though neither Israel nor Saudi Arabia are comfortable with Trump’s latest move, partly because they were evidently not consulted, or even briefed, and partly because it could be interpreted as the beginning of a wider American disengagement from the Middle East and a long overdue phasing out of George W. Bush’s ‘war on terror’ launched after 9/11, continuing year after year without an endgame, although Obama at one point openly regretted this, and promised to devise one, but it never happened.
I am hard put to find any positive initiatives in recent Middle East diplomacy emanating from Washington. Trump/Kushner have carried the partisan pro-Israeli policies of earlier presidencies to absurdly one-sided extremes by way of announcing the embassy move to Jerusalem in December 2017, Washington’s silence about the weekly atrocities at the Gaza fence, cruel cuts the UNRWA funding, closing the PLO office in Washington, questioning Palestinian refugee status, a blind eye toward unlawful settlement expansion and the seeming acceptance of Israel’s recent moves in its Knesset toward a one-state apartheid solution. To refer to Israel as ‘the only democracy in the Middle East’ has become so obviously false that even Zionist militants have quietly abandoned the claim.
Perhaps, American pressures are moving Saudi Arabia and its allies to end their intervention in Yemen, previously materially and diplomatically backed by the United States, and pushing the civilian population to the very brink of starvation. The situation in Yemen is already being described as the worst famine in the past hundred years, putting at severe risk over 17 million Yemenis. If the Yemen War is brought finally to an end, it can be seen as an unintended consequence of the grotesque Khashoggi murder, creating strong incentives in Washington to rethink its embrace of Mohammed Bin Salmon as ally and partner. Or put more crudely, the arms sales bonanza with Riyadh could be in trouble unless the Yemen War is brought to an end before the humanitarian ordeal becomes catastrophic.
Q4: Trump’s doctrine has been called “me first.” Does this title apply in the case?
I have no reason to doubt that Trump’s actions with regard to Syria are basically reflections of his narcissistic political style as expressed at a particular moment through concrete actions. Yet, as earlier suggested, because Trump withdrew from Syria at this time on the basis of selfish motives, does mean that we should not evaluate the policy on its merits rather than through the eyes of the dominant political class in Washington that has brought grief to tens of millions for decades. These ‘experts’ have over time built up an intellectual and career dependence on global militarism and permanent warfare. It means, among other things, a stubborn refusal to take note of a string of failures where battlefield dominance has not translated into control of political outcomes, but instead ended in stinging political defeats. At bottom, there persists a stunning refusal to heed this central lesson of the Vietnam War, a refusal repeated in Afghanistan, Iraq, and with respect to most of the colonial wars. In each instance the side that won on the battlefield lost the war in the end, yet only after inflicting terrible damage and itself enduring heavy human, economic, and reputational costs. Nothing helpful was learned, and energies were devoted to how to reinvent counterinsurgency and counterterrorist doctrine so as to win such struggles for the political control of distant countries, and not be hampered by anti-war activism and elite skepticism.
If Trump stumbles onto a security path that ends such interventions in the global south we should celebrate the result, even if we withhold praise of Trump as a virtuous political actor. Beyond this, we should not be too quick to condemn his openness to a cooperative relationship with Russia if it helps the world avoid a second, more dangerous cold war that it can ill afford at this time of climate change. Trump might not know exactly what he is doing but bypassing Europe for a geopolitical bargain with Moscow might make realist sense given present historical circumstances, and it time self-styled realists themselves woke up to this benign possibility.
Of course, my wish for an end to militarism, nuclearism, and foreign interventions may be coloring my views, blindfolding me with respect to the dangers and risks that some associate with Trump’s march to the apocalypse. I acknowledge this, but I am also convinced that the conventional candidates of either political party would never in a thousand years pull the rug out from under this globalized militarism that could never tolerate a peaceful future for humanity. Humanity remains trapped in a cage sometimes called ‘the war system,’ which has the semblance of a permanent lockup.
Q5: Will liberal hawks react to same way to Syria as they typically do with Russia? This seems to be a failing strategy to reclaim the presidency in 2020. Do you agree?
I fear the centrist pragmatism of liberals, and not only the regressive approaches taken by hawks. These liberals have supported war after war as well as forged a strong new consensus that the time has come to challenge Russia and China once again. The logic is perverse: If Putin is pleased it is proof that Trump is wrong. Such reasoning seems to be dominant among the policy planners in Washington and the opinion and editorial commentary of CNN and the NY Times. Such issues are not even treated as fit subjects for debate and discussion. Instead, there are two or more guests with military or CIA backgrounds that take turns lambasting Trump’s Syria moves, especially as it has been coupled with a White House decision to halve the American troop contingent in Afghanistan by withdrawing 7,000 soldiers, hardly a rash decision considering that the American military presence in Afghanistan is about to enter its 17thyear, and stability for the country is further away than it was in 2002 when the occupation began.
As far as the 2020 election is concerned, it will be a great lost opportunity if the Democrats nominate a centrist liberal, who might be far more humane than Trump at home, but would likely recommit to the war of terror and a revival of American readiness to avoid political setbacks in various parts of the world, never having learned this supreme lesson that military intervention does not and should not work in the post-colonial world.
Of course, these days we cannot be sure of anything, including being confident that such a return to the old ways of doing foreign policy by a Democratic candidate would be an electoral disaster. Trump remains unpopular outside his base. This means that if the stock market stays down, trade wars reduce living standards in the country, the undocumented are cruelly deported or asylum seeking women and children are shot at the border, a smooth talking Democrat with the politically correct national security views would win, maybe even scoring a landslide.
But would this outcome be a victory for the peoples of the world? If Trump were to stay the Syrian withdrawal course, not a likely
prospect, it might not be so easy to vote him out of office with a clear conscience. This suggestion is meant as a provocation to liberals and establishmentarians, but it does call attention to the likely frightful foreclosure of peaceful options for American voters given the likely choices in 2020. The liberal line in 2016 was that compared to Sanders, Hillary Clinton was electable and would get things done, and look where that bit of practical wisdom landed us!
Tags: Iraq occupation, Mattis Resignation, national security consensus, Trump Diplomacy, U.S. militarism