Rubio is considered the moderate Republican - just look at his billionaire and George W. Bush era neocon backers - if he wins in November 2016, it would be like Bush's third term
Marco Rubio Is Winning the
Neocon Primary
While
bombastic GOP front runners steal the headlines, the Florida senator is quietly
racking up the support of right-wing mega-donors and Bush-era neocons.
By Sina Toossi, December 8, 2015.
With
pundits and columnists dissecting and critiquing every word uttered by GOP
front-runners Ben Carson and Donald Trump, comparatively little attention has
been paid to the positions and affiliations of a far more electable Republican
presidential candidate: Florida Senator Marco Rubio.
Unlike
Trump or Carson, Rubio is considered a stalwart member of the party’s
establishment wing, standing out in the crowded Republican primary field for
his comparatively moderate stances on issues such as immigration reform. While
he lags behind Trump and Carson in most polls and runs neck-and-neck with “Tea
Party” evangelical Ted Cruz,
Rubio is primed to jump to first should the spectacle of the
“anti-establishment” candidates finally run its course.
Beyond
his veneer of reasonableness, however, Rubio has established himself as the
most adept of the Republican candidates at regurgitating the militaristic
talking points of the party’s neoconservative wing. His competency in this
regard has earned him the favor of influential hawkish donors like Sheldon Adelson, as
well as an array of neoconservative political operatives.
Rubio is
in fact a dark horse candidate who, more explicitly than any of his
competitors, would usher back into power the Bush-Cheney school of foreign
policy.
Bolstered
by an all-star cast of Bush-era foreign policy ideologues, the Florida senator
has echoed Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the “conditions” do not exist for a
two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict; vowed to renege on the
Iran nuclear deal and re-impose sanctions on the country, potentially putting
the United States on the path to another catastrophic war in the Middle East;
and promised to
rescind the Obama administration’s diplomatic achievements with Cuba, further
alienating the United States in Latin America.
With
respect to other great powers, Rubio has stated he is
“open to Ukraine joining NATO,” a move that would be immensely provocative to
Russia and could put Washington on the hook for any further escalation of the
conflict in eastern Ukraine. He’s also asserted
that he would “restrict Russian access” to the SWIFT international payment
system, essentially cutting Russia out of the world economy and plunging the
world to the cusp of a global war. On China, Rubio has designs just as
aggressive, calling for
the United States to “engage with dissidents” and “champions of freedom” within
the country, using language that implies a regime change agenda.
This
specter brings to mind the phrase famously
misquoted by former President George W. Bush: “Fool me once,
shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me.”
Sheldon
Adelson’s “Perfect Little Puppet”
Perhaps
the most consequential relationship Rubio has built for his presidential
campaign has been with billionaire casino mogul Sheldon Adelson — a major
funder of Republican causes and hardline “pro-Israel” initiatives in
particular. Rubio’s courtship of the controversial mega-donor has spurred
criticism even from Donald Trump, who tweeted in
October: “Sheldon Adelson is looking to give big dollars to Rubio because he
feels he can mold him into his perfect little puppet. I agree!”
Obsessed
with imposing his hawkish worldview on both U.S. and Israeli politics, Adelson
has been described
by veteran journalist Bill Moyers as the “unofficial head of the Republican
Party” and the “uncrowned King of Israel.” Adelson doled out an estimated $100
million — more than anyone
else in American history — during the 2012 presidential election, at first in
support of Newt Gingrich
and then to the Mitt Romney/Paul Ryan presidential
ticket.
The key
to Adelson’s wallet is the issue most near and dear to his heart — and the one
on which he’s most out of step with decades of mainstream U.S. policy: Israel.
Adelson’s
stance on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the broader Middle East can most
charitably be described as Manichaean. Less charitably, it’s racist and
reactionary. Adelson has disparaged
the two-state solution, denying even the existence of the Palestinians as a
distinct people; called for a
nuclear bomb to be dropped on Iran; and dismissed
concerns that Israel’s treatment of Palestinians was undermining its
democracy with a “So what?”
Adelson
is to the right of even the American Israel Public Affairs Committee — or
AIPAC, the famous “pro-Israel” lobby — breaking with the group in 2007 over disagreements
on U.S. economic aid to the Palestinian Authority. He’s instead propped up a
host of uber-hawkish advocacy organizations that have helped make his extremist
visions politically viable, such as the Zionist Organization of America, Christians
United for Israel, the Republican
Jewish Coalition, and the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, among
others.
In April,
Politico reported
that Rubio has “reached out to Adelson more often than any other 2016
candidate” and “provided him with the most detailed plan for how he’d manage
America’s foreign policy.” The piece added that Rubio phones Adelson “every two
weeks” and is the “clear frontrunner” to win the “Sheldon Adelson primary.” A
follow-up article in October added that a
“formal endorsement” is imminent, “and with it, the potential for a
multimillion dollar contribution.”
In
Israel, meanwhile, Adelson has twisted the country’s political landscape by
publishing and freely distributing the right-wing newspaper Israel Hayom,
which fostered the rise of Benjamin Netanyahu and right-wing parties like the
Likud. Bloomberg reported in
June that Israel Hayom has “all but anointed” Rubio.
On the
Campaign Trail
Rubio’s
courtship of the neoconservative right may already be paying dividends for his
presidential campaign.
For
example, a dubious nonprofit “social welfare” group — which, under U.S.
campaign finance law, doesn’t have to disclose any of its funders — has paid for all
of Rubio’s early-state TV ads, including ones railing against the Iran nuclear
deal. The New York Times has said of the
group, called the Conservative Solutions Project: “Mr. Rubio’s heavy reliance
on the group effectively keeps secret the identities of some of his biggest
supporters, making it impossible to know whose agenda the senator may be
embracing. Mr. Rubio has avidly courted the casino billionaire Sheldon Adelson,
for example, even signing on in June as a co-sponsor of an Adelson-backed bill
that would restrict Internet gambling.”
Adelson’s
Venetian Hotel in Las Vegas will play host to a Republican debate on December
15, an arrangement that has led to officials from other campaigns to worry that
the audience will be pre-picked to be in favor of Rubio. A recent Politico
story stated that “top campaign officials” have “pressed the Republican
National Committee” on whether Adelson would be able to receive a “block of
tickets” to “stack the crowd for his favored candidate.” The piece added that
Adelson is widely believed to formally get behind Rubio in the near future.
While
Adelson waits in the wings, Rubio’s already won the official support of another
major hardline “pro-Israel” donor: hedge fund billionaire Paul Singer. Declaring
his endorsement in October, Singer described Rubio in a letter to his network
of like-minded donors as the “strongest choice” for the nomination. According
to CNN, Singer’s support is a huge boost for Rubio, and a blow to rivals like Jeb Bush,
“because the billionaire has a vast network of people who will give hard
dollars to Rubio and lots of money to his super PAC.”
Rubio’s
political career was in fact jump-started by powerful donors in the ideological
vein of Adelson and Singer. Norman Braman, a Florida businessman with a
decisively hawkish attitude on U.S. Middle East policy, has been the
“single-largest backer of Rubio’s presidential campaign” thus far, according
to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA). Braman, a billionaire who’s funded illegal
Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, took Rubio on a trip to Israel
shortly after he was elected to the Senate.
The JTA
has reported
that Braman’s relationship with Rubio goes back to Rubio’s early political
career. The donor “helped finance the young senator’s legislative agenda,
employed Rubio as a lawyer, hired Rubio’s wife (a former Miami Dolphins
cheerleader) as a philanthropic adviser, helped fund Rubio’s position as a
college instructor, and assisted Rubio with his personal finances.”
Return of
the Neoconservatives
Rubio’s
foreign policy platform doesn’t just reflect the dangerously black-and-white
worldviews of donors like Adelson, Singer, and Braman.
In fact,
it’s been drawn up by the same neoconservatives who so discredited themselves
with their disastrous foreign policy adventurism during the George W. Bush
administration. Even Rubio’s campaign slogan, “A New American Century,” is
almost certainly a homage to the infamous neoconservative letter-head group,
the Project for the New American Century (PNAC),
which played a decisive role in agitating for U.S. intervention in the Middle
East prior to 9/11 and in the lead up to the Iraq War.
Rubio
counts among his foreign policy advisors numerous
prominent neocons, including Weekly Standard
editor Bill Kristol,
hawkish former senator Jim Talent, former
Reagan official and Iran-Contra convict Elliott Abrams,
neoconservative writer and historian Robert Kagan, and
former George W. Bush national security advisor Stephen Hadley.
Rubio has
also been advised by
the avowedly militarist John Hay
Initiative, an advocacy group founded in 2013 by former Romney
advisor Brian Hook and former George W. Bush administration officials Eric Edelman and Eliot Cohen. The Hay
Initiative consists of
more than 250 “experts,” of whom the vast majority have hawkish track records,
and is “structured somewhat like a campaign foreign policy team in waiting,” according
to the Daily Beast. Observers have opined that the group is a
“rebirth of the Project for the New American Century.”
Another
Rubio advisor, neoconservative Council on Foreign Relations fellow Max Boot, recently
garnered attention for his call for the
United States to unilaterally declare a Sunni autonomous region in Iraq. Rubio
promptly echoed him,
stating that as president he would “demand” that Iraq’s government grant
“greater autonomy” to the country’s Sunni regions.
On his
official campaign team, Rubio has appointed Jamie Fly as his
“counselor for foreign and national security affairs.” A former director of the
Foreign
Policy Initiative, another PNAC successor organization that was
founded in 2009 by Robert Kagan and Bill Kristol, Fly co-wrote a paper in 2012
with Gary Schmitt
(of PNAC fame) that explicitly called for a military attack on Iran that would
“destabilize the regime.”
Is
Rubio’s full-spectrum saber-rattling just campaign rhetoric, or is it
reflective of what he would actually do as president? Either way, his
water-carrying for hardline donors and disgraced foreign policy entrepreneurs
is bad news for global peace and stability.
Sina
Toossi is the assistant editor of Right Web, a project that monitors the
efforts of militarists to influence U.S. foreign policy. He tweets @SinaToossi.
No comments:
Post a Comment