Wednesday, September 28, 2022

The Sorrows of Empire - Redux

The Sorrows of Empire is the title of a 2004 book by Chalmers Johnson whose thesis was that the United States was entering a political and economic decline resulting from decades of faulty prioritization of spending imposed on the public due to

  • an economy overly dependent on oil
  • a bloated military required to ensure stable access to oil from unstable autocratic nations
  • an ever-expanding collection of overseas military outposts bolstering American interests after oil-motivated conflicts
  • corrupt financial institutions focused on protecting the US dollar as the default currency for the world petro market

The 2004 release date of Johnson's book coincided with the point at which many Americans were beginning to recognize the magnitude of the costs in lives and treasure likely to arise from the wars launched in Afghanistan then Iraq -- wars launched ostensibly for justice and democracy whose actual tactics abandoned any focus on killing bin Laden and destroyed any social infrastructure required for democracy in either country. A nearly identical book, American Theocracy by Kevin Philips, was published in 2006 with nearly identical analysis and conclusions with additional emphasis on how the resulting outcomes of those mistakes were further warping domestic American politics, magnifying the entire feedback cycle. (Click here for a review.)

Obviously, books published in 2004 and 2006 were unable to influence American policy makers who LAUNCHED those catastrophes but in hindsight, it is clear there were hundreds or thousands of people in government who still could have / should have gained insight from these books but didn't -- the United States continued doubling down on the original failures for more than a decade before punching out.

In 2022, it is very evident there is one other person on the planet that could have benefited from reading and understanding either one of these books -- Vladmir Putin. Ukraine's refusal to surrender as soon as Z-tagged tanks started rolling and Russia's failure to take Kyiv within days as Russia expected made it immediately apparent Putin lacked a clear understanding of his actual hand in the game. What is more fascinating and tragic is that the initial shock from the first failed weeks of the war didn't jolt Putin out of his self-induced fog to reset strategy to avoid a larger catastrophe -- for Russia and the world certainly but even for himself. Every action he has taken since has only further exposed how weak Russia is in all dimensions (manpower, material, logistics, training, tactics, discipline, military leadership). Without nuclear weapons, Russia would appear to be punching at bantamweight levels.

It's interesting to try to analyze the events in Ukraine and Putin's decisions as a completely neutral observer, ignoring the personalities involved and pondering only the global situation, using some of the concepts of The Sorrows of Empire and American Theocracy as touchpoints. Above all, the actions taken by Russia represent a colossal failure of imagination in leveraging the world situation to gain economic, political and social power. One way to summarize the world's problems might involve mapping current issues into these buckets:

  • fossil fuel dependency
  • growing income distribution inequities
  • populist preference for certainty via authoritarianism over unpredictable democracy
  • woldwide interest in re-engineering energy consumption towards renewables / non-fossil fuels
  • massive looming weather changes from global warming

The world cannot abandon internal combustion engine vehicles and coal / gas energy plants overnight. There will continue to be steady demand for current dirty fossil fuels for easily the next forty years. Russia has oil and gas reserves in spades and is perfectly positioned to continue profiting from fossil fuel production, even in a world moving away from fossil fuels. If the world still needs X million barrels of crude per day, it would be preferable to extract it with "classic" means rather than fracking that ALSO requires millions of gallons of WATER that are in short supply and threatens underground fresh water sources through contamination. The US has temporarily gained some fossil fuel independence because of fracking extraction technologies but it seems clear that all of the hidden ecological costs for that technology have not been fully captured and factored into prices yet.

If the world is going to continue buying oil and preferring drilled oil over fracked oil, wouldn't it be better to buy less oil from regions using the revenue to fund ongoing battles in centuries-old religious conflicts and buy more from a region also contributing to the science helping to replace it? That could be Russia, if it wasn't initiating terrorist attacks in neighboring states, annexing them, then rolling in its military to protect "ethnic Russians" as part of some Fractured Fairy Tales dream of a "greater Russia" that never was.

Desired reductions in fossil fuel consumption require a completely revamped electrical grid in every country. Revamping the entire world's electric grids requires vastly more intelligence in the grid itself and devices that connect to it for consumption and charging. That intelligence requires vastly more intelligence and communication among devices / vehicles using that grid to smooth demand for optimal generation and transmission efficiencies. All of that requires software and data analytics built upon software engineering skills. Russia has software engineers with skills matching those in any other country. Unfortunately, much of that brainpower has been dedicated to state-run surveillance measures, disinformation efforts and wholesale, international computer crime. Other than Kaspersky Labs, I cannot think of a single Russian brand producing "retail" software for typical businesses or consumers used in the rest of the world.

A re-engineered world will also hinge on advances in material science -- improving semiconductor technologies, improving charging times and capacity of batteries, improving photovoltaic efficiencies, etc. Russia as a country hasn't been a slouch in basic science education and research so it has the intellectual "raw materials" to participate and lead in this area as well. Unfortunately, as news clips make clear, Putin's mass conscription targeting 300,000 additional men has triggered TENS OF THOUSANDS of highly educated big-city Russians to flee the country to avoid serving in a war nearly guaranteed to kill them. It is unlikely that brainpower will return without a change in leadership and the productivity of those that remain filling in the gaps will drop significantly. Instead, that brainpower will boost the economic power of the countries taking in those refugees, further widening the gap between Russia and just about every country.

This failure of imagination on Putin's part was already foreseen months ago. A piece in The New Yorker (discussed here) three weeks into the war outlined a repeating pattern of dysfunction in Russian history dating back centuries:

  • concentrated wealth requires strong government mechanisms to squelch dissent
  • centralized government measures lead to corruption of officials charged with enforcing the controls
  • increased corruption further reduces resources provided to the public, tightening the squeeze
  • squelched dissent in the short term eliminates corrective feedback, allowing prior mistakes to compound exponentially, further magnifying corruption, further magnifying oppression
  • wash,rinse, repeat until collapse

This is the Putin kleptocracy in bullet form. These represent the controlling dynamic in Russia since Putin took power.

Thinking through these possibilities might be a way of maintaining some optimism for what might be possible once justice is served to Putin and his cronies. The downside is that authoritarian regimes self-select for paranoid, criminal, mega-maniacal tendencies which never make for stable, predictable transitions. Will Putin's replacement have any better perspective?


WTH

Monday, September 19, 2022

Two New Presidential Firsts

The dumpster fire of the Trump Administration and its aftermath continue to generate firsts in American Presidential history. Firsts that no properly functioning democracy and properly functioning criminal justice system should come near approaching.

The first first? News outlets and the blogosphere commentariat apparently discovered at approximately the same time that Trump's new lawyer lead is a registered foreign agent. Chris Kise, the lawyer Trump hired with a $3 million dollar advanced paid for from Trump's stop-the-steal PAC, began work in January of 2020 handling lobbying and legal work for -- WAIT FOR IT -- the Attorney General of Venezuela under the Maduro regime. The lobbying and legal work was related to -- WAIT FOR IT -- efforts by Venezueala to undo sanctions imposed on Venezuela for a slew of actions between 2014 and 2018 related to human rights abuses and election manipulations within Venezuela. The original story unearthed by news outlets is likely this one:

https://floridapolitics.com/archives/317253-kise-maduro-us-sanctions/

Kise has an interesting professional history but it appears Trump's team did no research on Kise, didn't understand the implications of that background or (more likely?) had to ignore it and hire him anyway in the absence of any other lawyers willing to join the team.

Think about the client and possible charges Kise will be defending for a moment. The client is a former President of the United States who is being investigated SIMULTANEOUSLY for two unrelated actions. One involves taking highly classified documents out of approved government facilities and instead housing them in a residential setting in a basement room with a padlocked door. The other involves likely wire fraud and racketeering related to collecting contributions for specific legal work related to election fraud claims in ten to twelve states but ACTUALLY reallocating millions of those dollars to other political purposes and (likely) personal use including fees for your personal defense in these criminal investigations.

And the lawyer selected to lead this defense work

  1. has registered as a foreign agent for a government quite hostile to the United States and could POSSIBLY see documents with information that might help him in his work FOR a foreign government attempting to THWART policies of the United Sates
  2. has collected a $3 million dollar retainer from funds involved with the PAC at the heart of one of the pending criminal investigations

But wait a minute. Are we getting ahead of ourselves on thoughts of an actual criminal indictment and trial of a former President? To answer that, we only need to look at the filings submitted by Trump's team to the court over the last two weeks.

On Saturday, September 17, the new Special Master Judge Raymond Dearie issued a written order requiring Trump to provide an explicit statement identifying which documents among the contested set seized via search warrant Trump was arguing needed review by the Special Master. Dearie's rationale was very simple. Trump argued (and Cannon agreed… sigh) that justice / fairness demanded that a Special Master be appointed to look at all documents seized by the FBI and sort them into two buckets PRIOR to the DOJ using ANY of the documents for additional case work so that documents in a bucket of "unclassified" docs can be returned to Trump. Okay team Trump, you tell me explicitly which documents belong in each bucket according to your theory so I can begin reviewing them. Dearie gave Trump until Tuesday September 20 to respond. Trump's team filed their response on Monday September 19.

Dearie's order is a double-edged sword for Trump because

  • if Trump DOESN'T list any documents, then winning the argument for a Special Master to review and return documents to Trump that supposedly belong to Trump is pointless since there are no documents to review
  • Trump's entire legal argument about whether documents were classified or de-classified is immaterial to the nature of the likely charges because the documents still required confidential handling under explicitly defined security conditions which are not satisfied by a locked basement room in a cheesy golf resort in hurricane alley.

So how did Team Trump respond? After hours on September 19, Trump's team provided the requested written response to Dearie. Analysis of the response in the media focused on these aspects:

  • Trump's team REFUSED to provide any written list of documents to the judge as requested
  • Trump's team stated it would convey to the court the "time and place" when and where such a list WOULD be provided only once a criminal trial begins
  • Details would NOT be provided to the court because doing so would give the DOJ insight into Trump's plan of defense in the criminal trial and this order didn't require Trump to begin disclosing that defense strategy
  • Trump's team also failed to provide any affidavits or documents confirming any steps that WERE taken WHILE PRESIDENT to alter the classification of any of the documents

Pretty clever, huh? That must be what Kise and company are thinking right now. We've got the entire court in a catch-22 that will paralyze the entire process. The Special Master cannot sort the documents until we tell him our criteria. We can argue that providing that criteria will unfairly require us to divulge our defense strategy for criminal charges that haven't been filed, increasing the likelihood of being charged. And the DOJ cannot finalize any indictment until they can finish their investigations based on these documents and we've frozen that access courtesy of the Cannon ruling. VOILA! We've succeeded at paralyzing the process so Trump can continue flying around the country living the life of a millionaire. Indefinitely.

Well, not so clever. This September 19 response by Team Trump forgets the information Team Trump has already conveyed in writing in prior filings about their defense strategy. In the week of 9/12, a prior filing by Trump's team stated:

The government’s stance assumes that if a document has a classification marking, it remains classified irrespective of any actions taken during President Trump’s term in office… There is no legitimate contention that the chief executive’s declassification of documents requires approval of bureaucratic components of the executive branch.

In other words, Trump is still clinging to the notion that a President can instantly declassify anything. In reality, Trump himself signed legislation tightening the rules on information classification, processes and approvals required to declassify information and hiking penalties for the very actions he has committed. Most importantly, Trump appears to believe indictments are likely in these cases and is utilizing the tactic he knows best -- DELAY -- because his ever-shuffling team of lawyers has further impaired an already perilous case through weeks of negligent legal work.

This really seems to be the coup de grace in all this Cooterville-class lawyerin'. The kind of lawyerin' one can only get by having a 40 year track record as a business cheat AND an equally long record of not paying your own lawyerin' bills. This entire Special Master process has lacked any legal merit and it is likely there are only two people on the planet who fail to understand that -- Donald Trump and Aileen Cannon. Hopefully Dearie will IMMEDIATELY rule based on Trump's non-response and provide the DOJ the green light to reveiw ALL documents and end this phase of the charade. Maybe Dearie will also conclude that a registered foreign agent has no business in a courtroom that will be addressing issues of national security and get Kise booted off Teeam Trump as well.

This quality of legal counsel does raise a more serious question, though.

Are we really at a point where someone who has held the highest office in the land is so corrupt and untrusted that no competent, ethical lawyer can be found willing to work for them? In this case, I absolutely believe Trump needs to be indicted, tried, convicted, sentenced and actually SERVE jail time. But that won't happen if the legal process keeps getting delayed as those acting as his legal counsel keep getting knocked off the case for their own misconduct, requiring him to start over with new, equally incompetent counsel.

It seems to me we are very near the point where the only way Trump will get competent counsel is to appoint a public defender for him. How's THAT for a Presidential first?



WTH