http://en.ria.ru/world/20140522/190048201/OPINION-Biden-in-Romania-Talks-Reveals-Extramundane-Nature-of-US.html


RIA Novosti
May 22, 2014


OPINION: Biden in Romania Talks Reveals Extramundane Nature of US Push for War 
Rick Rozoff


MOSCOW: US Vice President Joseph Biden appeared at a military base in the 
capital of Romania on May 20 and, against the backdrop of this year's annual 
Carpathian Spring joint military exercises, announced that Washington's 
willingness to go to war over the mutual military support clause of the 1949 
North Atlantic Treaty, the founding document of the North Atlantic Treaty 
Organization, is not only clear and unwavering, but indeed of a mock-religious 
- extramundane and sempiternal - nature.

In his precise words: "America's commitment to collective defense under Article 
5 of NATO is a sacred obligation in our view - a sacred obligation not just for 
now, but for all time." In aeternum, in saecula saeculorum and in line with 
eschatological imperatives.

Biden, the once, (near) future and perennial candidate to succeed the current 
commander-in-chief of the world's sole military superpower (the exact words of 
his current superior, President Barack Obama in his Nobel Peace Prize 
acceptance speech of five years ago), an abrasive and pugnacious Walter Mitty 
of a malign bent who has often experienced difficulties distinguishing between 
fact and fiction, campaign claims and occurrences in the real world, and his 
own modest abilities and megalomaniacal inflation thereof, began his speech in 
Romania upbraiding his hosts for not providing him the clement weather a 
personage of his elevated stature deserves and had, moreover, been promised, 
querulously and inconsistently grousing, "it's very hot in here. I was supposed 
to - I was told it was going to be cooler here, but thank you for the great 
weather."

A Roman emperor, Trajan for example, the conqueror of Dacia (modern-day 
Romania), would have severely chastised and as severely punished the leaders of 
a subjugated province for not having secured nicer weather for a visiting 
imperial dignitary of Biden's rank.

Though his modern avatar did commend the military prowess of Romanian troops 
serving under NATO command in Afghanistan, martial values serving in lieu of 
miracle-working ones, evidently. The American satrapy, a NATO member for a 
decade, maintains one of the largest troop contingents remaining in 
Afghanistan, 1,000 soldiers, and Bucharest will continue to provide NATO with 
cannon fodder in South Asia even after the formal completion of troop 
withdrawal at the end of this year.

The vice president acknowledged that Romania, with whom then-Secretary of State 
Condoleezza Rice signed an agreement in 2005 for the acquisition of bases and 
the stationing of military personnel and equipment, is housing a permanent 
force of US Marines at the Mihail Kogalniceanu Air Base near Constanta on the 
Black Sea. That base is also home to US Army Europe's Task Force East and the 
US Marine Corps' Black Sea Rotational Force, the latter a Special Purpose 
Marine Air Ground Task Force (SPMAGTF) used as the model for US Africa 
Command's SPMAGTF.

Biden also obliquely pressured Romania in regard to demands of the US (and at 
least implicitly NATO, because of interoperability exigencies) for the country, 
like neighboring Bulgaria, to replicate the purchase of American F-16 Fighting 
Falcons by Poland at the beginning of the century - 48 in all, the largest 
military outlay in Polish history - by reminding the Romanian officials present 
that "You're building a fleet of F-16s." Bucharest like Sofia was being 
pressured to purchase 24-36 apiece of the General Dynamics-manufactured 
warplanes before the US-generated economic downturn of six years ago led to a 
scaling back of that number.

With characteristic bravado and brusqueness, he also stated:

"America and our NATO allies have urgently stepped up our military presence in 
the air, land and on the sea of NATO's eastern flank. In just the past weeks 
we've had ships visit. The USS Truxton, Cook, Taylor, as well as the Dacian 
Viper F-16 exercise. And in the coming days, new ships - the Vella Gulf will 
enter the Black Sea to conduct port visits and maritime training. Period."

The four US warships mentioned are guided missile vessels and part of the US 
Navy's Aegis Combat System, which is being integrated into the US-NATO European 
Phased Adaptive Approach interceptor missile system to cover all of Europe west 
of Russia, the Mediterranean Sea Basin and the South Caucasus.

USS Truxton and USS Donald Cook are Arleigh Burke class destroyers, USS Taylor 
is a Oliver Hazard Perry class frigate and USS Vella Gulf a Ticonderoga class 
cruiser.

With an anachronistic martial ethos more suitable to a - much - earlier epoch, 
say, the late Roman Empire, the deputy commander-in-chief of the world's sole 
military superpower flattered US military personnel at the event as "the 
greatest generation of warriors the world has ever produced." He immediately 
added, "And that is not hyperbole," though of course it is.

Last month's Dacian Spring joint US-Romanian week-long exercise he alluded to 
consisted of drills with US F-16s and host country MiG-21 Lancers.

At the end of his ex officio declamations, Biden shifted from sub-imperator to 
pontifex maximus in tone, dispensing benedictions broadcast: "May God bless 
Romania, may God bless America, and may God protect our troops." It is 
uncertain which deity, of the underworld or other sphere, has conferred on him 
the office of bestowing blessings, as it were on the eve of a campaign, a war.

Adjectives like grandiose, magniloquent, millenerial and bombastic come to mind 
in reference to the pronouncements of Mr. Biden. But they, even, are too 
generous and elevated in tone.

Having recently had occasion to re-read Imperial Purple (1892), a series of 
belletristic sketches of the first twenty-five Roman emperors by American-born 
writer Edgar Saltus, I am more reminded of one or more of the later of those 
the author, a friend and colleague of such fellow writers as Oscar Wilde and 
Arthur Symonds during his London years, limned with a combination of urbane 
bemusement and visceral repugnance. Commodus, say, or Heliogabalus.



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