Professor Henry Srebrnik

Professor Henry Srebrnik

Wednesday, June 04, 2025

New Books Document Joe Biden’s Disastrous Decline

 By Henry Srebrnik, [Saint John, N.B.] Telegraph-Journal

Two new books exposing the cover-up of former U.S. President Joe Biden’s cognitive decline have created fresh political waves in the United States, all the more so since his cancer diagnosis.

“Original Sin: President Biden’s Decline, Its Cover-up, and His Disastrous Choice to Run Again,” co-authored by CNN anchor Jake Tapper and Axios reporter Alex Thompson, an account of Biden’s disastrous political conclusion, came out May 20.

“Fight: Inside the Wildest Battle for the White House,” by Jonathan Allen, a reporter at NBC News, and Amie Parnes, a senior political correspondent at The Hill, detailing Biden’s decline, was published last month.

All four authors described their shock at watching the ill-fated June 2024 debate between Biden and Donald Trump. But even before the 2020 election, it was obvious that Biden was struggling cognitively on the campaign trail. This became clearer by the day while he was president, even as White House staffers limited and strictly choreographed his media appearances.

Biden knew of the concerns, but it only ignited his defiance. His pride drove him to seek re-election. In April 2023, he announced he was running again – though he had stated in 2020 that he’d only serve one term. And since his senior aides were convinced that only Biden could beat Trump again, they lied to themselves, allies, and the public about his condition and limitations.

And, as these books point out, it’s remarkable how they kept him so closed off, since as one writer put it, “he had become a shell of himself.” It finally all came crashing down in the debate with Trump. And even then, he held on for another month before finally stepping aside, giving the party no time to hold primaries, so allowing for Vice-president Kamala Harris’ own hapless run, and Trump’s victory. It was a fitting end to a presidency that will likely be primarily remembered for Biden’s mental deterioration.

These days, Democrats who supported him are even more hostile to Biden than Republicans are. That’s because they blame Trump’s victory on Biden’s stubborn refusal to give up his bid for a second term, despite his obvious growing mental incapacity.

But they are themselves complicit. Many had vouched for Biden literally up to the very day the president ended his campaign. Representative Ro Khanna of California, for instance, lauded a speech Biden made in Detroit a mere five days before he finally dropped out.

There are lessons to be learned from all this, larger than the Biden debacle itself. First of all, the so-called “legacy” media are now far less trusted than before. America’s premier newspapers, including the New York Times and Washington Post, were in effect collaborating with the concealment. Their reporters clearly knew what was going on yet hid and denied it -- something worthy of propaganda sheets in dictatorships.

Read this: “Doing his best to push back against doubts about his stamina and health,” an “energized” President Biden “delivered a fiery and forceful speech at a rally in Michigan.” This is from a July 12, 2024 New York Times article by Maggie Haberman, a seasoned White House reporter, just days before Biden stepped aside.

On the other hand -- and yes, I brag! -- I published an oped in the Charlottetown Guardian on May 5, 2021, “Is Joe Biden Up for the Job?” in which I wrote: “The Democrats perpetrated a fraud on the American people and sold them a bill of goods.” And I haven’t set foot in the White House since a conference held there in February 1986, when I worked as a journalist in Washington.

Biden was a put-up job from the word go, little more than a front man, like Stalin’s “president” of the Soviet Union, Mikhail Kalinin. He became the candidate, in an arrangement brokered by Representative Jim Clyburn, the powerful South Carolina dealmaker, on behalf of those Democrats worried Bernie Sanders might win the nomination. This would work in 2020, given the exigent circumstances of the pandemic, but not four years later.

Is it a wonder more and more people turn to blogs and websites – in effect, “samizdats” – for news? The shock was palpable, and it turbocharged Trump’s campaign. To turn the Washington Post’s motto in on itself, “Democracy dies in darkness.”

Another very important lesson: yes, Virginia, you can have “conspiracies” with many multiples of people involved, despite those who say that makes it impossible. It was clearly the case in this instance.

There’s a third disturbing aspect to the deception: much of it was based on Biden being considered “indispensable,” due to the “existential” threat posed by Trump.  Of course, this kind of attitude most typically happens in authoritarian regimes.

The ruler’s age or health is never discussed because without him, claim his collaborators, the state’s very existence is in peril. He’s “healthy” until the minute he dies, even if he’s in his nineties. We have seen this in various countries, often with African despots, but also in formerly Communist or fascist states.

Democracies should never reach a point where a challenger who has been legitimately nominated by a major party needs to be defeated at any cost, including the use of lies or “lawfare.” If the political system is already under such strain, it’s a clear indication of a country in political and constitutional peril.

 

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Where Does Israel Fit into Donald Trump’s Middle East Vision?

 By Henry Srebrnik, [Winnipeg] Jewish Post

Donald Trump’s recent visit to the Middle East will lead, the U.S. president promised, to a region where interest has replaced ideology.  

“A new generation of leaders is transcending the ancient conflicts and tired divisions of the past and forging a future where the Middle East is defined by commerce, not chaos; where it exports technology, not terrorism; and where people of different nations, religions, and creeds are building cities together — not bombing each other out of existence.”

Nice words, but behind them is a framework that is consistent with Trump’ approach to the region during his first term, when he crafted the Abraham Accords. He isn’t going to let its age-old animosities get in the way of business. The result is the rise of advisers who champion “realism and restraint,” by which they mean no more misbegotten wars in the Middle East and Central Asia leading to disasters such as the Iraq and Afghanistan quagmires.

Where does this leave Israel? Perturbed. Trump is moving ahead on a whole range of regional issues without including Israel and without heeding Israeli concerns in an expanding number of agreements. Trump visited Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates — yet did not stop in Israel.

It also did not go unnoticed that the last remaining American hostage held by Hamas, Eden Alexander, was released from captivity in a deal brokered by Steve Witkoff, Trump’s special envoy to the Middle East. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was apparently completely bypassed. Witkoff negotiated directly with Hamas through a secret backchannel. Indeed, he even expressed his “disappointment” that America “wants to return the hostages, but Israel is not ready to end the war.”

Now, in a dramatic turn of events, Trump is establishing friendly relations with the new Syrian president, whom he met face-to-face in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman al-Saud looking on. Earlier this year, it was reported that Israel had lobbied Washington to keep its sanctions on Syria, but to no avail. 

Trump lifted all sanctions on a Syrian leadership that Israel understandably regards as a terrorist regime. After all, its new president, Ahmed al-Sharaa, is a former jihadi whose group, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, was until 2016 al-Qaeda’s affiliate in Syria.  Twenty years ago al-Sharaa was languishing in an American military prison in Baghdad, held on suspicion of terrorism on behalf of the Islamic State.

And while Trump has forged a truce with Yemen’s Houthis, in which they promised to no longer attack international shipping in the Red Sea, it seems they will still be able to strike Israel with missiles and drones. The deal served to shield American ships from attacks but said nary a word about Israel’s security. Indeed, it was announced two days after the Houthis had launched a missile that struck Ben Gurion Airport, prompting foreign airlines to flee.

Pro-Israel Republicans and hawkish foreign policy experts worry that Trump’s dealmaking with oil-rich Gulf nations, with trade deals in the hundreds of billions of dollars, puts Israel at a diplomatic disadvantage.

“His approach is obviously completely transactional. If he has a view about U.S. national interest, that view revolves around financial and commercial interests, and that diminishes the value of the alliance with Israel, which is not primarily financial and commercial,” contended Elliott Abrams, a former longtime Republican official who served as Iran envoy in Trump’s first term. The Israel relationship is “based on values. It’s based on military cooperation.”

Financially, “Israel can’t compete with these other states,” remarked David Schenker, who headed the State Department’s Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs in the first Trump administration. Rather than financial investments, he said, Israel could make concessions to what Trump wants to see in the region. If it doesn’t adapt, Israel could run the risk of being sidelined in Washington.

Trump did make it clear that he remains interested in mediating a normalization agreement between Saudi Arabia and Israel, even as he announced new arms sales to Riyadh and heightened defence cooperation that many expected to be connected to a normalization deal. 

Trump’s various actions, including the deal with the Houthis that ended their of attacks on shipping vessels, but not on Israel; his direct negotiations with Hamas over the release of Edan Alexander; the legitimacy he granted Syria’s new president, and his skipping of Israel as a stop on his Middle East tour, all leave Israel feeling it is on the sidelines during this critical time.

Knowing all this, Israel needs to begin the move towards ending its reliance on U.S. military aid, Netanyahu said in a meeting of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defence Committee May 11.

“We receive close to $4 billion for arms. I think we will have to wean ourselves off of American security aid, just as we weaned ourselves off of American economic aid,” Netanyahu told them. He added that, just as stopping economic aid helped spur economic growth in Israel, stopping military aid could help the defence sector.

The remark was made in the context of talks with the U.S. about the next 10-year aid package for Israel.  Things are moving fast in the Middle East.