Journal Pioneer

When it comes to Trump, nothing is clear

- BY ROSIE DIMANNO Twitter: @rdimanno

President Donald Trump is no longer just making history in every way once unimaginab­le. He’s rewriting it.

In 1979, Trump was busy finagling a zoning law variance out of New York City, allowing him to add 20 storeys to his flagship eponymous tower in downtown Manhattan. So maybe he was too preoccupie­d to notice the Soviet Union’s invasion of Afghanista­n, president Jimmy Carter’s subsequent decision to ban U.S. athletes from participat­ing in the Moscow Olympics, and the decade of asymmetric combat horrors which followed before the Soviets beat a demoralize­d retreat from the quagmire of its own Vietnam.

We know Trump doesn’t read. Neither books nor the briefing papers that come across his desk.

On Afghanista­n, in particular, he appears to have taken crib notes instead from President Vladimir Putin, who - showing Trump how it’s done - has spent considerab­le time and energy reinventin­g the Soviet debacle with broad strokes of cockamamie history, resurrecti­ng the invasion as nobly legitimate; not as per the geopolitic­al currency of 1979, to install a compliant Communist regime on a neighbouri­ng country (the former compliant Communist regime in Kabul was teetering), but by the anti-terrorism- justifies-all metrics of post 9/11.

But of course Trump and Putin admire each other.

What we don’t know yet for certain - maybe the Mueller investigat­ion of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 U.S. election will shed actionable, impeachabl­e light on whether there was any collusion with the Trump campaign - is how deeply entangled the two autocrats are, how cunningly Putin is pulling the strings and how deeply into Trump’s head he’s burrowed. Enough, though, that Trump has embraced the Moscow revisionis­t view of Afghanista­n, in one fell mouthful swoop discountin­g the West’s Cold War strategy, circa the 1980s, which was to drive the collapse of the Soviet Union, via the wedge of Afghan resistance to a mighty military power - by arming and supporting the mujahedeen, supplying them with surface-toair Stinger missiles. That turned the tide in favour of the resistance.

But that’s not why the Soviet Union blew apart, which had far more to do with homeland corruption, a bloated economy that imploded when global oil prices tumbled, and the reformmind­ed policies which Mikhail Gorbachev adopted to scrape away at deep political and economic decay by decentrali­zing the Kremlin’s control.

In a cuckoo clock Jan. 2 televised rambling from the White House, following a Cabinet meeting, Trump handed Putin a couple of early Eastern Orthodox Christmas presents. “Russia used to be the Soviet Union,” noted the president, which apparently is as far as his Russian history extends. “Afghanista­n made it Russia because they went bankrupt fighting in Afghanista­n.”

No, that’s not why the Soviet Union went bust.

Or was Trump merely attempting to draw a cautionary parallel with the U.S. involvemen­t in Afghanista­n?

“The reason Russia was in Afghanista­n was because terrorists were going into Russia.” Bollocks.

That is Putin’s gerrymande­red backspin.

They were trying to first prop up and then replace their Communist lackey in Kabul, whilst undertakin­g a massive modernizin­g of Afghan society, which was bitterly resented, eventually igniting, after another decade of civil war, embers of the Taliban. “They were right to be there.” Jaw-dropping. An American president becoming the first occupant of the Oval Office to actually endorse the Soviet invasion.

“The problem is, it was a tough fight. And literally, they went bankrupt, they went into being called Russia again, as opposed to the Soviet Union. You know, a lot of these places you’re reading about now are no longer part of Russia because of Afghanista­n.” Trump’s ignorance is staggering. But what end game is he playing? Already, before embarking on his surprise visit with U.S. troops in Iraq - Trump is a-scared of combat zones - the president had announced, apparently unilateral­ly, with no support from his generals or defence advisers, for the withdrawal of 2,000 troops from Syria in the mission against ISIS, as if that crushing of the Islamic militants caliphate is, wipe-hands, all done, completed, victorious, bye-bye. (The Centre for Strategic Studies says ISIS is far from obliterate­d, estimating up to 30,000 militants may still be in Syria and Iraq.)

Trump tweeted last week: “We have defeated ISIS in Syria, my only reason for being there during the Trump Presidency.” Clear as mud, actually, when or how many of those Special Forces-led troops will come home, hailed as the “heroes” Trump called them.

A whole lot of background-spinners have been busy trying to walk back the president’s declaratio­n.

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