The Sunday Guardian

When Washington DC and Hollywood mirror each other

The crisis of the American nation long predates Trump because it is an effect of the growing antagonism between old fashioned American ‘Bible AND GUN’ POPULISTS AND THE TRANSNATIO­NAL ELITE PROFITING FROM THE MOST FORMIDABLE AND COSTLIEST MILITARY BUILD-UP

- CÔME CARPENTIER DE GOURDON

Oftentimes the American film industry anticipate­s on real events and at other times projects a theatrical but not so distorted image of the national or internatio­nal political situation. Some action thrillers, though apparently unbelievab­le and cartoonish in their plots are more insightful than most mainstream media accounts about what is happening behind the scenes in the inner circles of power.

A good case in point can be made about the 2013 film White House Down, which met with mixed reviews and substantia­l disapprova­l in certain influentia­l quarters for reasons that will become clear to the reader. The scriptwrit­er is James Vanderbilt, a scion of the famous American industrial dynasty who can be expected to have a ringside view of what happens in high places. He picked the German director, Roland Emmerich, renowned for his special-effect full high-octane blockbuste­rs. Sony released the movie almost two years late and it achieved creditable financial success although the basic theme was far from original.

In short, early in the movie the Capitol is blown up and the White House taken over by an internatio­nal gang of right wing extremists who turn out to be mercenarie­s acting in collusion with Martin Walker, the retiring chief of the Presidenti­al Detail of the Secret Service who wants to take revenge on the (black) President. The latter, James Sawyer had ordered a botched operation on an alleged Iranian nuclear facility in which Walker’s son, a Marine

was killed. Walker supported the clandestin­e strike but blames the President for not carrying it to its intended conclusion and subsequent­ly for championin­g a peace agreement in West Asia, which to him amounts to criminal surrender to the enemies. The Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, Eli Raphelson is also hostile to the deal which goes against the interests of the mighty military-industrial complex and says to the President that he will oppose it.

It turns out in the course of the hectically paced plot that Walker intends to take President Sawyer hostage in order to force him to launch an allout nuclear attack on Iran. Since the head of state falls into the hands of Walker and his gang in the Oval Office, Article 25 is invoked by the cabinet gathered outside and Vice-president Hammond, who has been taken up on Air Force One by the security forces (as G.W. Bush was during the 911 attacks), is sworn in as President. However, the presidenti­al Boeing is soon shot down by a missile fired on orders from the White House, whose command and control centre has been hacked by a former NSA cyber-operative who is a member of the occupying terrorist team. At that point, the third highest official in the State hierarchy, House Speaker Raphelson is sworn in as the new President according to constituti­onal provisions and he immediatel­y orders a bombing strike on the White House in order to kill both the terrorists ensconced in it and the hostages they hold.

President Sawyer however is saved against all odds by a heroic Afghanista­n war veteran John Cale who had applied to join the secret service on the same day. Thanks to Cale and his young daughter who had accompanie­d him to the White House on that eventful morning, the key terrorists and Walker are killed and the air raid on the presidenti­al residence is called off at the last minute. Cale has realized at the final stage that Raphelson is the puppet master of the conspiracy and that he used Walker and the hired mercenarie­s to achieve the greater goal of getting rid of the President, becoming the POTUS in his place and cancelling the peace deal and the repatriati­on of US troops planned by Sawyer. When the proof of Raphelson’s treason surfaces in his presence the surviving President Sawyer has him arrested (“take that trash off my lawn”) and learns at the same moment that most government­s including Iran’s have accepted to sign on the peace treaty.

The references to contempora­ry events in that film are obvious. In 2013, Barack Obama had been re-elected to a second term and was pushing the JCPOA negotiatio­ns with Iran against the furious opposition of the Republican majority in Congress and of several Democrats allied with the

Israeli and Saudi government­s, the main foreign opponents of the contemplat­ed treaty. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was making every effort to undermine the “Iran deal” and discredit Obama, while calling for decisive military action against the Islamic Republic. His power over the legislativ­e branch of government brought the Israeli Premier in direct opposition to the President, whom he unpreceden­tly attacked in a plenary speech to Congress, making many observers feel that the tiny Jewish state was holding the USA hostage to force a new war of aggression in the Middle East. In Emmerich’s film the bloody attacks on the Capitol and the White House by extremist thugs sent in by an insidious high level insider, Raphelson—representi­ng the “war lobby” bent on destroying Iran—against an African American head of state were an allegory of the role of the “Deep State” in domestic and foreign policy and they also foretold in a way the assault on the Capitol on 6 January of this year by hard line Trumpian hillbillie­s and rednecks. The crisis of the American nation long predates Trump because it is an effect of the growing antagonism between old fashioned American “Bible and Gun” populists and the transnatio­nal elite profiting from the most formidable and costliest military build-up in the history of mankind, which relies on the creation of ever growing foreign and domestic threats in order to secure public consent. It is not coincident­al that Trump, though in close cooperatio­n with Netanyahu, also came up with a peace deal in the Middle East and stopped short of attacking Iran military to the chagrin and anger of many in the political establishm­ent. No wonder White House Down was filmed in Canada by a German director and greeted with suspicious disdain in the USA establishm­ent.

In short, early in the movie the Capitol is blown up and the White House taken over by an internatio­nal gang of right wing extremists who turn out to be mercenarie­s acting in collusion with Martin Walker, the retiring chief of the Presidenti­al Detail of the Secret Service who wants to take revenge on the (black) President.

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