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The Jungle Grows Bigger

The second-ranking United States diplomat Victoria Nuland met with senior leaders of the junta in Niger.

“France has been kicked out of Niger by its new military government, by extension placing U.S. interests there in peril. Who would ever have thought that the U.S. footing the bill for training Nigerien soldiers would result in a net gain for Russia and China? Apparently not the U.S. State Department.

Enter Victoria Nuland with demands to speak to those in charge.


Nuland rocked up to Niger and demanded to speak to the ousted president, but was refused the opportunity. Instead, she got to meet with one of the coup leaders – the new army chief of staff, Brigadier General Moussa Salaou Barmou, who not only trained at Ford Benning and at Washington’s National Defense University, but was photographed alongside U.S. Special Operations in Africa Commander Lt. Gen. Jonathan Braga just a few weeks ago at a U.S. drone base in Niger.

In a State Department teleconference on Monday, Nuland said that she was in Niger ‘because we wanted to speak frankly to the people responsible to this challenge to the democratic order’. That didn’t actually require a foreign trip, though. She could have just stayed home and called a staff meeting. You made this mess yourselves, guys.

‘The benefit from the joint mortar training event is twofold – providing Nigerien soldiers with a tangible skill, while also bolstering the partnership between U.S. and Niger forces’, the Pentagon said in 2021 of a joint training exercise. Looks like all those skills came in handy when it came to kicking out U.S.-allied France.

‘We met with the self-proclaimed chief of defense of this operation, General Barmou, and three of the colonels supporting him’, Nuland said. ‘I will say that these conversations were extremely frank and at times quite difficult because, again, we were pushing for a negotiated solution’. Interesting how peace and negotiations suddenly appear on the table when Washington loses its foothold, finds itself in too weak or precarious a position to start dropping bombs, and needs to buy some time to regain the upper hand. Such was the case with the Russia-Ukraine Minsk agreements of 2014 and 2015, which used peace as a pretext for better arming Kiev against Moscow as Western allies trained and supplied Ukrainian neo-Nazis at Russia’s doorstep. Nuland not so subtly hinted at Washington’s priorities when she said that she ‘had a chance first to sit with a broad cross-section of Nigerien civil society’, describing them as ‘long-time friends of the United States’. In other words, to better shore up the in-country proxies to defend U.S. interests.

Washington and Regime Change Karen here are unabashed control freaks. Nuland was long obsessed with Europe’s Nord Stream pipeline of cheap Russian gas – until it was mysteriously blown up. She was spotted in Ukraine back in 2014, handing out cookies to anti-government protesters and caught discussing the potential roles of Ukrainian opposition leaders post-regime change. That recording leaked, featuring Nuland expressing just how much she values U.S. allies and international law when they don’t quite align with Washington’s agenda for Kiev once U.S.-friendly puppets are installed. ‘So that would be great, I think, to help glue this thing, and have the UN help glue it, and you know... **** the EU’, Nuland told U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Geoffrey Pyatt.

At a Senate hearing earlier this year into ‘Russian aggression in Ukraine and beyond’, Nuland demonstrated that she couldn’t even resist keeping her hands off neighboring Belarus, underscoring that the U.S. was ‘working intensively with the Belarusian opposition’. Regime Change Karen has her nose in everyone’s business. It seems to run in the family, as her husband, Robert Kagan, is a prominent neoconservative interventionist whose biography on the State Department website describes him as an expert on ‘NATO expansion’. He also co-founded the Project for the New American Century (PNAC) think tank, which set out the blueprint for endless U.S. regime change wars against countries that didn’t adhere to Washington’s agenda.

In Niger, that agenda includes keeping the door unlocked so that Washington can come and go as it pleases, like it has in Ukraine, up to and including the point of being able to exploit the country’s resources or use it as a crash pad for operations against its geopolitical foes. Which would explain why the CIA set up a drone base in Niger for its African operations in the wake of the Benghazi fiasco in Libya, after which Washington lost its foothold there. It’s likely not a coincidence that Libya is right next door.

Washington apparently did not foresee that Nigerien troops would take their U.S.-funded training and use it to start defending themselves against what they perceived to be Western interference. Regime Change Karen seems miffed that they didn’t follow the usual path of getting trained up by the U.S. to subsequently be used and exploited to fight Washington’s wars.

If Nuland and her colleagues have any potential at all for introspection amid this fallout in Niger, they might want to start considering what could happen if the Western-backed Azov neo-Nazis also decide someday to betray the interests of their benefactors in favor of defending their own –with all their generously donated firepower courtesy of Western taxpayers”. -RT

Although Victoria Nuland is more accustomed to pushing for regime change than pressing for the reversal of a military coup, the veteran envoy’s ongoing service to the neoliberal status quo in attempting to quell unrest throughout various parts of the world brings to mind the geopolitical metaphor of the garden and the jungle popularized by Nuland’s husband, Robert Kagan, which is “tending the jungle on behalf of the garden of democracy”.

“The liberal order is as precarious as it is precious. It is a garden that needs constant tending lest the jungle grow back and engulf us all”. -The Jungle Grows Back, Robert Kagan, 2019