Powerful custodians of the USA's hugely profitable military-industrial complex prefer it that way. They aren't much interested in any course toward Russia other than antagonism if not belligerence. There is enormous commitment to heading off the "threat" of genuine diplomacy and rapprochement.
Elite guardians of the U.S. warfare state, committed to what Martin Luther King Jr. called "the madness of militarism," certainly don't want a modern-day incarnation of the "spirit of Glassboro" that emerged 50 years ago when President Lyndon Johnson met at length with Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin. Standing next to Kosygin at the end of their summit at a New Jersey college, Johnson said: "I have no doubt about it at all" that "it does help a lot to sit down and look a man in the eye all day long and try to reason with him, particularly if he is trying to reason with you."
If Trump says anything like that after meeting with the Kremlin's leader this week, you can expect some misguided Democratic partisans to denounce him as a Putin tool.
While many people are eager for constructive dialogue between the United States and Russia, on Capitol Hill the efforts to prevent such a possibility are fierce and unrelenting. Ultra-hawks like Senators Lindsey Graham and John McCain are among quite a few Republicans doing all they can to prevent genuine diplomacy between Washington and Moscow. But much of the most unhinged rhetoric is coming from Democrats, often with the "progressive" label.
To sample just how far downhill the discourse has gone in the frenzy to take genuine U.S.-Russian diplomacy off the table, consider this tweet that a longtime member of Congress with an antiwar past, Democrat Maxine Waters, sent out a week ago: "When Trump goes to kiss Putin's ring at the G20 meeting, maybe he should just return to Russia w/him & their favorite amb. Sergey Kislyak."
The director of the Kennan Institute at the Woodrow Wilson Center, Matthew Rojansky, pointed out days ago: "The momentum in relations between the world's two big nuclear powers is now so negative, that it really is time to call a halt to anything that looks like further escalation or deterioration."
Yet that negative momentum is what many members of Congress are trying to increase. Words like "irresponsible" and "reckless" don't begin to describe what they are doing.
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