Shifting U.S. policy to right, Trump chooses a pro-lifer and an anti-Islam, pro-Russian adviser
By Julio
Severo
President-elect
Donald Trump signaled a sharp rightward shift in U.S. national security policy
Friday by choosing Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions as attorney general and retired
Lt. Gen Michael Flynn as his national security adviser.
Jeff Sessions and Michael Flynn |
Trump’s
initial decisions suggest a more aggressive military involvement in strategies
against the Islamic terror and a greater emphasis on Islam’s role in stoking
extremism.
Under
left-wing President Barack Obama, U.S. foreign policy officials, including
Hillary Clinton, focused on demonizing Russia by portraying Russia as the
biggest threat and on fighting demonization of Islam by portraying Islam as a
religion of peace. ISIS has made havoc among Christians and in the Russian
borders. Trump has recognized that ISIS was created by Hillary. But Obama has
antagonized Russia since Putin passed a law banning homosexual propaganda to
children. This law eventually led the Obama administration to launch sanctions
against Russia, even though Obama said that the sanctions were motivated by the
Russian “invasion” of Crimea, a region traditionally Russian for 1,000 years.
Jeff
Sessions is best known for his solid pro-life views. He has a 100% pro-life
voting record according to the National Right to Life Committee and has
consistently voted for pro-life legislation and in opposition to taxpayer
funding of abortions.
Sessions,
who will be the first pro-life attorney general since President George W Bush,
said, “Our policies in this country as a nation should focus on life, should
focus on decency, and focus on love for even the least of these.” He will bring
to the Justice Department a consistently conservative voice.
Under
pro-abortion Obama, pro-abortion Attorneys General have labeled pro-life
advocates terrorists, went after pro-life people who peacefully protest outside
abortion clinics, and refused to properly investigate and prosecute the Planned
Parenthood abortion business for engaging in the sales of aborted baby body
parts.
Of
Trump’s new personnel picks, Michael Flynn will have the most direct access to
the president. His role as a national security adviser will center on
coordinating the policy positions of the secretaries of state, defense, justice
and other members of a president’s national security team.
He is
known in the military intelligence community as a smart professional and
unconventional thinker. He was forced out of the Defense Intelligence Agency in
2014 because he disagreed with Obama’s approach, which was to focus on Russia,
not on the Islamic terrorism.
In
Flynn’s book, “The Field of Fight: How We Can Win the Global War Against
Radical Islam and its Allies,” he condemned U.S. leaders who have called Islam
a religion of peace. “This insistence on denying the existence of jihad led
President Obama to the absurd claim that the Islamic State has nothing to do
with Islam,” Flynn wrote.
In
August, he called Islam a “cancer,” which is in line with Trump, who said in a CNN interview last March that “Islam hates us.”
In
advising Trump’s campaign, Flynn has emphasized that the Islamic State poses an
existential threat on a global scale. He shares Trump’s belief that Washington
should work more closely with Moscow.
Flynn
traveled last year to Moscow, where he joined Russian President Vladimir Putin
and other Russian officials. His warmth toward Russia worries left-wing and
neocon experts.
Trump’s
warmth toward Russia also worries them. During his campaign, Trump was
accused by neocons of being a “Russian agent.” The Trevor
Loudon blog said,
“If Trump is
elected, you will have the Russians… in the White House. Trump’s advisers are
very connected to Vladimir Putin and Russia. Trump himself has many ties as
well and is friends with Putin.”
Trump’s
choices are definitely shifting U.S. policy to right. But while left-wingers
are worried about Trump’s pro-life choices and both Republican and Democratic
neocons are worried about Trump making Russia a partner against Islamic
terrorism, conservative Christians are worried about his soft treatment of the
gay ideology, especially his appointment of homosexualists,
including Peter Thiel.
Trump’s
two appointments — Sessions and Flynn — are a blow to two powerful industries
in the United States: the abortion industry and the main neocon industry, the military-industrial
complex. If Trump wants to be successful, he should not let the gay agenda
industry untouched.
With
information from the Associated Press and LifeNews.
Portuguese
version of this article: Mudando a política
dos EUA para a direita, Trump escolhe homem pró-vida e assessor anti-islamismo
e pró-Rússia
Source: Last Days Watchman
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