
Photo composition showing the cover of the Annual Threat Assessment by the US Office of the Director of National Intelligence with Joe Biden during his last State of the Union address. Photo: Orinoco Tribune/Shawn Thew/EPA/Bloomberg.

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Photo composition showing the cover of the Annual Threat Assessment by the US Office of the Director of National Intelligence with Joe Biden during his last State of the Union address. Photo: Orinoco Tribune/Shawn Thew/EPA/Bloomberg.
By Roger D. Harris –Â Mar 18, 2024
President Biden used the bully pulpit of the annual State of the Union Address to describe a world that significantly differed from the picture presented just a month earlier in the Annual Threat Assessment of the US Intelligence Community.Â
Information fed to the general public is deliberately spun to sell the imperial project. In contrast, intelligence assessments for elite policymakers are designed to sustain the endeavor. That the presidentâs pronouncements diverge from the conclusions reached by his own intelligence community highlights the chasm between what is foisted on the public compared to what is understood within the bowels of the state.Â
Unlike Bidenâs bullish and bellicose pronouncements about âour leadership in the world,â the Assessmentâs view was less triumphal. It states: âThe United States faces an increasingly fragile global order.âÂ
The fraying US-imposed ârules-based orderâ and its discredited neoliberal economic system are more and more being challenged by âstates engaging in competitive behavior,â according to the Assessment. The report adds, fallout from the Gaza crisis, in particular, serves to âundermineâ the US.Â
Both pronouncements, however, have similar biases. Bidenâs address to the nation was overtly political, accusing Trump of âbowing downâ to Putin. But the supposedly neutral and objective âcollective insights of the Intelligence Communityâ were likewise predisposed in favor of Democratic Party memes. Both blame Russian electoral interference for Trumpâs ascension to the Oval Office in 2016. As proof, the so-called intelligence community again offered nothing more than its own assessment, lacking better evidence.Â
âAmbitiousâ China
Biden bragged in this address: âFor years, all Iâve heard from my Republican friendsâŚis Chinaâs on the rise and America is falling behind. Theyâve got it backward!â Contrary to his bravado about âweâre in a stronger position to win the competition for the 21st Century against China,â the World Bank predicts 4.5% GDP growth in China compared to 1.6% for the US in 2024.
China has surpassed the US as the largest world economy by purchasing power parity. The Assessment forecasts slowed â but still greater than for the US â economic growth in what it labels as an âambitiousâ China.Â
The Assessment reports that China ânow rivalsâ the US in DNA-sequencing and is the âworld leaderâ in voice and image recognition and video analytics. Bidenâs claim that âIâve made sure that the most advanced American technologies canât be used in China,â is contradicted by the Assessmentâs finding that China is âmaking progressâ in producing advanced chips on its own. Â
The Assessment notes: âChina views Washingtonâs competitive measures against Beijing as part of a broader USâŚeffort to contain its rise.â In this context, the Chinese perceive an increased likelihood of a US first-strike nuclear attack, according to the Assessment. Nevertheless, China has shown growing âconfidenceâ in its nuclear deterrent capabilities against US aggression, also according to the Assessment. Â
China is disadvantaged militarily, according to the Assessment, because it âlacks recent warfighting experience,â something the US has in excess. US intelligence estimates that China will only âfully modernizeâ its national defense by 2035 and will not become a âworld-class militaryâ until 2049.Â
The Assessment anticipates increased Chinese push-back over Taiwan. Although Biden claimed that the US is âstanding up for peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait,â the US has done the opposite by continuing to destabilize and militarize the region. To wit, Biden said in his address, âIâve revitalized our partnerships and alliances in the Pacific.â
âConfrontationalâ Russia
The Assessment labels Russia âconfrontational,â projecting Washingtonâs own posture. In a fit of made-for-popular-consumption Russophobia, Biden warned in his address: âPutin of Russia is on the marchâŚIf anybody in this room thinks Putin will stop at Ukraine, I assure you, he will not!âÂ
While the Assessment warns of many threats, Russian expansionism â as Biden fear mongered â is not one of them. In fact, the Assessment notes that Russia stepped down from intervening in neighboring Azerbaijan regarding the Nagorno-Karabakh territory. The Assessment assures us: âRussia almost certainly does not want a direct military conflict with US and NATO forces.âÂ
The Assessment notes that Russia âmaintains the largest and most diverse nuclear weapons stockpile.â But it adds that Russia sees its stockpile as ânecessary for maintaining deterrenceâ (presumably from a US first strike). The Assessment, while describing Russia as a âcapable and resilient adversary,â takes the contrary view to Bidenâs, seeing Russiaâs posture as mainly âdefensive.â
As the US proxy war against Russia drags on, Biden continues to campaign for expanding the US funding for Ukraine with no hint of a peace. For its part, the Assessment does not contest what it describes as Putinâs belief that Russia is winning the war in Ukraine.Â
Rather, the Assessment sees no victory in sight for the US: âThis deadlock plays to Russiaâs strategic military advantages and is increasingly shifting the momentum in Moscowâs favor.â Not surprisingly, this huge admission of the futility of the US war effort in Ukraine coming from its own intelligence institutions has not been prominently reported by the follow-the-flag corporate press.Â
The Assessment describes how Russia is strengthening and leveraging ties with China, Iran, and North Korea. Russia is mitigating the impacts of US-led sanctions, while ârebuild[ing] its credibility as a great power.â Russiaâs deepening ties with China in particular have afforded it significant âprotection from future sanctions.â
Despite US-led coercive economic measures, the Assessment projects âmodestâ Russian GDP growth. Moscow has âsuccessfully divertedâ its oil exports and largely evaded the US/G7 price caps, retaining âsignificant energy leverageâ as the second-largest supplier of liquefied natural gas to Europe. In short, Russia is âoffsetting its decline in relations with the Westâ with a pivot to the Global South.Â
Bidenâs Gaza Ceasefire Talk âPolitical Ployâ To Appease Voters at Home: Activist
Other global flashpoints
Bidenâs policy of âcontaining the threat posed by Iranâ is elaborated in the Assessment. US-led sanctions are credited with putting âbrakes onâ Iranâs economy. In response, the Assessment reports, that Tehran has âexpanded its diplomatic influenceâ by improving ties with Russia, Saudi Arabia, and Iraq.
The Assessment correctly notes that Iran uses its nuclear program âto build negotiating leverage and respond to perceived international pressure,â pointing out that Iran would ârestore JCPOA limits if the United States fulfilled its JCPOA commitments [emphasis added].âÂ
On the one hand, the Assessment preposterously accuses Iran of seeking to âblock a peace settlement between Israel and the Palestinians.â On the other, Iran is absolved of orchestrating or having any foreknowledge of the Hamas attack on Israel. This is a notable admission.Â
The Gaza conflict, according to the Assessment, poses the ârisk of escalationâ into regional interstate war. Uncle Samâs âkey Arab partners,â the Assessment laments, face hostile domestic sentiment because their citizens (correctly) see the US and Israel as responsible for âthe death and destruction.â Although the US is recognized as the âpower brokerâ that could âend the conflict,â the Assessment (also correctly) implies that the US has not played that role.Â
The Assessment foresees Israel needing to confront âarmed resistance from Hamas for years to come.â While acknowledging that Hamas enjoys âbroad support,â the Assessment questions Israeli President Netanyahuâs âviabilityâ and âability to rule.â
Similar to the case of Iran, the Assessment explains, that North Koreaâs nuclear program is pursued as a âguarantor of regime securityâ and to âdeter outside intervention.â North Koreaâs missile launches, the Assessment admits, are responses to counter hostile US-South Korea military exercises. North Koreaâs development of nuclear capabilities, the Assessment further acknowledges, is defensive to âenhance second-strike capabilitiesâ in the contingency of a first strike by the US and its allies.Â
In regard to immigration, Biden touts his âcomprehensive plan to fixâ our system. Given the current dysfunction on the US border, claiming credit there sounds more like a Republican talking point than one favoring the incumbent. Largely ignored in Bidenâs address, the Assessment is concerned with global warming and its potentially destabilizing effect on the US-imposed global order by generating climate refugees.Â
âPoor socioeconomic conditions and insecurityâ further drive cross-border migration, warns the Assessment. While admitting that âlack of economic opportunitiesâ are among the factors that drive Cuban, Nicaraguan, and Venezuelan emigration, the Assessment incredulously rejects blaming US sanctions for driving people away from their homelands.Â
Conclusion
Unlike the upbeat âgreatest comeback story never toldâ of the State of the Union address, the Assessment cautions:
âStrains in US alliances and challenges to international norms have made it more difficultâŚto tackle global issuesâŚ. The world that emerges from this tumultuous period will be shaped by whoever⌠[is] most effective at advancing economic growth and providing benefits for more people, and by the powersâŚthat are most able and willing to act on solutions to transnational issues and regional crises.âÂ
Meanwhile, the Assessment reports that Putinâs âRussia has increased social spendingâŚand increased corporate taxes.â Also reported, Xiâs China is prioritizing âa more equitable distribution of wealth â replacing the focus on maximizing GDP growth.â Back home, Biden promised in his address âto end cancer as we know itâ and prophesized that he will âsave the planet from the climate crisis.â (For starters, I would settle for just stopping the genocide in Palestine and a negotiated peace in Ukraine.)
RDH/OT

Roger D. Harris lives in California and is with the anti-imperialist human rights organization Task Force on the Americas, the Venezuela Solidarity Network, the US Peace Council, and the Marxist Forum. He writes regularly on Latin American and the Caribbean with a special emphasis on Venezuela, Cuba, and Nicaragua.