
Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., talks to reporters at an election night watch party for Donald Trump, Nov. 5, 2024, in West Palm Beach, Fla. Photo: Alex Brandon/AP.
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Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., talks to reporters at an election night watch party for Donald Trump, Nov. 5, 2024, in West Palm Beach, Fla. Photo: Alex Brandon/AP.
By Alan MacLeod – Dec 2, 2024
With the appointment of Marco Rubio to the post of Secretary of State, the Trump administration has elevated one of the most pro-war extremists ever to serve in the cabinet of the United States of America.In this article, MintPress highlights Rubioâs history as one of the most reliable warmongering voices in Washington, an individual who has led or supported many of Americaâs most aggressive foreign policy decisions, including military interventions, coups, and sanctions.
Trump, who promises to be the âmost pro-Israel president ever,â has picked a cabinet replete with neoconservative, pro-war voices. Rubio, however, may be the most belligerent of all of them, and his ascension to the most powerful position in Trumpâs team does not bode well for the world.
Sanctioning China, The World
Of all the situations to trigger a global nuclear war, a confrontation with Beijing appears among the most likely. The U.S. has constructed a network of over 300 military bases encircling China â another nuclear-armed state. Rubio is doing more than almost anyone to make that doomsday scenario an eventuality. He has made clear that he supports Taiwanese independence, breaking more than a half-century of official U.S. policy in the process. His âTaiwan Peace Through Strength Actâ promotes direct military collaboration between the U.S. and Taiwan and calls for increased arms spending on the island.
Rubio was also one of the faces of the 2014 Hong Kong protest movement, a U.S.-backed attempt to wrest the island city from Chinese influence. He invited the movementâs leaders to Washington, D.C., and attempted to introduce legislation to force the United States into supporting Hong Kongâs independence.
At home, he has led the clampdown on Chinese businesses such as Huawei and has spearheaded a movement to uncover and stamp out Chinaâs supposed undue influence over American media and educational institutions.
Unsurprisingly, then, the former Florida senator also supports a trade war and sanctions against China and, indeed, much of the world, including Russia, the Democratic Peopleâs Republic of Korea, and Iran.
Unilateral sanctions, of course, are illegal under international law. However, Rubio believes the United States can and should use its economic might to crush countries resisting Washingtonâs dictates. The waning power of the dollar as the global reserve currency, though, makes this increasingly difficult. As Rubio lamented on Fox News last year, Brazil, the largest country in Latin America, signed a comprehensive trade agreement with China whereby goods and services would be paid for in local currencies rather than the dollar:
Theyâre creating a secondary economy in the world, totally independent of the United States. We wonât have to talk sanctions in five years, because there will be so many countries transacting in currencies other than the dollar, that we wonât have the ability to sanction them.â
đşđ¸ U.S. Senator @MarcoRubio slams đ§đˇđ¨đł Brazil-China deal to do trade in own currencies for undermining U.S. power to impose sanctions:
"In 5 years… there will be so many countries transacting in currencies other than the dollar that we won't have the ability to sanction them." pic.twitter.com/RbWTn6tpIB
— No Cold War (@NoColdWar) April 11, 2023
Genocide Denier
Rubio has strongly supported Israel in its campaign against its neighbors. âIsrael takes extraordinary steps to avoid civilian losses,â he said during a solidarity visit to Tel Aviv earlier this year, adding that the problem is that its enemies âdonât value human life.â
âIsrael has consistently sought peace with the Palestinians⌠Israelis rightfully living in their historic homeland are not the impediment to peace; the Palestinians are,â he wrote in a letter to his predecessor, Antony Blinken.
When asked by activists from peace group CODEPINK whether he supports an end to Israeli atrocities, he answered in the negative, stating, âOn the contrary. I want them to destroy every element of Hamas they can get their hands on. These people are vicious animals.â
Narco Rubio
Hailing from the notoriously conservative Cuban-American community in Florida, Latin American policy has always been among Rubioâs chief interests. Described as the unofficial âSecretary of State for Latin Americaâ during Trumpâs first term, he will undoubtedly hold enormous influence over U.S. policy in the region in the years to come. This is bad news for the people of Cuba, Nicaragua, Bolivia, and Venezuela, all of whom have watched as Rubio supported coup attempts against their countries. In 2019, for example, he went as far as directly tweeting images of the capture, death and bloody assassination of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi at NicolĂĄs Maduro during an ongoing U.S.-backed coup against the Venezuelan president.
.@marcorubio tweets bloodied Gaddafi photo as he calls for Maduro to step down in Venezuela. https://t.co/eNYdUPaUyI pic.twitter.com/dzVp3jPBTt
— Miami Herald (@MiamiHerald) February 24, 2019
Rubio has always favored a more aggressive, punitive approach to Cuba. Last year, for example, he introduced legislation to ensure that Cuba would remain on the U.S. State Sponsor of Terrorism List, offering no evidence of the islandâs supposed support for such groups.
A right-wing conservative Christian, Rubio has also made well known his contempt for much less radical Latin American leaders, such as Mexicoâs AndrĂŠs Manuel LĂłpez Obrador and Brazilâs Lula da Silva. On the other hand, he has openly embraced far-right presidents, like Brazilâs Jair Bolsonaro (in power between 2019 and 2023) and Argentinaâs Javier Milei.
Rubio has attempted to link Maduro with the organized drug trade, insisting, with little evidence, that the Venezuelan leader is a narcotics kingpin. On this issue, he appears to be living in a glasshouse; his own brother-in-law is a cocaine drug lord. Orlando Cicilia spent 12 years in a Florida prison for crimes related to the smuggling and distribution of cocaine. Rubio enjoys a very close relationship with Cicilia and, after the latterâs release from prison, used his political position to pressure a Florida regulator to grant him a real estate license. Across much of Latin America, the new Secretary of State is known as âNarco Rubio.â
The Implications for Venezuela of Marco Rubio’s Appointment as US Secretary of State
Neocon Warmonger
A consummate Washington insider, Rubio cheerled the U.S. action in Libya that led to Gaddafiâs execution and the country being turned into a failed state replete with open-air slave markets. He also supported the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, condemning Biden for his pullout from Kabul in 2021. In addition, he helped Saudi Arabia in its genocide against Yemen while expressing outrage over alleged Houthi human rights abuses, minuscule in comparison with the Saudi-led, U.S.-backed genocide.
Studies by Brown University have shown that Americaâs post-9/11 wars have killed at least 4.5 million people and displaced at least 37 million more. One of the most shocking stories arising from the Global War on Terror is the torture camp at GuantĂĄnamo Bay. By the mid-2010s, the facility was causing such negative publicity for the U.S. that the Obama administration was reportedly considering shutting it down. Rubio, however, was enthusiastic in his support for the center, promising to reopen it if elected president.
He also supported the dramatic expansion of the surveillance state into American life, voting to continue the practice of collecting vast amounts of data on ordinary American citizens, and has effectively argued that First Amendment protections should not be applied to anti-Israel campus protestors.
Sheldon Adelsonâs âPerfect Little Puppetâ
Few in 2016 would have predicted Rubioâs rise to become arguably the most powerful man in Trumpâs cabinet. The Floridian was once one of Trumpâs fiercest critics, describing him as a fraud when the two were battling for the Republican Presidential nomination. âI think it is time to unmask [Trump] for what he is,â he said during a campaign speech in Oklahoma City, adding:
Heâs trying to take over the conservative movement even though heâs not a conservative, but more importantly, heâs a con. I mean, heâs a conman who is taking advantage of peopleâs fears and anxieties about the future, portraying himself as some sort of strong guy. Heâs not a strong guy.â
Trump was, if anything, even more scathing towards Rubio, stating that â[Pro-Israel billioniare] Sheldon Adelson is looking to give big dollars to Rubio because he feels he can mold him into his perfect little puppet. I agree!â
One of Adelsonâs key issues is stopping the rise of clean, renewable energy, and in that, he found an ally in Rubio, who consistently denied the reality of man-made climate change, stating that there was âno scientific evidenceâ to back up the theory. Funded by big money donations from the oil and gas industries, he even voted against legislation protecting low-lying cities such as Miami from severe weather events.
Since their public spat, Trump has clearly buried the hatchet with both Rubio and Adelson. The latterâs widow, Miriam, contributed a gigantic $100 million to Trumpâs recent presidential run, becoming his biggest donor in the process. Clearly, then, both Trump and Rubio are willing to make major concessions in the pursuit of power. However, given Rubioâs track record, his appointment as Secretary of State does not bode well for either America or the rest of the world.
Alan MacLeod is a member of the Glasgow University Media Group and a Senior Staff Writer for MintPress News. After completing his PhD in 2017 he published two books: Bad News From Venezuela: Twenty Years of Fake News and Misreporting and Propaganda in the Information Age: Still Manufacturing Consent, as well as a number of academic articles. He has also contributed to FAIR.org, The Guardian, Salon, The Grayzone, Jacobin Magazine, and Common Dreams.