The art of being a spectacularly misguided oracle

Posted By : Rina Latuperissa
10 Min Read

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The late Zbigniew “Grand Chessboard” Brzezinski for some time dispensed wisdom as an oracle of US foreign policy, side by side with the perennial Henry Kissinger.

While Kissinger, in vast swaths of the Global South, is regarded as nothing but a war criminal, Brzezinski never achieved the same notoriety. At best he claimed bragging rights for giving the USSR its own Vietnam in Afghanistan – by facilitating the internationalization of Jihad Inc, with all its dire consequences.    

Over the years, it was always amusing to follow the heights Dr Zbig would reach with his Russophobia. But then, slowly but surely, he was forced to revise his great expectations. And finally he must have been truly horrified that his perennial Mackinder-style geopolitical fears came to pass – beyond his wildest nightmares. 

Not only did Washington fail to prevent the emergence of a “peer competitor” in Eurasia, but the competitor that did emerge is now configured as a strategic partnership between Russia and China.      

Former US National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski (L) and Former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger are pictured as speakers at the Nobel Peace Prize Forum in Oslo December 11, 2016. Photo: AFP / Terje BENDIKSBY / NTB Scanpix

Dr Zbig was not exactly versed in Chinese matters. His misreading of China may be found in his classic A Geostrategy for Eurasia, published in – where else? – Foreign Affairs, in 1997: 

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