[Peace-discuss] Minion of the Long War
C. G. Estabrook
galliher at illinois.edu
Mon Apr 20 10:31:34 CDT 2009
[The following will appear in Common Sense, an independent journal at Notre
Dame, where Obama will be commencement speaker. --CGE]
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MINION OF THE LONG WAR
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“When we convince the American people that it will be a long war.”
--Defense Secretary Rumsfeld, after the 9/11/2001 attacks, answering
a reporter's question, “How will we know when we've won the war on terror?”
A generation ago, when the Reagan administration came into office, they
announced that their foreign policy would be "a war on terror." They rejected
with scorn the Carter administration's assertion that the theme of American
foreign policy should be the promotion of human rights (a pious hope at best
under Carter, who supported US client dictators in Iran, Indonesia, Nicaragua,
and elsewhere).
Seven presidential terms later, the Obama administration – with its great
attention to how something is said – was perfectly willing to continue its
predecessors' policies in this regard, but they knew that the name had to be
changed. After the attacks of 9/11/2001, the Bush administration had seized
that old Reagan trope and proclaimed a new "War on Terror." Donald Rumsfeld –
an apparatchik of the Reagan administration, including “Special Envoy to the
Middle East,” while CEO to some of the most disgusting big business enterprises
in the country – then Bush's defense secretary, pointed out that the real
object of the talk of a “war on terror” was the American people. He was
admitting that a rationale had to be found for a long war that the American
elite was determined to continue, but that the American populace opposed. The
9/11 attacks were a wonderful excuse. “Terrorism” could take the place of
“Communism,” as the bete noire that would justify America's imperialist actions
around the world, particularly in the Middle East.
The real reason for the Long War that Rumsfeld – and now Obama – wished to
promote, stretched back deep into the twentieth century. During World War II
the US State Department described the Mideast is the “most strategically
important area of the world,” and the area's vast energy resources – oil and
natural gas – as “a stupendous source of strategic power, and one of the
greatest material prizes in world history.” In the years since then, oil
companies and their associates have reaped colossal profits; but, even more
importantly to the US, control over two-thirds of the world’s estimated
hydrocarbon reserves – uniquely cheap and easy to exploit – provides what
Obama's foreign policy adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski called “critical leverage”
over European and Asian rivals, what the State Department many years earlier had
called “veto power” over them.
Noam Chomsky points out, "Note that the critical issue is control, not access.
US policies towards the Middle East were the same when the US was a net exporter
of oil, and remain the same today when US intelligence projects that the US
itself will rely on more stable Atlantic Basin resources [i.e., those of the
Western hemisphere plus west Africa]. Policies would be likely to be about the
same if the US were to switch to renewable energy. The need to control the
'stupendous source of strategic power' and to gain 'profits beyond the dreams of
avarice' would remain. Jockeying over Central Asia and pipeline routes [notably
in Afghanistan] reflects similar concerns."
With Israel as its "local cop on the beat," as the Nixon administration put it,
the US has conducted a generations-long war for the control of energy resources
in a 1500-mile radius around the Persian Gulf -- from the Mediterranean to the
Indus valley, from the Horn of Africa to Central Asia – and not because the US
is dependent on Mideast oil: less than 10% of the oil the US imports for
domestic consumption comes for the Middle East.
And it should by now be clear that – whether we call them al-Qaeda, Taliban,
insurgents, terrorists, or militants – the people whom we're trying to kill in
the Middle East are those who want us out of their countries and off of their
resources. In order to convince Americans to kill and die and suffer in this
cause, the Bush administration repeatedly lied about the situation, from
trumpeting the non-existent weapons of mass destruction to outright forgery.
But the Obama administration continues to utter the biggest lie, that the US is
fighting a "war on terror," as they expand the war to Pakistan, which they see
as the center of opposition to US control of the region.
The real reason for the Long War had to be hidden, because whenever it was
described candidly, it was rejected by a majority of the American people. So,
because the US government's description of the war was so fundamentally
mendacious, it was reduced to increasingly ridiculous euphemisms. Thus the
“Global War on Terrorism,” was relabeled the “Global Struggle Against Violent
Extremism” (“G-SAVE”) by Rumsfeld's Pentagon – which is now outdone in absurdity
by Obama's people, who have decreed that their murders shall be know as
“Overseas Contingency Operations”! The cream of the jest came early, when
someone in the Bush administration noticed what the acronym for the preferred
title for the invasion of Iraq – “Operation Iraqi Liberation” – spelt. The
unconscious speaks the truth.
President Obama too is clearly committed to the long-term and invariant US
policy of controlling the energy resources of the Middle East. And the means
have been clear for two generations: military power, exerted directly by the US
or by its clients – notably Iran (1953-79), Israel (from 1967), and the
"moderate" Arab regimes (Saudi Arabia, Egypt after 1979, Iraq until 1990).
The policy faces opposition from two groups: the American people, who are
reluctant to go to war; and the people of the region, who are reluctant to be
colonized. In a devastating guerrilla raid in that war, a resistance group
killed thousands of Americans in the home country on 11 September 2001.
Al-Qaeda said that they did it because of (a) the murderous sanctions on Iraq,
(b) the oppression of the Palestinians, and (c) the American military presence
in the Muslim holy places.
In his campaign for president, Obama proposed to deal with the two groups by
killing the latter ("take them out," in a favorite phrase of his) and persuading
the former, the American people -- whom he took to be the greater danger. In
his audition piece for the US elite, the well-named "Audacity of Hope," he
advertised his ability to co-opt them. In that book Obama wrote -- setting aside
three million dead and a devastated country -- that "the biggest casualty of
[the Vietnam] war was the bond of trust between the American people and their
government."
He presented himself as the agent to restore that "bond of trust" – i.e., to
convince the bulk of the American population that their interests coincided with
those of the elite policy-makers, when in fact it was clear that they were
directly opposed. In this case Americans' opposition to going to war clashed
with the elite desire to control the Middle East -- and there was no draft to
rely on, because the US conscript army had revolted during the war in Vietnam.
And the greatest anti-war demonstrations in history had occurred around the
world before Bush's invasion of Iraq.
Obama demonstrated his ability to co-opt the US anti-war movement by convincing
Americans that he was the "peace candidate," even though in office he has shown
himself more aggressive and violent than Bush, from Palestine to Pakistan. But
he has so far been more adept that Bush in implementing that constant policy, at
home and abroad.
As a principled rather than merely "pragmatic" opponent of the Long War, Justin
Raimondo, editor of the excellent site Antiwar.com, is certainly right to say,
"I am truly at a loss to describe, in suitably pungent terms, the contempt in
which I hold the 'progressive' wing of the War Party, which is now enjoying its
moment in the sun. These people have no principles: it's all about power at the
court of King Obama, and these court policy wonks are good for nothing but
apologias for the king's wars."
On Friday 27 March 2009 “Barack Obama announced, with a flourish of falsehoods
and fearmongering, his grand plans to escalate the 'AfPak' War,” wrote Chris
Floyd. “His much-vaunted 'strategic review' was simply a bureaucratic exercise
to determine how best to tweak and refine the policies already adopted by the
Bush Administration and its military managers -- all of whom were of course
retained by Obama. Again, this was to be expected. After all, 'continuity' has
been his watchword -- or rather, it became his watchword right after he was
swept into office as the self-proclaimed embodiment of the public's desperate
longing for change.”
Many people thought that Obama's review would result in a winding-down of the
war, or even a withdrawal from the country the US attacked in 2001. (The US
government said then that it was going after Osama bin Laden, but it's real
motive was the long-standing US policy of colonial control of the region: when
the Afghan government offered to negotiate the surrender of Osama bin Laden, the
US government refused -- and bombed the country instead, as it had planned.)
But Obama announced war, not peace, for Afghanistan and the region. Making the
truly amazing (and quite false) claim that "The United States of America did not
choose to fight a war in Afghanistan" (both he and his predecessor had done
exactly that), Obama promised a wider war. With another contestable assertion
-- "The United States of America stands for peace and security" (families of the
civilians killed by US Predator rockets in Afghanistan and Pakistan might
reasonably doubt that) -- he vowed to "use all elements of our national power to
defeat Al-Qaeda" -- although al-Qaeda constitutes a small fraction of the
resistance in Afghanistan.
Richard Holbrooke, Obama's plenipotentiary for AfPak, worked vigorously to
destroy the attempts by the governments of Afghanistan and Pakistan to make
peace with their insurgents. The US needs the war, to justify its military
control of the region. Peace would reasonably lead to the withdrawal of foreign
troops -- notably American.
Chris Floyd continues, “Even so, to see the expansion of the AfPak War finally,
formally promulgated, and to realize what this really means, not in terms of the
ludicrous political theater of Washington and the media, not in the war-game
fantasies of think-tankers and armchair warriors, but in the actual costs -- the
death and suffering of thousands of innocent people, the ruinous chaos and the
violent hatred engendered, the massive financial corruption and gargantuan debt
added to our already corrupt and bankrupt system, the further coarsening and
brutalization and militarization of our society, and again, because it bears
repeating, the physical and emotional destruction of countless human beings
whose only crime was to be born in a region targeted by the Great Gamesters of
the world, the warlords in turbans and those in Brooks Brothers suits, the
gangsters in the alleys and in the corridors of power -- this is a bitter and
sickening thing.”
What should Obama do, instead? The answer is obvious: he should stop killing
people. We seem to think that because someone becomes head of government –
particularly the U.S. government – he can order killing without being liable for
murder. But that excuse is not accepted by the million people driven from their
homes in northwest Pakistan by terror attacks by missiles from unmanned American
aircraft – ordered by Obama at a rate much greater than that employed by the
Bush administration – and attacks by the Pakistani army, demanded by the
wretched Holbrooke. It's not accepted in the rest of the world, and it should
not be accepted by us.
As Noam Chomsky puts it, “Invading armies have no rights, only responsibilities.
Among them are the responsibility to pay reparations for their crimes, and to
hold the guilty accountable. A crucial responsibility is to pay careful
attention to the will of the victims” – and few doubt that the will of the
victims of America's generation-long invasion of the Middle East is that America
leave – troops, corporations, mercenaries, and all.
The Obama administration is making what Arthur Silber wrote of Iraq almost three
years ago apply also to AfPak, and throughout the Middle East:
“Given the immense, incalculable destruction we have caused, we are
obligated to provide significant financial aid to Iraq for the foreseeable
future. In light of the damage this catastrophe has already caused to our
economy, that is a formidable prospect -- but it is markedly superior to
continuing to pour billions of dollars down the drain of this murderous
occupation. And we must be responsible for our actions, and especially for our
gravely mistaken and immoral ones. To the extent amends are possible, we must
offer them. No amount of money will ever make up for the lives that have been
lost and those that have been irrevocably damaged, but we must do whatever is
possible. That will still not merit forgiveness for our actions, but at least we
will have acted with a minimal sense of honor. Beyond this, 'we' should do
nothing but get out. Get out. Every single goddamned American. Out, within
months. To hell with the disgusting lie about 'combat troops.' All Americans,
out...”
But Obama's administration, as was only to be expected, is a vast propaganda
operation for ongoing American polices. This administration simply does with
lying and misdirection what the last did with callow openness. What those
policies would be under a Democratic administration was seen clearly by some
before the election. The historian Howard Zinn wrote as follows a year ago, in
the midst of the presidential campaign:
“...we can be sure that the Democratic Party, unless it faces a popular
upsurge, will not move off center. The two leading Presidential candidates have
made it clear that if elected, they will not bring an immediate end to the Iraq
War, or institute a system of free health care for all. They offer no radical
change from the status quo. They do not propose what the present desperation of
people cries out for: a government guarantee of jobs to everyone who needs one,
a minimum income for every household, housing relief to everyone who faces
eviction or foreclosure. They do not suggest the deep cuts in the military
budget or the radical changes in the tax system that would free billions, even
trillions, for social programs to transform the way we live.
“None of this should surprise us. The Democratic Party has broken with its
historic conservatism, its pandering to the rich, its predilection for war, only
when it has encountered rebellion from below, as in the Thirties and the
Sixties. We should not expect that a victory at the ballot box in November will
even begin to budge the nation from its twin fundamental illnesses: capitalist
greed and militarism...”
Zinn's prophecy was exact. Obama was avid for the job of running the elite's
Long War; but his first task has turned out to be to protect the elite's even
longer-running protection racket, American capitalism. Whether he will be able
to hoodwink the American people adequately to keep both confidence games going,
remains to be seen.
[C. G. Estabrook taught history at Notre Dame in the dark backward and abysm of
time; now, retired from the University of Illinois, he conducts political
discussions on public television <www.newsfromneptune.com> in Urbana, Illinois;
he can be contacted at <carl at newsfromneptune.com>.]
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