[Peace-discuss] Obama, Like Bush, Just Doesn't Get It
E. Wayne Johnson
ewj at pigs.ag
Sat Jun 6 17:11:43 CDT 2009
Obama, Like Bush, Just Doesn't Get It
By Jacob Hornberger
Published 06/06/09
President Obama is in Cairo to deliver a major address to the Muslim
world, which no doubt will explain that the U.S. government loves the
people of the Middle East and is doing all sorts of good things to them.
Alas, President Obama, like his predecessor, just doesn't get it. The
reason that people in the Middle East are angry at the United States is
because the U.S. government is over there. If the U.S. government wasn't
involved in the Middle East, that would bring an end to the U.S.
foreign-policy woes in that part of the world.
Or as Ron Paul put it so succinctly, "They attack us because we've been
over there; we've been bombing Iraq for 10 years. We've been in the
Middle East. . . I'm suggesting that we listen to the people who
attacked us and the reason they did it, and they are delighted that
we're over there."
On the eve of Obama's visit to Egypt, which one of the U.S. government's
authoritarian torture partners, Osama bin Laden released an audiotape
warning of future terrorist attacks on the United States. In that tape,
did bin Laden say that such attacks would be motivated by hatred for
America's freedom and values? No. He said that such attacks would be
motivated by the U.S. government's occupations and interventions in
Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan, which continue to kill, maim, and destroy.
Obama, like President Bush, thinks that it's all just a public-relations
problem. We just have to get the message out that U.S. officials love
Muslims. Once they get the message, the U.S. Empire will be able to
impose its will throughout the Middle East.
And that's the core of the problem facing the American people. What
business does the U.S. government have imposing its will on people who
live thousands of miles away?
Indeed, what right did the U.S. government have to oust the
democratically elected prime minister of Iran and replace him with an
unelected dictator, the Shah of Iran?
What right did the U.S. government have to support Saddam Hussein and
deliver weapons of mass destruction to him so that he could use them to
kill Iranians?
What right did the U.S. government have to intervene in the Persian Gulf
War, especially after signaling to Saddam Hussein that the United States
had no interest in the border conflict between Iraq and Kuwait?
What right did the U.S. government have to impose brutal sanctions that
took the lives of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi children?
What right did the U.S. government have to establish "no-fly zones" over
Iraq, which killed even more Iraqis?
What right did the U.S. government have to invade and occupy Iraq,
killing hundreds of thousands of more Iraqis, exiling millions more, and
destroying the country?
This is what it's all about. This is what Americans are sacrificing
their rights, their freedom, and their financial and economic well-being
for -- the "right" of the U.S. Empire to impose its will on people
thousands of miles away.
That's also what the kidnapping, the torture and sex abuse, the
renditions, the secret prison camps, the kangaroo prosecutions, and the
torture-partners are all about.
How can Americans honestly believe that it's worth it? Is empire so
important that everything that Americans hold dear must be sacrificed to
maintain it?
If Americans want perpetual war, perpetual fear, perpetual loss of
liberty, perpetual terrorism, and perpetual economic and financial
chaos, then all they have to do is continue supporting a pro-empire,
pro-interventionist foreign policy.
On the other hand, if Americans wish to restore freedom, prosperity, and
harmony to our land, the solution is there: immediately withdraw all
imperial troops from around the world, especially in the Middle East,
bring them home and discharge them, and restore a limited-government
constitutional republic to our land. And free the American people --
i.e., the private sector -- to trade and interact with the people of the
world, including those in the Middle East.
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