'Our War Against Canada': Alex Cox and the Long March of American Militarism
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
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I. Echoes
From the Past and Future
The images
look familiar, even comforting in a way, steeped in the heroic black-and-white
tints of classic movies and World War II newsreels. Unshaven, wisecracking
G.I.s slogging gamely through urban combat. Tanks crawling over
broken walls, past burned-out buildings. Quick cut to the skies:
lumbering bombers releasing their payloads over sprawling cities,
while fighters dart in and out around them and black clouds of ack-ack
explode with sudden menace. A brief sweep of the enemy dead, frozen
in their final agonies across a churned-up field. Then a long line
of refugees, plodding along the edge of a highway while American
troop trucks, jeeps, and half-tracks roar past them in the opposite
direction.
But there's
something slightly wrong, something askew in the pictures. The shop
signs in that ruined city they're all in English. The road
signs in that shot of the highway are in Spanish. And those refugees
aren't white German burghers or French villagers; they're
brown,
like Mexicans, maybe. And look, the fighters swooping in to strafe
our bombers they've got maple leafs painted on their fuselages.
And there, amongst the enemy dead, a corpse still clutching his
battalion's flag: a Union Jack.
This is the
kind of cognitive dissonance evoked by a new screenplay from renowned
director Alex Cox: Our War Against Canada. The British-born
Cox long resident in the United States is planning
a three-part, 90-minute documentary on the all-too-true story of
serious American plans to wage war against Canada, Mexico and Great
Britain in the years before World War II. These detailed schemes
are filled with "echoes from the future," in Pasternak's
apt phrase: eerie prefigurements and deep-rooted patterns that have
been played out in reality, not just on paper over
and over down through the decades, and now confront us once again,
most starkly and horribly, in Iraq.
"War Plan
Red" dealt with a proposed war against Great Britain, then
considered America's chief rival for economic dominance in the world.
The 1935 plan envisioned major strikes on UK interests around the
world, with the primary focus on nearby Canada, which was to be
subjected to a full-scale invasion and occupation, with aerial bombing
of cities, massed infantry and armor attacks and the use
of poison gas. The capture of Canada's vast mineral wealth was another
goal of the attack. How serious was this plan? Serious enough to
be the object of the largest war games in U.S. history up to that
time: 50,000 troops on a detailed dry run of the cross-border assault.
"War Plan
Green" was a similar plan drawn up for an attack on Mexico.
This was to be a "regime change" operation designed to
seize oil fields and protect U.S. economic interests if an unfriendly
government sought to challenge American hegemony. The plan began
with economic sanctions to soften up the recalcitrant Mexicans,
followed by the concoction of a suitable pretext for "defensive"
military action. After a blitzkrieg assault on Mexico City, the
regime would then be handed over to local collaborators, with an
American-trained "national army" to keep the populace
in line.
There is a
general misconception that the U.S. military has always turned out
plans like these to cover almost every possible contingency, every
country; thus you're bound to run across off-the-wall scenarios,
such as an invasion of Canada, that would never be implemented.
But this is just a myth. In fact, war plans at this level of detail
are never drawn up unless there are very serious policy considerations
behind them. For example, the now-advanced plans for an airstrike
on Iran are not simply contingency exercises churned out by Pentagon
analysts, they were ordered directly by George W. Bush, as were
the prewar plans for the Iraq invasion.
As Cox notes
in the documentary's conclusion: "These war plans tell us some
disturbing things about the world's last superpower about
America's attitude toward its allies, about the motivation behind
its lofty sentiments, and its inexplicable acts of terrorism and
war." Like some grand cinematic mashup, the film will force
past and present into a strange, disturbing harmony whose resonances
will almost certainly, tragically, echo far into the future.
II. Follow
the Money
Alex Cox is
something of a mashup himself director, writer, actor, a
unique combination of artistic integrity and political insight rarely
seen in the cinematic world. His widely varied, multi-leveled work
encompassing everything from early Eighties "cult"
hits like Repo
Man and Sid
and Nancy to the more recent surrealist Three
Businessmen and his mind-bending, Liverpudlian update of
The
Revenger's Tragedy is characterized by an unflagging
sense of subversion: overturning, undermining, examining, recasting
the dominant paradigms of power and convention. Far outside the
Hollywood mainstream, based in rural Oregon with his wife and creative/business
partner, screenwriter Tod Davies, Cox's reputation draws an array
of top talent to his projects, including Derek Jacobi, Joe Strummer,
Harry Dean Stanton, Dennis Hopper, Ed Harris, Elvis Costello, Eddie
Izzard and many others.
In recent years,
Cox has also been directing documentaries on such diverse subjects
as Japanese film icon Akira Kurosawa and the Seventies soft-porn
Emmanuelle phenomenon the latter made for British
TV. It's unlikely that Our War Against Canada will be backed
by the corporatist American networks anytime soon, but Cox was keen
to talk about the project in an email exchange as he was scouting
film locations around the American West for his next feature.
Cox said the
idea for the documentary sprang from an article by Floyd Rudmin
in Counterpunch earlier this year. "I read it, and was
fascinated," said Cox. "Rudmin's conclusion that
the U.S. military's plan for the invasion of Mexico was the same
as the invasion plan for Iraq (cause chaos, set up an ineffective
puppet government, and create permanent military bases among the
oil fields) is stunning in its simplicity and its conviction.
It suggests that the Iraq war, far from being a failure or a misadventure,
is going exactly the way its authors planned. A documentary film
if anyone sees it can bring that information to a
wider audience."
The film also
drives home another telling point: that there were no similar plans
for a possible war with Nazi Germany a nation that one might
think posed a greater potential threat than America's close allies
Britain, Canada and Mexico. But there's nothing strange about this
to Cox; it simply underlines the elitist economic interests that
have remained the driving force behind U.S. foreign policy for generations.
"The war
plans were to cripple potential economic rivals and to seize the
natural resources of Mexico and Canada. Germany was viewed entirely
as an ally by the U.S. military, and thus, one assumes, by the American
oligarchy: the Rockefellers, the Mellons, the Duponts not
to mention a very minor U.S. oligarch named Prescott Bush, whose
firms had extensive dealings with the Nazis, even after America
had entered the war. The moral here is that a nation as powerful
as the United States didn't and doesn't need allies.
It has vassal states, instead. Step forward my own dear Britain!"
And the American
media have been eagerly complicit in masking the true nature of
this corporatist agenda, Cox noted. "The Washington Post ran
an article based on Rudmin's research into the war plans at the
National Archives. As Rudmin pointed out, there was a code name
for Germany: Black. But the Post reporter outright lied, pretending
there was also a 'War Plan Black.' There wasn't. There were too
many American corporations IBM, Ford, DuPont, Standard Oil
doing business with the Nazis to permit such possibilities.
So apparently it's the Washington Post's job to reverse the truth,
via scurrilous, lazy fudges."
The plans didn't
stop at aggressive war and economic terrorism, however. They also
envisioned internment camps for British and Canadian nationals in
the States, along with homegrown "pacifists" and other
troublemakers. Nor did they draw the line at conventional weaponry;
as noted, WMD attacks of poison gas were part of the scenario. Here
too, Cox sees disturbing continuities.
"I suppose
all countries were guilty of this," he noted of the WMD plans.
"Both sides used it in the First World War. Churchill viewed
poison gas as an excellent option, as I recall. Mussolini used it
in North Africa. Today most civilized nations eschew gas, germ warfare,
and landmines (though not the U.S. on the latter) but there
are no international prohibitions against napalm, white phosphorus,
depleted uranium, or cluster bombs: equally insidious weapons, even
crueler than the phosgene and mustard gas they've replaced."
As for the
planned concentration camps which were actualized less than
a decade later, in the internment of Japanese-Americans "there
were such plans in the Eighties too, at the time of the Nicaraguan
and Salvadoran civil wars Rex-84 and other mass-roundups
planned by Ollie North," said Cox. "But all that stuff
gets forgotten very quickly just as Clinton and Gore's support
of the Contra terrorists, or Jimmy Carter's creation of the Islamic
extremist army in Afghanistan vanishes quickly from the 'official'
record."
Indeed, such
inconvenient truths reveal another salient fact about America's
corporatist militarism, from "War Plan Red" to "Operation
Iraqi Freedom," said Cox: its bipartisan nature. "That's
why the American electorate gets a choice of two oil-related warmongers
like Gore and Bush," he said. "It's easy and lazy to pretend
that Kerry or Clinton would have done things differently. But a
million Iraqi children died on Clinton's watch a price that
Madeline Albright said was perfectly acceptable."
Confirmation
of this joint responsibility for decades of murderous mischief comes
from an unexpected source: Robert Gates, the new Secretary of Defense
for Bush Junior (and ex-CIA chief for Bush Senior). "Robert
Gates wrote a book called From the Shadows in which he said that,
having served in six administrations, Democrat and Republican, he
saw no difference between the parties' foreign policies," Cox
said. "Carter created the Afghan terror network and the Contras.
Bush and Reagan just enhanced them. And FDR signed off on the invasion
of Mexico and Canada. Gates is part of that small intelligence-related
crew which has dominated US politics since the JFK assassination:
people who keep showing up in different guises. John Dimitri Negroponte
is another. Rumsfeld another. Gates knows his stuff."
"We
as sentient citizens or individuals need to get past the
idea that a choice of two almost-identical parties will fix things,"
Cox went on. "Both parties in the US like the Tories,
New Labour, and the Liberal Democrats in England represent
the needs and desires of the oligarchy and the big corporations.
There is no difference between any of them. As long as they control
oil in the Middle East, water resources in Bolivia, and uranium
on the Navajo reservation, they're happy. The only solution is another
party. And that, for me based on what I've seen in England
and Scotland is the Greens."
At the same
time, Cox is fully aware of the fickleness of political factions
even the most "progressive" ones. One of his most
striking films, "Walker," was a darkly comic look at a
19th century American intervention in Nicaragua. He shot the film
in Nicaragua itself, with the cooperation of the Sandinista government,
in 1987, at the height of the Contra terrorist war. The Sandinistas
returned to power this month with Daniel Ortega's presidential victory.
But Cox sees little to celebrate in this political sequel.
"I can't
rejoice at all in Ortega's victory, despite the energy and time
I put into supporting the Sandinistas including giving them
millions of Universal Picture's dollars. Ortega has made too many
compromises with the oligarchy and the Catholic Church. He has discredited
the party and the movement. The weekend before his election victory,
a young woman died in a Managua hospital because a doctor was afraid
to give her a therapeutic abortion. What does anyone have to celebrate
in Nicaragua?"
Still, Cox
keeps moving, seeking out new ways to "inoculate the world
with disillusionment," as Henry Miller once described the role
of the artist. "Our War Against Canada" is part of that
effort. "Paul Lewis, who was Dennis Hopper's producer, said
that films should be punishment inflicted on people looking to be
entertained. I subscribe to that philosophy," Cox said, then
added: "Unfortunately, we were thinking about an improving
punishment, rather than the current crop of Hollywood films."
This piece
was written for Truthout.org.
November
28, 2006
Chris
Floyd [send him mail]
is the author of Empire
Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime.
Copyright
© 2006 Chris Floyd
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