Bush Redefines His Global War to Encompass a New Range of Enemies
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
DIGG THIS
Wise man Robert
Parry, who has been a
light shining in the darkness for decades now, identifies an
important and entirely sinister change in Bush's description
of the "Long War" that he has initiated around the world.
This semantic shift portends an even greater level of bloodshed,
state terrorism and tyranny than we have yet seen, as it indicates
another stage in the inexorable expansion of the "enemies"
that the "forces of civilization" must crush by violence.
As Parry notes,
this declension into madness has moved from very specific targets
(terrorist groups of global reach") to the more generalized
and already impossibly vague "global war on terrorism"
to the new formulation: a war against "radicals and extremists"
wherever they might be, however you decide, arbitrarily,
to define them, and whether or not they engage in violence against
the United States.
And make no
mistake: the American Establishment as a whole has bought into the
"war on terror" package in one form or another, i.e.,
viewing the murderous actions of a few bands of criminals not as
a law enforcement problem to be tackled within the traditional systems
of law and representative politics but as some wholly new, ludicrously
overblown existential crisis of civilization that can only be "solved"
by indiscriminate military force abroad and the gutting of civil
liberties at home. In the Establishment, you will find almost no
voice of any substance, reach or power that contests the latter
view, although a few might quibble on how best to prosecute this
endless war. Thus, the benchmarks that Bush is setting today, the
way he is defining the "Long War" and establishing the
patterns of executive power to deal with it will have a very large
and continuing impact even when he is out of office. Why? Because
as Parry shows here, Bush's expanding definitions of this endless
war are being accepted by the Establishment even now, when
he is at one of the lowest ebbs of popular support that any president
has ever faced.
So you should
read Parry's whole piece. It's important not only as a description
of what is happening today, but also as a guideline for where we
will be heading in the future.
Bush's
'Global War on Radicals' (consortiumnews.com)
Excerpts:
The United States will never win the war on terror,
in part, because George W. Bush keeps applying elastic definitions
to the enemy, most recently expanding the conflict into a war
against Muslim radicals and extremists.
With almost
no notice in Official Washington, Bush has inserted this new standard
for judging whos an enemy as he lays the groundwork for
a wider conflict in the Middle East and a potentially endless
world war against many of the planets one billion adherents
to Islam.
Indeed, it
could be argued that the war on terror has now morphed
into the war on radicals, allowing Bush to add the
likes of Iraqi Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr and the leaders of
Syria and Iran to his lengthening international enemies list...
Now, Bush
is broadening the wars parameters yet again, depicting the
goal of his Middle East policy as defeating radicals and
extremists, categories that are even more elastic than the
word terrorist.
At a joint
news conference with British Prime Minister Tony Blair on Dec.
7, Bush said, I believe were in an ideological struggle
between forces that are reasonable and want to live in peace,
and radicals and extremists. Bush has repeated this formulation
in other recent public appearances, including at his news conference
of Dec. 20 when he portrayed the fight against radicals
and extremists as a long-term test of American manhood....
In other
words, the war against terrorist groups of global reach,
which became the global war on terrorism, now has
morphed into what might be called the global war on radicals
and extremists, a dramatic escalation of the wars
ambitions with nary a comment from the U.S. news media.
So, under
Bushs new war framework, the enemy doesnt necessarily
have to commit or plot acts of international terrorism or even
local acts of terrorism. It only matters that Bush judges the
person to be a radical or an extremist.
While the word terrorism is open to abuse under
the old adage one mans terrorist is another mans
freedom fighter the definition of radical
or extremist is even looser. It all depends on your
point of view.
December
29, 2006
Chris
Floyd [send him mail]
is the author of Empire
Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime.
Copyright
© 2006 Chris Floyd
Chris
Floyd Archives
|