Save
Darfur?
by
Joshua Frank
by Joshua Frank
If President
Bush had any foresight at all, he'd intervene in the Darfur mayhem
just to slice a wedge in the antiwar movement. President Nixon attempted
to do such a thing in the early 1970s when his administration helped
establish the Environmental Protection Agency.
Nixon thought
the antiwar movement at the time was largely made of up radical
environmentalists, so he figured why not divide the movement by
appeasing a few of the enviros' wishes. Fortunately for those who
wanted U.S. armed forces out of Vietnam, Nixon's ploy didn't work.
Today, the Save Darfur campaign is the cause du jour for the liberal
wing of the antiwar movement. And unlike Nixon and the EPA in the
'70s, if Bush gets involved in Darfur he may well derail the mounting
opposition to the war in Iraq.
George Clooney
and a handful of other Hollywood big shots, along with over 164
humanitarian and religious groups, are now calling on the United
States to hustle troops over to stop the ethnic conflict. Bin Laden,
in his latest radio hit (if it was really him), claimed the Darfur
region of the Sudan, which is largely Muslim, would be the next
stop for the U.S. imperial armies. Let's hope he's wrong, even if
Clooney and Amnesty International desire it. The United States,
if troops were deployed, would most likely only escalate the deaths,
not end them. There is absolutely no reason to believe that shipping
young Americans off to the Horn of Africa to die would result in
anything tangible or worthwhile. Sadly, the bloody conflict would
likely continue regardless.
Some little-known
facts about the Darfur situation: Both sides in the conflict are
black, and both sides are Muslim. So, despite what the major news
media may say, this isn't an Arab-on-black or Muslim-on-Christian
nightmare. And perhaps worst of all, there isn't a good side to
be on. Both have committed horrible atrocities, and both want to
slaughter the other. Not to mention that entering the region militarily
would only feed right into bin Laden's rhetoric – much like we did
when we shocked and awed Baghdad. So I think it's safe to say that
hatred of the U.S. would only increase among closet jihadists in
the Middle East and elsewhere if we invaded Darfur. That doesn't
make us, or them, any safer.
You may recall
that President Clinton did his part to end the violence in the Sudan
when he fired a few missiles at a pharmaceutical plant in 1998.
It didn't do much good; it led to countless deaths and probably
prompted al-Qaeda to attack the United States quicker. There is
no reason to believe that an intervention by Bush would result in
anything different. And never mind that the United States is all
that great at "humanitarian interventions."
1992
saw the invasion of Somali, which by most accounts was an utter
failure. Thousands of innocent Somalians died while others were
brutally raped by UN peacekeeping forces. And for all those who
claim that the late 90s Kosovo war a just conflict, don’t forget
that thousands of ordinary people were killed because of our intervention.
Oh yeah, NATO is still occupying the place.
There are other
reasons we ought not act on all of our humanitarian impulses, however
well intentioned they may seem. Unlike Darfur, we've got wars going
on in Iraq and Afghanistan that actually involve us. In fact, we
are responsible for them. Want to help bring peace to the Middle
East? Why not pressure the U.S. government to halt all funding to
Israel? That'd be a heck of a start.
There
are atrocities for which the U.S. government is culpable, but Darfur
isn't one of them. So don't jump on the Save Darfur bandwagon –
it may only lead to more devastation.
May
11, 2006
Joshua
Frank [send him mail]
is the author of Left
Out!: How Liberals Helped Reelect George W. Bush, just published
by Common Courage Press. You can order a copy at a discount through
Josh’s blog.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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