The Looming Political War Over Afghanistan
by Glenn Greenwald
Recently
by Glenn Greenwald:
GE's
Silencing of Olbermann and MSNBC's Sleazy Use of Richard Wolffe
There was a
time, not all that long ago, when the U.S. pretended that it viewed
war only as a "last resort," something to be used only when absolutely
necessary to defend the country against imminent threats.
In reality, at least since the
creation of the National Security State in the wake of World
War II, war for the U.S. has been everything but a "last resort." Constant
war has been the normal state of affairs. In the 64 years
since the end of WWII, we have started
and fought far more wars and invaded
and bombed more countries than any other nation in the world
not even counting the numerous wars fought by our clients
and proxies. Those are just facts. History
will have no choice but to view the U.S. particularly in
its late imperial stages as a war-fighting state.
But at least
we paid lip service to (even while often violating) the notion
that wars should be waged only when absolutely imperative to defending
the nation against imminent threats. We largely don't even
bother to do that any more. Consider today's
defense of the war in Afghanistan from the war-loving Washington Post
Editorial Page. Here's their argument for why we should
continue to wage war there:
Yet if Mr.
Obama provides adequate military and civilian resources, there's
a reasonable chance the counterinsurgency approach will yield
something better than stalemate, as it did in Iraq.
Does that sound
like a stirring appeal to urgent national security interests? Why
should we continue to kill both Afghan civilians and our own troops
and pour billions of dollars into that country indefinitely? Because
"there's a reasonable chance the counterinsurgency approach will
yield something better than stalemate." One can almost
hear the yawning as the Post Editors call for more war.
We don't need to pretend any more that war, bombing and occupation
of other countries is indispensable to protecting ourselves; as
long as "there's a reasonable chance it will yield something better
than stalemate," it should continue into its tenth, eleventh, twelfth
year and beyond.
Of course,
the reason the Post editors and their war-loving comrades
can so blithely advocate more war is because it doesn't affect them
in any way. They're not the ones whose homes are being air-bombed
and whose limbs are being blown off. That's nothing new; here's
George Orwell in Homage
to Catalonia, describing (without knowing) Fred Hiatt
in 1938:
The people
who write that kind of stuff never fight; possibly they believe
that to write it is a substitute for fighting. It is the same
in all wars; the soldiers do the fighting, the journalists do
the shouting, and no true patriot ever gets near a front-line
trench, except on the briefest of propaganda-tours.
Sometimes
it is a comfort to me to think that the aeroplane is altering
the conditions of war. Perhaps when the next great war comes we
may see that sight unprecedented in all history, a jingo with
a bullet-hole in him.
This point
was made equally well by Chuck Hagel today, in
a Post Op-Ed, comparing his actual first-hand experiences
in Vietnam to the ongoing waste in Afghanistan:
Too often
in Washington we tend to see foreign policy as an abstraction,
with little understanding of what we are committing our country
to: the complications and consequences of endeavors. It is easy
to get into war, not so easy to get out. Vietnam lasted more than
10 years; soon, we will slip into our ninth year in Afghanistan.
. . .
The U.S.
response, engaging in two wars, was a 20th-century reaction to
21st-century realities. These wars have cost more than 5,100 American
lives; more than 35,000 have been wounded; a trillion dollars
has been spent, with billions more departing our Treasury each
month. We forgot all the lessons of Vietnam and the preceding
history.
No country
today has the power to impose its will and values on other nations.
. . . Bogging down large armies in historically complex, dangerous
areas ends in disaster.
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