What, Exactly, Do They Mean By 'Homeland Security?'
by
Justine Nicholas
by Justine Nicholas
DIGG THIS
During the
orgy of propaganda and disaster pornography leading to the 9/11
memorial, a local news anchor asked New York City Mayor Michael
Bloomberg whether he felt his city was "doing enough to improve
homeland security."
The Mayor’s
response: "Only history will tell."
With all due
respect to hizzoner, I don’t think we’ll have to wait for future
generations to provide the answers.
He has probably
done everything he knows how to do, and is allowed to do, under
current systems of government. The one and only action that might
be "enough" to increase our safety is one that neither
he nor any of his deputies or agencies can take.
It’s something
that only Congress has the power to vote into being: Withdrawal
of US troops from Afghanistan, Iraq, and in the rest of the Middle
East.
That’s just
for starters. What would need to happen next is something that the
Pentagon, not Mayor Bloomberg’s office, could do: Close the military
bases on the Arabian Peninsula, which, together, represent the largest
foreign military presence in any nation’s history, save for West
Germany’s during the Cold War. Then the top brass should dismantle
its mammoth armed encampments in the rest of the Middle East, and
in other parts of the world.
Also: This
nation would have to stop subsidizing the State of Israel.
Contrary to
what some neo-conservatives think, we would not be disarming ourselves
in taking such actions. Instead, we would be taking away fuel for
the anger of men who have nothing to lose but their belief that
they will have their choice of 72 virgins in the afterlife. Their
animus toward this country is not, as Bush and his cronies claim,
a hatred of our way of life.
Instead, it
is based on our imperialism. This is the reason why they have carried
out attacks in the US, Britain and Spain. (At least Spain brought
home its troops after the attack in Madrid. One out of three ain’t
bad, I guess.) If their hatred were really a form of envy of our
lifestyle, as claimed by those who let National Review contributors
do their thinking for them, jihadists would have brought their fire
to such secular, hedonistic, if socialistic, bastions of affluence
as the Netherlands, Denmark and Norway. And the Swiss and Swedes
would no longer find comfort under the umbrellas of their neutrality.
Now I can hear
someone asking what I like to think of as the "Pearl Harbor
Question." The US did not have the sort of military presence
in Japan or its neighboring states that it now has in the Arab and
Muslim worlds. Yet, the Japanese forces still attacked Hawaii, a
US colony.
However, Japan
was an imperial power that had, by the time of the Pearl Harbor
blitz, conquered much of the Pacific region.
Like their
counterparts in other imperialistic countries, Japanese leaders
were not motivated by an ideology based on putative enemies or "Satans,"
as Al Queda, Hezbollah and other so-called terrorist groups are.
Official Japan was interested, instead, in real estate and the accompanying
natural resources. (Indeed, it may be argued that if Japan, Britain,
the US or any other empire was/is guided by ideology, it consisted
mainly of the belief that it was the destiny or duty of their nation
to subjugate other lands and peoples.) To take over large masses
of land – as opposed to killing large numbers of people in small
areas of land – the Japanese, like their historical predecessors,
carried out large-scale military operations: the sorts of operations
that can’t be thwarted, or carried out, by counterterrorism units.
In fact, it
can be argued that there are only two ways to deal with an impending
imperialist invasion – assuming, of course, that a country’s leader
has foreknowledge of such an incursion. One is through a pre-emptive
strike. The other is simply to pull troops and installations out
of harm’s way before the attack. Pre-emptive strikes are not feasible
in the face of a terroristic threat which, by definition, comes
without warning. Such an action would surely trigger a counter-attack
of some sort.
In contrast
with World War II Japan – and England, France and Spain before it
– Al Queda, Hezbollah and other similar groups are not interested
in taking over nations or territories, as Eric Margolis and others
have pointed out. Even when groups like the Palestine Liberation
Organization talk of "driving Israel into the sea," it’s
not the land they want. (Indeed, that tiny country contains no petroleum
and few other natural resources. Most of the land is useless without
massive irrigation.) Instead – at least from their point of view
– they are looking to free themselves from Western imperialism and
to practice their vision of religious Islamic life. They are not
looking to expand their territorial dominion; rather, they want
to eradicate any actual or perceived obstacles to their goals.
What are they
to think when their self-appointed "liberators" storm
into their lands, take away their means of living and abuse or kill
their wives, mothers, daughters, sons and others they love? How
should we expect them to react when their self-anointed reformers
impose "democracy," and other forms of Western-style "progress"
on them?
Continuing
this country’s military presence in the Middle East will only further
stoke radical Muslim fundamentalists’ rage. And, remember: The Middle
East is the part of the world that originated the notion that "the
enemy of my enemy is my friend?" Should we be surprised, then,
if Hezbollah and other groups look to North Korea – or Russia or
China, should American relations with them deteriorate – for support?
While
no policy or procedure can guarantee that no one will attack the
US, withdrawing our military presence from the Middle East and the
rest of the world will do much more to improve the security of ordinary
citizens than any so-called homeland security program could. Perhaps
Mayor Bloomberg could alert his fellow Republican George W. Bush
to this fact.
September
13, 2006
Justine
Nicholas [send her mail]
teaches English at the City University of New York.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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