American
Hegemony Is Not Guaranteed
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
DIGG THIS
Exactly as
the British press predicted, last week’s congressional testimony
by Gen. David Petraeus and Green Zone administrator Ryan Crocker
set the propaganda stage for a Bush regime attack on Iran. On
April 10 Robert H. Reid of AP News reported: "The top US
commander has shifted the focus from al-Qaida to Iranian-backed
‘special groups’ as the main threat . . . The shift was articulated
by Gen. Petraeus who told Congress that ‘unchecked, the special
groups pose the greatest long-term threat to the viability of a
democratic Iraq.’"
According to
the neocon propaganda, the "special groups" (have you
ever heard of them before?) are breakaway elements of al Sadr’s
militia.
Nonsensical
on its face, the Petraeus/Crocker testimony is just another mask
in the macabre theatre of lies that the Bush regime has told in
order to justify its wars of naked aggression against Muslims.
Fact #1: Al
Sadr is not allied with Iran. He speaks with an Iraqi voice and
has his militia under orders to stand down from conflict. The Badr
militia is the Shi’ite militia that is allied with Iran. Why did
the US and its Iraqi puppet Maliki attack al Sadr’s militia and
not the Badr militia or the breakaway elements of Sadr’s militia
that allegedly now operate as gangs?
Fact #2: The
Shi’ite militias and the Sunni insurgents are armed with weapons
available from the unsecured weapon stockpiles of Saddam Hussein’s
army. If Iran were arming Iraqis, the Iraqi insurgents and militias
would have armor-piercing rocket-propelled grenades and surface-to-air
missiles. These two weapons would neutralize the US advantage by
enabling Iraqis to destroy US helicopter gunships, aircraft and
tanks. The Iraqis cannot mass their forces as they have no weapons
against US air power. To destroy US tanks, Iraqis have to guess
the roads US vehicles will travel and bury bombs constructed from
artillery shells. The inability to directly attack armor and to
defend against air attack denies offensive capability to Iraqis.
If the Iranians
desired to arm Iraqis, they obviously would provide these two weapons
that would change the course of the war.
Just as the
Bush regime lied to Americans and the UN about why Iraq was attacked,
hiding the real agenda behind false claims that Saddam Hussein had
weapons of mass destruction and connections to al Qaeda, the Bush
regime is now lying about why it needs to attack Iran. Could anyone
possibly believe that Iran is so desirous of having its beautiful
country bombed and its nuclear energy program destroyed that Iran
would invite an attack by fighting a "proxy
war" against the US in Iraq?
That the Bush
regime would tell such a blatant lie shows that the regime has no
respect for the intelligence of the American public and no respect
for the integrity of the US media.
And why should
it? The public and media have fallen for every lie the Bush regime
has told.
The moral hypocrisy
of US politicians is unrivaled. McCain says that if he were president
he would not attend the opening ceremony of the Beijing Olympics
because China has killed and injured 100 Tibetans who protested
Tibet’s occupation by China. Meanwhile the Iraqi toll of the American
occupation is one million dead and four million displaced. That
comes to 20% of the Iraqi population. At what point does the US
occupation of Iraq graduate from a war crime to genocide?
Not to be outdone
by McCain’s hypocrisy, Bush declared: "The message to the Iranians
is: we will bring you to justice if you continue to try to infiltrate,
send your agents or send surrogates to bring harm to our troops
and/or the Iraqi citizens."
Consider our
"Christian" president’s position: It is perfectly appropriate
for the US to bomb and to invade countries and to send its agents
and surrogates to harm Iraqis, Afghans, Somalians, Serbians and
whomever, but resistance to American aggression is the mark of terrorism,
and any country that aids America’s victims is at war with America.
The three-week
"cakewalk" war that would be paid for by Iraqi oil revenues
is now into its sixth year. According to Nobel economist Joseph
Stiglitz, the cost of the war to Americans is between three and
five trillion dollars. Five trillion dollars equals the entire US
personal and corporate income tax revenues for two years.
Of what benefit
is this enormous expenditure to America? The price of oil and gasoline
in US dollars has tripled, the price of gold has quadrupled, and
the dollar has declined sharply against other currencies. The national
debt has rapidly mounted. America’s reputation is in tatters.
The Bush regime’s
coming attack on Iran will widen the war dramatically and escalate
the costs.
Not content
with war with Iran, Republican presidential candidate John McCain
in a speech written for him by neocon warmonger Robert Kagan promises
to confront both Russia and China.
Three questions
present themselves:
- Will our
foreign creditors – principally China, Japan and Saudi Arabia
– finance a third monstrous Bush regime war crime?
- Will Iran
sit on its hands and wait on the American bombs to fall?
- Will Russia
and China passively wait to be confronted by the warmonger McCain?
Should a country
that is over-extended in Iraq and Afghanistan be preparing to attack
yet a third country, while threatening to interfere in the affairs
of two large nuclear powers? What sort of political leadership seeks
to initiate conflict in so many unpromising directions?
With Iran,
Russia, China, and North Korea threatened by American hegemonic
belligerence, it is not difficult to imagine a scenario that would
terminate all pretense of American power: For example, instead of
waiting to be attacked, Iran uses its Chinese and Russian anti-ship
missiles, against which the US reportedly has poor means of defense,
and sinks every ship in the American carrier strike forces that
have been foolishly massed in the Persian Gulf, simultaneously taking
out the Saudi oil fields and the Green Zone in Baghdad, the headquarters
of the US occupation. Shi’ite militias break the US supply lines
from Kuwait, and Iranian troops destroy the dispersed US forces
in Iraq before they can be concentrated to battle strength.
Simultaneously,
North Korea crosses the demilitarized zone and takes South Korea,
China seizes Taiwan and dumps a trillion dollars of US Treasury
bonds on the market. Russia goes on full nuclear alert and cuts
off all natural gas to Europe.
What would
the Bush regime do? Wet its pants? Push the button and end the world?
If
America really had dangerous enemies, surely the enemies would collude
to take advantage of a dramatically over-extended delusional regime
that, blinded by its own arrogance and hubris, issues gratuitous
threats and lives by Mao’s doctrine that power comes out of the
barrel of a gun.
There are other
less dramatic scenarios. Why does the US assume that only it can
initiate aggression, boycotts, freezes on financial assets of other
countries and bans on foreign banks from participation in the international
banking system? If the rest of the world were to tire of American
aggression or to develop a moral conscience, it would be easy to
organize a boycott of America and to ban US banks from participating
in the international banking system. Such a boycott would be especially
effective at the present time with the balance sheets of US banks
impaired by subprime derivatives and the US government dependent
on foreign loans in order to finance its day-to-day activities.
Sooner
or later it will occur to other countries that putting up with America
is a habit that they don’t need to continue.
Does America
really need more political leadership that leads in such unpromising
directions?
April
14, 2008
Paul
Craig Roberts [send
him mail] a
former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury and former associate
editor of the Wall Street Journal, has been reporting shocking cases
of prosecutorial abuse for two decades. A new edition of his book,
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions,
co-authored with Lawrence Stratton, a documented account of how
Americans lost the protection of law, has just been released by
Random House.
Copyright
© 2008 Creators Syndicate
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