Watching Propaganda Become Truth
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
In
1961, I returned from the Soviet Union with a collection of propaganda
posters. I used the posters to illustrate to students how government
in a closed society can substitute propaganda for fact.
The
most dramatic poster in my collection depicts a fascist who has
climbed the upraised arm of the Statue of Liberty. A fiery torch
in the fascist's hand overlays the stone torch in Liberty's hand,
sending forth the flames of war. Bombs are falling on dark-skinned,
white-robed Arab women and children.
This
was Soviet propaganda's portrait of the attempt in 1956 by Britain,
France and Israel to reclaim from Egypt the Suez Canal, an effort
that would have succeeded but for President Eisenhower's intervention.
The Soviet Union was not about to credit the United States for stopping
the invasion.
Looking
at the colorful poster, one is struck that a half century later
events have turned propaganda into truth. American bombs have been
falling on Arabs, killing thousands.
The
entire world now knows that the reason Bush and Blair gave for invading
Iraq was false. The invasion was a strategic blunder. It has created
new enemies for America throughout the Muslim world, and perhaps
beyond.
In
The
Pity of War, Niall Ferguson concludes his history of the
First World War: "It was nothing less than the greatest error in
modern history." Is Bush's invasion of Iraq the second greatest
error in modern history? Has Bush set into motion the unification
of hundreds of millions of Muslims under religious leaders?
Michael
Polanyi wrote that World War I destroyed Europe. He did not mean
merely the destruction of buildings and an entire generation. He
meant the war destroyed European culture. After the senseless slaughter,
the values rang hollow. Commitments lost their meaning. From the
ashes rose Lenin, Stalin and Hitler. With them came alien doctrines
that almost extinguished European civilization in the 20th century.
A
newly released Heritage Foundation report on the dangers of a dirty
bomb brings two questions to mind: (1) why have we so carelessly
created enemies motivated to release radioactivity in our cities,
and (2) will we see our culture destroyed as we become a police
state in a vain attempt to forestall terrorist acts?
Recreating
the ancient state of Israel after thousands of years was an audacious
act requiring godlike diplomacy. But force took diplomacy's place.
As force has intensified, objections to Israel have mounted. The
United States has foolishly spent $200 billion creating new enemies
for itself and Israel by invading Iraq. Imagine what this enormous
sum could have achieved by ensuring the prosperity of an Israeli-Palestinian
settlement. Peace is always cheaper than war.
As
we are belatedly learning in Iraq, there are no easy military solutions
to terrorism. If there were, Israelis would have achieved security
many years ago. Terrorism requires that grievances be acknowledged
and addressed. This requires humility. Jacobin arrogance merely
stirs the pot. If we keep stirring the pot, we are going to become
the least safe people on earth, living in fear not only of terrorists,
but also of our own police state.
Bush
and Blair diminish themselves daily with their continuing insistence
on Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction. It is as if they
are reincarnations of Lord Curzon, British viceroy of India.
A
century ago, Curzon convinced himself that Tibet was filled with
Russians and Russian weapons, and had become a threat to British
India. Curzon sent off an invasion force that managed to slaughter
several hundred Tibetans but failed to find any Russians or weapons.
By humiliating the hitherto impenetrable mysterious country, Curzon
opened the door for the Chinese. In the same way, Bush's invasion
of Iraq has flung open the door for terrorism.
February
10, 2004
Dr. Roberts [send him mail]
is John M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy, Senior
Research Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University,
and Research Fellow at the Independent Institute. He is a former
associate editor of the Wall
Street Journal and a former assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury.
He is the co-author of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2004 Creators Syndicate
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