Draft Needed To Bail Out the Cakewalk War
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
One
of the favorite fantasies of right-wing talk radio and Fox "News"
is that only Bush-hating liberals oppose the Iraq war and additional
US military incursions into the Middle East or wherever.
Yet,
it is the March issue of the Washington Monthly, a magazine
with a liberal Democratic audience, which makes a case for the draft
as the only way "America can remain the world’s superpower."
The
authors, Phillip Carter and Paul Glastris, take it for granted that
America’s duty is to make the rest of the world conform to America.
They regard this virtuous calling to be so great that a draft is
a small price to pay.
The
authors have no doubts that Americans exist in order to serve other
countries. American lives, limbs, and treasure are required to rectify
whatever happens elsewhere that fails to meet with our leaders’
approval.
Since
other countries are not willing "to share the burden"
by sacrificing their own citizens and resources, America must build
a large enough army to do the job on its own.
The
authors try to devise a draft proposal that "would create a
cascading series of benefits for society" by instilling "a
new ethic of service" among college-bound youth. Before America’s
youth could be admitted to college, they would first have to serve
either in the military or in tutoring disadvantaged children or
by helping old folks, or in homeland security by guarding ports.
The
authors admit that few would choose combat abroad, but say that
some would out of patriotism. They write: "Even if only 10
percent of the one-million young people who annually start at four-year
colleges and universities were to choose the military option, the
armed forces would receive 100,000 fresh recruits every year."
The
authors mean "nationalism," when they say "patriotism."
True patriots would oppose the Jacobin agenda of Global Cop and
demand that America stick to its founding principles. But the authors
cannot imagine America without "its mantle of global leadership"
and regard enslaving youth in the service of the state as a small
price to pay.
The
authors are probably correct that the neoconservatives’ war plans
cannot be undertaken with the present US force structure. The neocons
thought that in Iraq all the US had to do was to defeat a poorly
equipped army. They overlooked that insurgency is a different kind
of fighting.
To
deal with insurgencies requires vast numbers of troops and practices
that tend to produce more insurgents. When the draft army fails
to impose America’s will on the world, we will hear the case for
"useable nukes."
The
US desperately needs to escape from Iraq before America is sucked
into a wider conflict that will necessitate a draft. Once the Bush
administration has created so much instability in the Middle East
that a rising Islamic revolution is afoot, the stakes will be too
high for the US to be able to withdraw.
What
might save America from further neoconservative miscalculations
is the collapse of the US dollar. A country dependent on foreign
financing, as is the US, cannot fight wars that its foreign bankers
do not approve. I suspect America’s foreign bankers would let the
US fight itself into a deep hole before pulling the plug. It is
the best way the world has of getting rid of us.
March
28, 2005
Dr.
Roberts [send him mail]
is
John M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy and Research
Fellow at the Independent Institute.
He is a former associate editor of the Wall Street Journal,
former contributing editor for National Review, and a former
assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury. He is the co-author of
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2005 Creators Syndicate
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