Escalating the Sin
by
Michael S. Rozeff
by Michael S. Rozeff
DIGG THIS
The leaders
of the U.S. sinned in invading Iraq, and they sinned in unleashing
a devastating war in that earthly hell. They bore false witness
to the American people, they coveted Iraqi oil, and they murdered.
Americans at large must and will bear the consequences of these
sins for applauding the mayhem, funding the war, and retaining the
American perpetual motion war making political system. Americans
and their leaders both stand indicted and convicted.
Opportunities
to repent abound. The last election provided an encouraging sign,
but only superficially. Key Democrats have signaled for months and
years that they support the war. Where it counts, in the pocketbook,
they have voted to fund the war. Now, they will not lift a financial
finger to de-fund it. Instead, they will pass toothless resolutions
and play for petty political advantage.
What more could
Democrats ask for than to hang the war completely around Republican
necks? If escalation succeeds, which it won’t, they cannot be accused
of not supporting the U.S. at a critical wartime moment. If escalation
fails, as it will, they can accelerate their attacks on Republican
foreign folly. Foreign policy has supposedly been a Republican strong
point over many decades. What better opportunity for Democrats to
seize some high political ground?
President Bush
is unilaterally escalating the Iraq folly. He now escalates the
sin. He has the power to do so, a power provided constitutionally
by the framers and reaffirmed continually throughout American history.
So far, Americans have not seen fit to rein in the imperial war
making power of their presidency. The sin of our failures to rein
in the military-industrial axis of evil lie upon us all. It has
widened to become a foundation-lobbying axis of evil. We cannot
hope to mitigate the consequences except by changing our evil ways.
The handwriting
on the wall grows clearer. America will follow Iraq’s descent into
a living hell unless it reverses course not only in Iraq but in
its grasping, fearful, bullying, and paranoid heart. Only just reactions
to the crimes of terrorists can rescue America from its sins. Only
intelligent, measured, and just exercises of force can hope to change
the war making atmosphere. Only just behavior of the U.S. in all
its foreign affairs can hope to defuse the threats of terrorism.
Is it too late?
It is never too late to repent. But right now, America is doing
the opposite. America has declared war on terrorism, a grisly blank
check for endless escalations of sin throughout the world. It must
undeclare this war in order even to begin to reverse course. Otherwise,
the U.S. will continue, as in Somalia, to destabilize the politics
of more and more foreign nations, inflicting and unleashing more
and more unwarranted death and destruction. The consequences for
America will be equally devastating.
Our modern
Neroes do not fiddle while Rome burns. They ignite the fires in
every suburb surrounding the city. These fires were set to smolder
over a hundred years ago by U.S. leaders, especially signified by
the Spanish-American War. Our leaders set more fires in many lands
as the decades marched by. Sometimes the fires broke out into vast
conflagrations that were doused but never entirely extinguished.
There they smolder, ready to be fanned into flames, in far-flung
lands like Lebanon, Egypt, Thailand, Pakistan, Korea, Israel, the
Philippines, and Iran. Bin Laden has been clever enough to pull
America’s chain, causing our leaders once again to release pure
oxygen onto the slow-burning fires and ignite them into fiery blazes
in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Somalia.
We are not
the only arsonists in this world, but we are the ones responsible
for what we do. The fruitless election is past. Escalation in Iraq
is what we are choosing, and it is destined for utter failure. Even
if Baghdad is stabilized, which it won’t be, the civil war in Iraq
will simply move onto other grounds in space and time, extending
to other regions and extending temporally.
The U.S. involvement
with Middle Eastern oil began a long time ago. A key event was Franklin
Roosevelt’s meeting with Saudi Arabia’s King Abdulaziz on February
14, 1945. One thing has led to another, as they often do when commitments
and agreements are struck.
American entanglement
and ambitions in the Middle East have now flowered beyond anything
that FDR or Truman could have imagined as they laid the foundation
for American woes. American leaders now dream of controlling the
Middle East and its oil. They dream of controlling Iran. They dream
of establishing stable democracies in countries that have their
own timetables and cultures of political expression.
Although it
is possible for Americans to interact with all the peoples of the
earth in just and peaceful ways, we choose not to when it comes
to our national state. This is how it must be with states. Our leaders
have chosen unjust and violent ways. Such ways escalate the reactions
against America and Americans. They recruit jihadists against America.
They destabilize the lands we intervene in.
The
ways our leaders are choosing are sinful ways, and sinful ways bring
retribution. We will experience that retribution. The more we escalate
the sin, the more retribution we will experience.
January
12, 2007
Michael
S. Rozeff [send him mail]
is a retired Professor of Finance living in East Amherst, New York.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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