People Who Live in Glass Houses
by
Michael S. Rozeff
by Michael S. Rozeff
DIGG THIS
"What
should we do, let Iran build nuclear bombs and drop them on us?
We should go after them with a vengeance." These are the e-mailed
ideas of a man who favors attacking Iran pre-emptively. The public
utterances of our leaders are not far different.
Pre-emptive
attacks on account of distant imagined threats are aggressive attacks,
pure and simple. They are what Hitler did. They are what Israel
has done in bombing Iraq and Syria. They are what the U.S. did in
Iraq.
Our leaders
are slightly more sophisticated in their thought. They know that
the greatest risk facing Americans is not a nuclear-tipped missile
attack by Iran. It is detonation of a smuggled nuclear bomb. They
fear that Iran will disperse nuclear weapons to Islamic terrorists
who will use them against Americans.
Determined
antagonists can hunt down sources of fissile materials and nuclear
technology now, even without Iran. Every so often, the press reports
that the CIA has wind of a bomb smuggled into the U.S. Our leaders
and others have warned us again and again of the significant chance
of a nuclear attack on a major U.S. city within the next 10 years.
An American Hiroshima or much worse is no longer a remote prospect.
Why has this
happened? Apart from minor frictions, we in North America have lived
peacefully with the Islamic world since Columbus landed. There is
nothing inherent in the Islamic religion that set it on a jihad
against Americans over the past 400 years. The Islamic peoples of
the world never had a generalized hatred of us or our freedoms.
Our problems
arose in the last 5060 years. Terrorists tell us plainly that
their beefs with the U.S. are political. It is plain that American
foreign policy has triggered a terrorist counter-reaction. The U.S.
for a variety of reasons has intervened in foreign countries. Instead
of greater security, we are getting greater insecurity.
There are only
two ways to go in the Middle East: get out or get in deeper. Getting
out is wiser. That will reduce the threats. Getting out requires
that America reverse course. This course was set in 1787 but the
ship of state didn’t set its full sails until 1898 and the Spanish-American
War. Since then, the ship has become a Titanic speeding along as
it heads for its iceberg. Changing course is the only way to avoid
the collision and sinking of the ship.
The alternative
to getting out is to get in deeper, such as by attacking Iran and
Syria. Bush, Cheney, and Rice have opted for this course. The U.S.
Congress has for years taken an anti-Iran stance.
What will be
the result of getting in deeper? Under the best of circumstances,
the U.S. will be involved in occupations that will last a very long
time. The U.S. stayed for 50 years in the Philippines. It has been
in Korea and other places around the world for 5060 years
and counting. Bush has said that the war on terror will take 100
years.
These occupations
will have the goal of remaking the politics of Middle Eastern societies.
They will be very costly. The Iraq War tab is now put at 2 trillion
dollars after only 4 years. There will surely be local resistance
movements in those countries. The occupations will attract foreign
elements as in Iraq. We will see bloody campaigns that make the
Philippines look like everyday riots. In time, the U.S. may produce
reliable allies. This is under the very best of circumstances.
Under all other
circumstances, far worse outcomes will occur. We can expect at least
100 years and more of war. The U.S. will be at the mercy of foreign
nations upon whom it depends for financing. The U.S. will be at
the mercy of any nation that arms and foments local rebellions in
the occupied countries. Al-Qaeda and other similar movements will
be able to recruit a new army of anti-U.S. soldiers. Attempts to
blow up U.S. cities will intensify. The U.S. in its classic historic
form will collapse. In fact, the U.S. has already substantially
transformed itself from a classic liberal republic into an empire.
This process will intensify. The U.S. will become more brutal at
home and more brutal abroad.
And for what?
What do we get out of all of this?
Americans live
in a glass house. We should stop throwing stones immediately. We
should get out, not get in deeper.
The tragedy
is that our leaders and too many of us cannot even think in terms
of anything else. No American leader has seriously entertained any
other conception except interventionism for a century.
They
and many of us are all blind captives of a basic misconception:
idealism in international relations. With good intentions that are
leading us to hell, we are looking for the war to end all wars,
or the international institution like the UN that will insure world
peace, or the extension of democracies so as to insure peace, or
some other program such that the human race lives happily ever after.
We think that
we can do good by intervening overseas or by making war. We are
trying to achieve the Kingdom of God using the Kingdom of Satan,
and we don’t even know it.
October
31, 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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