I Question Your Patriotism
by
Laurence
M. Vance
Recently
by Laurence M. Vance: The
Twelve Days of Christmas (Military Version)
I have been
called a lot of things since I began writing about ten years ago
on the folly of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the evils of the
U.S. military, and the belligerence of U.S. foreign policy.
Many of the
things I have been called I can’t repeat because they are so vile
and filthy. However, the negative e-mails have tapered off quite
a bit over the years since these wars have turned out to be such
debacles.
One charge
that has been consistently leveled against me is that I am unpatriotic
because I don’t "support the troops" as they invade and
occupy other countries and mete out death and destruction to "insurgents"
and "terrorists." But who is really being unpatriotic?
I think it is long past time that we question the patriotism of
those who do "support the troops" in their foreign wars,
occupations, interventions, and escapades.
Let’s take
the case of Syria.
For months
now we have heard how the United States must "do something"
and intervene in Syria to end the brutal regime of Bashar al-Assad
and stop the violence that has led to the deaths of 40,000 people
since the outbreak of an anti-regime revolt last year. The familiar
cry that dictator x might use chemical weapons on his own
people is being resurrected to garner support for U.S. intervention.
The U.S.
Senate, by a vote of 92-6, recently voted to "require a
report on military activities to deny or significantly degrade the
use of air power against civilian and opposition groups in Syria."
This amendment (S.AMDT.3262) to the National Defense Authorization
Act requires that
not later
than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the
Secretary of Defense shall, in consultation with the Chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, submit to the congressional defense
committees a report identifying the limited military activities
that could deny or significantly degrade the ability of President
Bashar al-Assad of Syria, and forces loyal to him, to use air
power against civilians and opposition groups in Syria.
Its purpose
is to "advance the goals of President Obama of stopping the
killing of civilians in Syria and creating conditions for a transition
to a democratic, pluralistic political system in Syria."
The U.S. military
is sending Patriot
air defense missiles and 400 U.S. troops to operate them at
two batteries in "undisclosed locations" in Turkey as
part of a NATO force meant to protect Turkish territory from potential
Syrian missile attack.
The aircraft
carrier the USS
Eisenhower is reportedly off the coast of Syria along with the
USS Iwo Jima Amphibious Ready Group.
There are also
reports that more than 3,000 U.S. military personnel have secretly
returned to Iraq via Kuwait in response to the civil war in
Syria that has spilled over into northern Iraq. The Pentagon is
denying this report, which means it is probably true.
Never mind
that the "evil dictatorship" of Assad was once supported
by the United States.
Never mind
that the CIA "renditioned" people to Syria to be tortured.
Never mind
that the United States just concluded a disastrous war in Iraq and
is still conducting another disastrous one in Afghanistan.
Never mind
that some Syrian rebel groups have ties to al Qaeda.
Never mind
that some Syrian rebels are foreign jihad mercenaries.
Never mind
that some Syrian rebels have openly murdered Syrian Christians for
not supporting the overthrow of the secular Syrian government.
Never mind
that some Syrian rebels have committed acts of terrorism that have
killed children.
Never mind
that some Syrian rebel groups have tested their own chemical weapons.
Never mind
that the United States and NATO developed their own chemical weapons
years ago.
Never mind
that George Washington – 230 years ago – warned against making "entangling
alliances" such as NATO.
But even if
all of these things are not true, even if President Assad is another
Hitler, even if the rebels have the purest of motives, and even
if the Assad regime is targeting civilians, executing POWs, raping
women, killing children, torturing political opponents, using chemical
weapons, instituting pogroms, engaged in ethnic cleansing, and committing
genocide – the U. S. government has no authority whatsoever to intervene
in any way. No U.S. soldier, sailor, airman, Marine, military advisor,
CIA operative, contractor, or State Department employee has any
business going anywhere near Syria. It is not the purpose of the
U.S. government to be the policeman, security guard, mediator, or
babysitter of the world.
What happens
in Syria is the concern of Syrians and perhaps Syria’s immediate
neighbors. Nothing that happens in Syria should be the concern of
the United States.
Americans individually
or collectively may despise the Assad regime, they may pray for
the rebels, they may long for Assad’s overthrow, they may sell weapons
to the rebels, they may donate money to the rebels, they may go
help the rebels fight against the Syrian government, they may undertake
humanitarian relief efforts, they may marry Syrian widows, they
may adopt Syrian orphans, they may employ Syrian refuges – they
may even take the side of Assad against the rebels. But the U.S.
government should do absolutely nothing.
How patriotic
am I? Nothing that happens in Syria is worth one drop of blood from
one American soldier or one dollar from one American taxpayer. Nothing
and not one. Not a paper cut. Not a scrape. And not one red cent.
I am so patriotic that I don’t support U.S. troops getting within
a thousand miles of Syria.
Since the U.S.
military is nothing more than the personal
attack force of the president, there is a chance that the president
will order U.S. forces to intervene in Syria. If this happens, even
most who oppose intervention will suddenly and vocally "support
the troops" should Syria be their next military adventure.
But
because the use of American troops should be limited to the defense
of the United States, there should be no respect or support for
any U. S. soldier who goes to fight in Syria. He didn’t have to
join the president’s personal attack force. He can refuse to go
and suffer the consequences or he can refuse to fight like soldiers
did during the Christmas
Truce of 1914.
To those Americans
who think it will be "worth it" to "support the troops"
as the United States expends blood and treasure in Syria: I question
your patriotism.
January
1, 2013
Laurence
M. Vance [send him mail]
writes from central Florida. He is the author of Christianity
and War and Other Essays Against the Warfare State, The
Revolution that Wasn't, Rethinking
the Good War, and The
Quatercentenary of the King James Bible. His latest book
is The
War on Drugs Is a War on Freedom. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2013 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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