New Statesman

Fascism today is not just skinheads and an Austrian political thug. There is
also a geopolitical fascism, led by the US

John Pilger by John Pilger    5th February 2001

Washington 

Former President Bill Clinton, having bombed and blockaded civilians on
several continents, and doubled America's prison population while
accelerating the number of mostly non-white executions by limiting federal
appeals, finally signed off by pardoning a coterie of suspects and crooks,
including a convicted Wall Street embezzler who reportedly is to give $135m
to Clinton's presidential library.

In Britain, liberals at Tony Blair's court wrote obsequious farewells to
Clinton, whom they loved. They mock Dubbya. Manufacturing difference between
the two is as important as the Westminster correspondents' arduous task of
running a cigarette paper between Blair and Hague, and Straw and Widdecombe,
suggesting democratic choice where there is none.

Thus, the dumping of Peter Mandelson was hot political news. In truth, it
was merely a useful exercise for the government to pretend it is opposed to
lying. Real political news was a week earlier. This was the despatch by
Blair of two of his senior people to Washington, including Jonathan Powell,
his chief of staff and a leading member of the semi-masonic British American
Project. "The Prime Minister is pitching hard to be the first European
leader to travel to Washington," reported the Guardian. "Mr Blair is
determined to prove that he can be as close to the Republican George Bush as
he was to the Democrat Clinton."

The reason that increasing numbers of people have stopped voting in Britain
is the same as in the United States. There is no one who speaks for them.
The two parties speak for big business and the supremacy of American-led
economic power. The rest is Monica Lewinsky, Peter Mandelson and other lies.
A current lie spun by the Secretary of State for Defence, Geoffrey Hoon, is
that the government has not yet decided to support Washington's "missile
defence system", the Son of Star Wars insanity, of which the Fylingdales
early warning base in north Yorkshire is a vital component. "It's too soon,"
says Hoon, when there is not the slightest doubt that the government has
made clear to the Americans, though not to the British people, that they
can, as always, rely on their "closest ally".

Whitehall may not like the old Reagan nonsense about a "missile shield for
freedom", but servility to America is a divinity, and Foreign Office
"strategy" is to promote Britain as a "bridge builder between Europe and the
US". What politicians must not do is provoke a wide debate, alerting the
public. Last week, Peter Hain was demoted to junior energy minister not
because he was at odds with "policy", but because his aggrandising, public
verbosity on Africa and in defence of infanticide in Iraq was becoming an
embarrassment. 

Support for Son of Star Wars is treacherous of true British interests, which
lie in a peaceful and secure world, not one manipulated by economic conquest
and violence. Politicians genuinely speaking up for these interests, and the
human rights of the British people, would condemn any collaboration with a
missile programme whose dangers cannot be overstated. It will trigger
another nuclear arms race. It will disturb and distort development
priorities in much of the world. For Washington, it will serve to "contain"
the growing economic power of China by forcing the Chinese to compete and,
like the Soviets before them, to spend themselves into submission. The
Pentagon's obsession is the control of space. Satellite technology was used
extensively in both the Gulf war and the Nato attack on Yugoslavia. The
rationale of a threat from "rogue states" such as Libya and North Korea is
drivel. 

These are surreal times. War plans are policy and there is no enemy.
Piratical corporations are afforded the rights owed only to humans, while
inhuman concepts go unrecognised. Umberto Eco tells us why fascism is still
latent, warning us that it is merely a diffuse form of totalitarianism. He
defines its characteristics: delusion of advanced knowledge, disregard of
rational and humane principles, state machismo, racism, a consuming sense of
insecurity, televised populism and the use of newspeak with its unstated
limit on ideas. 

Modern fascism is not merely skinheads and an Austrian political thug. There
has long been a geopolitical fascism overseen by the United States, assisted
by Britain. Its record is truly blood-drenched: Vietnam, Indonesia, Chile,
Nicaragua, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Iraq, Palestine, Turkey and
Colombia. Remembering them is as important as remembering the Holocaust.
Globalisation, the advance of rapacious capital, is another phase, with a
new militarism known as "humanitarian intervention". Within a space of 18
months, the Blair government used armed force three times outside United
Nations control. Since the Gulf war, British governments have spent £911m
bombing Iraq - enough to buy back the railways twice over. Within hours of
Bush's inauguration, American and British pilots reportedly killed six
civilians in Muthanna province, southern Iraq.

Once again, people are putting the pieces together. Not only is a resistance
to western economic warfare growing rapidly, the peace movement has
regenerated, and the true humanitarian intervention of those seeking to
expose and disarm nuclear weapons is gaining recognition. On 18 January in
Manchester Crown Court, a jury found two Trident Ploughshares activists not
guilty on a charge of conspiracy to commit criminal damage. Their attempts
to disarm the nuclear submarine HMS Vengeance were justified on the grounds
that the government was in breach of international law. Bush and Blair have
not yet won.  




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