Ignorance and Empire
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
Those of us still in command of our faculties wish we could tell our
stunned European allies, as well as the entire Middle East, that not all
of us have lost our minds, not all of us favor nuclear belligerence, and
not all of us support a war against Iraq over the issue of phantom
weapons.
Americans obviously have every right to be angry at the savages who
perpetrated the attacks of last September. But the willingness to attack
countries like Iraq that had nothing to do with it, the refusal to ask
seriously what the motivation for these attacks may have been, the lack
of any real outcry against the White House�s nuclear bluster all
these things demand explanation.
The fact is, most Americans are completely ignorant of what their
country has been up to in the world over the years. What they know is
themselves: they�re friendly, they have cookouts, they play badminton,
they march against breast cancer. Naturally, then, they conclude that in
attacking America it�s decency the terrorists aim to destroy.
They generally know little to nothing about Israel and the
Palestinians, about the extent of the United States� global reach, or
about the effects of the embargo on Iraq 500,000 dead children
("worth it," according to Madeleine Albright). While the
foreign press, even in friendly countries, has urged Americans to
consider how their government�s aggressive foreign policy has made them
less secure and more vulnerable to attack, Americans by and large are
scarcely even aware that such a point of view exists.
It�d be nice if Europeans, Middle Easterners, and even terrorists
themselves were aware of this: the American population knows next to
nothing about the whys of this conflict. All they know is they�ve been
attacked, and they think it happened because they live in a democracy,
which the terrorists hate. It can hardly come as a surprise that the
combination of these factors has produced the extremely ill-conceived and
profoundly misguided belligerence we are seeing.
Obviously, I hold no brief for terrorists, so I�d prefer not to
receive any emails from people making a concerted effort to misunderstand
what I am saying. The point is, they play badminton in Switzerland, too,
but few in Switzerland are worried about a "dirty" nuclear
device being detonated in one of their cities.
With a population so docile as this, the federal government has been
able to get away with launching a completely open-ended "war on
terror," not to mention the usual half-truths (to put it delicately)
that always accompany war.
Thus in a story that arose briefly and then disappeared forever,
shortly after the humanitarian drops began the Pentagon actually accused
the Taliban of planning to poison the food packages American planes were
dropping. "We are confident in the information that we have that
they may intend to poison one or more types of food sources and blame it
on the Americans," Rear Admiral John Stufflebeem said in late
October. This whopper was a little much even for the Pentagon to
maintain: we are to believe that Taliban officials considered it a good
and sensible risk to run out into the open, confiscate food packages,
poison them, and then scatter them again? So they could then claim
Americans were taking civilian lives? Couldn�t they just point to the
bombing?
As a matter of fact, according to the Washington Post�s Bob
Woodward, when Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld put together a slide
show as part of a briefing on the President�s options, one segment of the
presentation was called "Thinking Outside the Box: Poison the Food
Supply." National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice and aide Frank
Miller objected, however, and that portion was never shown. But the whole
incident really ought to leave us speechless.
We make quite a production out of telling other countries to settle
their disputes peacefully, but for years bombing (after a suitably
impossible ultimatum whose terms grow harsher the more the target country
seems willing to comply) has apparently been the first option for the
U.S. We then profess to be baffled when other countries call us
arrogant.
It never seems to occur to anyone apart from the unreliable weakling
Colin Powell that this level of belligerence can only have the effect of
increasing terrorism and accelerating the development of "weapons of
mass destruction." Had the American principle been that the U.S.
would lay waste to any country harboring terrorists, that would itself
have been problematic given both our woefully inept intelligence services
and the inevitable civilian casualties, destruction, resentment, and new
waves of would-be martyrs that such campaigns leave in their wake. But it
would at least have been an understandable principle that other countries
could take into account. The proposed war on Iraq, on the other hand,
targeting a country whose terrorist connections have not been established
at all, sends the signal that no one is safe. What choice do we have,
weaker countries will ask themselves, other than arming ourselves with
every possible retaliatory force, given that no proof of wrongdoing need
be supplied prior to U.S.-U.K. invasions?
That was the strategy Lenin used in the Red Terror if he�d
attacked only people who were obviously guilty of opposing the Bolshevik
regime, this would hardly have had the desired effect. The point of the
Terror was precisely to attack some innocent victims in order to terrify
the rest into absolute submission. Is this a model we want to
follow?
The problem with that approach, apart from the moral nihilism it
presupposes, is that an aroused population eventually tore down the
statues of Lenin.
Some of us want to know why we can�t simply withdraw from the Middle
East and live like a normal country again, rather than the global empire
we have allowed ourselves to become. We are told that such actions would
constitute appeasement of the terrorists. But what would we say about
someone with his head inside a hornets� nest who, when told that the most
sensible solution to his constant stinging sensation was simply to take
his head out, replied that such a retreat would amount to a surrender to
the hornets?
The need for an informed American people has perhaps never been
greater, but it�s rarely been more difficult to get alternative
perspectives before the public.
In the spirit of Gary North and Burt Blumert, then, I close by reminding readers of the need to support LewRockwell.com, an island of peace and sanity.
Edward ><+>
If you have fifty problems and one of them is government, you have only one problem.
http://www.global-connector.com/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/reality_pump/
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
