---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Marx Laboratory <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Apr 19, 2011 at 1:28 PM
Subject: Obstruct Militarization and the Usurpation of Democracy
To: Marx Laboratory <[email protected]>



 *Obstruct Militarization and the Usurpation of Democracy*
*by Adrienne Pine*

*Address to the "Confronting US Militarism: Educational & Strategy
Conference," Latin American Solidarity Coalition<http://www.lasolidarity.org/>,
Washington, DC, 8 April 2011*

On behalf of the American University Anthropology department, I am deeply
honored to welcome you all to AU, and to the Latin American Solidarity
Coalition's "Conference to Build a Stronger Movement to End US Militarism
and the Militarization of Latin America."  It's exciting personally to be
involved in such an important event -- after all, demilitarization of the
Americas is now more important than ever -- and I sincerely hope that we can
continue this relationship and work to increase AU's involvement with the
event in the years to come, not only because it would save us money on the
facility fees, but more importantly, because there is a deep thirst among AU
students to become more engaged in this kind of solidarity work and because,
I believe, the AU community can contribute to it in important ways.  This
conference is a perfect fit with all of the best aspects of this university,
and those aspects -- the dedication to community involvement, to social
action and public intellectualism -- always need reinforcing.

It is now more important than ever to study militarization, not through a
false academic neutrality, but rather with the express purpose of ending it.
 Randolph Bourne emphasized this in his 1917 essay "The War and the
Intellectuals"<http://www.randolphbourne.columbia.edu/war_and_the_intellectuals.pdf>
:

[T]he intellectuals whom the crisis has crystallized into an acceptance of
war have put themselves into a terrifying strategic position.  It is only on
the craft, in the stream, they say, that one has any chance of controlling
the current forces for liberal purposes.  If we obstruct, we surrender all
power for influence.  If we responsibly approve, we then retain our power
for guiding.  We will be listened to as responsible thinkers, while those
who obstructed the coming of war have committed intellectual suicide and
shall be cast into outer darkness.  Criticism by the ruling powers will only
be accepted from those intellectuals who are in sympathy with the general
tendency of the war.  Well, it is true that they may guide, but if their
stream leads to disaster and the frustration of national life, is their
guiding any more than a preference whether they shall go over the right-hand
or the left-hand side of the precipice?  Meanwhile, however, there is
comfort on board.  Be with us, they call, or be negligible, irrelevant.
 Dissenters are already excommunicated.  Irreconcilable radicals, wringing
their hands among the debris, become the most despicable and impotent of
men.  There seems no choice for the intellectual but to join the mass of
acceptance.  But again the terrible dilemma arises -- either support what is
going on, in which case you count for nothing because you are swallowed in
the mass and great incalculable forces bear you on; or remain aloof,
passively resistant, in which case you count for nothing because you are
outside the machinery of reality.

To follow Sartre, a true intellectual is not one who makes apologies for the
war machine -- he refers to such academics as technicians of practical
knowledge.  In today's parlance we might call them tools of empire.  A true
intellectual, according to Sartre, is a *radicalized companion of the masses
*.  We should be all using the academy not because of its inherent, removed
or abstract value, but rather as a strategic tool that gives us symbolic
legitimacy that can enable us to be more effective in this radicalized
companionship.  Randolph Bourne rightly noted in the above quote that *
obstruction* often disqualifies academics as legitimate critics.  And yet it
is our duty as intellectuals -- and I consider all of us here in this room
intellectuals in the best Gramscian sense of the term -- to accompany
our *compaƱeras
y compaƱeros* throughout the hemisphere by obstructing -- obstructing the
State Department, obstructing the U.S. Military Southern Command (SOUTHCOM),
obstructing the "civil society" groups funded and orchestrated by USAID and
other shadowy governmental and non-governmental actors with the aim of
usurping democracy throughout the Americas, and obstructing all the other
actors who work constantly and diligently to prevent us all from having the
choice to live without the war machine.

Earlier I mentioned that this conference represents the best of American
University.  I am proud to work at this university, and especially in a
department whose mission centers around a deep commitment to social justice.
 That said, American University receives ample funding from the Department
of Defense; I have colleagues who have served on the board of the School of
the Americas <http://www.soaw.org/>; we run a Masters program for the
Inter-American Defense College; we offered Paul Bremer a visiting
professorship after he was done destroying Iraq and sponsored Roberto Flores
Bermudez as a "diplomat-in-residence" in Fall 2009 while he was illegally
acting as an unregistered foreign agent on behalf of the Micheletti
dictatorship.  As I speak, a reception for "experts" on the extractive
industries in Latin America, industries that bear much of the responsibility
for the militarization of the region, is winding up at the Washington
College of Law.  And none of this is new; American University's "Special
Operations Research Office" was the home of the infamous Project Camelot of
the early 1960s, a U.S.-army-funded initiative to use social science to
develop strategies for counterinsurgency and psychological warfare in Latin
American countries with the aim of preventing another Cuban-style revolution
among *campesinos*, indigenous groups, and others struggling for access to
land and democracy.  In 1964, *obstruction* by U.S. and Chilean academics
acting in solidarity against this program successfully destroyed it.

Given the importance of the academy in legitimating and strengthening the
mission of SOUTHCOM to increasingly militarize the hemisphere, which we can
see in sharp focus at places like Florida International University, where
SOUTHCOM has set up its own university center to create "strategic culture"
reports for every country in Latin America and the Caribbean, it is vital
that we join together in strategy and action: activists, intellectuals,
intellectual activists, activist intellectuals, to OBSTRUCT the
militarization of the hemisphere and of our daily lives, and where
necessary, to obstruct the academy.  I look forward to continuing this
struggle with all of you.
 ------------------------------
 *Adrienne Pine* is a militant medical anthropologist who has worked in
Honduras, Mexico, Korea, the United States, and Egypt.   The text above was
first published 16 April 2011 in  her blog at <quotha.net>
 ------------------------------




-- 


You cannot build anything on the foundations of caste. You cannot build up a
nation, you cannot build up a morality. Anything that you will build on the
foundations of caste will crack and will never be a whole.
-AMBEDKAR



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