http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article30917.htm

March 26, 2012 "The News" -- So this is how the cookie crumbles. From
burning books to butchering babies, it seems everything is fair game as
the victors near their tether. Four years after Barack Hussein Obama
offered a “new way forward”; the gulf between America and the world’s
Muslims is at its widest.

The horrific details of the Panjwai massacre, with first person accounts
recounting how the brave US soldiers coolly went about killing women and
sleeping children, have poured fuel over a land already ablaze. Obama has
condemned the massacre but chose to describe it as “an isolated incident.”

Is it really now? Why do I feel we have been here before? From bombing
wedding parties to striking funeral processions and even cemeteries,
there’s been a long trail of such ‘isolated incidents.’

Interestingly, the latest in Yankee shenanigans coincides with a
groundbreaking book that seeks to make sense of Uncle Sam’s worldview.
Andrew Alexander’s America and the Imperialism of Ignorance is a damning
critique of the US foreign policy over the past six decades and offers a
cogent analysis of the military-industrial complex mindset that commands
and dictates the actions of the most powerful nation on the planet.

Armed with facts and arguing from a historical perspective, the Daily Mail
columnist elucidates how America and the West spent trillions of dollars
in taxpayer’s money for decades in fighting – or pretending to fight – an
enemy whose threat proportions, intentions and capabilities were
ludicrously exaggerated to justify the absurdly inflated defence budgets
and militarisation of the US and Europe.

During the Cold War, Europe and virtually the whole world was divided into
two perpetually bickering camps with everyone being forced to take sides.
Germany was split between the two camps with Berlin, divided by that
obscene wall, becoming the theatre of the proxy war and intrigues and
machinations of the two superpowers.

The proxy war was only part of the story. For nearly half a century the
world teetered on the edge of a nuclear catastrophe as the US-Nato and
Soviet nuclear arsenals targeted each other, promising assured destruction
of life on the planet in a matter of minutes. Scores of millions of
soldiers and gigantic war machines on either side remained in perpetual
battle mode, ever ready to annihilate each other.

Alexander argues that all that could have been avoided and was totally
avoidable as the Russians never posed a serious threat to the West. For
all his savagery towards his own people, sending tens of thousands of them
to their death in Siberia, Stalin knew his limits and had no intentions of
stepping out of Eastern Europe to take on the West.

If it weren’t for America’s “imperial ignorance,” suggests Alexander,
“coupled with its arrogance and immense naivety,” the world would have
been a safer place and would never have witnessed the dangerous
uncertainty that it did during the Cold War years, constantly living under
the shadow of a nuclear cloud.

President Truman, the small town politician who found himself in the big
shoes of the visionary Roosevelt on his death, ignored the close
partnership of the US, Soviet Union and Britain during World War II, as
they took on Hitler’s Germany, to conjure up a Soviet Armageddon and the
fantasy of red tide flooding the world. (By the way, it was Truman who
defying his advisers and global public opinion rushed to recognise the new
state of Israel on the Palestinian land.)

So from the end of World War II to the disintegration of the Soviet Union
and Eastern bloc, it was America’s awesome power coupled with its paranoia
that made the world a much more dangerous place than it ought to have
been, posits Alexander.

You would think this would have changed with the end of the Cold War and
the elimination of the threat that the “evil empire” allegedly posed. But
two decades after the Cold War ended, the US and Russia are yet to stand
down and eliminate the deadly payload at their disposal, even a quarter of
which is enough to destroy the planet many times over.

What is more, trillions of dollars in taxpayer’s money continue to be
poured into the bottomless pit that is America’s all-consuming war
machine, which now lords over the whole planet with military bases and
presence in almost all parts of the world. America’s war hasn’t stopped
for a moment since it stepped out of its borders to join the Great War.

First, it was Communism. Now the enemy is Islam, or Islamist terrorism, as
the euphemism goes. With the demise of Soviet Union and the worldview that
it represented, the military industrial complex and the gargantuan
corporate war industry needed a new enemy and where none existed they had
to invent one to justify their existence. Which Samuel Huntington promptly
did for them, fashioning Islam as the new enemy of the West. And the 9/11
provided the ready excuse.

So as part of this constant tilting at the windmills, Washington had to
invent Saddam Hussein’s weapons of mass destruction. The tyrant who had to
crawl into a hole to save himself when they came for him was painted as
the greatest threat to the civilised world. And it’s no coincidence that
soon after the ‘shock and awe’ of Operation Iraqi Freedom, the target
shifted next door with the talk of Tehran’s mythical nukes targeting
Europe and America’s allies in the Middle East.

Predictably, the first major deal that the free and democratic Iraq has
clinched is the purchase of 36 F16 fighter jets from its benefactor at a
cost of $6 billion dollars even as the war weary people are still yearning
for luxuries like clean water, electricity, schools, hospitals and, above
all, security. There will be more such business opportunities tomorrow if
the much sanctioned Iran goes the Iraq way after Washington and Israel are
done playing good cop-bad cop. Meanwhile, with the constant talk of Iran’s
military ambitions, nervous neighbours are goaded into buying more and
more military junk from you know who.

Alexander explains it all as the “imperial ignorance.” But is it
ignorance? It’s more like imperial hubris combined with single-minded,
old-fashioned pursuit of commerce. Uncle Sam, or the corporate military
machine that drives him, knows full well what is going on. In the end, it
all comes down to business. And there’s nothing like a good war in distant
lands to drive your business and fill your coffers, consequences for the
rest of the world be damned.

Most reasonable people, including those in the West, know that it’s not
“Islamist terrorism” but unfair Western policies and wars that gave birth
to groups like Al-Qaeda and are the real threat and impediment to world
peace.

“The American folk hero is the swaggering gunman. Let loose in the wider
world, he is a threat to peace,” says the veteran British foreign affairs
commentator, urging Britain and Europe to intervene. “It is our duty to
warn him off this course, not trail along in his wake.”

You would think old Europe would do that after all that it lived through
in the last century. However, instead of talking some sense into their
Atlantic cousin, they joined in the fun. Clearly, the two disastrous wars
weren’t enough to teach the continent the right lessons.

The writer is a commentator on Middle East and South Asian affairs. Email:
aijaz.syed@hotmail. com





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