America's imperial war

The liberals who backed the Afghan bombing are now lined up with rampant US
militarism

George Monbiot

Tuesday February 12, 2002
The Guardian [UK]

Never was victory so bitter. Those liberals who supported the war in
Afghanistan, and so confidently declared that their values had triumphed in
November, must now be feeling a little exposed. Precisely who has lost, and
what the extent of their loss may be, is yet to be determined, but there can
now be little doubt that the dangerous and illiberal people who control the
US military machine have won. The bombing of Afghanistan is already starting
to look like the first shot in a new imperial war.

In 30 years' time we may be able to tell whether or not the people of
Afghanistan have benefited from the fighting there. The murderous Taliban
have been overthrown. Women, in Kabul at any rate, have been allowed to show
their faces in public, and readmitted into professional life. Some $3bn has
so far been pledged for aid and reconstruction. But the only predictable
feature of Afghan politics is its unpredictability. In the absence of an
effective peacekeeping force, the tensions between the clan leaders could
burst into open warfare when the fighting season resumes in the spring.
Iran, Russia and the US are beginning, subtly, to tussle over the nation's
future, with potentially disastrous consequences for its people.

In the meantime, 7m remain at risk of starvation. Some regions have been
made safer for aid workers; others have become more dangerous, as looting
and banditry fill the vacuum left by the Taliban's collapse. Already, some
refugees are looking back with nostalgia to the comparative order and
stability of life under that brutal government. For the Afghan people, the
only certain and irreversible outcome of the war so far is that some
thousands of civilians have been killed.

But other interests in Afghanistan are doing rather nicely. On January 29,
the IMF's assistant director for monetary and exchange affairs suggested
that the country should abandon its currency and adopt the dollar instead.
This would, he explained, be a "temporary" measure, though, he conceded,
"when an economy dollarises, it takes a little while to undollarise". The
day before, the administrator of the US Agency for International Development
revealed that part of its aid package to Afghan farmers would take the form
of GM seed.

Both Hamid Karzai, the interim president, and Zalmay Khalilzad, the US
special envoy, were formerly employed as consultants to Unocal, the US oil
company which spent much of the 1990s seeking to build a pipeline through
Afghanistan. Unocal appears to have dropped the scheme, but smaller
companies (such as Chase Energy and Caspian Energy Consulting) are now
lobbying for its revival. In October the president of Turkmenistan wrote to
the United Nations, pressing for the pipeline's construction.

More importantly, the temporary US bases in Afghanistan, Pakistan and the
Caspian states appear to be putting down roots. US military "tent cities"
have now been established in 13 places in the states bordering Afghanistan.
New airports are being built and garrisons expanded. In December, the US
assistant secretary of state Elizabeth Jones promised that "when the Afghan
conflict is over we will not leave central Asia. We have long-term plans and
interests in this region."

This is beginning to look rather like the "new imperium" which commentators
such as Charles Krauthammer have been urging on the US government. Already
there are signs that confrontation with the "axis of evil" is coming to
involve more than just containing terrorism. Writing in the Korea Times last
month, Henry Kissinger insisted: "The issue is not whether Iraq was involved
in the terrorist attack on the United States, though no doubt there was some
intelligence contact between Iraqi intelligence and one of the chief
plotters. The challenge of Iraq is essentially geopolitical."

An asymmetric world war of the kind George Bush and his defence secretary,
Donald Rumsfeld, have proposed provides the justification, long sought by
the defence companies and their sponsored representatives in Washington, for
a massive increase in arms spending. Eisenhower warned us to "guard against
the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the
military industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of
misplaced power exists and will persist." But we have disregarded his
warning, and forgotten how dangerous the people seeking vast state contracts
can be.

In October I wrote that "the anthrax scare looks suspiciously convenient.
Just as the hawks in Washington were losing the public argument about
extending the war to other countries, journalists start receiving envelopes
full of bacteria, which might as well have been labelled 'a gift from Iraq'.
This could indeed be the work of terrorists, who may have their own reasons
for widening the conflict, but there are plenty of other ruthless operators
who would benefit from a shift in public opinion." The suggestion was widely
ridiculed.

This week's New Scientist reports that the FBI has yet to catch the
perpetrators of the anthrax attacks. "Investigators are virtually certain of
one thing, though: it was an inside job. The anthrax attacker is an American
scientist - and worse, one from within the US's own biodefence
establishment... If he wished to scale up US military action against Iraq,
he almost succeeded - many in Washington tried hard to see Saddam Hussein's
hand in the attacks. If he wished merely to make the US pour billions into
biodefence, he did succeed."

Now Bush has secured a further $48bn for the defence contractors who helped
him into office, and those who contested the first phase of his war are
still reviled, by people such as the British foreign office minister Peter
Hain, as "rejectionists" and "isolationists". In truth, it is those who
supported the war who have endorsed US isolationism.
Hain insists that Britain will use its influence to restrain the "hawks on
Capitol Hill", but I fear that Henry Kissinger comes closer to the truth
when he suggests that "Britain will not easily abandon the pivotal role
based on its special relationship with the US that it has earned for itself
in the evolution of the crisis... A determined American policy thus has more
latitude than is generally assumed." Jack Straw's newfound enthusiasm for
the US missile defence programme (which necessitated, of course, the
unilateral abandon ment of the anti-ballistic missile treaty) suggests that
Dr Kissinger is rather better versed in British politics than Mr Hain.

Over the past few weeks, the men who run the military-industrial complex
have shoved aside the government of the Philippines, dispatched 16 Black
Hawk helicopters to Colombia, arrested the Cuban investigators seeking to
foil a bomb plot in Miami, alarmed Russia and China by scrambling for
central Asia, begun developing a new tactical nuclear weapon, and all but
declared war on three nations. Yet still the armchair warriors who supported
their bombing of Afghanistan cannot understand that these people now present
a threat not just to terrorism but to the world.
www.monbiot.com

-- Jim Devine

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