http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article20095.htm

Pilger doesn't even mention Obama's Afghan surge policy and his retention of 
Gates as defence minister! 

Cheers k hanly

In The Great Tradition

Obama Is A Hawk
In his latest column for the New Statesman, John Pilger reaches back into the 
history of the Democratic Party and describes the tradition of war-making and 
expansionism that Barack Obama has now left little doubt he will honour.

By John Pilger

14/06/08 "ICH" -- -In 1941, the editor Edward Dowling wrote: "The two greatest 
obstacles to democracy in the United States are, first, the widespread delusion 
among the poor that we have a democracy, and second, the chronic terror among 
the rich, lest we get it." What has changed? The terror of the rich is greater 
than ever, and the poor have passed on their delusion to those who believe that 
when George W Bush finally steps down next January, his numerous threats to the 
rest of humanity will diminish.

The foregone nomination of Barack Obama, which, according to one breathless 
commentator, "marks a truly exciting and historic moment in US history", is a 
product of the new delusion. Actually, it just seems new. Truly exciting and 
historic moments have been fabricated around US presidential campaigns for as 
long as I can recall, generating what can only be described as bullshit on a 
grand scale. Race, gender, appearance, body language, rictal spouses and 
offspring, even bursts of tragic grandeur, are all subsumed by marketing and 
"image-making", now magnified by "virtual" technology. Thanks to an 
undemocratic electoral college system (or, in Bush's case, tampered voting 
machines) only those who both control and obey the system can win. This has 
been the case since the truly historic and exciting victory of Harry Truman, 
the liberal Democrat said to be a humble man of the people, who went on to show 
how tough he was by obliterating two cities with the
 atomic bomb.

Understanding Obama as a likely president of the United States is not possible 
without understanding the demands of an essentially unchanged system of power: 
in effect a great media game. For example, since I compared Obama with Robert 
Kennedy in these pages, he has made two important statements, the implications 
of which have not been allowed to intrude on the celebrations. The first was at 
the conference of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (Aipac), the 
Zionist lobby, which, as Ian Williams has pointed out, "will get you accused of 
anti-Semitism if you quote its own website about its power". Obama had already 
offered his genuflection, but on 4 June went further. He promised to support an 
"undivided Jerusalem" as Israel's capital. Not a single government on earth 
supports the Israeli annexation of all of Jerusalem, including the Bush regime, 
which recognises the UN resolution designating Jerusalem an international city.

His second statement, largely ignored, was made in Miami on 23 May. Speaking to 
the expatriate Cuban community – which over the years has faithfully produced 
terrorists, assassins and drug runners for US administrations – Obama promised 
to continue a 47-year crippling embargo on Cuba that has been declared illegal 
by the UN year after year.

Again, Obama went further than Bush. He said the United States had "lost Latin 
America". He described the democratically elected governments in Venezuela, 
Bolivia and Nicaragua as a "vacuum" to be filled. He raised the nonsense of 
Iranian influence in Latin America, and he endorsed Colombia's "right to strike 
terrorists who seek safe-havens across its borders". Translated, this means the 
"right" of a regime, whose president and leading politicians are linked to 
death squads, to invade its neighbours on behalf of Washington. He also 
endorsed the so-called Merida Initiative, which Amnesty International and 
others have condemned as the US bringing the "Colombian solution" to Mexico. He 
did not stop there. "We must press further south as well," he said. Not even 
Bush has said that.

It is time the wishful-thinkers grew up politically and debated the world of 
great power as it is, not as they hope it will be. Like all serious 
presidential candidates, past and present, Obama is a hawk and an expansionist. 
He comes from an unbroken Democratic tradition, as the war-making of presidents 
Truman, Kennedy, Johnson, Carter and Clinton demonstrates. Obama's difference 
may be that he feels an even greater need to show how tough he is. However much 
the colour of his skin draws out both racists and supporters, it is otherwise 
irrelevant to the great power game. The "truly exciting and historic moment in 
US history" will only occur when the game itself is challenged.

www.johnpilger.com


Blog:  http://kenthink7.blogspot.com/index.html
Blog:  http://kencan7.blogspot.com/index.html
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to