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Dear Richard,
             Thanks for the insightful comments on
this - thoroughly - distressing topic.
The most perplexing, most damnable aspect of this
whole affair has been the enthusiastic support of,
when not aggressive agitation for, NATO's wars in the
Balkans by many ostensibly anti-establishment and even
on the left.
I'll add a few additional sources after your comments.


> It's the old "we haven't/didn't do enough" line, to
> pysche up establishment liberals/ left to support
> the
> policy and campaign for it.
> 
> What they are saying is "the West's governments and
> establishment politicians were always doing deals
> with
> Milosevic", so liberals/lefties will demand MORE
> action and feel good in themselves at attacking the
> establishment for their misdeeeds, thereby
> transforming  the anti-Jugoslav campaign into a
> trendie liberal/left ie one.
> If anyone doubts this I have had bitter arguements
> with such people for the last DECADE, I repeat
> DECADE,
> all convinced "we must intervene more" and the
> Jugoslavs are monsters/fiends/invading themselves
> etc.
> 
> Also the same technique was the basis of
> American/British propaganda to get America into WW1


As you've perceptively picked up on the prototype of
this betrayal being that of World War I, the single
most important historical writing I know of on this
analogy is that of the American radical Randolph
Bourne written 1n 1917 - "War And The Intellectuals."
I'm appending it below, as I went back to it again and
again during the war against Yugoslavia in 1999 and,
if a few person/place names were changed, it seemed
perfectly contemporary in its analysis and
accusations.
As supplements, see also (though it's not a perfect
piece) Philip Knightley's "Propaganda Wars" from The
Independent of June 27, 1999:
http://www.transnational.org/features/propagandawars.html
for an insightful study of the origin of "atrocity
stories" during the Boer War and World War I used to
build up war fever.
See also Part Two of Diana Johnstone's "Yugoslavia:
Through A Glass Darkly" at Emperor's New Clothes
(http://www.emperors-clothes.com - Search) for an
investigation of the role of public relations firms,
reporters and so-called NGOs, and the role of all in
both subverting local community control and in beating
the war drums in the Balkans.

        


http://www.bigeye.com/thewar.htm
Reprinted from The Seven Arts, II (June 1917), pp.
133-146.

The War and the Intellectuals
Randolph Bourne



To those of us who still retain an irreconcilable
animus against war, it has been a bitter experience to
see the unanimity with which the American
intellectuals have thrown their support to the use of
war-technique in the crisis in which America found
herself. Socialists, college professors, publicists,
new-republicans, practitioners of literature, have
vied with each other in confirming with their
intellectual faith the collapse of neutrality and the
riveting of the war-mind on a hundred million more of
the world's people. And the intellectuals are not
content with confirming our belligerent gesture. They
are now complacently asserting that it was they who
effectively willed it, against the hesitation and dim
perceptions of the American democratic masses. A war
made deliberately by the intellectuals! A calm moral
verdict, arrived at after a penetrating study of
inexorable facts! Sluggish masses, too remote from the
world-conflict to be stirred, too lacking in intellect
to perceive their danger! An alert intellectual class,
saving the people in spite of themselves, biding their
time with Fabian strategy until the nation could be
moved into war without serious resistance! An
intellectual class, gently guiding a nation through
sheer force of ideas into what the other nations
entered only through predatory craft or popular
hysteria or militarist madness! A war free from any
taint of self-seeking, a war that will secure the
triumph of democracy and internationalize the world!
This is the picture which the more self-conscious
intellectuals have formed of themselves, and which
they are slowly impressing upon a population which is
being led no man knows whither by an indubitably
intellectualized President. And they are right, in
that the war certainly did not spring from hysterias,
of the American people, however acquiescent the masses
prove to be, and however clearly the intellectuals
prove their putative intuition.

Those intellectuals who have felt themselves totally
out of sympathy with this drag toward war will seek
some explanation for this joyful leadership. They will
want to understand this willingness of the American
intellect to open the sluices and flood us with the
sewage of the war spirit. We cannot forget the
virtuous horror and stupefaction which filled our
college professors when they read the famous manifesto
the their ninety-three German colleagues in defense of
their war.1 To the American academic mind of 1914
defense of war was inconceivable. From Bernhardi2 it
recoiled as from blasphemy, little dreaming that two
years later would find it creating its own cleanly
reasons for imposing military service on the country
and for talking of the rough rude currents of health
and regeneration that war would send through the
American body politic. They would have thought anyone
mad who talked of shipping American men by the
hundreds of thousands - conscripts - to die on the
fields of France. Such a spiritual change seems
catastrophic when we shoot our minds back to those
days when neutrality was a proud thing. But the
intellectual progress has been so gradual that the
country retains little sense of the irony. The war
sentiment, begun so gradually but so perseveringly by
the preparedness advocates who come from the ranks of
big business, caught hold of one after another of the
intellectual groups. With the aid of Roosevelt, the
murmurs became a monotonous chant, and finally a
chorus so mighty that to be out of it was at first to
be disreputable and finally almost obscene. And slowly
a strident rant was worked up against Germany which
compared very creditably with the German fulminations
against the greedy power of England. The nerve of the
war-feeling centered, of course, in the richer and
older clases of the Atlantic seaboard, and was keenest
where there were French or English business and
particularly social connections. The sentiment then
spread over the country as a class-phenomenon,
touching everywhere those upper-class elements in each
section who indentified themselves with this Eastern
ruling group. It must never be forgotten that in every
community it was the least liberal and least
democratic elements among whom the preparedness and
later the war sentiment was found. The farmers were
apathetic, the small business men and workingmen are
still apathetic towards the war. The election was a
vote of confidence of these latter classes in a
President who would keep the faith of neutrality.3 The
intellectuals, in other words, have identified
themselves with the least democratic forces in
American life. They have assumed the leadership for
war of those very classes whom the American democracy
has been immemorially fighting. Only in a world where
irony was dead could an intellectual class enter war
at the head of such illiberal cohorts in the avowed
cause of world-liberalism and world-democracy. No one
is left to point out the undemocratic nature of this
war-liberalism. In a time of faith, skepticism is the
most intolerable of all insults.

Our intellectual class might have been occupied,
during the last two years of war, in studying and
clarifying the ideals and aspirations of the American
democracy, in discovering a true Americanism which
would not have been merely nebulous but might have
federated the different ethnic groups and traditions.
They might have spent the time in endeavoring to clear
the public mind of the cant of war, to get rid of old
mystical notions that clog our thinking. We might have
used the time for a great wave of education, for
setting our house in spiritual order. We could at
least have set the problem before ourselves. If our
intellectuals were going to lead the administration,
they might conceivably have tried to find some way of
securing peace by making neutrality effective. They
might have turned their intellectual energy not to the
problem of jockeying the nation into war, but to the
problem of using our vast neutral power to attain
democratic ends for the rest of the world and
ourselves without the use of the malevolent technique
of war. They might have failed. The point is that they
scarcely tried. The time was spent not in
clarification and education, but in mulling over
nebulous ideals of democracy and liberalism and
civilization which had never meant anything fruitful
to those ruling classes who now so glibly used them,
and in giving free rein to the elementary instinct of
self-defense. The whole era has been spiritually
wasted. The outstanding feature has been not its
Americanism but its intense colonialism. The offence
of our intellectuals was not so much that they were
colonial - for what could we expect of a nation
composed of so many national elements? - but that it
was so one-sidedly and partisanly colonial. The
official, reputable expression of the intellectual
class has been that of the English colonial. Centain
portions of it have been even more loyalist than the
King, more British even than Australia. Other colonial
attitudes have been vulgar. The colonialism of the
other American stocks was denied a hearing from the
start. America might have been made a meeting-ground
for the different national attitudes. An intellectual
class, cultural colonists of the different European
nations, might have threshed out the issues here as
they could not be threshed out in Europe. Instead of
this, the English colonials in university and press
took command at the start, and we became an
intellectual Hungary where thought was subject to an
effective process of Magyarization. The reputable
opinion of the American intellectuals became more and
more either what could be read pleasantly in London,
or what was written in an earnest effort to put
Englishmen straight on their war-aims and
war-technique. This Magyarization of thought produced
as a counter-reaction a peculiarly offensive and inept
German apologetic, and the two partisans divided the
field between them. The great masses, the other ethnic
groups, were inarticulate. American public opinion was
almost as little prepared for war in 1917 as it was in
1914.

The sterile results of such an intellectual policy are
inevitable. During the war the American intellectual
class has produced almost nothing in the way of
original and illuminating interpretation. Veblen's
"Imperial Germany;" Patten's "Culture and War," and
addresses; Dewey's "German Philosophy and Politics;" a
chapter or two in Weyl's "American Foreign Policies;"
- is there much else of creative value in the
intellectual repercussion of the war? It is true that
the shock of war put the American intellectual to an
unusual strain. He had to sit idle and think as
spectator not as actor. There was no government to
which he could docily and loyally tender his mind as
did the Oxford professors to justify England in her
own eyes. The American's training was such as to make
the fact of war almost incredible. Both in his reading
of history and in his lack of economic perspective he
was badly prepared for it. He had to explain to
himself something which was too colossal for the
modern mind, which outran any language or terms which
we had to interpret it in. He had to explain his
sympathies to the breaking-point, while pulling the
past and present into some sort of interpretative
order. The intellectuals in the fighting countries had
only to rationalize and justify what their country was
already doing. Their task was easy. A neutral,
however, had really to search out the truth. Perhaps
perspective was too much to ask of any mind. Certainly
the older colonials among our college professors let
their prejudices at once dictate their thought. They
have been comfortable ever since. The war has taught
them nothing and will teach them nothing. And they
have had the satisfaction, under the rigor of events,
of seeing prejudice submerge the intellects of their
younger colleagues. And they have lived to see almost
their entire class, pacifists and democrats too, join
them as apologists for the "gigantic irrelevance" of
war.

We had had to watch, therefore, in this country the
same process which so shocked us abroad - the
coalescence of the intellectual classes in support of
the military programme. In this country, indeed, the
socialist intellectuals did not even have the grace of
their German brothers and wait for the declaration of
war before they broke for cover. And when they
declared for war they showed how thin was the
intellectual veneer of their socialism. For they
called us in terms that might have emanated from any
bourgeois journal to defend democracy and
civilization, just as if it was not exactly against
those very bourgeois democracies and capitalist
civilizations that socialists had been fighting for
decades. But so subtle is the spiritual chemistry of
the "inside" that all this intellectual cohesion -
herd-instinct - which seemed abroad so hysterical and
so servile, comes to us here in highly rational terms.
We go to war to save the world from subjugation! But
the German intellectuals went to war to save their
culture from barbarization! And the French to save
international honor! And Russia, most altruistic and
self-sacrificing of all, to save a small State from
destruction! Whence is our miraculous intuition of our
moral spotlessness? Whence our confidence that history
will not unravel huge economic and imperialist forces
upon which our rationalizations float like bubbles?
The Jew often marvels that his race alone should have
been chosen as the true people of the cosmic God. Are
not our intellectuals equally fatuous when they tell
us that our war of all wars is stainless and
thrillingly achieving for good?

An intellectual class that was wholly rational would
have called insistently for peace and not for war. For
months the crying need has been for a negotiated
peace, in order to avoid the ruin of a deadlock. Would
not the same amount of resolute statesmanship thrown
into intervention have secured a peace that would have
been a subjugation for neither side? Was the terrific
bargaining power of a great neutral ever really used?
Our war followed, as all wars follow, a monstrous
failure of diplomacy. Shamefacedness should now be our
intellectuals' attitude, because the American play for
peace was made so little more than a polite play. The
intellectuals have still to explain why, willing as
they now are to use force to continue the war to
absolute exhaustion, they were not willing to use
force to coerce the world to a speedy peace.

Their forward vision is no more convincing than their
past rationality. We go to war now to internationalize
the world! But surely their league to Enforce Peace4
is only a palpable apocalyptic myth, like the
syndicalists' myth of the "general strike." It is not
a rational programme so much as a glowing symbol for
the purpose of focusing belief, of setting enthusiasm
on fire for international order. As far as it does
this it has pragmatic value, but as far as it provides
a certain radiant mirage of idealism for this war and
for a world-order founded on mutual fear, it is
dangerous and obnoxious. Idealism should be kept for
what is ideal. It is depressing to think that the
prospect of a world so strong that none dare challenge
it should be the immediate prospect of the American
intellectual. If the League is only a makeshift, a
coalition into which we enter to restore order, then
it is only a description of an existing fact, and the
idea should be treated as such. But if it is an
actually prospective outcome of the settlement, the
keystone of American policy, it is neither realizable
nor desirable. For the programme of such a League
contains no provision for dynamic national growth or
for international economic justice. In a world which
requires recognition of economic internationalism far
more than of political internationalism, an idea is
reactionary which proposes to petrify and federate the
nations as political and economic units. Such a scheme
for international order is a dubious justification for
American policy. And if American policy had been
sincere in its belief that our participation would
achieve international beatitude, would we not have
made our entrance into the war conditional upon a
solemn general agreement to respect in the final
settlement these principles of international order?
Could we have afforded, if our war was to end war by
the establishment of a league of honor, to risk the
defeat of our vision and our betrayal in the
settlement? Yet we are in the war, and no such solemn
agreement was made, nor has it even been suggested.

The case of the intellectuals seems, therefore, only
very speciously rational. They could have used their
energy to force a just peace or at least to devise
other means than war for carrying through American
policy. They could have used their intellectual energy
to ensure that our participation in the war meant the
international order which they wish. Intellect was not
so used. It was used to lead an apathetic nation into
an irresponsible war, without guarantees from those
belligerents whose cause we were saving. The American
intellectual, therefore has been rational neither in
his hindsight, nor his foresight. To explain him we
must look beneath the intellectual reasons to the
emotional disposition. It is not so much what they
thought as how they felt that explains our
intellectual class. Allowing for colonial sympathy,
there was still the personal shock in a world-war
which outraged all our preconceived notions of the way
the world was tending. It reduced to rubbish most of
the humanitarian internationalism and democratic
nationalism which had been the emotional thread of our
intellectuals' life. We had suddenly to make a new
orientation. There were mental conflicts. Our latent
colonialism strove with our longing for American
unity. Our desire for peace strove with our desire for
national responsibility in the world. That first lofty
and remote and not altogether unsound feeling of our
spiritual isolation from the conflict could not last.
There was the itch to be in the great experience which
the rest of the world was having. Numbers of
intelligent people who had never been stirred by the
horrors of capitalistic peace at home were shaken out
of their slumber by the horrors of war in Belgium.
Never having felt responsibility for labor wars and
oppressed masses and excluded races at home, they had
a large fund of idle emotional capital to invest in
the oppressed nationalities and ravaged villages of
Europe. Hearts that had felt only the ugly contempt
for democratic strivings at home beat in tune with the
struggle for freedom abroad. All this was natural, but
it tended to over-emphasize our responsibility. And it
threw our thinking out of gear. The task of making our
own country detailedly fit for peace was abandoned in
favor of a feverish concern for the management of war,
advice to the fighting governments on all matters,
military, social and political, and a gradual working
up of the conviction that we were ordained as a nation
to lead all erring brothers towards the light of
liberty and democracy. The failure of the American
intellectual class to erect a creative attitude toward
the war can be explained by these sterile mental
conflicts which the shock to our ideals sent raging
through us.

Mental conflicts end either in a new and higher
synthesis or adjustment, or else in a reversion to
more primative ideas which have been outgrown but to
which we drop when jolted out of our attained
position. The war caused in America a recrudescence of
nebulous ideals which a younger generation was fast
outgrowing because it had passed the wistful stage and
was discovering concrete ways of getting them
incarnated in actual institutions. The shock of war
threw us back from this pragmatic work into an
emotional bath of these old ideals. there was even a
somewhat rarefied revival of our primative Yankee
boastfulness, the reversion of senility to that
republican childhood when we expected the whole world
to copy our republican institutions. We amusingly
ignored the fact that it was just that Imperial German
regime, to whom we are to teach the art of
self-government, which our own Federal structure, with
its executive irresponsible in foreign policy and with
its absence of parlimentary control, most resembles.
And we are missing the exquisite irony of the
unaffected homage paid by the American democratic
intellectuals to the last and most detested of
Britain's tory premiers as the representative of a
"liberal" ally, as well as the irony of the selection
of the best hated of America's bourbon "old guard" as
the missionary of American democracy to Russia.5

The intellectual state that could produce such things
is one where reversion has taken place to more
primative ways of thinking. Simple syllogisms are
substituted for analysis, things are known by their
labels, our heart's desire dictates what we shall see.
The American intellectual class, having failed to make
the higher synthesis, regresses to ideas that can
issue in quick, simplified action. Thought becomes any
easy rationalization of what is actually going on or
what is to happen inevitably tomorrow. It is true that
certain groups did rationalize their colonialism and
attach the doctrine of the inevitability of British
seapower to the doctrine of a League of Peace. But
this agile resolution of the mental conflict did not
become a higher synthesis, to be creatively developed.
It gradually merged into a justification for our going
to war. It petrified into a dogma to be propagated.
Criticism flagged and emotional propaganda began. Most
of the socialists, the college professors and the
practitioners of literature, however, have not even
reached this high-water mark of synthesis. Their
mental conflicts have been resolved much more simply.
War in the interests of democracy! This was almost the
sum of their philosophy. The primative idea to which
they regressed became almost insensibly translated
into a craving for action. War was seen as the
crowning relief of their indecision. At last action,
irresponsibility, the end of anxious and torturing
attempts to reconcile peace-ideals with the drag of
the world towards Hell. An end to the pain of trying
to adjust the facts to what they ought to be! Let us
consecrate the facts as ideal! Let us join the greased
slide towards war! The momentum increased.
Hesitations, ironies, consciences, considerations, -
all were drowned in the elemental blare of doing
something aggressive, colossal. The new-found Sabbath
"peacefulness of being at war"! The thankfulness with
which so many intellectuals lay down and floated with
the current betrays the hesitation and suspense
through which they had been. The American university
is a brisk and happy place these days. Simple,
unquestioning action has superseded the knots of
thought. The thinker dances with reality.

With how many of the acceptors of war has it been
mostly a dread of intellectual suspense? It is a
mistake to suppose that intellectuality necessarily
makes for suspended judgments. The intellect craves
certitude. It takes effort to keep it supple and
pliable. In a time of danger and disaster we jump
desperately for some dogma to cling to. The time
comes, if we try to hold out, when our nerves are sick
with fatigue, and we seize in a great healing wave of
release some doctrine that can immediately be
translated into action. Neutrality meant suspense, and
so it became the object of loathing to frayed nerves.
The vital myth of the League of Peace provides a dogma
to jump to. With war the world becomes motor again and
speculation is brushed aside like cobwebs. The blessed
emotion of self-defense intervenes too, which focused
millions in Europe. A few keep up a critical pose
after war is begun, but since they usually advise
action which is in one-to-one correspondence with what
the mass is already doing, their criticism is little
more than a rationalization of the common emotional
drive.

The results of war on the intellectual class are
already apparent. Their thought becomes little more
than a description and justification of what is going
on. They turn upon any rash one who continues idly to
speculate. Once the war is on, the conviction spreads
that individual thought is helpless, that the only way
one can count is as a cog in the great wheel. There is
no good holding back. We are told to dry our unnoticed
and ineffective tears and plunge into the great work.
Not only is everyone forced into line, but the new
certitude becomes idealized. It is a noble realism
which opposes itself to futile obstruction and the
cowardly refusal to face facts. This realistic boast
is so loud and sonorous that one wonders whether
realism is always a stern and intelligent grappling
with realities. May it not be sometimes a mere
surrender to the actual, an abdication of the ideal
through a sheer fatigue from intellectual suspense?
The pacifist is roundly scolded for refusing to face
the facts, and for retiring into his own world of
sentimental desire. But is the realist, who refuses to
challenge or criticise facts, entitled to any more
credit than that which comes from following the line
of least resistance? The realist thinks he at least
can control events by linking himself to the forces
that are moving. Perhaps he can. But if it is a
question of controlling war, it is difficult to see
how the child on the back of a mad elephant is to be
any more effective in stopping the beast than is the
child who tries to stop him from the ground. The
ex-humanitarian, turned realist, sneers at the
snobbish neutrality, colossal conceit, crooked
thinking, dazed sensibilities, of those who are still
unable to find any balm of consolation for this war.
We manufacture consolations here in America while
there are probably not a dozen men fighting in Europe
who did not long ago give up every reason for their
being there except that nobody knew how to get them
away.

But the intellectuals whom the crisis has crystalized
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 obstucted 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, irrrelevant.
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.

Is there no place left then, for the intellectual who
cannot yet crystallize, who does not dread suspense,
and is not yet drugged with fatigue? The American
intellectuals, in their preoccupation with reality,
seem to have forgotten that the real enemy is War
rather than imperial Germany. There is work to be done
to prevent this war of ours from passing into popular
mythology as a holy crusade. What shall we do with
leaders who tell us that we go to war in moral
spotlessness, or who make "democracy" synonymous with
a republican form of government? There is work to be
done in still shouting that all the revolutionary
by-products will not justify the war, or make war
anything else than the most noxious complex of all the
evils that afflict men. There must be some to find no
consolation whatever, and some to sneer at those who
buy the cheap emotion of sacrifice. There must be some
irreconcilables left who will not even accept the war
with walrus tears. There must be some to call
unceasingly for peace, and some to insist that the
terms of settlement shall be not only liberal but
democratic. There must be some intellectuals who are
not willing to use the old discredited counters again
and to support a peace which would leave all the old
inflammable materials of armament lying about the
world. There must still be opposition to any
contemplated "liberal" world-order founded on military
coalitions. The "irreconcilable" need not be disloyal.
He need not even be "impossibilist." His apathy
towards war should take the form of a hightened energy
and enthusiasm for the education, the art, the
intrepretation that make for life in the midst of the
world of death. The intellectual who retains his
animus against war will push out more boldly than ever
to make his case solid against it. The old ideals
crumble; new ideals must be forged. His mind will
continue to roam widely and ceaselessly. The thing he
will fear most is premature crystallization. If the
American intellectual class rivets itself to a
"liberal" philosophy that perpetuates the old errors,
there will then be need for "democrats" whose task
will be to divide, confuse, disturb, keep the
intellectual waters constantly in motion to prevent
any such ice from ever forming.


Our Notes:

"Appeal to the Civilized World" was published in
October, 1914, by ninety-three German writers and
teachers. In it they defended Germany's war effort and
praised its military establishment.

German general and military historian, Friedrich von
Bernhardi, whose 1912 book, "Germany and the Next
War", advocated a war of conquest for Germany. The
book was used for propaganda purposes by the allies.

Campaigning for the Presidency in 1916, Wilson pledged
himself to non-intervention in the war in Europe.

The League to Enforce Peace, organized as a
non-partisan group, advocated a post-war league of
nations to employ economic sanctions or military force
against any member waging war.

The references are to Lord Balfour, British Foreign
Secretary and former prime minister, and to Elihu
Root. Balfour headed the British war mission to the
U.S. in April 1917. Root was appointed in the same
month to head an American mission to revolutionary
Russia. 



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