St. Paul E-Democracy Links
http://www.e-democracy.org/stpaul/links.html
_____________________________________________

At 01:44 PM 12/28/03, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The Brits don't have to listen to the hogwash our government tries to feed us constantly. And they print the truth.

Two words for you: Andrew Gilligan.


http://www.guardian.co.uk/hutton/keyplayers/story/0,13842,1025911,00.html

While the British print media have the advantage of being forthright about their political biases - everyone knows the Times and the Telegraph are conservative, while the Guardian is extremely liberal - the BBC is both intensely biased to the left AND serves as government propaganda.

Monitoring and documenting the depth and breadth of the egregiousness of the BBC's biases and agendae has become a bit of a cottage industry:

http://www.bbcwatch.com/

If you think the BBC is "unbiased" and "the truth", it's because you agree with it.

Mitch Berg
Da Midway!

Shot In The Dark
The only real truth you'll get in the Twin Cities media
http://www.mitchberg.com/shotindark/


--Dori Ullman West 7th Resident


Message: 4 Date: Sat, 27 Dec 2003 19:12:31 -0500 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: A Year of Thwarted Ambition

The Guardian (UK)
December 27, 2003

A year of thwarted ambition

War in Iraq revealed the likely limits to American
imperial power

By Martin Jacques

Saddam Hussein's arrest provided a long overdue, and
desperately needed, morale-booster for the American and
British governments. The fact that they had succeeded
in finding neither Saddam nor Osama bin Laden had lent
an air of ridicule to American military grandiloquence.
The failure to capture Saddam spoke eloquently of an
occupation that had veered far off course from the
confident predictions that had been made at the time of
the invasion.

We will have to wait and see what the longer-term
effect of Saddam's arrest proves to be. Combined with
Libya's new contrition, it should, for a period at
least, ease some of the domestic pressure on Bush and
perhaps even Blair. But it seems unlikely that it will
change much, especially where it matters most, on the
ground in Iraq.

It is salutary to reflect on how the invasion of Iraq
and the subsequent course of the occupation have
tempered the ambitions and expectations of the Bush
administration. We may now live in the era of American
hyperpower and a new kind of American imperial
ambition, but Iraq has served to demonstrate some of
the likely limits to that power.

First, American unilateralism has come at a price. Far
from commanding more or less universal acquiescence in
its power and message - as happened with the first Gulf
war - the invasion has provoked a reaction which has
resulted in the appearance of new global fault lines.
The most dramatic of these has been the schism between
France and Germany on the one hand and the US on the
other, a divide which calls into question the purpose
and durability of the western alliance. Few would have
thought that France and Germany would have had the
courage or independence of mind and spirit to oppose
the US, but that is exactly what they did.

Opposition, moreover, was not confined to the European
powers. Russia was of similar mind, notwithstanding the
fact that ever since the days of Boris Yeltsin, a man
of ignominious and tainted memory, it had chosen to
side with the US on issues of major import. China trod
the same course, wearing Hush Puppies, desperate not to
be noticed, because while there could be no doubt where
China's true sentiments lay, the world's next
superpower is playing a very long game, one of the
longest history has ever known, subordinating
temptation and instinct to its strategic desire not to
alienate the US in the course of its breathless
economic transformation.

Nor should we forget the manner in which the invasion
has polarised public opinion in the vast majority of
the countries of the world - including those nations
like Italy, Spain, Japan and South Korea, whose
governments supported the coalition partners - against
the US, such that it is now more unpopular than it has
ever been in the theatre of global opinion.

Second, the military opposition to the American
occupation has confounded all expectations: no sooner
had President Bush declared the war over and Iraq
subdued than the real war seemed to start. The full
repertoire of imperial responses to rebellion by a
local population has been rehearsed: that these were
the remnants of Saddam's regime, or criminals, or al-
Qaida sympathisers who had slipped over the border. As
with Eoka, the Mau Mau, the Vietcong, the IRA, and
countless others before, there has never been any
admission that the guerrilla forces, motley, primitive
and disorganised as they may be, enjoy popular support,
bear the imprimatur of legitimacy invested in those
nationalist forces who resist invading powers.

As time has passed, and the intensity of the opposition
has grown, it has become clear that the opposition is
far more diffuse and homegrown than has been admitted,
enjoying widespread support, especially in central and
northern Iraq. Saddam's capture is unlikely to make
much difference to this.

And who should be surprised? The second half of the
last century was the era of successful anti-colonial
struggles, culminating in the Vietnamese liberation
movement. People do not like being occupied from afar
by countries of different cultures and races, though
the new American imperial hubris - like many before -
convinced the Bush administration and our own prime
minister that the coalition troops would be greeted
like a liberating army, that the people of Iraq yearned
for our values and our way of life.

Iraq has already demonstrated that American public
opinion does not have the stomach for a prolonged
occupation, that the Bush administration cannot afford
the body bags, and that therefore their Iraqi
appointees will have to assume, sooner rather than
later, many of the frontline responsibilities. The
occupation of Iraq has taught the US, not to mention
the world, that overweening military power is not
invincible, but on the contrary, is as vulnerable as
ever when it tries to occupy another people's country.
Such was, and remains, the lesson of anti-colonial
struggle.

Third, it seems possible, even probable, that further
American imperial ambitions - as encapsulated in the
so-called "axis of evil" - have been laid to rest, at
least for the time being, in the streets of Baghdad,
Samarra, Tikrit and neighbouring towns. There was much
speculation in the early part of this year about which
country would be next - Iran or North Korea. With the
occupation of Afghanistan looking increasingly fragile
- and more and more vulnerable - and the Iraqi
guerrilla opposition obliging an imminent American
retreat, at least of a kind, it is difficult to imagine
the Americans taking on either of these regimes in the
near future. Indeed, there has already been a marked
shift in the mood music from the days of Rumsfeld's
high noon, with the Americans increasingly looking to
China to assist with North Korea, and a clutch of other
countries to defuse Iran's nuclear ambitions.

Fourth, as with all imperial endeavours, there has been
much moralising about democracy, human rights and
justice. It was ever so, but no more so than now. Yet
these values have, as in the past, been the first
casualties of imperial ambition. There are countless
stories of the way in which American troops shoot first
and ask questions later. The Americans don't even
bother to count the number of Iraqi dead. When Bush and
Blair insist that the Iraqis should determine Saddam's
fate, by Iraqis they mean their own quisling Iraqi
regime. The Guantanamo camp is an affront to human
rights worldwide. Civil rights have been rolled back in
the US in the name of the fight against terror. And, of
course, there are no weapons of mass destruction: truth
is the first casualty of war - and imperial ambition.
It is difficult to imagine the US and Britain ever
enjoying the same kind of respect again in their claim
to be the mantle of democracy and human rights.

None of this is to suggest that we do not live in the
age of the American imperium. Following 9/11, we have
witnessed the birth of a new American unilateralism and
self-interest to which every country in the world has
been, and is being, obliged to respond and relate. Iraq
is the first true test of that American imperial
ambition and it has already served to suggest some of
the limits to that power.

� Martin Jacques is a visiting fellow at the London
School of Economics Asian Research Centre

http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1112882,00.html





________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________

_____________________________________________ NEW ADDRESS FOR LIST: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To subscribe, modify subscription, or get your password - visit:
http://www.mnforum.org/mailman/listinfo/stpaul

Archive Address:
  http://www.mnforum.org/mailman/private/stpaul/
_____________________________________________
For state and national discussions see: http://e-democracy.org/discuss.html
For external forums, see: http://e-democracy.org/mninteract

Reply via email to