Always a good read is Bill Blum.

------

http://members.aol.com/bblum6/aer42.htm
Anti-Empire Report, February 3, 2007
The Anti-Empire Report
Some things you need to know before the world ends
                                         February 3, 2007
                                          by William Blum

Full Spectrum Dominance
It is not often that the empire is put in the position of one its 
victims, in fear of the military and technical prowess of another 
country, forced to talk of peace and cooperation, just as Iraq and 
others, hoping to put off an American attack, were forced to do over 
the years; just as Iran now. No, China is not about to attack the 
United States, but the Chinese shootdown of a satellite (an old 
weather satellite of theirs) in space on January 11, has made a US 
attack on China much more dangerous and much less likely; it's made 
the empire's leaders realize that they don't have total power to make 
any and all other nations do their bidding.

Here's how the gentlemen of the Pentagon have sounded in the recent 
past on the subject of space.

"We will engage terrestrial targets someday -- ships, airplanes, land 
targets -- from space. ... We're going to fight in space. We're going 
to fight from space and we're going to fight into space." -- General 
Joseph Ashy, Commander-in-Chief of the U.S. Space Command, 1996[1]

"With regard to space dominance, we have it, we like it, and we're 
going to keep it." -- Keith R. Hall, Assistant Secretary of the Air 
Force for Space and Director of the National Reconnaissance Office, 
1997[2]

"US Space Command -- dominating the space dimension of military 
operations to protect US interests and investment. Integrating Space 
Forces into warfighting capabilities across the full spectrum of 
conflict. ... During the early portion of the 21st century, space 
power will also evolve into a separate and equal medium of warfare. 
... The emerging synergy of space superiority with land, sea, and air 
superiority will lead to Full Spectrum Dominance. ... Development of 
ballistic missile defenses using space systems and planning for 
precision strikes from space offers a counter to the worldwide 
proliferation of WMD [weapons of mass destruction]. ... Space is a 
region with increasing commercial, civil, international, and military 
interests and investments. The threat to these vital systems is also 
increasing. ... Control of Space is the ability to assure access to 
space, freedom of operations within the space medium, and an ability 
to deny others the use of space, if required." -- "United States 
Space Command: Vision for 2020", 1997[3]

"Space represents a fundamentally new and better way to apply 
military force" -- U.S. Strategic Command, 2004[4]

And now along comes China, with the ability to make all this proud 
talk look somewhat foolish. At a State Department press briefing a 
week after the shootdown, the department's deputy spokesman Tom Casey 
stated, presumably without chuckling: "We certainly are concerned by 
any effort, by any nation that would be geared towards developing 
weapons or other military activities in space. ... We don't want to 
see a situation where there is any militarization of space." He spoke 
of the "peaceful use of space", and was concerned about the threat to 
"modern life as we know it", because "countries throughout the world 
are dependant on space based technologies, weather satellites, 
communications satellites and other devices".

A reporter asked: "Has the United States conducted such a test 
destroying a satellite in space?"

Yes, said Casey, in 1985. But that was different because "there was a 
Cold War that was being engaged in between the United States and the 
Soviet Union" and there were much fewer satellites moving about 
space.[5]

Cong. Terry Everett, senior Republican on the House armed services 
subcommittee on strategic forces, said China's test "raises serious 
concerns about the vulnerability of our space-based assets. ... We 
depend on satellites for a host of military and commercial uses, from 
navigation to ATM transactions."[6]

Even prior to the Chinese test, the Washington Post pointed out: "For 
a U.S. military increasingly dependent on sophisticated satellites 
for communicating, gathering intelligence and guiding missiles, the 
possibility that those space-based systems could come under attack 
has become a growing worry. ... The administration insists that there 
is no arms race in space, although the United States is the only 
nation that opposed a recent United Nations call for talks on keeping 
weapons out of space. ... Although the 1967 U.N. Outer Space Treaty, 
signed by the United States, allows only peaceful uses of space, some 
believe that the United States is moving toward some level of 
weaponization, especially related to a missile defense system."[7]

Tom Casey, the State Department spokesperson, tried his best to give 
the impression that the United States has no idea why China would do 
such a thing -- "We would like to see and understand and know more 
about what they're really trying to accomplish here." ... "exactly 
what their intentions are" ... "questions that arise about what 
Chinese intentions are" ... "not only the nature of what they've 
done, but the purpose and intent"[8]

But the United States can well imagine what China's intention was. 
The Chinese were responding to the efforts of the Bush 
administration, and the Clinton administration before them, to 
establish and maintain US military supremacy in space and to use that 
supremacy as a threatening, or actual, weapon. Beijing wished to put 
Washington on notice that in any future conflict with China the 
United States will not be dealing with Iraq or Afghanistan, or 
Yugoslavia, Panama or Grenada.

"But what did anyone expect?" asks Lawrence Martin, columnist for The 
Globe and Mail of Canada. "For several years, China, Canada, and 
virtually every country in the world have been urging the United 
States to enter into an arms-control treaty for outer space. Leave 
the heavens in peace, for god's sake. Come together and work 
something out. It's called collective security. ... Mr. Bush and Mr. 
Cheney showed no interest in a space treaty. Their national space 
policy is essentially hegemony in the heavens. They oppose the 
development of new legal regimes or other measures that restrict 
their designs. A UN resolution to prevent an arms race in space was 
supported by 151 countries with zero opposed. The U.S. abstained. It 
wants strategic control."[9]

The ideology of the ruling class in any society is one that tries to 
depict the existing social order as "natural".
In 1972 I traveled by land from San Francisco to Chile, to observe 
and report on Salvador Allende's "socialist experiment". One of the 
lasting impressions of my journey through Latin America is of the 
strict class order of the societies I visited. There are probably 
very few places in the world where the dividing lines between the 
upper and middle classes on the one hand and the lower class on the 
other are more distinct and emotionally clung to, including Great 
Britain. In the Chilean capital of Santiago I went to look at a room 
in a house advertised by a woman. Because I was American she assumed 
that I was anti-Allende, the same assumption she'd have made if I had 
been European, for she wanted to believe that only "Indians", only 
poor dumb indígenas and their ilk, supported the government. She was 
pleased by the prospect of an American living in her home and was 
concerned that he might be getting the wrong impression about her 
country. "All this chaos," she assured me, "it's not normal, it's not 
Chile". When I relieved her of her misconception about me she was 
visibly confused and hurt, and I was a little uncomfortable as well, 
like I had betrayed her trust. I made my departure quickly.

There's the classic Latin American story of the servant of a family 
of the oligarchy. He bought steak for his patrón's dog, but his own 
family ate scraps. He took the dog to the vet, but couldn't take his 
own children to a doctor. And complained not. In Chile, under 
Allende, there was a terribly nagging fear amongst the privileged 
classes that servants no longer knew their place. (In Sweden, for 
some years now, they have been able to examine children of a certain 
age -- their height, weight, and various health measurements -- and 
are then not able to tell which social class the child is from; they 
have ended class warfare against children.)

In the 1980s, in Central America, servants rose up in much of the 
region against their betters, the latter of course being 
unconditionally supported with Yankee money, Yankee arms, even Yankee 
lives. At the end of that decade the New York Times offered some 
snapshots of El Salvador:

Over canapes served by hovering waiters at a party, a guest said she 
was convinced that God had created two distinct classes of people: 
the rich and people to serve them. She described herself as 
charitable for allowing the poor to work as her servants. "It's the 
best you can do," she said.  The woman's outspokenness was unusual, 
but her attitude is shared by a large segment of the Salvadoran upper 
class.
The separation between classes is so rigid that even small 
expressions of kindness across the divide are viewed with suspicion. 
When an American, visiting an ice cream store, remarked that he was 
shopping for a birthday party for his maid's child, other store 
patrons immediately stopped talking and began staring at the 
American. Finally, an astonished woman in the check-out line spoke 
out. "You must be kidding," she said.[10]

The same polarization is taking place now in Venezuela as Hugo Chávez 
attempts to build a more egalitarian society. The Associated Press 
(January 29, 2007) recently presented some snapshots from Caracas: A 
man of European parents says that at his son's private Jewish school 
some parents are talking about how and when to leave the country. The 
man wants a passport for his 10-year-old son in case they need to 
leave for good. "I think we're headed toward totalitarianism." A 
middle-class retiree grimaces at what she sees coming: "Within one 
year, complete communism. ... What he's forming is a dictatorship." 
 The fact that Chávez is himself part indígena and part black, and 
looks it, can well add to their animosity towards the man.

I wonder what such people think of George "I am the decider" Bush and 
his repeated use of "signing statements", which effectively means a 
law is what he says it is, no more, no less; his Patriot Act, and his 
various assaults on the principle of habeas corpus, to name but a few 
of the scary practices of his authoritarian rule.

Chuck Kaufman, National Co-Coordinator of the Washington-based 
Nicaragua Network, was part of a group which visited Venezuela last 
fall. Following is part of his report:

Venezuela is politically polarized. We witnessed the extremes of this 
during a dinner with lawyer and author Eva Golinger. Some very drunk 
opposition supporters recognized Golinger as author of The Chávez 
Code and a strong Chavez partisan. Some of them surrounded our table 
and began screaming at Golinger and the delegation, calling us 
"assassins" "Cubans," and "Argentines." The verbal abuse went on for 
long minutes until waiters ejected the most out-of-control 
anti-Chávez woman. We were later told that she worked in the Attorney 
General's office, highlighting one of the many contradictions arising 
from the fact that Chávez' Bolivarian revolution came into power 
democratically through the ballot box rather than by force of arms. 
Armed revolutions generally sweep opponents out of government jobs 
and places of influence such as the media, but in Venezuela many in 
the opposition are still in the civil service and most of the media 
is virulently anti-Chávez.[11]

I admire Hugo Chávez and what he's trying to do in Venezuela, but I 
wish he wouldn't go out of his way to taunt the Bush administration, 
as he does so frequently. Doesn't he know that he's dealing with a 
bunch of homicidal maniacs? Literally. Someone please tell him to 
cool it or he will endanger his social revolution.

Liberalism's best and brightest
A report in the Washington Post, headlined "Soldier's Death 
Strengthens Senators' Antiwar Resolve", informs us that Senators 
Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.) and John Kerry (D-Mass.) have been rather 
upset upon learning of the death in Iraq of an Army Captain whom they 
met on a visit to the country in December, and who made a strong 
impression upon them. Dodd has been "radicalized", the story says, 
and Kerry has been "energized" in his opposition to the war.

Why, it must be asked, does it take the death of someone they met by 
chance to fire up their anti-war sentiments? Many millions of 
Americans, and many millions more around the world, have protested 
the war vehemently and passionately without having met any of the 
war's victims. What do these protestors have inside of them that so 
many members of Congress seem to lack?

"This was the kind of person you don't forget," said Dodd. "You 
mention the number dead, 3,000, the 22,000 wounded, and you almost 
see the eyes glaze over. But you talk about an individual like this, 
who was doing his job, a hell of a job, but was also willing to talk 
about what was wrong, it's a way to really bring it to life, to 
connect."[12]

Dear reader, is it the same for you? Do your eyes glaze over when you 
read or hear about the dead and wounded of Iraq?

Neither senator has apparently been "energized" enough to call for 
the immediate withdrawal of American forces from Iraq. That would be 
too "radical".

This gap -- emotionally and intellectually -- between members of 
Congress and normal human beings has been with us for ages of course. 
The anti-Vietnam War movement burst out of the starting gate back in 
August 1964, with hundreds of people demonstrating in New York. Many 
of these early dissenters took apart and critically examined the 
administration's statements about the war's origin, its current 
situation, and its rosy picture of the future. They found continuous 
omission, contradiction, and duplicity, became quickly and wholly 
cynical, and called for immediate and unconditional withdrawal. This 
was a state of intellect and principle it took members of Congress -- 
and then only a minority -- until the 1970s to reach. The same can be 
said of the mass media. And even then -- even today -- our political 
and media elite viewed Vietnam only as a "mistake"; i.e., it was "the 
wrong way" to fight communism, not that the United States should not 
be traveling all over the globe to spew violence against anything 
labeled "communism" in the first place. Essentially, the only thing 
these best and brightest have learned from Vietnam is that we should 
not have fought in Vietnam.

In the land where happiness is guaranteed in the Declaration of Independence
"Think raising the minimum wage is a good idea?"
"Think again."

That was the message of a full-page advertisement that appeared in 
major newspapers in January. It was accompanied by statements of 
approval from the usual eminent suspects:
     "The reason I object to the minimum wage is I think it destroys 
jobs, and I think the evidence on that, in my judgment, is 
overwhelming." Alan Greenspan, former Federal Reserve Chairman
     "The high rate of unemployment among teenagers, and especially 
black teenagers, is both a scandal and a serious source of social 
unrest. Yet it is largely a result of minimum wage laws." Milton 
Friedman, Nobel Prize-winning economist[13]

Well, if raising the minimum wage can produce such negative 
consequences, then surely it is clear what we as an enlightened and 
humane people must do. We must lower the minimum wage. And thus enjoy 
less unemployment, less social unrest. Indeed, if we lower the 
minimum wage to zero, particularly for poor blacks ... think of it! 
... No unemployment at all! Hardly any social unrest! In fact -- dare 
I say it? -- What if we did away with wages altogether?

"The modern conservative is engaged in one of man's oldest exercises 
in moral philosophy: that is, the search for a superior moral 
justification for selfishness." John Kenneth Galbraith

Some little-known items from my old files
Here is US General Thomas Power speaking in December 1960 about 
things like nuclear war and a first strike by the United States: "The 
whole idea is to kill the bastards! At the end of the war, if there 
are two Americans and one Russian, we win!" The response from one of 
those present was: "Well, you'd better make sure that they're a man 
and a woman."[14]

Edward R. Murrow is of course a much-honored newsman and "legendary 
broadcaster". There's the annual Edward R. Murrow Award for 
Excellence in Public Diplomacy, with nominations made by the State 
Department, and there's the recent acclaimed film about Murrow, "Good 
Night, and Good Luck", amongst many other tributes. In 1960, CBS 
aired "Harvest of Shame", a documentary made by Murrow, which was 
lauded for exposing the terrible abuses endured by migratory farm 
workers in the United States. The following year Murrow left 
broadcasting to become the director of the United States Information 
Agency, whose raison d'être was to make the United States look as 
good to the world as it does in American high school textbooks. Thus 
it was that when the BBC planned on showing "Harvest of Shame" in the 
UK, Murrow called them in an effort to suppress the broadcast, saying 
it was for US domestic use only. But the film was shown in the UK.[15]

One could wax cynical about Jimmy Carter as well; for example, while 
in the White House he tried hard to sabotage the Sandinista 
revolution in Nicaragua; even worse, Carter supported the Islamic 
opposition to the leftist Afghanistan government in 1979, which led 
to a decade of very bloody civil war, the Taliban, and anti-American 
terrorism in the United States and elsewhere. However, I think that 
overall Carter was closer to a decent human being than any post-World 
War Two president. In 1978 he invited 1960s anti-war activist and 
leader of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), Tom Hayden, to the 
White House. (Think George W inviting Michael Moore.) As recounted by 
Hayden, in their private conversation he said to Carter: "You are the 
elected President of the United States, yet I'm concerned that you 
have less power than the chairmen of the boards of the large 
multinational corporations -- men we don't elect or even know."
     "After looking pensively out the Oval Office window, President 
Carter nodded and said, 'I believe that's right. I've learned that 
these last 12 months'."[16]

NOTES

[1] "Aviation Week and Space Technology" (New York), August 5, 1996, p.51

[2] Speaking to the National Space Club (Washington, DC), September 15, 1997

[3] Excerpts are in the same sequence as found in the August 1997 
brochure beginning on page 1.

[4] March 2004, www.stratcom.mil/fact_sheets/fact_sm.html. In 2002, 
the U.S. Space Command was merged with the U.S. Strategic Command.

[5] State Department Press Briefing, January 19, 2007, 
www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/dpb/2007/79056.htm

[6] Associated Press, January 19, 2007

[7] Washington Post, December 17, 2006; p.12

[8] See note 5

[9] January 25, 2007 p.A19

[10] New York Times, October 7, 1990, p.10

[11] For the full report of October 28, 2006, see www.vensolidarity.org

[12] Washington Post, January 30, 2007, p.3

[13] To see the advertisement -- www.MinimumWage.org

[14] Fred Kaplan, "The Wizards of Armageddon" (1983), p.246

[15] Google <murrow "harvest of shame" bbc>

[16] San Francisco Chronicle, March 4, 1978

William Blum is the author of:
Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions Since World War 2
Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower
West-Bloc Dissident: A Cold War Memoir
Freeing the World to Death: Essays on the American Empire
       Portions of the books can be read, and copies purchased, at
<www.killinghope.org>
Previous Anti-Empire Reports can be read at this website.
      To add yourself to this mailing list simply send an email to 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> with "add" in the subject line. I'd like your name 
and city in the message, but that's optional. I ask for your city 
only in case I'll be speaking in your area.
      Or put "remove" in the subject line to do the opposite.
      Any part of this report may be disseminated without permission. 
I'd appreciate it if the website were mentioned.

_______________________________________________
Biofuel mailing list
Biofuel@sustainablelists.org
http://sustainablelists.org/mailman/listinfo/biofuel_sustainablelists.org

Biofuel at Journey to Forever:
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html

Search the combined Biofuel and Biofuels-biz list archives (50,000 messages):
http://www.mail-archive.com/biofuel@sustainablelists.org/

Reply via email to