‘They Make War and Call it Peace’: The Shame of Obama’s Nobel
Prize<http://vinaylal.wordpress.com/2009/12/11/%e2%80%98they-make-war-and-call-it-peace%e2%80%99-the-shame-of-obama%e2%80%99s-nobel-prize/>

December 11, 2009 by Vinay Lal<http://vinaylal.wordpress.com/author/vinaylal/>

*Solitudinem faciunt pacem appellant*:  ‘They make solitude [desert] and
call it peace’.  So wrote the Roman historian Caius Tacitus almost 2,000
years ago.  The text from which this quote is drawn deserves a bit more
scrutiny:  “*Auferre trucidare rapere falsis nominis imperium, atque ubi
solitudinem faciunt pacem appellant*”, says Tacitus (*Life of Agricola* 30),
which has generally been rendered as follows:     ‘To robbery, slaughter and
rapaciousness [*rapere*] they give the false name of empire; where they make
a solitude they call it peace.’  Tacitus was describing the conduct of the
Romans, to whom the “further limits of Britain” had been thrown open.  By
solitude, Tacitus meant a ‘desert’; they laid waste to a place and so
rendered it a place of solitude [*solitudinem*].  Somehow, reading Obama’s
Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech, delivered today in Oslo, Tacitus’s text
comes to mind.

When nearly two months ago the Norwegian Nobel Committee announced the
conferral of the peace prize upon Obama, one wondered what Obama had done to
deserve the honor, or what qualifications the Committee’s members had to
bestow the prize upon Obama – or indeed anyone else.  Both questions are
easily answered.  The Norwegians know something about salmon and lingon
berries, and they should content themselves with that knowledge, and leave
judgments about international governance and peace-making to others.  (The
results of their previous efforts to ‘broker peace’, to use the debased
jargon of realpolitik, are there to be seen in Sri Lanka.)  As for Obama’s
qualifications, many people are persuaded, and who knows Obama himself among
them, that his (supposed) repudiation of the policies of his predecessor in
the White House has alone made him an eminently worthwhile candidate for
unusual and great honors.  Quite tickled pink with the idea of his rock star
charm, Obama even made a flying visit to Denmark to help in Chicago’s bid to
stage the Olympics, only to receive a rude shock when Chicago was thrown out
of the final round of competition with the lowest number of votes.  Once
Obama had been so slighted, it may be argued, something had to be done to
assuage his wounds.  And the Nobel Peace Prize is certainly there for the
taking.

Many of the left objected, as indeed they should have, to the conferral of
the Nobel Peace Prize upon Barack Obama, who is a wartime President of the
United States.  Obama had, in October, already ruled out immediate
withdrawal of the US troops from Afghanistan and was even contemplating an
increased American military presence in Afghanistan, a step that has now
become official policy.  His administration has retained the previous
administration’s policy of extraordinary rendition and has, again in keeping
with the trend established by his predecessor, blocked attempts to release
photographs and other evidence of abuse from Abu Ghraib.  The objection that
a wartime President should not be conferred the Nobel Peace Prize is an
entirely legitimate one, but one that is futile.  Others may occasionally
forget that the President of the United States is also, in title and in
fact, the Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces of the United States, but
Obama’s acceptance speech today does not shy from this fact.  As
Commander-in-Chief, Nobel Laureate Barack Obama presides over a military
establishment with a budget that dwarfs the military expenditures of every
other country.  In 2008, the Stockholm Peace Research Institute has
reported<http://www.sipri.org/yearbook/2009/05/>,
the United States spent $607 billion on its armed forces, accounting for
41.5% of the world’s military expenditures.  By comparison, China spent $85
billion, France $66 billion, Britain $65 billion, Russia $59 billion, and
India $30 billion.  Whatever else the US might be, it is, and has been for
some time, a war-making machine.  That is the most fundamental and
ineradicable part of its identity.  War is an American addiction, and Obama
is no freer of that addiction than any other power-monger in American
history. Unfortunately, Obama is not merely the victim of that addiction; he
is today charged with peddling that addiction – arms sales of the most
advanced weaponry also fall under his jurisdiction, for example — with
palpable consequences for the rest of the world.

Thus, in accepting the Nobel Prize, Obama had to engage in some exercise of
sophistry.  He perforce had to begin with reflection that, even as he
receives the award, he has authorized the deployment of an additional 30,000
troops to Afghanistan. Obama has mastered the art of appearing ‘noble’, in
pursuit of higher truths – in his Nobel speech, this manifests partly as
repeated invocations to Mohandas Gandhi and Martin Luther King.
(Thankfully, Gandhi never received the Nobel Peace Prize, a matter of much
regret to many well intentioned but hopelessly confused Indians who puzzle
over his omission.)  Obama might have ruminated over the fact that the same
Martin Luther King, only a year before his death, unhesitatingly described
the United States ‘as the greatest purveyor of violence in the world’.
Independent-minded as he is or claims to be, Obama can rightfully claim that
he can pick and choose what he likes from his alleged mentors.  As for
Gandhi, that man seems to have an inescapable presence in Obama’s life,
popping out of the bottle like some genie every now and then.   A few weeks
ago, I wrote on this blog
<http://vinaylal.wordpress.com/2009/09/26/obama-gandhi-and-a-few-morsels-of-food-part-i-on-the-ideal-dinner-guest/>about
how Obama, when asked by a schoolgirl who he would like to have had as his
dinner guest, had identified Gandhi.  And, now, in his Nobel speech, here is
Gandhi again:  “The non-violence practiced by men like Gandhi and King may
not have been practical or possible in every circumstance, but the love that
they preached – their faith in human progress – must always be the North
Star that guides us on our journey.”  How Obama loves that man!

Augustine and the church fathers authored the doctrine of ‘the just war’,
and Obama’s fond enunciation of this tenet — with which Jesus’s name should
not be associated — of the Christian faith will be celebrated by some as a
reflection of his ‘principled’ stand on the question of war.  One thought
that the distinction between the ‘bad war’ (Iraq) and the ‘good war’
(Afghanistan) had been buried by intelligent minds, but Obama has just
breathed new life into this sterile, not to mention stupid, distinction.
The usual platitudes about the presence of evil in this world, and the pain
he feels at sending young men and women into the killing fields aside, I
could not but notice the sleight of hand with which he dispatched the idea
of nonviolent resistance, which Obama otherwise claims to champion, into
oblivion.  “A non-violent movement could not have halted Hitler’s armies”,
said Obama; “Negotiations cannot convince Al Qaeda’s leaders to lay down
their arms. To say that force is sometimes necessary is not a call to
cynicism – it is a recognition of history; the imperfections of man and the
limits of reason.”  I’m not aware that an international nonviolent movement
was even remotely contemplated, much less brought into existence, but it has
become an article of unquestioned faith to argue that Gandhian-style
nonviolent resistance would not have survived a minute against Nazi
Germany.  Still, supposing that Obama is right in rehearsing this cliché,
what is striking is that he should have used the most extreme example of the
exercise of violence, namely totalitarian Nazi Germany, to support his call
for war in Afghanistan.  So is Afghanistan an instance of the unmitigated
evil that men can do?  And if al-Qaeda and Afghanistan – notice, too, the
easy and implicit pairing of the two – are reminiscent of the days of
Hitler, surely this is a ‘just war’?

The avid lovers of Foucault, and the myriad other postmodernists and
poststructuralists, should all be on notice, if they were not previously,
that in Obama we have the latest instantiation of the view that, in our
progressive times, we shall be killed by kindness.

Posted in American Society and
Culture<http://en.wordpress.com/tag/american-society-and-culture/>,
Global Politics <http://en.wordpress.com/tag/global-politics/>, The Politics
of Culture <http://en.wordpress.com/tag/the-politics-of-culture/> |

Reply via email to