The War to Promote Terror
The "necessary war" in Afghanistan, which both presidential candidates support - the one, you know, that's really about terrorists and Osama and all - raises as many troubling questions about who we are as the other war we're fighting and losing.
Consider the details of this war. The aggregate civilian death toll, at the hands of the U.S. and NATO - between 6,800 and more than 8,000, according to economics professor Marc Herold of the University of New Hampshire - is a start. But Herold's about-to-be-released report on the bombing campaign in Afghanistan, "The Matrix of Death," is a disturbing analysis not only of the collateral damage churned up by our terrorist-hunt in this broken nation, but of the attitude and rationality that are driving it. The report is subtitled: "The (Under)Valuation of an Afghan Life."
This is a report on the flawed premise from which ultimate failure flows - the flawed premise that keeps hell active and guarantees an endless supply of enemies. And the more of these "enemies," and their children, that we kill, the less safe we are, and we know this, so we lie about the numbers of dead. Most of all we lie about what we are, in fact, doing, which is fighting an irrational war, most accurately called the war to promote terror. We will not win it unless we revert to the morality of Ancient Rome: "create a wasteland and call it peace." But that's not winning, either.
What it is, indeed, is racism, especially the use of what is called close air support: In order to protect the lives of American and NATO (mostly white) troops, we do much of our fighting from the air, with 500- and 2,000-pound bombs, lacerating a (non-white) Afghan population we don't even have to face.
Herold quotes John MacLachlen Gray in the U.K. Globe and Mail: ". . . the slaughter of innocent people, as a statistical eventuality is not an accident but a priority - in which Afghan civilian casualties are substituted for American military casualties." Herold adds: "What I am saying is that when the 'other' is non-white, the scale of violence used by the U.S. government to achieve its stated objectives at minimum cost knows no limits."
This is a description of U.S. policy stripped of the pretense in which it is usually cloaked. Not only are the numbers of dead downplayed significantly in official military statements and the sympathetic (mainstream) media, but those civilian dead who are acknowledged are instantly rendered "regrettable, but not our fault" by the circular, all-purpose justification that they were not deliberately targeted.
When you bomb a village, the dead are random and anonymous - and therefore, thanks to some legalistic moral loophole, no one's fault. And this is one of the military advantages of air war, as far as I can tell. However horrific the results it produces on the ground - "I saw pieces of bodies scattered around . . . I couldn't even make out which part was which . . . it was just flesh everywhere" - the perpetrators maintain an easy moral purity that forestalls self-doubt and revulsion.
Aerial bombardment, therefore, because of the psychological insulation of distance that it provides - especially when added to the psychological insulation of racism, which makes non-white deaths matter little or not at all - is a particularly insidious form of warfare, and its perfection is in and of itself a dire threat to humanity's future.
And, as Herold writes: "The recent increasing reliance upon unmanned drones to dispense death and destruction in the border regions is in a sense the penultimate disconnect between killing them and saving ours."
To put this all another way, the simple math of conventional national security - the zero-sum game of kill or be killed, our lives matter and theirs don't - is terrifyingly counterproductive in the 21st century. It always has been, of course, but we used to be protected from its consequences by distance and ignorance. Humanity is connected now like never before, and possesses the technology of self-annihilation. Such technology cannot be contained, and thus true security has nothing to do with national borders. We cannot afford to devalue any portion of the human race.
For that reason, the most disturbing part of Herold's report may have been his discussion of the "condolence" money paid, occasionally, to the survivors of Afghan civilians killed by our actions. These payouts have ranged from as low as $400 per dead civilian to several thousand dollars.
Herold puts this into perspective: "Approximately $80,000 was spent on the rehabilitation of every sea otter affected by the Exxon Valdez oil spill, that is, ten times the condolence amount offered by the U.S. military to the family of an Afghan killed."
This does not make me feel safe. I can't even fathom the values that are operating here, even though they are stamped: "U.S.A." We are already reaping what the Bush legacy has sown, but there's a lot more that awaits us, and we have no right to be surprised when it comes.
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23 Comments so far
Show AllSadly, during the drum-up to war with Iraq, The Rev. Jesse Jackson aptly, referred to them as "NINTENDO WARS."
He was so right.
Mr. Khoeler's piece is a quality piece but is limited in a way.
I have been submitting material to commondreams that I personally feel is unique in its perspective and opens new horizons to discuss and independently develop an understanding of what is going on.
I go where my research and analysis takes me and as such I cannot have any loyalties but to the material I uncover.
The following is the location of my latest article which might even add another layer of appreciating what Mr. Khoeler is saying.
The article, Obama – America’s 'Second Chance' or is it its Last?, can be found at
http://www.thepeoplesvoice.org/cgi-bin/blogs/voices.php/2008/09/24/p28984
The article was submitted to commondreams along with other editors around the world. I did not hear a word from commondreams while the others published.
Yesterday, I got this email from commondreams about helping Obama. My attitude is, if you want to help Obama straighten out, you have to inform Obama through the public that you are on to him. From that perspective, I emailed commondreams again and brought the article to their attention.
If you find the material of value, please contact commondreams and ask them to stop cherry picking.
Regards,
Maher Osseiran
maher@mydemocracy.net
JERUSALEM, Oct. 3 (Xinhua) -- As Israel plans to buy the Joint Strike Fighter (F-35) from the United States, the Israeli Defense Ministry is seeking American approval to install Israeli-made technology on the stealth fighter jets it buys.
With Israeli technology they can strafe American ships like the USS Liberty without worrying about jammers and such. Senator McCain will cover up any political problems just like his father the admiral did.
Defense spending wasn't always a bad thing decades ago. It's just that Vietnam and Iraq were the worst examples of defense spending abused. Johnson abused it in Vietnam, Raygun pushed for excessive defense spending which Bush I would use towards Iraq for oil, Clinton ironically trimmed it and improved the quality of the military, but Bush II picked up from Raygun and misused it for Iraq for oil again and exploiting 9/11. Afghanistan was lost the minute we headed for Iraq.
Another thing that never gets mentioned are spouses of soldiers in the war. I've met folks in the army back when I served in Vietnam. They thought they had no future if they didn't join and in fact a few confessed to me that their girlfriends/wives would leave them if they tried to back off and leave and that was before the draft.
The battle in Afghanistan can't be won in the air, it could only be won with a massive boots on the ground program. More than the US can gather without a draft. There are over 400 tribal cheiftans in the area, many don't like one another and it will be hard getting them to work together. It will bog us down for another 50 years if we let it. Afghanistan is a bigger sinkhole than Iraq.
tomhairless
bombing civilians is "racism" - what race were the Germans in Dresden?
we don't even have the excuse of racism - the word is "imperialism" and we are them.
That's right, our US government is torrorist! That makes all of us Americans terrorists, too, doesn't it?
When Hitler turned the Germans into a collective group of terrorists, nobody thought it was anything otherwise. What is fascinating is how the American people are unable to recognize what they have become by simply looking themselves in the mirror. What is it that we think that we are by voting all this money to terror? I'm talking about our War Industry.
we used to call you sheeple
now the term chump is not quite good enough
fund the military death machine
wall street - that was a good one - opinion polls indicated that close to 98% of the public was opposed to this piece of shit but they went right ahead and did it anyway
you all deserve your cots in the fema prisons
cowards that you are
cheers, b
You make a good point about our "representatives." I've argued for years that voting is pointless - I haven't voted since 1992, when I voted for that pig, Bill - because our "representatives" represent their campaign donors, not the voters. A better way to vote is to use their own system of lobbyists against them: donate money to organizations who lobby on your behalf all year long.
Dave
http://daveeriqat.wordpress.com/
DUH ! The American occupation of Afghanistan is about the 21st century profits of Big Oil subsidized by the American taxpayer and many, many Afghan lives. Once again the Pentagon is muscle for corporate America. And if they succeed with the pipeline plans, most of the oil and natural gas of Centeral Asia will be marketed throughout Asia and Is Not for American use...etc. Pure and deadly criminal imperialism.
from: http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Book_Reviews/Bleeding_Afghanistan.html
“ After the splintering of the Soviet Union, the US and its allies began jockeying for position in a region that is a strategic prize in the new "great game" - for petroleum resources. The old Great Game was played in the 19th and early 20th century by the major world powers (Britain, France, Russia, China, Iran, and Turkey). During this period, Great Britain fought three failed wars against Afghanistan.”
“ Of course, this is what Western propaganda claims the soldiers are doing now, but the reality is that the US and NATO have prevented the introduction of an international peacekeeping force. The insurgents recognize what we do not: that the goal of propping up the puppet regime in Kabul and consolidating a Western presence in this strategic area has priority over all humanitarian endeavors. Like the Iraqis, the Afghanis know their history, and recognize that, like every invader before it, the US-led NATO alliance acts in accordance with the self-interest of its member states. Washington has promised NATO members privileged access to the area's energy resources in exchange for their cooperation in the humanitarian endeavor of helping Afghans by hunting Afghans.”
A variety of informed articles on this topic are at:
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Afghanistan/Afghanistan_page.html
including:
Afghanistan, the CIA, bin Laden, and the Taliban
The Real Afghanis
How can the US bomb this tragic people? - Robert Fisk
A Resource War - Afghanistan
The Fire Down Below
The Truth About Afghanistan
Betrayal (1/04)
War Without End - Afghanistan (9/04)
'One Huge US Jail' (3/05)
The U.S. War In Afghanistan Continues (7/05)
Women and Warlords: Letter From Afghanistan (5/06)
Afghanistan: The Other Lost War (9/06)
Abandoning Hypocrisy - Canada in Afghanistan (9/06)
Afghanistan - Foreign Troops and the Insurgency (9/06)
Who benefits from the Afghan Opium Trade? (9/06)
Afghanistan: Five Years Later (10/06)
Afghanistan Unliberated (10/06)
Women in Afghanistan (11/06)
Afghanistan - The Bloodiest Field for Slaughtering Human Rights (12/06)
Iran Is Seeking More Influence in Afghanistan (12/06)
Bleeding Afghanistan: Washington, Warlords, and the Propaganda of Silence - by Sonali Kolhatkar and James Ingalls (3/07) - a book review
Occupation Forces Support Afghan Narcotics Trade - Multibillion dollar earnings for organized crime and Western financial Institutions (4/07)
The US and Her Fundamentalist Stooges are the Main Human Rights Violators In Afghanistan (12/07)
Women's lives worse than ever [in Afghanistan] (2/08)
I've called this thing the "War OF Terror" for years. Not only do the U.S. actions constitute terrorism, but they engender more terrorism from their adversaries.
Dave
http://daveeriqat.wordpress.com/
Exactly right. Every innocent killed results in another whole family of "terrorists". Our leaders must realize this, yet they continue. Either there is a nefarious dark plan to it all or they are seriously twisted, sick individuals who, in either case, need to be dealt with as one would a rabid dog.
-- EKATON --
The entire population of a country, Afghanistan, must be living in fear of the next appearance of an "UAV" remotely piloted death-dealing drone. This is terrorism raised to a sophisticated level. Those who "pilot" those drones remotely here in the United States -- how can they sleep at night? I wonder where they live ... I truly wonder ... where ...
-- EKATON --
"War Is the Health of the State"
Randolph Bourne
And McCain/Palin criticize Obama for more talking, less bombing.
The "necessary war" is only necessary for...
For who's 'bottom line' or election is it necessary?
This is just like feeding a cancer!
It ENRAGES me that anyone would DARE to vote for either of the major party candidates - the people of these countries we TERRORIZE have value! We spend BILLIONS on murdering, terrorizing, in the name of stopping the terrorists, when in fact we do just the opposite. STOP OBAMA! STOP McCAIN! Vote for Nader or McKinney - it's a small place to start. At the very least the blood will not be in on your conscience.
Only a people's revolution (which is very, VERY unlikely to occur at this point or any point in the near future), with the backing of large segments of the armed forces or National Guard, will bring about any actual, positive change. Voting will change nothing. The corporatocracy would NEVER allow a truly progressive third party candidate to win a presidential election. This isn't pessimism or fatalism. This is the reality. The most likely scenario is that things will become worse and worse in this country until it implodes (probably economically). Maybe then, at long last, people will put away their IPods long enough to notice that they've sat idly by while everything's gone to hell.
Maybe.
I used to vote for third party candidates but at some point I realized I was just flailing away, making a statement for my own emotional gratification, but not really achieving anything. There has to be a plan for success. Certainly there will be no success in the short-term, but what is the plan for the long-term? Decades ago there were many more people voting for leftist third party candidates. We have regressed. Of course the decline of labor unions is partly to blame, but also the consolidation of the media, particularly the development of a concentrated corporate media, is a major cause.
I really do not see how it makes much sense for leftist parties to even field candidates when they have no chance of winning (all they seem to earn is ridicule). It might be better for a leftist party to spend resources on helping the labor movement and the development of alternative media, including that on the Internet. Flailing away may feel good for the moment but ultimately it leads to nothing more than the empty feeling of failure.
It ENRAGES me that anyone would DARE to vote for any of the major 3rd party candidates - the people of these countries we TERRORIZE have value! We spend BILLIONS on murdering, terrorizing, in the name of stopping the terrorists, when in fact we do just the opposite. STOP THE WAR! STOP McCAIN! Vote for Obama - it's a small place to start. At the very least the blood will not be in on your conscience.
"It ENRAGES me that anyone would DARE to vote for any of the major 3rd party candidates"
Maybe that's because of Obama also promising more wars especially in Afghanistan and Pakistan. If you really wanted to stop Mccain, you should have repaired your Democratic Party instead of allowing pro-war turncoats to ruin the party. If you can't fix the party first, you have no right to be angry at those who vote beyond the two parties. Is that clear?
JWVerez sez:
"..promising more wars especially in Afghanistan and Pakistan.."
You may not be aware of it, but we are already in Afghanistan. As for Pakistan, Obama has not said he would go to war against Pakistan, he said he would act on actionable intelligence about high value Al Qaeda members in Pakistan.
Is that clear?
Not clear enough for me - Obama (or McCain for that matter) have not described the 'act'. It will more than likely include unmanned aerial strikes and/or bombing as described in the article. Similar to the strikes which have already taken place in Pakistan, advised by Commanders on the ground and directed by intelligence operatives.
I agree it's not clear. We're still violating Pakistan's sovereignty with acts that fall short of a declaration of war. The question is how they will respond. It seems their response is two-fold: Trying to show they are attempting to control the border areas, while placating the populace with strong words against the US.