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War Without Purpose
Al-Qaida could not care less what we do in Afghanistan. We can bomb Afghan villages, hunt the Taliban in Helmand province, build a 100,000-strong client Afghan army, stand by passively as Afghan warlords execute hundreds, maybe thousands, of Taliban prisoners, build huge, elaborate military bases and send drones to drop bombs on Pakistan. It will make no difference. The war will not halt the attacks of Islamic radicals. Terrorist and insurgent groups are not conventional forces. They do not play by the rules of warfare our commanders have drilled into them in war colleges and service academies. And these underground groups are protean, changing shape and color as they drift from one failed state to the next, plan a terrorist attack and then fade back into the shadows. We are fighting with the wrong tools. We are fighting the wrong people. We are on the wrong side of history. And we will be defeated in Afghanistan as we will be in Iraq.
The cost of the Afghanistan war is rising. Tens of thousands of Afghan civilians have been killed or wounded. July has been the deadliest month in the war for NATO combatants, with at least 50 troops, including 26 Americans, killed. Roadside bomb attacks on coalition forces are swelling the number of wounded and killed. In June, the tally of incidents involving roadside bombs, also called improvised explosive devices (IEDs), hit 736, a record for the fourth straight month; the number had risen from 361 in March to 407 in April and to 465 in May. The decision by President Barack Obama to send 21,000 additional U.S. troops to Afghanistan has increased our presence to 57,000 American troops. The total is expected to rise to at least 68,000 by the end of 2009. It will only mean more death, expanded fighting and greater futility.
We have stumbled into a confusing mix of armed groups that include criminal gangs, drug traffickers, Pashtun and Tajik militias, kidnapping rings, death squads and mercenaries. We are embroiled in a civil war. The Pashtuns, who make up most of the Taliban and are the traditional rulers of Afghanistan, are battling the Tajiks and Uzbeks, who make up the Northern Alliance, which, with foreign help, won the civil war in 2001. The old Northern Alliance now dominates the corrupt and incompetent government. It is deeply hated. And it will fall with us.
We are losing the war in Afghanistan. When we invaded the country eight years ago the Taliban controlled about 75 percent of Afghanistan. Today its reach has crept back to about half the country. The Taliban runs the poppy trade, which brings in an annual income of about $300 million a year. It brazenly carries out attacks in Kabul, the capital, and foreigners, fearing kidnapping, rarely walk the streets of most Afghan cities. It is life-threatening to go into the countryside, where 80 percent of all Afghanis live, unless escorted by NATO troops. And intrepid reporters can interview Taliban officials in downtown coffee shops in Kabul. Osama bin Laden has, to the amusement of much of the rest of the world, become the Where’s Waldo of the Middle East. Take away the bullets and the bombs and you have a Gilbert and Sullivan farce.
No one seems to be able to articulate why we are in Afghanistan. Is it to hunt down bin Laden and al-Qaida? Is it to consolidate progress? Have we declared war on the Taliban? Are we building democracy? Are we fighting terrorists there so we do not have to fight them here? Are we “liberating” the women of Afghanistan? The absurdity of the questions, used as thought-terminating clichés, exposes the absurdity of the war. The confusion of purpose mirrors the confusion on the ground. We don’t know what we are doing.
Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the new commander of U.S. and NATO-led troops in Afghanistan, announced recently that coalition forces must make a “cultural shift” in Afghanistan. He said they should move away from their normal combat orientation and toward protecting civilians. He understands that airstrikes, which have killed hundreds of civilians, are a potent recruiting tool for the Taliban. The goal is lofty but the reality of war defies its implementation. NATO forces will always call in close air support when they are under attack. This is what troops under fire do. They do not have the luxury of canvassing the local population first. They ask questions later. The May 4 aerial attack on Farah province, which killed dozens of civilians, violated standing orders about airstrikes. So did the air assault in Kandahar province last week in which four civilians were killed and 13 were wounded. The NATO strike targeted a village in the Shawalikot district. Wounded villagers at a hospital in the provincial capital told AP that attack helicopters started bombarding their homes at about 10:30 p.m. Wednesday. One man said his 3-year-old granddaughter was killed. Combat creates its own rules, and civilians are almost always the losers.
The offensive by NATO forces in Helmand province will follow the usual scenario laid out by military commanders, who know much about weapons systems and conventional armies and little about the nuances of irregular warfare. The Taliban will withdraw, probably to sanctuaries in Pakistan. We will declare the operation a success. Our force presence will be reduced. And the Taliban will creep back into the zones we will have “cleansed.” The roadside bombs will continue to exact their deadly toll. Soldiers and Marines, frustrated at trying to fight an elusive and often invisible enemy, will lash out with greater fury at phantoms and continue to increase the numbers of civilian dead. It is a game as old as insurgency itself, and yet each generation of warriors thinks it has finally found the magic key to victory.
We have ensured that Iraq and Afghanistan are failed states. Next on our list appears to be Pakistan. Pakistan, like Iraq and Afghanistan, is also a bizarre construct of Western powers that drew arbitrary and artificial borders, ones the clans and ethnic groups divided by these lines ignore. As Pakistan has unraveled, its army has sought legitimacy in militant Islam. It was the Pakistani military that created the Taliban. The Pakistanis determined how the billions in U.S. aid to the resistance during the war against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan was allocated. And nearly all of it went to the most extremist wings of the Afghan resistance movement. The Taliban, in Pakistan’s eyes, is not only an effective weapon to defeat foreign invaders, whether Russian or American, but is a bulwark against India. Muslim radicals in Kabul are never going to build an alliance with India against Pakistan. And India, not Afghanistan, is Pakistan’s primary concern. Pakistan, no matter how many billions we give to it, will always nurture and protect the Taliban, which it knows is going to inherit Afghanistan. And the government’s well-publicized battle with the Taliban in the Swat Valley of Pakistan, rather than a new beginning, is part of a choreographed charade that does nothing to break the unholy alliance.
The only way to defeat terrorist groups is to isolate them within their own societies. This requires wooing the population away from radicals. It is a political, economic and cultural war. The terrible algebra of military occupation and violence is always counterproductive to this kind of battle. It always creates more insurgents than it kills. It always legitimizes terrorism. And while we squander resources and lives, the real enemy, al-Qaida, has moved on to build networks in Indonesia, Pakistan, Somalia, Sudan and Morocco and depressed Muslim communities such as those in France’s Lyon and London’s Brixton area. There is no shortage of backwaters and broken patches of the Earth where al-Qaida can hide and operate. It does not need Afghanistan, and neither do we.
- Posted in


142 Comments so far
Show AllHedges, one of the most astute observers of current US military policy, knows full well the answer to these questions, hence the none too subtle tongue-in-cheek attitude of the article.
Al Qaeda may not care what we do in Afghanistan (or Iraq or anywhere else) but the military-industrial complex sure does; we're using up tons of expensive ordnance to secure the gas and oil pipelines.
The death industry never cares who wins or loses a war because they always win.
q
q - Astute observation!
"No one seems to be able to articulate why we are in Afghanistan. Is it to hunt down bin Laden and al-Qaida? Is it to consolidate progress? Have we declared war on the Taliban? Are we building democracy? Are we fighting terrorists there so we do not have to fight them here? Are we “liberating” the women of Afghanistan? The absurdity of the questions, used as thought-terminating clichés, exposes the absurdity of the war. The confusion of purpose mirrors the confusion on the ground. We don’t know what we are doing."
With apologies to Hedges... We DO know what we are doing!
Besides using up $$$$ worth of ordnance and securing oil/gas conduits - we are also creating the future "Terrorists", which are ESSENTIAL for us to remain on permanent Military footing and keep the bottomless money pit known as the Pentagon in clover.
The same MO, with slight tweeks, has been in operation since the end of WWII... since it is soooo rewarding for the owners of Empire America!
What do you mean "We"?
I think he meant We the people do not know, not the MIC.
But You have a good point about the MiC.
Abraham Lincoln is reputed to have said this (and it is the most astute and wonderful quote I can think of coming from the mouth of any 'politician', ever.):
'Have I not destroyed my enemies when I have made them my friends?'
There is a percentage of utter 'crazies' in the world, a legitimate risk we share with other of life's risks. Life is never completely safe! But why, oh why, do we have to operate in such a manner as to create more (and MORE) crazies?!?
Sometimes I think I am becoming crazy myself.
Can we be friends?
Can we?
Please?
nedlud
Yet Abraham Lincoln, more than any other single person, was responsible for the most destructive war this nation has ever endured, which has left a heriage we have never been able to overcome, ever an oil and water mix. Not very PC, but perhaps we and the world might have been better off if we had split into two nations back then. Given our nature, we probably would have ended up fighting anyway.
Tony Vodvarka
I only say this, while remaining somewhat in defense and acknowledgement of your view, because Lincoln indeed, was the 'commander-in-chief'...
It appears to me, from what I can see of that terrible period of history, that Lincoln suffered himself, tremendously during the war. The wear and tear on his face, seems unmistakeble.
Our leaders now, except for the natural aging process, seem to galavant through everything they impose on 'their' people.
That's all.
Thanks.
Nonsense - Lincoln was willing to accept slavery to keep the US together. What he was unwilling to do is split the US.
That being said, I do wish he had allowed the South to secede, but I don't blame him - hindsight is 20/20.
Now that we know what we know... could we at least let Texas secede?
But if he had let the South secede then it would have developed into a backward region full of unenlightened morons who . . . .
Never mind.
q
Lincoln didn't give a rip about slavery...he was afraid California would side with the Confederacy and blow the US vision of manifest destiny.
Good idea Wanderer...but maybe we should try to make texass part of the US first. We can start by deprogramming them. We got texass and saud mobsters creating war and warriors to fuel both sides. The eyes of texass sure do a good job at keeping that yellow rose bush well nipped, and at the same time the US just pretends not to notice a rogue state exists within its border. Russ Baker's Family of Secrets just touches the surface of the texass terrorist cabal and its ability to murder presidents and start wars...
The bottom line is that its not about War. Its about the fog of war, and the money to be made after the fog is in the air. Ask Bandar Bush how its done.
beat-on, great post!
nedlund... "Sometimes I think I am becoming crazy myself."
THAT... is the sign of a sane, self-reflective individual!
The "Crazies" nearly always go into politics and business mgt - but... if less gifted in mental capacity, tend to migrate toward "World Extreme Cage Fighting".
"Crazies" - appear to be soooo insecure, that the only way for them to feel good about themselves is to create MORE of themselves (Hence, Limbaugh passing the "crazy" batton to Glenn Beck).
Unfortunately, it is highly unlikely that THEY will ever operate from a mode of "wanting to be friends"... since it is anathema to their death wish.
You can only do your best to create the best world for your self, family and community, and hope the example catches fire.
In Cosmic Peace... Klaatu
Thanks Klaatu.
From the article:
"The Taliban runs the poppy trade, which brings in an annual income of about $300 million a year."
This assertion ignores the reports on the activities of Hamid Karzai's brother; represents, if true, a reversal of the pattern of the Taliban's previous period of ascendancy, during which the poppy trade was suppressed; and runs counter to the weight of history of US military involvement in countries where narcotics are a major cash crop.
In an article which I otherwise find informative, this is a clanging dissonance.
Does the Taliban control the poppy trade is this just more propaganda?
It's propaganda. The Northern Alliance warlords are heavy into the drugs. Whereas when they were in power, the Taliban shut the opium trade down, they now have joined onto it as a way to raise $. Kinda like Colombia where both sides are into it, though the propaganda machine blames FARC disproportionately whereas the rightwing paramilitaries are the ones intight w/the druglords
Once again Chris is spot on in his description of the theater stage and the world at play. It has national ideology, religious theology,sex,crime, honor and value. We the audience laugh at the punch lines cry at the tragedy get angry at the injustice and cry in indignation.It is great relief from the every day struggle to put food on the table keep the roof over our head and raise our children. If you are lucky you get to have affairs, buy clothes to enhance your image or display your new toys.
Nice description of what happens on the stage of the world. But back stage what this play is about is what it has always been about. The kings queens lords and ladies providing the cover to control the worlds resources. The events portrayed in this article are really about the control of all things oil.But across the globe behind the curtain it is control of resources oil water land to grow crops and most important suppression of wages for the transfer of wealth.
We sit in the theater laugh, cry and clap our little hands thinking that it is great enjoyment to watch the show that goes on in front of us. Sooner or later we find ourselves actually on the stage portrayed in a comic tragedy a financial recession or part of some war that has come unwanted to our door because we have what the powerful want.
When do we realize this? When do we stop watching the show and begin to write the script ourselves? Isn't the quest for democracy about us writing the script and to act out that script on our own stage? When do we get up out of our seats, stop watching and begin to act ourselves?
A brilliant article from Mr. Hedges as always. Of course, the point of any of these wars in not "winning", it is maintaining an ongoing conflict. The militaristic cancer on our society didn't give a damn that it laid a curse on an entire generation of young working-class Americans during the many years of the Vietnam conflict, not to mention the Vietnamese. The point was just to keep it going, to feed the metastasis, to keep the money flowing in and so it is today in south Asia and the middle east. And these chickens always come home to roost, say, "Waco", say, "swat team". Soon, when they run out of real money to play these barbaric games with foreigners, we will be the target.
Tony Vodvarka
There is a clear purpose for this war. It is, as Tony says, to keep the money flowing--that is what all wars are about. To enrich the munition makers is one purpose and the other purpose is to kill people.
The extremely rich are concerned about over population on earth. They want to kill the non rich people. That includes nearly all Iraqis and Afganis and our troops---they are working class people. With the collapse of our economy the extremely rich want all the young healthy working class men in the military and out of the United States. These young men, who would be unemployed at home, could take part in a revolution against capitalism here in the 'homeland'.
It is clear that we do not live in a democracy, although the rich try to convince us we do. Our nation has been involved in wars and funding death squads since 1950 in Puerto Rico, Iran, Guatemala, Egypt, Lebanon, Panama, Viet Nam, Cuba, Laos, Iraq, Indonesia, Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Cambodia, Oman, Chile, Angola, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Grenada, Honduras, Libya, Bolivia, Philippines, Liberia, Somalia, Yugoslavia, Bosnia, Haiti, Zaire (Congo), Albania, and Macedonina. In all these nations we enriched the munition makers and killed people. Way to go America. We are NUMBER ONE! in terrorism.
While I agree with the basic thrust of your post, a few of your points need recalibration.
The extremely rich are concerned about over-population only to the extent that they need to horde as much resources as they can because (as they and we falsely believe) there is not 'enough' to 'go around'. Population is increasing at a geometric rate (2,4,8,16,...) while Earth's naturally regenerating resources occur at an arithmetic rate (2,4,6,8,...)
The paradigm shift that must occur is one of competition. Competition fueled by the "survival of the fittest" meme is what truly stands in our way. There is enough technological innovation around right now that, implemented in a non-competitive way, could create a sustainable existence for all humanity.
Utopian? Perhaps. But there is no denying that it is within our grasp right now.
The other point, "Our nation has been involved in wars and funding death squads since 1950..." is off by about 200 years since we've ALWAYS been involved in wars. At the turn of the last century, 'Manifest Destiny' just moved from the domestic to the global world stage.
What could the money we spend in dubious wars in Iraq and Afghanistan buy for us in tne U.S.A? How many lives ould we save? Where is our Churchill wise enough to warn us that Empire is too costly?
"The only way to defeat terrorist groups is to isolate them within their own societies."
Accepting our governments rationale for being there means they set the agenda and limited the options.
Until Israel allows us to leave, we'll be there, draining our economy, hollowing out our military, destroying our standing in the world.
Chris Hedges's excellent essay, which should be printed in all the major newspapers in this country, is indicative of one of the bumper stickers that adorns my car:
"We Are Creating Enemies Faster Than We Can Kill Them".
"We Are Creating Enemies Faster Than We Can Kill Them"
Good thing. We need enemy growth for economic growth.
I agree with the several commenters here that, in addition to al Qaeda's interest in feeding an endless "insurgency" to sap the resources of the West, there is the additional power to be gained by the corporate military power structure in those Western countries. But the way I see this working out is that we need to look in that "mirror" that Hedges mentioned in an earlier essay and see "ourselves" as facilitators of the conflict, and I mean "ourselves" as rank and file citizens of this country, not just the fat cats of the defense industry. Look at the current dust-up about the continuation of expensive and probably useless F-22 fighter production, a cessation of which the President is "demanding" (with what degree of sincerity I am not sure) with an intensity that is described as "serious as a heart attack." But any such move puts the administration cross-wise of "the people" themselves, as represented by their members of Congress who demand the continuation and expansion of the F-22 program, not just because of its profitability to defense contractors, but because of the "dependence" of local economies on defense expenditures: how can you talk about closing an aircraft-manufacturing plant and losing jobs when this town is already suffering from the loss of manufacturing jobs? In the "it's the economy, stupid" mentality that characterizes our Joe Sixpacks, there is additional motivation to continue military operations that are as fruitless and counter-productive as Hedges describes them as being. In a sense maybe the progressive issue of our time IS "the economy," that is finding a way toward a "sustainable" economy that is not sustained in Hedges' delightful characterization of our conflicts today as "a Gilbert and Sullivan operetta without bullets." (Think Pirates of Penzance and the stupidity of the "Modern Major General.")
Of course I meant to say "a Gilbert and Sullivan operetta WITH guns and bullets.
What we need is a reverse of the re-tooling policy that forced Detroit manufacturing to get out of the production of automobiles and into the production of military hardware when the US entered WWII. Don't just close up the MIC factories but convert them to 'green' factories. Build windmills and solar-panels instead of costly and wasteful behemoths like the F-22.
(Happy Birthday JDR)
Re Old Peculiar July 20th, 2009 1:32 pm
Yes, and light rail cars, and the ties and tracks to run them on.
Now you've got it! Solutions and Causes are so obviou$. It's all about the implementation.
(To those CDers quick to shoot the messenger...please read "War is a Force That Gives Us Meaning" by...Chris Hedges.)
"q" is right, Mr. Hedges questions are merely rhetorical. CH 'gets' it.
Sioux Rose
Old P: So true! How DARE Goldman Sachs take the money and run, and leave the nation's factories like those in Europe turned ghostly during WW II. Ours are being gutted by a lack of foresight along with a pathological incapacity to make intelligent investments, those that will actually serve needs, as opposed to the abstraction of greed!
"how can you talk about closing an aircraft-manufacturing plant and losing jobs when this town is already suffering from the loss of manufacturing jobs?"
Oh good, an opportunity to talk about civics and economics. We need to realize that a) the economy is driven by the people's demands, b) the people's better interests are served by local control over supply/demand, and that c) this lesson must be taught in a renewed K-12 civics curriculum.
Essentially, the people will learn to take control of their economy through their civic demands but especially their market demands. They will be driven by their awareness of how they ultimately benefit, and by the mandate/responsibility bestowed on them.
You can actually help bestow the mandate. Tell the people you encounter that they have this responsibility to drive through their demands the kind of production that serves the people's better interests. Do your patriotic duty and demand local production in the people's better interests.
Here we have a problem with definitions. If your "Purpose" in War is defined as "flawless strategy executed with the least carnage to effect a swift victory followed by lasting peace", then it surely does seem that this war in Afghanistan is without purpose.
But if your definition of purpose is "Dick around so long that you have time to build another Vatican-sized embassy and force the puppet government you set up to sign oil contracts that benefit big foreign oil companies, while simultaneously feeding the weapons manufacturers the dual treats of unnecesary attacks that use up mass quantities of ordnance and creating many new enemies to sell arms to", then I would say there's a big honking purpose all over the place.
As smart as this guy Hedges is, he makes me laugh. The real enemy is al-Qaida my ass.
Thank you, Not Alan[July 20th, 2009 10:14 am]for suggesting Pepe Escobar et al. But as for Chris Hedges...Chris, come clean, are you a fossil-fuel propagandist? Fighting terrorists?... ha ha ha!!! If the U.S. were against terrorism, it would probably not engage in it with such regularity. The U.S. [and other major powers] are turning all the gas and oil areas into Mad Max land, because they prefer chaos to ceding control to rivals. But, oops, you can't protect gas and oil pipelines and pump stations with armed insurgents running around. It's a pathetic race to control the last few good years before the biosphere descends into major die-offs.
http://freepublictransit.org
Chris Hedges falls into an all too easy intellectual trap: the notion that the Pashtuns are the "traditional rulers of Afghanistan." That is not so. There have been times when Pashtun regimes (such as the Durrani Empire) have temporarily dominated, but by and large, Afghanistan is a multi-ethnic crossroads sort of place where traditional notions of nationhood do not apply at all. Hedges also ignores a Pashtun tendency towards extreme chauvinism (especially against the Hazara), which the Taliban gave full expression to (the massacre that occurred when they captured Mazar-i-Sharif, for example). That written, to engage oneself in this land where tribal & clan warfare, & blood feuds are a daily part of life is beyond foolish. The best the west can do is make sure the non-Pashtun peoples of Afghanistan are armed well enough to defend themselves.
Some government shlub (maybe Gates) recently said that America has one year to make Afghanistan "work". A year from now we will hear glowing reports of enormous "progress", eagerly, breathlessly reported by the MSM with the title track of "Star Wars" playing beneath the reports. It will all be lies but virtually no one will care or even be paying attention. We'll still be in Afghanistan when Obimbo is bald, paunchy and in a wheelchair. Hope I'm dead wrong.
CH is smarter than the title of this article makes him out to be...
He knows that AfPakistan is a war for G.O.D... Gun$, Oil, & Drug$...
Like When he rhetorically asks why no one can say why we are there...
He Is intentionally being suggestive of a stenographic mainstream media...
As well as military spokespersons who are intentionally omitting the truth...
CH, as well read and well travelled and well connected as he is,
should know full well that the CIA created Al Queda and the Mujahedeen...
To perform false flag terrorist attacks & draw the soviets into a war of attrition...
While simultaneously, Poppy Bush, Summers, et al were covertly destabilizing the ruble...
Once the soviet union was bankrupt, they bring in their boy Yeltzin to sell off the caspian basin oil rights and industrial infrastructure in sweetheart deals for pennies on the dollar...
Sound familiar...? Because the same CIA front banks are using the same formula here in the USA...
And guess who will come out on top once this country is bankrupted beyond repair?
The CIA/Banksters and their private military contractors like Blackwater, Halliburton, and Dyncorp...
It is being generous to say that those actions constitute some kind of coherent purpose. Such a scatological (and salient) vignette portrays well the cyclical degradation of legitimate, goal-oriented action which I believe is the point. Many of our "MIC"-oriented systems are based on a completely absurd illusion of perpetuity, and it is important to remember that these people "win" only because they define that objective in such a meaningless way.
Perhaps with more information and referenced evidence, you will come to a different conclusion...
Read EP Heidner : Collateral Damage Pt 1 & 2...
Then tell me if you still think it is all a mere coincidence of degenerating forces spiraling into meaninglessness...
The term "terrorist" always makes me uncomfortable.
I always think of the American revolutionaries, considered the terrorists of their moment in time. Seeking out and destroying the terrorists is like the rising red threat and the scare tactics of the commie under the bed.
A good assessment by Hedges until he assumed the terrorist rationale himself.
Sioux Rose
Excellent posts: GOLDEN MEAN, JERRY ROSE, ELAINE M & others.
I can't help feeling a subtext to this article, conveyed mostly through attitude, that still emanates from a programmed sense of American exceptionalism. Hedges does not question our being over "there" at all, apart from trying to grant the military mission cover through a variety of potential reasons for its execution. The bottom line is that the U.S. and its war machine belongs NO WHERE, and until the premise that war is justified is utterly deconstructed, as was the case with Iraq, a variety of excuses will be tried on for PR/public consumption, and thanks to the actual rigors of modern life added to a psychological version of "short attention span theater," few Americans keep track of which war, which score, in actual time. Chilling what it does to our collective humanity that the PRACTICE of war, taken as one of life's inevitabilities, adds substantially to that silent toll best defined as the banality of EVIL. Of course feeding the MIC beast, and alloting to Mammon its unfair due also contribute mightily to this suicidal trajectory passing for foreign policy.
Dear Sioux Rose, Mr. Hedges' previous articles make it clear that he shares your aversion to militarism and foreign military adventures.
Tony Vodvarka
Which is why it is wierdly out of character for Chris to write this current article...
Hedges knows better than this, as he has prolofically elucidated in numerous other articles...
So one must ask themselves what is CH's motivation for writing this one...?
Is it due to a lack of research? Historical analysis? Geopolitical strategy? Who is to profit? Who is to gain?
Is it an unconscious visceral reaction to the atrocities being conducted by al Queda that circumvents the capacity for frontal lobe cognition in seeing the greater historical content and current covert relations with The CIA and Saudi intelligence?
Is it a case of needing to meet a deadline, and churning out another emotional heartstring account of the atrocities of empire is what CH does best, and I am grateful for his role in doing that if nothing else...
Or is it a case of Chris hedging his bets to pull some punches in order to pull some strings in order to continue doing what he does best?
Who knows? This article reads like "words without a purpose", by a gifted writer who has already said all anyone can say about war and how it effects us all...
Sioux Rose
GOLDEN: You and I have the same visceral reaction to Hedge's piece. It sounds like it's marching in synch with some invisible/internal "John Phillip Sousa" patriotic band. The whole tone carries this sense of America's RIGHT to be over there, and he parlays the idea, the possibility, of this latest occupation being about spreading democracy. Perhaps he wants to be interviewed on Fox?
And I realize that Hedges has written BRILLIANTLY on the topic of war. In this forum I related that I felt I saw spiritual/personal growth in his words and analysis. This piece however, seems to fall back to the whole "embedded journalist" showing patriotism stance. Something feels OFF.
Exactly! He's like, hey, we're over here without a purpose, and we're losing to boot. As if to say, when we get an approved purpose and start winning it will all be good.
And while this continues, no calls for getting out of Afghanistan now.
The anti-war movement is nonexistent.
The dominant myth running throughout American culture is that of an underdog fearlessly fighting the oppressors. That myth begins early with the Pilgrims leaving the oppressive religious environment of the old world to begin anew. The cornerstone of that myth is the Revolutionary War where the insurgent rabble become heroes by fighting off the evil British Empire with whatever means possible, ushering in the dawn of guerrilla warfare.
The myth gets replayed in books and movies like Dune where the Fremen fight the highly technical and organized Evil Empire from underground caves. Star Wars glorifies the theme of the "underdog defeats the big empire bully" where a scrappy hodgepodge of characters jury-rig whatever they can find in order to fight the suppressive and highly technical empire and destroys the Death Star. That theme permeates our culture.
We were supposedly victims of Pearl Harbor, just sleepily hanging around one Sunday morning and suddenly we had to rally and fight the evil Japanese and German empires.
Strangely, Americans still feel like victims. We have an image of some vast network of terrorists out to destroy us, and we still play the "Big Evil out there" card.
But we have become that great sophisticated technical empire against whom the insurgent rabble fight from underground caves, hiding from drones, and lasers, and fully equipped storm troopers. They fight with makeshift bombs, stolen rifles, whatever the can find, all the while finding strength and determination to do what they can to defeat the Great Evil Empire in their lands.
Ironically the insurgents and tribesmen, despite what we may think of their culture, are the heroes running throughout the American story. We have become the enemy of our own mythology.
"That myth begins early with the Pilgrims leaving the oppressive religious environment of the old world to begin anew."
And indeed it is a myth.
The Pilgrims were persecuted in England for their intolerant dogma, but the newly independent Republic of the Netherlands offered them freedom to practice their peculiar faith. Nearly twenty years they stayed in this country, until their children began to question the dogma, began to become as tolerant and secular as the Dutch. Then they left for America where they could practice their bigotry and pass it on.
(when the Dutch had finally driven out the Spanish oppressors - who had imported their Inquisition to persecute the "heretic" Protestants - the winning side began, in turn, to persecute the remaining adherents to the Roman faith. William the Silent, the nominal leader of the country, declared that "Freedom of religion is for everyone.")
Sioux Rose
PASCAL: Your post is refreshing for its originality and incisiveness.
And we became what we beheld. Well stated.
· Yr Obd't Servant