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President Obama's Afghanistan Election Speech
There was one way in which President Obama’s escalation speech brought significant relief to the 59% of people in this country, as well as the overwhelming majorities of people in Afghanistan, Pakistan, the Middle East and elsewhere who oppose the U.S. war in Afghanistan: It was a pretty lousy speech. That is, it had none of the power, the lyricism, the passion for history, the capacity to engage and to persuade virtually every listener, even those who may ultimately disagree, that have characterized the president’s earlier addresses.
And for that failure, we should be very grateful.
Because everything else in this politically and militarily defensive speech reflected accountability not to President Obama’s base, the extraordinary mobilization of people who swept this anti-war and anti-racist candidate into office, but rather to the exigencies of Washington’s traditional military, political, and corporate power-brokers who define “national security.”
In a speech like this, widely acknowledged to be setting the framework for the security/foreign policy/military paradigm for the bulk of Obama’s still-new presidency, location matters. West Point was crucial partly for tactical reasons (nowhere but a military setting, with young cadets under tight command, could the president count on applause and a standing ovation in response to a huge escalation of an unpopular war). But it was also important for Obama to claim West Point as his own after Bush’s 2002 speech there, an address that first identified preemptive war as the basis of the Bush Doctrine and a new foreign policy paradigm.
There was an important honesty in one aspect of President Obama’s speech. All claims that the U.S. war was bringing democracy to Afghanistan, modernizing a backward country, and liberating Afghan women, are off the agenda — except when the Pentagon identifies them as possible “force multipliers” to achieve the military goal. And that goal hasn’t changed — “to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat al-Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and to prevent its capacity to threaten America and our allies in the future.” So now it’s official. It’s not about Afghanistan and Afghans at all — it’s all about us.
It’s a good thing the White House has dropped that rhetoric as the past eight years has brought few social improvements. Afghanistan ranks second to last in the UN’s Human Development Index, and just in the last few weeks UNICEF identified Afghanistan as one of the three worst places in the world for a child to be born. As for improving the lives of women Afghanistan retains the second-highest level of maternal mortality of any country in the world — even after eight years of U.S. occupation. Is further military escalation likely to change that?
Ironic Timing
Less than two days after his escalation speech, Obama will host a jobs summit at the White House. Whatever his official message, the millions of unemployed in the U.S. know that 30,000 more troops in Afghanistan adds $30 billion this year to the already out-of-control war budget — and means that the only jobs available will be in the military. What clearer example could there be of the Afghanistan war as a war against poor people — those who die in Afghanistan and those left jobless and desperate here at home? A week later, Obama travels to Norway to accept the Nobel Peace Prize. Not even the best speechwriters will be able to portray sending thousands of young women and men across the world to kill and die as evidence of the newest Nobel laureate’s commitment to global peace.
And the day of the speech itself was World AIDS Day. The UNAIDS noted that all of its country goals — treatment for 6–7 million people, screening 70 million pregnant women, providing preventive services to 37 million people — could be accomplished with just $25 billion. That’s what the United States will spend fighting in Afghanistan in just three months. Timing matters.
The result was a speech that reflected Obama’s centrist-in-chief effort to please all his constituencies. Some will be quite satisfied. Mainstream Republicans were delighted. They were careful not to praise too much, but as Republican Senator Saxby Chambliss noted, President Obama’s escalation was “the right analysis, the right decision.” General McChrystal, Obama’s handpicked top commander in Afghanistan, was quite satisfied: He had asked for 40,000 new troops, and got 30,000 U.S. troops and a promise (we’ll see…) of 5,000 more from NATO and other allies. More significantly, he and Bush hold-over Secretary of Defense Robert Gates got the president’s endorsement of a full-scale counterinsurgency plan.
Mainstream Democrats were likely delighted — assertion of their party’s military credentials, with talk of a “transition to Afghan responsibility” to soothe their constituents’ outrage. They may be uneasy about the additional costs, but could take solace in Obama’s promise to “work closely with Congress to address these costs as we work to bring down our deficit.” Just how anyone would “address” these spiraling billions remains unclear.
The ones not happy — besides the young cadets in the audience, other soldiers facing new and endlessly renewed deployments, and their families — are the massive numbers of people who swept Obama into office on a mobilized tide of anti-war, anti-racist and anti-poverty commitments. Talk of beginning a “transition” 18 months down the line, with NO commitment for an actual troop withdrawal, isn't going to satisfy them.
And President Obama seemed to know that. So he resorted to an old tactic, long relied on by George W. Bush: book-ending his speech with the trope of 9/11, pleading for a return to the moment “when this war began, we were united — bound together by the fresh memory of a horrific attack, and by the determination to defend our homeland and the values we hold dear. I refuse to accept the notion that we cannot summon that unity again.” What Obama left out, and perhaps hoped that we have forgotten, was that the human solidarity that created such unity in the wake of the 9/11 attacks — not only across the United States, but around the world as well — began to erode as soon as the war in Afghanistan began. Because we knew then, as we know today, that the war in Afghanistan was never legitimate, was never moral, was never going to keep us safe,” and was never a “good war.”
What Did the Speech Say?
- Thirty thousand new U.S. troops will be sent to Afghanistan “at the fastest possible pace.” In July 2011, 18 months from now, the U.S. will “begin to transfer our forces out of Afghanistan.”
- No more “blank checks” to the Afghan government; the U.S. expects those it assists to combat corruption and “deliver for the people,” and that those “who are ineffective or corrupt to be held accountable.”
- The U.S. goals in Afghanistan are to “deny al Qaeda a safe haven. We must reverse the Taliban’s momentum and deny it the ability to overthrow the government. And we must strengthen the capacity of Afghanistan’s Security Forces and government, so that they can take lead responsibility for Afghanistan’s future.”
- The government of Pakistan is our friend and ally, and “our success in Afghanistan is inextricably linked to our partnership with Pakistan.”
- Unlike the Soviets and other earlier empires in Afghanistan, the U.S. has “no interest in occupying your country. We will support efforts by the Afghan government to open the door to those Taliban who abandon violence and respect the human rights of their fellow citizens. And we will seek a partnership with Afghanistan grounded in mutual respect.”
What Was Left Out
- The 18-month timeline references only the “beginning” of transferring U.S. troops out of Afghanistan; there was no reference to finishing transfer of all troops out of Afghanistan and ending the occupation. The words “exit” or “exit strategy” do not appear in the speech, and the word “withdraw” appears only in a reference to what the U.S. will NOT do.
- There was absolutely no explanation of how this year’s $30 billion additional costs for the 30,000 more troops, on top of the billions more already in the pipeline, would be paid for. Obama referred only to his intention to consult with Congress to “address” these costs while bringing down the deficit. The inevitable impact this spending would have on jobs, health care, or climate change was ignored.
- The speech assumed Afghan support for the U.S. occupation, ignoring the massive evidence to the contrary. Just hours before Obama spoke, the Wall Street Journal stated matter-of-factly that “when the U.S. forces enter an area, the levels of violence generally increase, causing anger and dissatisfaction among the local population.” It quoted a pro-Karzai parliamentarian who said, “If new troops come and are stationed in civilian areas, when they draw Taliban attacks civilians will end up being killed.”
- Obama paid no attention to the increasingly visible opposition to the Karzai government and the U.S. occupation from the majority Pashtun population — whose southern and eastern Afghanistan territory will be the operations center for the new troop escalation. The Journal quoted a shopkeeper in the southern city of Kandahar who said, “If we get more troops, there will be more bloodshed. Only Afghans themselves can solve this problem.” The Pashtuns, who make up the majority of the Taliban, are increasingly defining Afghanistan’s civil war as an ethnic war against supporters of the old U.S.-backed Northern Alliance, whose Tajik and Uzbek militants now make up the majority of the Afghan National Army.
- There was no reference to the U.S.-paid mercenaries (both local and internationals, all paid through U.S. contractor corporations) in Afghanistan, whose numbers rose by 40% just between June and September, now totaling 104,101, and already outnumbering U.S. troops.
- While claiming the U.S. may not have the same interests as earlier empires, Obama has now acknowledged that the U.S. is occupying Afghan land not to protect Afghan interests, but to protect the U.S. and U.S. citizens.
- There was no acknowledgement of the widely held view that there are fewer than 100 members of al Qaeda in Afghanistan, and perhaps as few as 300 over the border in Pakistan — so the U.S. will now be deploying more than 100,000 of its own troops, plus tens of thousands of NATO and other allied troops, in a global, lethal, impoverishing war to go after 400 people.
- Obama spoke of Afghanistan as a war of necessity, saying “We did not ask for this fight. On September 11, 2001, 19 men hijacked four airplanes and used them to murder nearly 3,000 people.” He ignored the fact that none of the hijackers were Afghans, none lived in Afghanistan (they lived in Hamburg), none trained in Afghanistan (they trained in Florida), and none went to flight school in Afghanistan (that was in Minnesota).
- Obama spoke of the existing involvement of NATO and other allied governments, and asked for additional troop commitments; he did not mention the massive opposition to the war all those government face (70% opposition in the UK, the highest troop contributor), with several countries pulling their troops out. He described the “broad coalition of 43 nations that support our aims,” but ignored the reality that many of those nations have deployed troops numbering only in the double or even single digits — one from Georgia, two from Iceland, four from Austria, seven each from Ireland and Jordan, 10 from Bosnia, etc.
- The speech acknowledged that the recent election of President Karzai was “marred by fraud,” but maintained the fiction that Karzai’s presidency is somehow still “consistent with Afghanistan’s laws and constitution.” There was no acknowledgement of the widespread Afghan view of Karzai as simultaneously corrupt, incompetent, and dependent on the U.S. occupation, and that trying to win “hearts and minds” to back a government lacking local legitimacy ensures failure.
- Describing an alleged “partnership” with Pakistan, Obama ignored the danger of a U.S. troop escalation further destabilizing Pakistan, and sidelined the fact that recent polls indicate 59% of Pakistanis view the U.S. as the greatest threat, more than three times as those who see arch-rival India as the most threatening, and almost six times more than those who identify the Taliban. Obama stayed silent about the on-going special forces and drone strikes in Pakistan, with no indication whether his future escalation will include ratcheting up those attacks.
- There was no reference to the need for a broad regional diplomatic strategy; the word “India” did not appear in the speech and Obama ignored Islamabad’s concerns vis-à-vis India, which shape much of Pakistan’s historic support for the Taliban and other insurgent forces in Afghanistan. He thus disregarded the most important regional dynamics at work.
- While referencing the U.S. “transition” out of Iraq, Obama didn't acknowledge the level of violence continuing there, where more civilians continue to die than are dying in Afghanistan, nor the 113,731 mercenaries bolstering the U.S. military there. While proposing Iraq as a model for getting U.S. troops out, he ignored the reality that there are still 124,000 U.S. troops occupying Iraq.
Anti-War Escalation Needed
Near the end of his speech, Obama tried to speak to his antiwar one-time supporters, speaking to the legacy of Vietnam. It was here that the speech’s internal weakness was perhaps most clear. Obama refused to respond to the actual analogy between the quagmire of Vietnam, which led to the collapse of Johnson’s Great Society programs, and the threat to Obama’s ambitious domestic agenda collapsing under the pressure of funding the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Instead, he created straw analogies, ignoring the massive challenge of waging an illegitimate, unpopular war at a moment of dire economic crisis.
Obama also did not acknowledge that about 30% of all U.S. casualties in the 8-year war in Afghanistan have occurred during the 11 months of his presidency. He did not remind us that the cost of this war, with the new escalation, will be about $100 billion a year, or $2 billion every week, or more than $11 million every hour. He didn’t tell us that the same one-year amount, $100 billion, could cover the cost of ALL of the United Nations Millennium Development Goals: clean water, health care, primary education and vaccinations for the people of every one of the poorest 21 countries in the world.
He didn’t ask us to consider what adding another $100 billion — let alone $500 billion, or half a TRILLION dollars over the next five years — to the already ballooning deficit will do to our chances for real health care reform.
President Obama didn’t ask us that. But we know the answer to that question. We need to build a movement that can respond to that answer, that can respond to the new challenges of these new conditions — because while this is not a new war, we face a new political moment. We need to build new alliances into a movement that can bring this war and occupation to a rapid end, so that we can begin to make good on our real obligations to the peoples of Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as to the people of our own country who struggle to find jobs, health care, and climate justice. We need to build a movement with roots in the trade unions, in the labor movement, and among those struggling for economic rights, particularly among communities of color. We have to push Congress to make good on their “concerns” regarding this new escalation by refusing to pay for it, and to support those members of Congress who are trying to do just that. Congress hasn’t given Obama a blank check for this war yet — not even a $30 billion check. And there’s still time for us to make sure they don’t.
We have a lot of work to do.


77 Comments so far
Show AllI did not watch the speech. Even if I wanted to I cannot because the TV stations went off the air in June. The writing was on the wall when this thing chose to retain Robert Gates as his war-making secretary. This thing admires Ronald Satan and when Ronnie Satan gave the Contras aids, Gates was by his side whispering cooked intelligence in his ear. Gates wanted to bomb Nicaragua! This thing should do a Tiger and confess to his wife and daughters: "yes it's true, I AM a blood-lusting war-president"
Wonderful and entertaining comment. Thanks!
It was a NAPPY (No Account President and Party of Yuppies) performance, indeed. Yup.
They are counting on a triangulation strategy of sorts to win elections. By co-opting the Right's positions and policies they hope to innoculate themselves and possibly widen their appeal. As for the marginalized Left--and the citizenry at large, they are inconsequential and easily manipulated by voting for the "lesser evil", bashing the Left even when it represents the views of the majority and rolling over an utterly useless congress up for the highest bid and complicit corporate media.
Obama was never an "anti-war" or an "anti-racist" candidate.
Where did Phyliis get this disinformation? Has she not done her homework on this matter. Every step of his political career Obama has supported institutions of militarism as well as racist institutions. There is a record that is clear and quite public why don't people like Ms. Bennis look it up before they assert such falsehoods.
So let us not talk falsely as the hour is indeed getting late.
Today will become a historic day...
It will not be the all too predictable speech from the day before yesterday but today, when the Democratic Party Left went bankrupt. Commentators who had originally joined the Democratic Party in order to stop "imperialist war", today openly supported imperialist war in order to support the Democratic Party. Moreover, they stated their reasoning openly -- so far has the very possibility of shame receded.
Others who found themselves unable to do other than to voice modest opposition, still reassured each other that it was possible to support President or Party while disagreeing on "some subjects". Still others publicly strategised on the methods by which mounting opposition by the people could be deflected in order to save the all important (and thoroughly empty) "domestic agenda". Yet others deferred discussion of accelerated mass murder in favor of debating whether Obama was a liar or not.
Thus, questions of life and death were given priority lower than the basest deal-mongering, in the "interest of the working-class"... and in the interest of political "career".
So the short period which began with "Clean-Gene" kids in 1968, or with Fonda/Hayden "local electoral" fantasies or with simple opportunists like John Kerry who managed to overcome their own PTSD just in time to move from the VVAW to the Senate... that short period ends with nothing whatsoever to show for it but the utter, total bankruptcy and corruption of those who went on the journey.
Correct. An anti-war Senator does not vote to fund a war. Senator Obama did vote funds for Iraq and Afghanistan. No additional evidence is needed. Case closed.
E. J. Dionne has finally descended into the moral underworld by calling President Obama's decision to send more troops to Afghanistan with a wishy-washy so-called exit strategy full of holes 'courageous'.
Are you really surprised about Dionne?
He's another odious Liberal-Lite puffball infotainwhore, like Richard Cohen and Joe Klein.
The list is very long, but I won't add to it here because I'm thinking of eating a late lunch, and I'd prefer to keep it down.
· Yr Obd't Servant
CAPITALIST DEMOCRACY
The upper 55% hoarding all the wealth and denying all ownership rights and power to the laboring class. A state of war.
SOCIALISM
The lower 55% taking all wealth and ownership away from the intelligent ruling class. A state of war.
SOCIAL DEMOCRACY
The realization that we have all been given a different level of intelligence
as a test, to see if we pass our excessive wealth down to those
less intelligent where it belongs.
Only an idiot would equate wealth with intelligence. I have a whole family of Orange county Republicans who think that way, yet they live within their gated communities shouting that the 'less intelligent' (see less wealthy) will need to give up their freedom in order to fight those that hate freedom. You see, they also think that money is speech, and that it is also freedom. Funny that wealth should be all of these things. In their world nothing is free, since money buys everything - intelligence, beauty, intelligence, a voice, and the freedom to steal everything, even other peoples' freedom. God made it that way.
Some intelligent people actually value things other than wealth, and for that reason they don't spend their efforts seeking after more than they need. Freedom is the default position, and only socialist ideas like 'justice' create popular respect for peoples' rights to life, and ownership of property. When that respect isn't returned there is no reason for anyone to respect the law, much less the property rights of thieves. Justice had better be 'socialized' or it isn't justice. At this point I see no reason to respect the right to own property, because justice has become a commodity to be bought or sold, like a car, or a new set of breasts.
Sioux Rose
With savagery in suits continuing to make and deliver the policies of destruction, the U.S. has its own fate sealed. The karmic implications are enormous. The "stars" are not with us on this venture into the graveyard of prior empires. Shame on Obama, another sell-out posing as a leader. The blowback has already begun in terms of how the world views the U.S, how its slippery Wall St dealings in the non-product euphemistically referred to as a derivative has become a monetary cancer throughout the world, our companies like Monsanto treat the elements of the natural world like their personal chemical toilet, and weapons are circulated that lead to bloodbaths in too many regions. These policies are an insult to Creation and any premise of respect for life. Hard to believe after Bush the next "one" in would not at least put the brakes on... that he's continuing the escalation in madness and worldwide destruction AFTER seeing what was done (most recently, and by no means indicative of the whole arc of destruction to which the "we're # 1 U.S." can lay claim) in Iraq qualifies as a nation's character bound to the level of a psychopath. Nobel Peace Prize... the elites really think it just takes the right marketing to tweak the most horrific of policies in an affirmative direction? Lots are waking up and see through the propped up images.
Hi Sioux Rose,
This is my first CD post in months. I hope you and all the regulars here are well. I just returned from the Golden State, strolling the beaches picking up trash and pocketing a few seashells as payment.
It was so healing to be at the edge of Mama Earth's largeat body of water. Dolphins frolicked in the surf while I soaked it all in so I would have enough of the good ocean medicine to carry back to the snow zone where I am destined to spend the winter months.
As much as I love you all here on CD, I am having a good time fasting from the world of mass media. My disillusionment with the system is keeping me away. I really had hopes that things were going to radically shift after the Obama's moved into the WH 9 months ago. Yeah, some things have changed. But where's the real change? It looks a lot like business as usual, thus my withdraw.
I don't know how long my absence will continue. Perhaps this post is a warm up, and I'm getting ready to return. I have more motivation to be an activist when it's cold and snowy outside. On the other-hand, I love to ski, so we'll see.
At any rate, I'm reading a few good books. One is called The Depression Cure by Stephen S. Ilardi, and my 5th Bill Bryson book called A Short History of Nearly Everything. Great books, by the way, for what it's worth.
Another great post by the way. Keep it up, sister. Hope you're well. How's Purto Rico? Did you go or still in Florida?
Peace out, Moondoggy
"I am having a good time fasting from the world of mass media."
You're certainly not the only one contemplating going frozen turkey on politics once and for all. I'm not a leader; I couldn't lead my bulldog to a barbecue. I would, however, be willing to donate money to and follow someone, anyone, who genuinely has the huevos to crap on Obama's head. I don't think there is the remotest possibility of this happening. You don't have to be a complete pessimist to entertain the thought that the United States is in a state of utterly hopeless decline. Given the criminal nature of our political duopoly and the ignorance and stupidity of so much of the USA population, perhaps it's just better to enjoy yourself, your loved ones and the pursuits about which you are passionate and have "a good time fasting from the world of mass media".
Just keep up the comedy man, we need laughter with the all crap going on.
Yeah, sometimes I think it would be a lot easier if I was just another dumbed, down American supporting Palin. Like I read somewhere: ignorance is bliss!
Christ, this author is long-winded... gibberish begets gibberish.
One sentence would have sufficed: "Finally, tonight, with his speech in front of 4,000 cement head drones, Obama completed his ascension to the throne as ruler of the Empire - not bad for 11 months up in the big house."
Good article until the last paragraph. Phyllis Bennis's reference that we need to pressure Congress (Democrats) to not pay for the escalation of the war and to support those that comply. Problems:
1) The Democrats have voted for the funding of both the Iraq and Afghanistan wars for years, while occasionally publicly denouncing the wars. The opposition is political theater.
2) The act of a Congressman to speak out once (and maybe vote) against the funding, e.g., next January, doesn't negate the fact that the Congressman has voted recently to dissallow the release of the torture photos (government secrecy), voted to condemn the Goldstone Gaza report, has been joining the neocons in making Iran out to be a bigger threat than it is...
Phyllis seems to be living on a different planet to ignore the fact that Democrats have time and time again ignored its constituency. The Democratic Party has ignored the majority of the public time and time again because its supporters support them regardless of how they vote.
Despair and depression. I have nothing left, no "hope", no nothing. It is over. The country is lost to the fascist MIC. Done. Over. Fini. Fuckit.
Yup, I agree completely.
Me too.
Look, the world would be better off with a few less homo sapiens, so if you're thinking about suicide, make it spectacular and public. But if you are unsure, perhaps you might take a look at a book I'm currently reading called:
The Depression Cure by Stephen S. Ilardi, PhD.
It explains a lot. You may realize something that you might have otherwise overlooked. Then you may change your mind, and your lifestyle and realize that your life is worth living afterall. Upon making that discovery you might even help a few others who are in a similar funk.
And who knows, you may end up discovering something that the rest of us need to know to save us from destroying ourselves and the rest of life on this rare and precious life-bearing planet. That would certainly be worth living for.
Life is good. Good luck!
I'm nowhere near suicide, not over a bunch of assholes in the top 1%. However, any of them may want to consider rather carefully whether they would feel secure in crossing my path. When I say "I have nothing left" I mean I have no fight left in me. They won. All I can do is try to stay under the radar and keep the taxes paid on my tiny townhouse until the currency inflates so much that I can't pay up. At that point I WILL make my "stand" as "the authorities" arrive to physically evict me. Then we shall have the "glorious" exit -- pictures at eleven.
I'll take a look at the book anyway. Hopefully the local library will have it.
Kent
Other than the first paragraph, I agree completely. I don't think that just reducing the population will do wonders. The ratio of higher quality lives to mediocre quality lives needs to be improved.
P.S.: Welcome back. :)
"…the U.S. is occupying Afghan land not to protect Afghan interests, but to protect the U.S. and U.S. citizens."
Yeah, right. I feel so much safer now. Thank you, Mr. President. Where would I be without you protecting me from those nasty orcs in Afghanistan?
I am now completely disillusioned with the Democratic wing of our one party Oligarch state. I did not expect huge miracles from Obama but I was hoping for at lest some minimal improvement with how the government treats the average American citizen. I see nothing meaningful that has been done, or is being proposed to be done, to make the little guys/gals life in this country better.
Bush could have easily given the escalation speech that O-bomb-a country did. You can read the whole thing here. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/12/01/obama-afghanistan-speech-text-excerpts_n_376088.html
But this is my favorite paragraph that I LOL'ed in disgust at the TV when I heard him say it.
"For unlike the great powers of old, we have not sought world domination. Our union was founded in resistance to oppression. We do not seek to occupy other nations. We will not claim another nation's resources or target other peoples because their faith or ethnicity is different from ours. What we have fought for - and what we continue to fight for - is a better future for our children and grandchildren, and we believe that their lives will be better if other peoples' children and grandchildren can live in freedom and access opportunity."
"We do not occupy other nations." Lets see... 700 foreign military bases.
"We don't claim other nation's resources." Google john Perkins, the economic hit-man for all the gory details on that one.
"Our union was founded in resistance to oppression." & "We do not target other peoples because of their ethnicity." I guess America going to Africa and stealing Africans from their home land to enslave them in the US doesn't count. And I guess the US history of the treatment of the American Indian slipped his mind also. Oh and what about the internment of Japanese Americans during WWII. Oops, his bad on that one too.
"We fight for a better life for our children and grand children and believe their lives will be better if other peoples children can live in freedom and access opportunity."
Lets see, we don't want to do anything about global climate change.
We squander future generations resources on wars of choice and shipping plastic pumpkins halfway around the world so a few owners of large corporations can make a bigger profit.
We are running up huge deficits that our children and grandchildren will have to pay but but have no voice in their creation.
And don't forget we support oppressive regimes all around the world if we think it is in the short term best interests of our country. One of the real reasons this country is despised by some of the peoples of the world.
It is hard to believe a supposed educated man could read that paragraph with a straight face. Does he really think all of us are that stupid, and have no knowledge of this countries history?
IMHO it was disgusting that he would state something like that to the world.
Does he really think all of us are stupid, and have no knowledge of this country's history? If he did, it would indicate that the ruling class cared about what we think. There is no evidence to support that supposition.
Excellent points. I had similar thoughts. Actually, I was trying to watch the speech but I had to quit at the "We do not seek to occupy other nations..." As you pointed out, it is difficult to discern a difference from what the monkey fiend used to say.
"It is hard to believe a supposed educated man could read that paragraph with a straight face. Does he really think all of us are that stupid, and have no knowledge of this countries history?"
"IMHO it was disgusting that he would state something like that to the world."
He knows the older generations are catching him in these lies. But anyone under forty probably lacks sufficient education and/or insight to catch him. Do they even teach history in schools anymore? I agree. It was disgusting and appalling, but yes, he IS getting over with it. Sadly.
Naomi Klein's book, The Shock Doctrine, also includes countless examples of how this country has trampled on the human rights of people in other countries -- including the children -- stealing resources, privatizing public businesses, training men to torture at The School of the Americas, etc.
9/11 in Chile -- Allende's murder.
And, then, there's Madeline Albright when she appeared on 60 Minutes, telling the world that sanctions in Iraq, with 5,000 children dying each month, is a price worth paying.
Of course, I could list countless other examples, but it is very depressing, isn't it?
"Of course, I could list countless other examples, but it is very depressing, isn't it?"
Yes it is...
I did not bother to watch this speech. I happened to be upstairs where my roomate had been watching it to make myself a sandwich when Obama was on the part you referenced.
All I could do was roll my eyes. My ANGER level jumped up by about 300 points. I was ready to throw something at the TV...I thought listening to GW Bush was torture but this was as bad if not worse.
Instead of waterboarding folk they should force them to sit through an Obama Speech.
When I realized how suddenly miserable I had become after a few moments of Obama speaking , I went back downstairs and had a beer.
People find him "inspiring"?
Phyllis Bennis has written here an excellent summary of the speech and of the situation. President Obama has risked becoming a one-term president, on behalf of his military-industrial-corporate sponsors.
I believe our focus should be the Congress. This escalation cannot happen if it isn't funded. We must mobilize our friends and relatives and develop a massive call-in to their offices to stop them from passing any more supplementals. We should also massively get out in the streets and protest both wars.
We want to stop these immoral wars for all the reasons of deaths and injuries of our own soldiers and of Iraqis, Afghans and Pakistanis, displacements of civilians in their countries, PTSD and suicides among our service people and the burdens of long term care on military families of those wounded.
Another reason: WE CANNOT AFFORD IT!! We've already spent almost one trillion dollars on these wars. The bailouts and the failed economy with our massive borrowing and devaluation of the dollar are leading to a destitute situation here at home.
Mcurie, please refer to Kent Shaw's 10:02 AM post. I appreciate your passion but IMHO our country is done for.
There were huge anti war protests before the Iraq war and we went in anyway. There was huge opposition to the bailouts to the banks. People called and wrote their congress critters and in the end they gave the banks the money anyway. The majority of the people in this country want some kind of public health insurance option, and we see how that fight is going.
The MIC/corpocracy is now a totally corrupted system incapable of doing the peoples business. We are an empire in terminal decline. How it all ends up will be "interesting" to say the least.
Hello, Tom. I am a hair away from believing with you and Kent Shaw that it's all over and I may as well slit my wrists. I've been in a big slump like the guy here who went picking up seashells in CA for a few months. But I can't not do something when I think of our children and what we'll be leaving them if we don't change things. We have to try again, and keep trying, for their sake. I was in DC for the anti-war rallies before and after the start of the wars; I even joined a citizens' lobbying effort there (that too was frustrating...no Democrats were in that day to speak with us...they sent the junior aides). I too did the visits to Congressional offices in the state, the calls, the emails, written op-eds in my local newspaper, letters to the editor, the whole bit. Call me masochistic (I call myself that) but I refuse to stop trying. Last night I went to my small-town hall with 40 others in a peaceful protest. There was a child of nine there with a small lit candle and she thanked us all for being there. It sounds trite but I ain't gonna give up on her or my own family kids.
mcurie: Last night, I also attended an anti-war rally -- at Times Square, here in NYC. We were a very small group -- especially considering that 8 million people live here. Like you, I attended every single rally and march in D.C. prior to the invasion of Iraq, and following the occupation. Of course, I also attended every rally and march here in NYC, one in Boston and one in Philadelphia. I wrote letters, I e-mailed, I called my congressional representatives, and was let down again and again. But, I will keep going. What other option is there?
This morning, I learned something that I hadn't yet connected to the lack of progressive and liberal support -- attending rallies, protests, and other types of serious activism, along with the low turnout when rallies are announced on a variety of issues. Rahm Emanuel, et. al., contacted the money-men, the men who fund the liberal and progressive organizations, and told them the administration didn't want to hear any rumblings, so to speak. In other words, muffle your members. What it all boils down to is that people, e.g. George Soros, would threaten to withhold funding from MoveOn (e.g.) if the organization failed to subdue their members.
Jane Hamsher explains on Democracy Now!
www.democracynow.org
Since Obama's inauguration, I have attended rallies on Wall Street, health care rallies, etc., and the numbers attending are so small. I really couldn't figure it out. Now, the dots are connected, and it all makes sense. In the meantime, though, several groups have lost their momentum, along with their credibility.
I feel your frustration with small numbers at rallies. I live in Montana where I expect number to be somewhat low. (But NYC?) Sometimes it feels a little embarrassing to be standing on a bridge or in front of a courthouse, congressional office, capitol or federal building with a tiny group of passionate protestors in a city of 100,000 people, who mostly vote for progressive candidates and issues.
So I don't know why more people don't show up. But I do have a theory. 2 things are going on: 1 if people are somewhat comfortable, it's easier to just stay home or go to a show or ball game. And when people are broke, they're working several jobs and have no time to spare.
A pattern I've noticed since childhood: people only rally in times of disaster. I remember a flood when I was 9. Everyone from miles around all came to help residents living along a flooded creek sandbag their eroding banks and keep houses from washing away. Before the flood many neighbors didn't know each other, but their common plight brought them all together like only a disaster can.
It's going to take a major disaster to bring people together. Once Florida begins to disappear beneith the waves then maybe we'll cut the crap and start working together for the common good.
I agree with you on people needing real disasters before they rally together. But as far as attending protests go I think there is also a cost benefit analysis people use for attending protests.
If it is reasonably local I think more people will go. But as you start thinking about spending hundreds of dollars to travel hundreds of miles to attend a protest that may or may not even make it on TV, and will probably have no impact on the government. I feel many people may think, maybe I should put that money aside to buy food, pay rent, or spend it on something that is tangible and really needed. Just IMHO anyway.
Kay, don't give up. It's not over yet. We must continue and try to make our friends and neighbors privy to what's going on. Good for you for all your good work to try and change things. There is such good in so many of us and we must believe that we are in the majority. We can't let the snakes among us be dominant. We are a world family and I guess we have to speak for those who cannot or will not speak for themselves.
Kay, don't give up. It's not over yet. We must continue and try to make our friends and neighbors privy to what's going on. Good for you for all your good work to try and change things. There is such good in so many of us and we must believe that we are in the majority. We can't let the snakes among us be dominant. We are a world family and I guess we have to speak for those who cannot or will not speak for themselves.
I haven't and won't give up -- but we do need more people in the streets!
When I say I've given up, I'm giving up on our government, not on myself or family. I have no intension of suicide or anything like that. I feel that at this time trying to change the federal government is almost impossible. It is too corrupted by money. Like said in a previous post. You can write your representative all you want but unless you are willing to attach a $100,000 check to your letter you will be ignored.
We have downsized our lives, have no debt and are trying to be as self reliant as possible. And that is advise I would give to everyone. I suspect were heading for another depression at worse, or a VERY extended hard recession, and I''m going to do my best to ride it out to whatever will be on the other side.
Tom
Sorry for my dramatic reply ;-); I'm not planning on suicide either but have been very low about the course of action of Obama and the Dems. You sound like a wonderful person with a great family. Don't give up yet. We need all the good people to come forward and keep up the barrage even though it's horribly frustrating.
Security and Insecurity
Security is manifest in living simply. When someone is secure (without care) they require little and they certainly do not make demands on others.
Life always has insecurity.
How much we require to live reflects our level of insecurity.
When insecurity becomes desperation it requires a great deal of energy, controls, distance, compliance, and is ultimately about domination, which, inevitably, in its most inflamatory manifestations, is unsustainable and collapses.
The United States of America (which is, in name, a lie) is, in all the history of this planet, the most egregiously inflamed example of rampant Insecurity and desperation.
To hear the so-called leaders of this nation speak about their religiously ardent dedication to security is to hear them preaching in the Church of the Unsustainable Desperation.
It permeates every aspect of the "american" way of life.
It is why blatantly corrupt electioneering passes for "democracy".
Their insecurity about gaining or retaining office (power/security) causes the obscenity of meaningless words of prostituting pander.
Greed is a hallmark of this vulnerability and desperation.
The creation of, maintaining of, and ultimate domination by something so blatantly OBSCENE as the Pentagon and its world-wide presence is possibly the most glaring example of the descent into desperation.
"MORE, MORE, MORE must be consumed"! This is the basis of the religion of this church which masquerades as government.
You are a threat if you are not a believer.
Even the courts have become a tool used to provide cover for and feed the insecurity.
Your voice will be silenced if you are not a believer.
It is their pathetic vulnerability which causes their obscene behavior.
We must claim our integrity and balance reasoned appreciation of security and insecurity.
We need to try to teach them how to stop their downward spiral.
Their desperate fearfulness is harming all of us.
If we do not take a stand, then we are a participant.
Your voice has been silenced? I thought I heard it loud and clear. Some of us believe that a Taliban victory would destabilize the entire region (i.e. Pakistan, with its nukes), and thus must be prevented at all costs. If Obama succeeds, I hope he is awarded another Nobel Prize. Those who urge us to leave the Afghanis to the untender mercies of the Taliban have no conscience -- and no sense of the dangers involved. Smug essays by the likes of Ms. Bennis will gratify the isolationist leanings of the so-called Left, but do nothing to point out a path to eventual peace. The world is too small to hunker down in our consumer paradise.
"th4377"
You are correct on one point - I have not been silenced (on this site).
Most progressives do not want isolation from the rest of the world. What they want is mutually beneficial policies which do not create horrors like the one in Afganistan. The United States of Global Domination is largely responsible for creating the mess in Afganistan. No one did more to create the taliban initially and no one is doing more to keep the taliban supplied with a steady stream of participants. That you would think that this nation and its militaristic, torturing, drone abusive, murdering thug-like approach to foreign policy is capable of improving this mess indicates a delusional tendency on your part.
Our military is NOT there primarily to help the people of Afganistan and THEY do not want our military monstrousity in their country.
If, by "consumer paradise", you mean that we live in a nation where the most greedy and voracious predators devour anyone and anything with less money and/or power, then yes, I guess it is a paradise FOR THEM.
You need to be isolated, Mr./Ms. th4377 Imperialist; i.e., you need to learn to mind your own (American Dream) business. But I appreciate the humor of your support for the US invasion/occupation of Afghanistan on the grounds that the Taliban would otherwise "destabilize the entire region"--as if the entire region were not already "destabilized," thanks to the imperialist compulsion of folks like you, U.S. & Israeli nukes, etc. Nor does it escape notice that your "prevented at all costs" brings the usual panoply of war crimes, from torture to assassination programs. And your claim that those who oppose the US invasion/occupation "have no conscience" is a slander that only demonstrates the indefensibility of the imperialist position that you promote; as well as a vast ignorance of the competent and humanistic thinking courageously offered by Phyllis Bennis over the years. "The world is too small" indeed for minds as small as yours.
"It’s a good thing the White House has dropped that rhetoric as the past eight years has brought few social improvements."
This is the second article on CD, the first by GG, that has parroted this idiocy. WTF ????
Excellent comment, we need all these arguments for our struggle in The Netherlands, where the Government is excited about this new Obama Plan, They want to continue our mission in Uruzgan after 2010. The whole progressive movement here is against. It will be a hard stuggle but we are going to fight it. Thanks again for this analysis. Please help us, don't let it be a stuggle in the US alone, there are many people in many countries who are seriously disappointed in mr. Obama. The whole world had hope, but that seems te be far away now.....
I can't believe how fast the internal contradictions of Obama's "strategy" are ripping it apart.
He's sending in the troops so that he can begin the withdrawal?
He is promising to start lowering the troop level in 2011...at the same time he is assuring McCain that the promise will be reviewed in 2010.
He is going after Al Queda, even though it is primarily not in Afghanistan.
He id dredging up "9/11" even though none of the hijackers were from Afghanistan.
He, the leader of a foreign occupation, is obstensibly asking Afghans to "reject violence".
The whole thing is so absurd on its face that anti-war Americans probably don't know where to start.
A very perspicacious line from Phyliss Bennis: " the exigencies of Washington's traditional military, political and corporate power brokers who define national security". When the Government defines national security it has absolutely nothing to do with the security of the average American citizen. When they say national security it is their security they are talking about not our security or the vast # of American citizens. These punic leaders hide a plethora of sins under the cloak of " national security".