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The Nine Surges of Obama’s War
How to Escalate in Afghanistan
Despite the seeming specificity of the speech, it gave little sense of just how big and how expensive this surge will be. In fact, what is being portrayed in the media as the surge of November 2009 is but a modest part of an ongoing expansion of the U.S. war effort in many areas. Looked at another way, the media's focus on the president’s speech as the crucial moment of decision, and on those 30,000 new troops as the crucial piece of information, has distorted what’s actually underway.
In reality, the U.S. military, along with its civilian and intelligence counterparts, has been in an almost constant state of surge since the last days of the Bush administration. Unfortunately, while information on this is available, and often well reported, it’s scattered in innumerable news stories on specific aspects of the war. You have to be a media jockey to catch it all, no less put it together.What follows, then, is my own attempt to make sense of the nine fronts on which the U.S. has been surging, and continues to do so, as 2009 ends. Think of this as an effort to widen our view of Obama’s widening war.
Obama’s Nine Surges
1. The Troop Surge: Let’s start with those “30,000” new troops the president announced. First of all, they represent Obama’s surge, phase 2. As the president pointed out in his speech, there were “just over 32,000 Americans serving in Afghanistan” when he took office in January 2009. In March, Obama announced that he was ordering in 21,000 additional troops. Last week, when he spoke, there were already approximately 68,000 to 70,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan. If you add the 32,000 already there in January and the 21,700 actually dispatched after the March announcement, however, you only get 53,700, leaving another 15,000 or so to be accounted for. According to Karen DeYoung of the Washington Post, 11,000 of those were “authorized in the waning days of the Bush administration and deployed this year,” bringing the figure to between 64,000 and 65,000. In other words, the earliest stage of the present Afghan “surge” was already underway when Obama arrived.
It also looks like at least a few thousand more troops managed to slip through the door in recent months without notice or comment. Similarly, with the 30,000 figure announced a week ago, DeYoung reports that the president quietly granted Secretary of Defense Robert Gates the right to “increase the number by 10 percent, or 3,000 troops, without additional White House approval or announcement.” That already potentially brings the most recent surge numbers to 33,000, and an unnamed “senior military official” told De Young “that the final number could go as high as 35,000 to allow for additional support personnel such as engineers, medevac units and route-clearance teams, which comb roads for bombs.”
Now, add in the 7,500 troops and trainers that administration officials reportedly strong-armed various European countries into offering. More than 1,500 of these are already in Afghanistan and simply not being withdrawn as previously announced. The cost of sending some of the others, like the 900-plus troops Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili has promised, will undoubtedly be absorbed by Washington. Nonetheless, add most of them in and, miraculously, you’ve surged up to, or beyond, Afghan War commander General Stanley McChrystal’s basic request for at least 40,000 troops to pursue a counterinsurgency war in that country.
2. The Contractor Surge: Given our heavily corporatized and privatized military, it makes no sense simply to talk about troop numbers in Afghanistan as if they were increasing in a void. You also need to know about the private contractors who have taken over so many former military duties, from KP and driving supply convoys to providing security on large bases. There’s no way of even knowing who is responsible for the surge of (largely Pentagon-funded) private contractors in Afghanistan. Did their numbers play any part in the president’s three months of deliberations? Does he have any control over how many contractors are put on the U.S. government payroll there? We don’t know.
Private contractors certainly went unmentioned in his speech and, amid the flurry of headlines about troops going to Afghanistan, they remain almost unmentioned in the mainstream media. In major pieces on the president’s tortuous “deliberations” with his key military and civilian advisors at the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the Los Angeles Times, all produced from copious officially inspired leaks, there wasn't a single mention of private contractors, and yet their numbers have been surging for months.
A modest-sized article by August Cole in the Wall Street Journal the day after the president’s speech gave us the basics, but you had to be looking. Headlined “U.S. Adding Contractors at Fast Pace,” the piece barely peeked above the fold on page 7 of the paper. According to Cole: “The Defense Department's latest census shows that the number of contractors increased about 40% between the end of June and the end of September, for a total of 104,101. That compares with 113,731 in Iraq, down 5% in the same period... Most of the contractors in Afghanistan are locals, accounting for 78,430 of the total...” In other words, there are already more private contractors on the payroll in Afghanistan than there will be U.S. troops when the latest surge is complete.
Though many of these contractors are local Afghans hired by outfits like DynCorp International and Fluor Corp., TPM Muckracker managed to get a further breakdown of these figures from the Pentagon and found that there were 16,400 “third country nationals” among the contractors, and 9,300 Americans. This is a formidable crew, and its numbers are evidently still surging, as are the Pentagon contracts doled out to private outfits that go with them. Cole, for instance, writes of the contract that Dyncorp and Fluor share to support U.S. forces in Afghanistan “which could be worth as much as $7.5 billion to each company in the coming years.”
3. The Militia Surge: U.S. Special Forces are now carrying out pilot programs for a mini-surge in support of local Afghan militias that are, at least theoretically, anti-Taliban. The idea is evidently to create a movement along the lines of Iraq's Sunni Awakening Movement that, many believe, ensured the "success" of George W. Bush's 2007 surge in that country. For now, as far as we know, U.S. support takes the form of offers of ammunition, food, and possibly some Kalashnikov rifles, but in the future we'll be ponying up more arms and, undoubtedly, significant amounts of money.
This is, after all, to be a national program, the Community Defense initiative, which, according to Jim Michaels of USA Today, will “funnel millions of dollars in foreign aid to villages that organize ‘neighborhood watch’-like programs to help with security.” Think of this as a “bribe” surge. Such programs are bound to turn out to be essentially money-based and designed to buy “friendship.”
4. The Civilian Surge: Yes, Virginia, there is a “civilian surge” underway in Afghanistan, involving increases in the number of “diplomats and experts in agriculture, education, health and rule of law sent to Kabul and to provincial reconstruction teams across the country.” The State Department now claims to be “on track” to triple the U.S. civilian component in Afghanistan from 320 officials in January 2009 to 974 by “the early weeks of next year.” (Of course, that, in turn, means another mini-surge in private contractors: more security guards to protect civilian employees of the U.S. government.) A similar civilian surge is evidently underway in neighboring Pakistan, just the thing to go with a surge of civilian aid and a plan for a humongous new, nearly billion-dollar embassy compound to be built in Islamabad.
5. The CIA and Special Forces Surge: And speaking of Pakistan, Noah Shachtman of Wired’s Danger Room blog had it right recently when, considering the CIA’s “covert” (but openly discussed) drone war in the Pakistani tribal borderlands, he wrote: “The most important escalation of the war might be the one the President didn’t mention at West Point.” In fact, the CIA’s drone attacks there have been escalating in numbers since the Obama administration came into office. Now, it seems, paralleling the civilian surge in the Af/Pak theater of operations, there is to be a CIA one as well. While little information on this is available, David E. Sanger and Eric Schmitt of the New York Times report that in recent months the CIA has delivered a plan to the White House “for widening the campaign of strikes against militants by drone aircraft in Pakistan, sending additional spies there and securing a White House commitment to bulk up the C.I.A.’s budget for operations inside the country.”
In addition, Scott Shane of the Times reports:
“The White House has authorized an expansion of the C.I.A.’s drone program in Pakistan’s lawless tribal areas, officials said..., to parallel the president’s decision… to send 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan. American officials are talking with Pakistan about the possibility of striking in Baluchistan for the first time -- a controversial move since it is outside the tribal areas -- because that is where Afghan Taliban leaders are believed to hide.”
The Pakistani southern border province of Baluchistan is a hornet’s nest with its own sets of separatists and religious extremists, as well as a (possibly U.S.-funded) rebel movement aimed at the Baluchi minority areas of Iran. The Pakistani government is powerfully opposed to drone strikes in the area of the heavily populated provincial capital of Quetta where, Washington insists, the Afghan Taliban leadership largely resides. If such strikes do begin, they could prove the most destabilizing aspect of the widening of the war that the present surge represents.
In addition, thanks to the Nation magazine’s Jeremy Scahill, we now know that, from a secret base in Karachi, Pakistan, the U.S. Army’s Joint Special Operations Command, in conjunction with the private security contractor Xe (formerly Blackwater), operates “a secret program in which they plan targeted assassinations of suspected Taliban and Al Qaeda operatives, ‘snatch and grabs’ of high-value targets and other sensitive action inside and outside Pakistan.” Since so many U.S. activities in Pakistan involve secretive, undoubtedly black-budget operations, we may only have the faintest outlines of what the “surge” there means.
6. The Base-Building Surge: Like the surge in contractors and in drone attacks, the surge in base-building in Afghanistan significantly preceded Obama's latest troop-surge announcement. A recent NBC Nightly News report on the ever-expanding U.S. base at Kandahar Airfield, which it aptly termed a “boom town,” shows just how ongoing this part of the overall surge is, and at what a staggering level. As in Iraq from 2003 on, billions of dollars are being sunk into bases, the largest of which -- especially the old Soviet site, Bagram Air Base, with more than $200 million in construction projects and upgrades underway at the moment -- are beginning to look like ever more permanent fixtures on the landscape.
In addition, as Nick Turse of TomDispatch.com has reported, forward observation bases and smaller combat outposts have been sprouting all over southern Afghanistan. “Forget for a moment the ‘debates’ in Washington over Afghan War policy,” he wrote in early November, “and, if you just focus on the construction activity and the flow of money into Afghanistan, what you see is a war that, from the point of view of the Pentagon, isn't going to end any time soon. In fact, the U.S. military's building boom in that country suggests that, in the ninth year of the Afghan War, the Pentagon has plans for a far longer-term, if not near-permanent, garrisoning of the country, no matter what course Washington may decide upon.”
7. The Training Surge: In some ways, the greatest prospective surge may prove to be in the training of the Afghan national army and police. Despite years of American and NATO “mentoring,” both are in notoriously poor shape. The Afghan army is riddled with desertions -- 25% of those trained in the last year are now gone -- and the Afghan police are reportedly a hapless, ill-paid, corrupt, drug-addicted lot. Nonetheless, Washington (with the help of NATO reinforcements) is planning to bring an army whose numbers officially stand at approximately 94,000 (but may actually be as low as 40-odd thousand) to 134,000 reasonably well-trained troops by next fall and 240,000 a year later. Similarly, the Obama administration hopes to take the police numbers from an official 93,000 to 160,000.
8. The Cost Surge: This is a difficult subject to pin down in part because the Pentagon is, in cost-accounting terms, one of the least transparent organizations around. What can be said for certain is that Obama’s $30 billion figure won’t faintly hold when it comes to the real surge. There is no way that figure will cover anything like all the troops, bases, contractors, and the rest. Just take the plan to train an Afghan security force of approximately 400,000 in the coming years. We’ve already spent more than $15 billion on the training of the Afghan Army and more than $10 billion has gone into police training -- staggering figures for a far smaller combined force with poor results. Imagine, then, what a massive bulking up of the country's security forces will actually cost. In congressional testimony, Centcom commander General David Petraeus suggested a possible price tag of $10 billion a year. And if such a program works (which seems unlikely), try to imagine how one of the poorest countries on the planet will support a 400,000-man force. Afghan President Hamid Karzai has just suggested that it will take at least 15-20 years before the country can actually pay for such a force itself. In translation, what we have here is undoubtedly a version of Colin Powell’s Pottery Barn rule (“You break it, you own it”); in this case, you build it, you own it. If we create such security forces, they will be, financially speaking, ours into the foreseeable future. (And this is even without adding in those local militias we’re planning to invest “millions” in.)
9. The Anti-Withdrawal Surge: Think of this as a surge in time. By all accounts, the president tried to put some kind of limit on his most recent Afghan surge, not wanting “an open-ended commitment.” With that in mind, he evidently insisted on a plan, emphasized in his speech, in which some of the surge troops would start to come home in July 2011, about 18 months from now. This was presented in the media as a case of giving something to everyone (the Republican opposition, his field commanders, and his own antiwar Democratic Party base). In fact, he gave his commanders and the Republican opposition a very real surge in numbers. In this regard, a Washington Post headline says it all: “McChrystal’s Afghanistan Plan Stays Mainly Intact.” On the other hand, what he gave his base was only the vaguest of promises (“…and allow us to begin the transfer of our forces out of Afghanistan in July of 2011”). Moreover, within hours of the speech, even that commitment was being watered down by the first top officials to speak on the subject. Soon enough, as the right-wing began to blaze away on the mistake of announcing a withdrawal date “to the enemy,” there was little short of a stampede of high officials eager to make that promise ever less meaningful.
In what Mark Mazzetti of the Times called a “flurry of coordinated television interviews,” the top civilian and military officials of the administration marched onto the Sunday morning talk shows “in lockstep” to reassure the right (and they were reassured) by playing “down the significance of the July 2011 target date.” The United States was, Secretary of Defense Gates and others indicated, going to be in the region in strength for years to come. (“...July 2011 was just the beginning, not the end, of a lengthy process. That date, [National Security Advisor] General [James] Jones said, is a ‘ramp’ rather than a ‘cliff.’”)
How Wide the Widening War?
When it came to the spreading Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan, the president in his speech spoke of his surge goal this way: “We must reverse the Taliban's momentum and deny it the ability to overthrow the government.” This seems a modest enough target, even if the means of reaching it are proving immodest indeed. After all, we’re talking about a minority Pashtun insurgency -- Pashtuns make up only about 42% of Afghanistan’s population -- and the insurgents are a relatively lightly armed, rag-tag force. Against them and a miniscule number of al-Qaeda operatives, the Pentagon has launched a remarkable, unbelievably costly build-up of forces over vast distances, along fragile, extended supply lines, and in a country poorer than almost any other on the planet. The State Department has, to the best of its abilities, followed suit, as has the CIA across the border in Pakistan.
All of this has been underway for close to a year, with at least another six months to go. This is the reality that the president and his top officials didn’t bother to explain to the American people in that speech last week, or on those Sunday talk shows, or in congressional testimony, and yet it’s a reality we should grasp as we consider our future and the Afghan War we, after all, are paying for.
And yet, confoundingly, as the U.S. has bulked up in Afghanistan, the war has only grown fiercer both within the country and in parts of Pakistan. Sometimes bulking-up can mean not reversing but increasing the other side’s momentum. We face what looks to be a widening war in the region. Already, the Obama administration has been issuing ever stronger warnings to the Pakistani government and military to shape up in the fight against the Taliban, otherwise threatening not only drone strikes in Baluchistan, but cross-border raids by Special Operations types, and even possibly “hot pursuit” by U.S. forces into Pakistan. This is a dangerous game indeed.
As Andrew Bacevich, author of The Limits of Power, wrote recently, “Sending U.S. troops to fight interminable wars in distant countries does more to inflame than to extinguish the resentments giving rise to violent anti-Western jihadism.” Whatever the Obama administration does in Afghanistan and Pakistan, however, the American ability to mount a sustained operation of this size in one of the most difficult places on the planet, when it can’t even mount a reasonable jobs program at home, remains a strange wonder of the world.
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21 Comments so far
Show AllThe US will cause instability leading to a civil war in Pakistan. Then Obama will try to occupy Pakistan too, resulting in more unnecessary, widespread death and destruction. Wait for it (1-2 yrs).
"The US will cause instability leading to a civil war in Pakistan."
This, of course, has already occurred. There are currently over a million displaced persons (refugees) within Pakistan. Obama is constantly urging the Pakistan government to attack its own people. As for unnecessary widespread death and destruction we need only look to Obama's constant missle attacks via drones operated by cowards at military bases inside the United States. I agree that actual large-scale invasion of Pakistan will come soon, but I suspect there are already large numbers of U.S. "special forces" within Pakistan itself.
Good point, JSOC's secret operations in Pakistan (with Sheitwater, now known as XE Services Inc.) have been written about by Jeremy Scahill. Also Webster Tarpley has spoken and written about this as well. The escalation has already de-stabilized Pakistan, scary stuff.
Those "fragile, extended supply lines" in and into Afghanistan may ultimately prove to be the undoing of all the plans by the Pentagon and CIA's best and brightest.
Bill from Saginaw
The Empire is going all out to colonize Afghanistan using all its corrupting influence and power but despite all of this it will fail and they will come home itching for the next war against Iran under Israel's direction. Meanwhile on the home front the whole thing is falling apart.
It used to be that the paths of glory lead but to the grave. Now it's "the new way forward". But you'll still be just as dead at the end!
It seems Tony Blair started using variations of the metaphor "the way forward" 10 years ago. Interesting how Obama (and others) have begun using it often. Every time I hear it I cringe.
A way forward for the homeland. Double deluxe cringe.
AS the wars surge, we the people in all the places affected, will suffer more. If you think things are bad now, they well be worst tomorrow. It will finally bring the chains we can be in. RIGHT NOW AMERICA SUCKS MORE THAN IT EVER HAS. THIS COULD BE FATAL IF NOTHING CAN BE DONE ABOUT IT NOW!
What about the tenth surge: Obama against US?!
between cheney's thundering and mcchrystal's politicking, obama could not stand up to the right wing and resist the temptation to pour more american youths into the killing fields of afghanistan. he had not the courage to stand up to fox news, the generals, cheney, john mccain and others who are now happy as larks that their military-industrial constituencies will be receiving money that should be going to the sick, unemployed, or those young folks who would like to make their own starts in life, in peace. it was, in my opinion, a coordinated media frenzy that made obama flinch and cower before his military masters, who staged a virtual coup d'etat right before our eyes, dominating every medium with their cries that "dithering" endangers the troops; even the public has been whipped into the mood for another round of bloodletting, as the mainstream media have interviewed few people against the surge, though six weeks ago, most americans were themselves opposed not only to further us miitary escalation in afghanistan but also to the war itself.
Time for Michael Moore and Rep Kucinich to admit to themselves that we are there for Oil, nothing else. They should also admit to themselves that the country is bleeding for jobs because of what Bill Clinton did with Nafta and the outsourcing of our industrial base to China and Mexico. Haven't you noticed how silent everyone is on this subject? Hillary outsourced what was left of our workforce, "computers" to India..
Why the Clintons are not being held accountable for the destruction of our Economy and Manufacturing base is a crime.
Silence everywhere.
The West Point speech. The Nobel speech. Engelhardt's analysis.
The die is cast, December 10, 2009. Million-dollar soldiers half a world away, indefinitely. In the United States, undernourished children and topless mountains. Indefinitely?
What is to be done?
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OleManRiver,
How about if we start building a river of LOVE that can't be ignored.
If not us, who?
If not now, when?
We are at the front of this war-- which is Washington DC, and our task is now clear what we must do is to deescalate this war and redirect the resources of this nation toward atonement and reparations, peace and good will. Now as the northern hemisphere is in its darkest days soon the light will return.
We need to gather in large assemblies, censure and reject our government and start a new one for our country. We can take the best of what has worked historically as our foundation and add a new commitment to true justice for all.
I respectfully disagree with every aspect of Obama's Nobel speech. I hope he and the rest decide eventually to join us in a new nation.
And, if congress won't defund these immoral wars for power and control of oil, shouldn't we start defunding congress? How can we with conscience enable this government to kill? Our moral duty is clear.
One question I have, with all we have spent and are spending monetarily toward war efforts and the MIC, couldn't we have just negotiated to trade fairly for the oil, for chrissakes?!!!
Donnalou ---- Your ideals are beyond reproach. I would point out, however, that our present government will strenuously object to being replaced.
The article's subtitle is, "How to Escalate in Afghanistan".
I don't like the sound of that subtitle, but knowing TomDispatch, I'm not expecting any promotion of escalation from the article; but, instead, critique, condemnation of escalation, etcetera.
But while I haven't yet read the article, which I wish to do, there are two ways that immediately come to mind for escalating war in Afghanistan and this is based on the two sources a little further below. In the first source instance, which is for an excellent interview with F. William Engdahl, we are credibly told that the Obama administration is not only sending an additional 30,000 or so U.S. military troops; instead, the admin. is also going to include more private sector mercenaries, perhaps many more. And the interview also tells us about what the most probable long-term objective(s) of the war in Afghanistan, and the extension into Pakistan, is (or are) for. In the second source instance, we additionally get insight into how NATO is also planning on increasing forces in this war.
Gunning for checkmating China and Russia, the economic power and military powers, respectively, of Central Asia or Asia! "Full spectrum dominance", as I first heard from Pepe Escobar, while having read other people using "global dominance" and "domination", since. And we get more intelligent insight into this from F. William Engdahl.
"VIDEO: Why is the USA in Afghanistan?" (14:35)
by F. William Engdahl, TheRealNews.com, Dec 9 2009
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=16482
Quote: "Interview with F. William Engdahl, author of Full Spectrum Dominance: Totalitarian Democracy in the New World Order. He may be reached via his website, www.engdahl.oilgeopolitics.net".
NATO: Let's have a look-SEE at how this war is like ... rather LARGE or HUGE in scope in terms of the total of invading forces of aggression (double emphasis, intended).
"The Great Game: U.S., NATO War In Afghanistan
Fifty or more countries in a single war theater"
by Rick Rozoff, Stop NATO, rickrizoff.wordpress.com, Dec 5 2009
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=16422
"Now this paints a pretty picture, doesn't it, dear(s)? Just close your eyes, or don't look outside as the train travels, dear; we'll eventually get to our destination and you'll see, everything will be so beautiful, wonderful, you'll be awed, I guarantee; mommy says so, trust me, dear" (omitting shocked, saying only awed). This is the train ride (to hell) that we've been on for the past ... over eight years; although we could say longer, for the war on Kosovo, Yugoslavia, and Serbia in 1999 really wasn't unrelated, and this is only if we don't consider further back in history; such as the first U.S. Gulf War on Iraq, and then ... for decades, earlier. The "LONG War", indeed.
The "LONG WAR" on humanity has been ... very long and there apparently is no end in sight, yet. It's global, even if the different parts don't seem related to each other, which they often aren't, if we only consider the apparent features. They are related at the root base though, and this sould be kept within our focus.
And the following censored story is also related; certainly relevant to refer to, anyway. I'll provide the link for the censored story pick report, first, and then links for the source interview video, the original and Youtube copies. PC is where I first learned of this story and the link for the 2010 index at PC is in the homepage near the top of the page. This is for information that's crucial to know about and is provided by George Farah, founder and executive director of OpenDebates.org, on U.S. Presidential debates, so campaigns.
"20. Secret Control of the Presidential Debates
In Top 25 Censored Stories For 2010"
www.projectcensored.org
"No Debate: How the Republican and Democratic Parties Secretly Control the Presidential Debates",
Dem. Now!, Oct 2 2008
http://www.democracynow.org/2008/10/2/no_debate_how_the_republican_and
Part 1 at Youtube (8:42)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jllk_DkGeNA
Part 2 (5:05, though really less for the interview)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_fXKn3KrB3M
The author mentions GWOT (Bush's term)
Mike Corbeil [Dec. 11th, 2009 2:41 am] mentions The Long War (Pentagon's term)
I suggest again that we call it DAFT, as it surely is.
Please, you can call the madness started by Public Law 107-40 by OUR term or you can continue collaborating in catapulting the MIC's propaganda.
A new strategy is needed, since every other Progressive strategy has failed miserably for over 8 years. I suggest again that the strategy be to bring the DAFT law into the light of day, so that all America can see that there is no future in preventing future terrorism by waging war against it.
Or people can, instead, think of GWoT as meaning GW [of], instead, of on T. And "Long War" should be a term to scare people into opposing the war. And GW it definitely is, for it is very global, as dictated by the Bush Jr-Cheney administration and continued by the Obama admin. No countries are off limits for the U.S. war falsely against terrorism. And there's definitely terrorism. After all, the U.S. war on Iraq is full of terrorism against Iraqis, peace, etcetera; and the same applies to the U.S. and NATO war on Afghanistan and, now, Pakistan too. Terrorism is part of what the U.S. and NATO have been committing.
DAFT sounds daft when only you and few other people know what it even means or stands for. Until the meaning of it becomes [common] knowledge, no one should bother using the term or acronym without also saying what it means.
You concluded by saying, "A new strategy is needed, .... I suggest again that the strategy ..., so that all America can see that there is no future in preventing future terrorism by waging war against it."
Problem: The war is not against terrorism.
Also, since you explicitly say that the war is against, you should have no problem with the Bush meaning of GWoT.
Donkey Hote writes:
"Donnalou ---- Your ideals are beyond reproach. I would point out, however, that our present government will strenuously object to being replaced."
Donnalou had written, in part:
"We need to gather in large assemblies, censure and reject our government and start a new one for our country."
I agree, but count me out of the "large assemblies" because the last time I experienced that I got teargassed too many times (in the 60s "War at Home"---seems like only yesterday!) and my lungs can't take it anymore, and I've developed a phobia about "large assemblies." I prefer to work in the background, unnoticed. It must be a multipronged, fish-in-the-sea approach.
Donnalou closes with:
"One question I have, with all we have spent and are spending monetarily toward war efforts and the MIC, couldn't we have just negotiated to trade fairly for the oil, for chrissakes?!!!"
I've thought that for years, and in fact, before 9/11 there were active U.S. negotiations with the recognized government of Afghanistan---the Taliban---for pipeline rights, but the hubristic war criminal Dubya preferred to be a War President and invaded and occupied a hapless nation in the American tradition of slow-motion genocide (see: Ameridians...). Obama really should have made a clean break with the trap Dubya set for any possible successor to the Office of President, but instead is now expanding into Pakistan, for "geopolitical" purposes of course. It really is a form of institutional insanity---the very opposite of a "river of LOVE."
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