Get News & Views Updates
Most Popular This Week
- Condemning the U.S. Postal Service’s Move to End Saturday Delivery
- Seattle Teachers Spark Rebuke of School Standardization and Privatization
- Study Finds 80% of All Antibiotics in US Used for Big-Ag
- High Time for Hemp
- DOJ Kill List Memo Forces Many Dems Out of the Closet as Overtly Unprincipled Hacks
Popular content
Today's Top News
Protecting Libyan Civilians, Not Others
Even if you think that the incipient Libyan civil war was an unfolding humanitarian tragedy that justified some international intervention, it is hard not to take note of the endless double standards and selective outrage that pervade U.S. foreign policy.
For instance, there’s the parallel hypocrisy in Washington’s tepid reaction to the invasion of Bahrain by military forces from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, supporting a brutal crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators by Bahrain’s king. Where are the warnings of a muscular Western response in the home port of the U.S. Fifth Fleet?
Indeed, many Washington policymakers and pundits quietly justify the Saudi/UAE military action by noting that the protesters are part of Bahrain’s Shiite majority who might favor closer ties to Shiite-ruled Iran if some form of democracy came to the island kingdom.
Since Iran is considered a U.S. adversary – and because the Sunni-run Persian Gulf sheikdoms provide lots of oil to the West – Realpolitik suddenly takes over. The principles of majority rule and human rights are shoved into the back seat.
Similarly, when Yemen, a key U.S. ally in the “war on terror,” opens fire on pro-democracy protesters, there’s only a little finger-waving, no international clamor for a military intervention.
Of course, this double standard is even more striking when it is Israel killing civilians – such as when it escalated minor border clashes into full-scale assaults against nearby enemies, inflicting heavy civilian losses in Lebanon in 2006 and in Gaza in 2008-09, not to mention Israel’s repeated assaults on Palestinians in the West Bank.
In such cases, U.S. politicians, including then-Sen. Hillary Clinton, endorsed Israel’s acts of “self-defense.” Prominent columnists like the Washington Post’s Charles Krauthammer cheered on the mayhem against the Lebanese and the Palestinians as a justifiable collective punishment for them tolerating Hezbollah and Hamas.
During the Israeli bombardment of Lebanon in 2006, Sen. Clinton happily shared the stage of a pro-Israel rally with Israeli United Nations Ambassador Dan Gillerman, a notorious anti-Muslim bigot. He responded to complaints that Israel was using “disproportionate” violence against targets in Lebanon by declaring: “You’re damn right we are.” [NYT, July 18, 2006]
After the slaughter in Gaza in 2008-09, the biggest villain to emerge was South African jurist Richard Goldstone for writing a report that cited war crimes by both Israel and Hamas. Goldstone placed the heavier blame on Israel in the killing of some 1,400 Palestinians. (Thirteen Israelis also died.)
Instead of showing sympathy for the dead Palestinian civilians, the U.S. House of Representatives voted 344-36 to condemn Goldstone’s report as “irredeemably biased” for its criticism of Israel. That overwhelming consensus was reflected across the U.S. political/media landscape.
And, there are the direct U.S. invasions of other countries – whether the ongoing ones in Afghanistan and Iraq or prior ones such as Vietnam in the 1960s, Panama in 1989 and Iraq in the Persian Gulf War of 1991. All have been accompanied by massive loss of civilian life.
In the case of Iraq in 2003, President George W. Bush initiated a war of aggression against a country that was then at peace. With very few exceptions, the U.S. political/media Establishment rallied behind Bush’s invasion, which has since led to the deaths and maiming of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis, including large numbers of civilians.
Though Bush launched the Iraq invasion without U.N. sanction – and his actions were criticized by some world leaders – not a single country took any direct action to interfere with the U.S. assault or to protect Iraqi civilians from Bush’s “shock and awe” campaign of overwhelming violence. As the war wore on, cities like Fallujah were flattened by U.S. firepower.
Fighting Al-Qaeda
To this day, U.S. drones and other air assets routinely kill civilians while hunting Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan and in neighboring Pakistan. The American justification is that the Taliban has taken up arms against the U.S.-installed government in Kabul and that the Taliban is believed to be harboring elements of al-Qaeda.
That rationale mirrors what Libyan strongman Muammar Gaddafi says he is doing in his country, fighting back against armed militants who, he claims, have connections to an al-Qaeda affiliate.
In a personal letter to President Barack Obama on Saturday, Gaddafi wrote that “we are confronting al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, nothing more. What would you do if you found them controlling American cities with the power of weapons? Tell me how would you behave so that I could follow your example?”
Though Gaddafi’s claim that his Libyan opponents include al-Qaeda terrorists is surely self-serving, it could not be any more self-serving – or false – than President Bush’s assertions tying Iraq’s Saddam Hussein to al-Qaeda, a primary justification for invading Iraq in 2003.
It’s also a fact that American political/media insiders often mock claims by U.S.-designated enemies during the early propaganda phases of a conflict but then later, grudgingly, acknowledged that there was some truth to those assertions after all.
For instance, when Iraq turned over 12,000 pages of documents to the U.N. in fall 2002 explaining how the country had destroyed its old WMD stockpiles, the submission was pooh-poohed by U.S. officials and leading American media commentators, but it later turned out to be true.
Today’s Libyan conflict has been generally viewed as an incipient civil war pitting anti-Gaddafi tribes from the east against pro-Gaddafi tribes in the west, but it is certainly possible that al-Qaeda operatives will take advantage of the disorder, much as they did in moving into post-invasion Iraq.
That point was acknowledged by the New York Times on Sunday in reporting that “one widely held concern is the possibility of a divided Libya with no clear authority, opening the door for Islamic extremists to begin operating in a country that had formerly been closed to them.”
Despite similarities between past conflicts and the new one, there has been one notable difference separating Bush’s invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq from Obama’s support for the intervention in Libya: the rhetoric.
While Bush oversaw vibrant pro-war propaganda campaigns topped off by his grim-faced speeches from the Oval Office, Obama has behaved as the reluctant warrior he claims to be.
Obama insisted that no U.S. ground troops be sent to Libya, that the United Nations Security Council sanction the intervention and that U.S. involvement last only days, not be open-ended. He didn’t even disrupt a previously arranged visit to South America.
At a Saturday press briefing, standing next to Brazil's president, Obama only briefly mentioned the start of the conflict. In marked contrast to Bush’s bluster about a “crusade” to eliminate “evil” in the world, Obama struck a nuanced note of regret.
“I want the American people to know that the use of force is not our first choice,” he said. “But we can’t stand idly by when a tyrant tells his people that there will be no mercy.”
Obama also skipped the emergency summit in Paris called by French President Nicolas Sarkozy. Obama dispatched Secretary of State Clinton instead. She, too, expressed uncharacteristic American humility and ambivalence regarding the war.
“We did not lead this,” Clinton said, as she pointedly repudiated “unilateral” action, a slap at Bush’s macho go-it-alone approach to war.
Absent the enforced jingoism that usually accompanies a U.S. war buildup, the American press corps also seemed a bit less gung-ho, even daring to take note of the inconsistency of Saudi Arabia and the UAE backing an intervention to protect Libyan civilians while joining in the violent suppression of Bahrain’s Shiite majority.
So, perhaps one should offer thanks for small favors. At least in this third ongoing U.S. war in the Muslim world, there hasn’t been quite the propaganda bullying that surrounded the other two.
- Posted in
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


16 Comments so far
Show AllThe U.S. foreign policy establishment has always been highly selective about which country's citizenry is repressed and why and who deserves our "help."
Too true. There hasn't been any "cost" to most recent incursions. The "homefront" doesn't have to sacrifice, the military is all volunteer so their families suffer if they are kill or are wounded, but their crying as they get the news is rarely televised. No "war tax" specifically labeled as such is added to the taxes.
The only "cost" is the administration's loss (if they ever had it) of support from people who think like you and I and many posters on site like this do.
The president has now "proved" that he's not afraid to use the military. Every president seems to have to do this. They love to look stern as they announce armed actions. Have to establish "credibility" with our enemies, who are . . . ?
How about a no fly zone over Gaza?
There really is no end to the hypocrisy .. although, I must say, the mental contortions and doublethink required to somehow justify the double, triple and quadruple standards applied to whatever the US decides to focus on in a given day is rather impressive. Genocide in Darfur? Oh, well, that's an internal matter. Massacres in Bahrain? Well, that's bad, but here is some more military aid for you (just don't do it again, ok?). Collective punishment of the Palestinians? Way to go, Israel! Civil war in Libya? We cannot sit idly by as a dictator kills his own people! To WAR!!!
And the media treats it all as if it is perfectly normal...
And by the way, bombing cities in order to protect civilians is like throwing gas on a burning house in order to put the fire out. That is the first lie right there -- we are not going to war to "protect civilians." Since this is an impossibility, it should be rejected as the bald-faced lie that it is, and perhaps some thought given to the REAL motivations.
I would describe US actions as "Insanity". While quick to label the leaders of Libya or North Korea or Iran or Plug in todays new enemy here as MAD, the actions of the US Government and its Military are orders of magnitude worse then any of these "despots".
The Government of the United States is the single largest purveyor of violence on the globe. They are the greatest threat to world peace. They are the most hypocritical nation in the history of mankind.
Nations that blindly follow the US lead are like those children that followed Stephen of Cloyes on his Children's crusade.
Sorry, Robert, I'm not hearing you.
Did you forget to identify the cause of this imperialist offense?
Robert, You're making my head spin with too much data on humanitarian hypocrisy, diplomatic deceits, automobile dangers, carbon dangers, corporate looting complexities, torture secrecy, spying, anti-union attacks, etc., etc., etc., --- Ad nauseum.
Why not focus on the source of all these awful things --- The seminal causal cancer of the hidden EMPIRE at the heart of all these 'symptom issue' distractions!
Will protests have any effect on EMPIRE? if you don't say that EMPIRE is the cause of the problem? Of all problems?
If complaining about blocked corrective actions and protesting about unfairness by the supposed intellectuals behind the protest movements do not soon realize that they need to clearly identify the focus of their protest singularly at the "EMPIRE", which is the cancerous cause of everything from the divided 'symptom issue' protests against wars, economic oppression, spying ... and all the way down to saving the friggin whales, then they will soon enough find that Empire does not respond to anything that does not have the guts or brains to name its target as EMPIRE.
You can't attack Empire if you don't have the basic sense to identify it as 'Empire'.
Just some advice from an old strategic marketing guy who knows that you can't sell cars if you haven't educated (and told) people what a 'car' is.
And you can't sell a revolution "Against Empire" (Parenti) if the multitude don't know what an Empire they live in!
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Liberty over violent empire -- People's Party 2012
"While Bush oversaw vibrant pro-war propaganda campaigns topped off by his grim-faced speeches from the Oval Office, Obama has behaved as the reluctant warrior he claims to be."
Good grief.
I think Robert Parry should have just presented his Obama apologetics up front, so those of us who are nauseated by such could have just skipped the rest of it.
Well, I wouldn't worry too much about the United States "promoting freedom and democracy", since it has never done such a thing. What they are trying to do in Libya is replace one tyrant with another tyrant -- one that will allow U.S., French, British and Canadian oil companies free reign to pillage and plunder the country's natural resources. Oh, and one that will act as an Arab bulwark of support for Israel's slow motion genocide of the Palestinians.
Is there anyone left In US who still believes that US intervenes militarily for moral reasons like protecting civilians? The rest of the world understands that the reason is ( and always has been) national interest or more precisely - corporate interest!
"So, perhaps one should offer thanks for small favors."
________________________
In an article published at CD on Saturday, David Kreiger referenced the "Global War on Terror". I commented, in part:
"Ah, the 'Global War on Terror'!
Actually, Team Obama long ago officially discarded the term because it had become rhetorically putrescent in the context of the amoral, pseudo-pragmatic 'realpolitik' calculus that is its operating system.
Yes, they Officially call it something else now. But I can't be bothered researching exactly how they 're-branded' this depraved scam. NOBODY remembers the New, Improved name any more than anyone still drinks New Coke-- and that's exactly the point."
I'm familiar with the argument that minor or seemingly-superficial changes in rhetorical tone or attitude DO make a difference, and are not to be scorned or dismissed out of hand.
In fact, during Obama's meteoric rise during his candidacy and the first months after his election-- when much was made of his international Rock Star popularity, aka "Obamamania"-- Amerikans were told over and over again that just the change in style, in tone, in presentation from George W. Bush to Barack Obama made all the difference in the world, and a difference for the better, to foreign populations.
My own expatriate brother enthusiastically testified to this seeming sea change, countering my skepticism by insisting that I couldn't appreciate the pervasive improvement in public relations and good will from my parochial domestic roost; it was like the sun finally emerging from behind dark, forbidding clouds.
Bloody but unbowed, and vindicated by experience, I stick to the skeptical belief that the rhetorical and stylistic changes Parry references are indeed the smallest of favors.
The power elite may change its administrative tunes and cadences because of personal idiosyncracy and changes in fashion, but not because of any profound improvement in its aims and motives from its predecessor.
Put another way, successful scam artists always adapt the patter to keep stringing along their victims. Acting the "reluctant warrior" is the equivalent of changing the pitch so that enthusiastic subscribers of get-rich-quick enterprises insist that it's certainly NOT a "pyramid scheme"!
If Obama had reason to believe that he could get re-elected by dressing up in military gear and cutting brush at a rented ranch, he'd do it in a heartbeat.
Oh, and it's pathetically amusing that any politician can get rhetorical mileage out of the term "al-Qaeda terrorists". Apparently Serious Persons in the audience don't grasp that beneath that ominious phrase, the speaker might as well be referring to "The Boogie-Man".
Bombs away. Just send us the bill...
Two wars at a time could be a coincidence, but three at a time is a confirmation.
It's Official....The USA is committing genocide against all Muslims.
There does seem to be some diffidence by the US in the Libya "intervention."
Probably because the US is broke.