When Will the U.S. Confront Its Role in Fueling Terror
Attacks Across the Planet?
By
Vijay Prashad
January 06, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Alternet"
- Stories upon stories pile up about what appears to be
senseless violence at an Istanbul (Turkey) nightclub or
a market in eastern Baghdad (Iraq), on the streets of
Tripoli (Libya) or in a mosque in Kabul (Afghanistan).
Some in the West turn away from this news, eager to shut
it off or to blame it somehow on the failings of Eastern
societies. Have they not always been like that? Will
they not always kill each other? Others in the West
look, but all they feel is great sorrow and then,
gratefulness for their own security. It is always the
leaden eyes of children in war that move people.
Accumulations of such stories are never enough. The
voices of the grieving make no sense. It is one thing to
feel sympathy for someone in war, but hard, very hard to
feel empathy – their suffering is so alien to the
comforts of those in the West, too alien to expect a
person to enter the shattered lives of others.
The reactions
are easier when the West can walk away from its deep
complicity in this suffering, particularly when it can
blame petty autocrats and the Russians for everything.
Someone else, surely, is at fault. How can the West take
political and emotional responsibility for the actions
of others who have their own will? It is a fair
question. Autocrats and tyrants do have their own will,
and they do often exercise it with great brutality
against those who deign to challenge them. But do the
autocrats control the destiny of their countries, or do
other – malevolent – forces surround them, driving
people to desperation and into the jaws of death?
News comes from
the United Nations that 6,878 civilians were killed in
Iraq during 2016. These are official numbers. The
unofficial numbers are likely much higher. Since the
illegal American war on Iraq in 2003, hundreds of
thousands if not a million people have been killed
before their natural lives ended. It is one of the great
criminal acts of contemporary history, and yet no one
has been called to account for it (although
The People’s
Tribunal on the Iraq War hopes to make noise in the
silence). The immensity of the tragedy of Iraq – the
cause of great destabilization in West Asia and North
Africa – has been utterly forgotten. It is easy to see
the Associated Press article on these numbers, to even
read about the UN Assistance Mission for Iraq’s hard
work to establish these figures, and yet to forget that
the prime mover here is not Eastern culture or human
nature, but a war driven by Washington, DC based
entirely on lies.
President
George W. Bush’s adventure in Iraq was not an aberration
in the War on Terror, as President Barack Obama
suggested; it was its highest point, its defining
action. Reason went out of the window and in its place
came a jumble of anxieties mixed in with older currents
of racism – hatred of Arabs who were seen to be
inherently duplicitous and only able to learn their
lessons through violence. Unforgivable bombardment of
Baghdad and Fallujah fixed the outlines, which were then
colored in by lesser actions up and down the Euphrates
and Tigris rivers. Iraq now lingers despite every effort
over the past decade to erase it from the map.
There is little
reported news from southern Libya, where a battle is
raging in the crossroads city of Sabha between two
rivals – and unofficial – armies, the forces of the city
of Misrata and the Libyan National Army led by General
Khalifa Haftar. Earnest protests by residents of the
city for the war to go elsewhere have been ignored.
Moth-eaten military bases and lucrative checkpoints are
the targets of this war. Sabha sits at a strategic point
in the Sahara Desert, linking the trafficking from
Agadez (Niger), Darfur (Sudan), Zouar (Chad), Kidal, Gao
and Menaka (Mali) and Ghat (Algeria). It is through
Sabha had human traffickers cart people to the Libyan
coastline to become refugees to Europe or extremists for
the wars in Libya and Syria as well as back to Boko
Haram in Nigeria. Africa’s central region has been
wracked by war, driven not merely by terrorism but by
IMF-induced economic collapse, Western-backed
kleptocracy, and the wars of Africa’s Great Lakes for
resources – including those that run our cell-phones –
that have spilled out of the Congo region. NATO’s regime
change war in Libya, the French military intervention in
Libya and the presence of US Special Forces in 33 of the
54 African states did little to settle an already
disturbed situation. There is little to chose between
the wars in Libya and in the eastern Congo – both
catastrophic for the future of Africa, both fueled by
the capillaries of economic polices driven by the West
and by an arms industry buoyed by Western arms sales.
Imperialism?
Why does the
United States have this vast footprint across Africa and
– indeed – the entire world? Why does the United States
– which already has five military bases in Colombia and
a considerable base in Paraguay – plan to build another
large base in Peru? What is the point of the drive to
push NATO eastwards from Germany’s eastern border to
Russia’s western border? Why do US warships patrol close
to the Chinese coastline and in the waters off Iran? Why
is the United States’ arms industry the largest in the
world, and why does the US government eagerly lobby for
arms sales to countries that its own State Department
chastises for human rights violations?
No Great Power
claims to exercise authority for its own interests or
for the interests of those businesses that dominate its
institutions. They like to speak about humanitarian
obligations – whether to protect civilians from other
humans or from natural disasters. They put on the cloak
of protection to suggest that they are above crass
monetary interests, whether theft of resources or
control of markets. The United States – currently the
most powerful state on the planet – is no different. It
too suggests that it goes to war to protect humanity –
using weapons of mass destruction to destroy weapons of
mass destruction. In our liberal age, it is hard to
define wars in terms of self-interest. That is what
makes the wars and economic policies of our time so
mystifying. We are told that they the bitter medicine
for the good of the planet, when in fact they are the
use of force – by gun or by pen – for the betterment of
very small numbers of people against the collective
interest of the working-people of the planet. Our
bewilderment comes from the thick cloak of ideology that
covers over the real motivations of the powerful.
‘Globalization’
meant that firms no longer produce their goods and
services near their markets. The planet was their
factory, with bits and pieces of goods made here and
there and assembled in yet another place. Power of
workers deteriorated as business owners made decisions
to set up their plants where they could squeeze the best
deals from desperate states. Businesses found that they
needed to ensure the safety of their communications
networks, their transportation systems and their
intellectual property. The Global Commodity Chain –
which is what this novel form of production is called –
had to be protected from hackers and pirates. It is to
this end that the United States and its allies revived
old Cold War bases and built new bases to defend the
commodity chain and supply lines, to ensure that Big
Business was not vulnerable to any attack. Meanwhile,
ordinary people saw their wages decline as they competed
on a global scale for low-tech production and as robots
displaced them in strategically situated high-tech
factories. Donald Trump’s economic nationalism is
ignorant of these realities.
Those US ships
that sail in the South-China Sea are not there to
protect Taiwan or South Korea. They are there to protect
the Global Commodity Chain. With the emergence of Russia
and China – in particular – as regional powers, the US
has tried to hem them in. The tensions between the
United States and Russia-China is not because the former
is benevolent and the latter are malevolent, but because
they are in the midst of a geo-strategic battle over
whether the United States and its allies should be the
only ones to control the supply lines and the commodity
chain, as well as how money is moved around (the SWIFT
network) and how money is valued (whether the Dollar
remains the main currency). This is a dangerous battle
that could well go out of control. The victims of that
war will once more be in the proxy battlefields of the
Global South, where the blood already, ‘mysteriously,’
flows.
Vijay Prashad is professor of international
studies at Trinity College in Hartford,
Connecticut. He is the author of 18 books,
including Arab
Spring, Libyan Winter (AK Press, 2012),
The Poorer Nations: A Possible History
of the Global South (Verso, 2013) and The
Death of a Nation and the Future of the Arab
Revolution
(University of California Press, 2016). His
columns appear at AlterNet every Wednesday.
The views
expressed in this article are the author's own and do
not necessarily reflect Information Clearing House
editorial policy. |