Trump’s War on Terror Has Quickly Become
as Barbaric and Savage as He Promised
By
Glenn Greenwald
March 30, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Intercept"
- From the start of his presidency,
Donald Trump’s “war on terror” has
entailed the seemingly indiscriminate
slaughter of innocent people in the name
of killing terrorists. In other words,
Trump has escalated the 16-year-old core
premise of America’s foreign policy —
that it has the right to
bomb any country in the world where
people it regards as terrorists are
found — and in doing so, has fulfilled
the warped campaign pledges he
repeatedly expressed.
The most recent
atrocity was the
killing of as many as 200 Iraqi
civilians from U.S. airstrikes this
week in Mosul. That was preceded a few
days earlier by the
killing of dozens of Syrian civilians in Raqqa
province when the U.S. targeted a school
where people had taken refuge, which
itself was preceded a week earlier by
the
U.S. destruction of a mosque near
Aleppo that also killed dozens. And one
of Trump’s first military actions was
what
can only be described as a massacre
carried out by Navy SEALs, in which 30
Yemenis were killed; among the children
killed was an 8-year-old American girl
(whose 16-year-old American brother was
killed by a drone under Obama).
In sum: Although precise numbers are
difficult to obtain, there seems little
question that the number of civilians
being killed by the U.S. in Iraq and
Syria — already quite high under Obama —
has increased precipitously during the
first two months of the Trump
administration. Data
compiled by the site Airwars tells
the story: The number of civilians
killed in Syria and Iraq began
increasing in October under Obama but
has now skyrocketed in March under
Trump.
What’s particularly notable is that
the number of airstrikes actually
decreased in March (with a week
left), even as civilian deaths rose —
strongly suggesting that the U.S.
military has become even more reckless
about civilian deaths under Trump than
it was under Obama:
But what is becoming clear is that
Trump is attempting to liberate the U.S.
military from the minimal constraints it
observed in order to avoid massive
civilian casualties. And this should
surprise nobody: Trump explicitly and
repeatedly vowed to do exactly this
during the campaign.
He constantly criticized Obama —
who bombed seven predominantly Muslim
countries — for being “weak” in battling
ISIS and al Qaeda. Trump regularly
boasted that he would free the U.S.
military from rules of engagement that
he regarded as unduly hobbling them. He
vowed to bring back torture and even to
murder the family members of suspected
terrorists — prompting patriotic
commentators to naïvely insist that the
U.S. military would refuse to follow his
orders. Trump’s war frenzy reached its
rhetorical peak of derangement in
December 2015, when he roared at a
campaign rally that he would “bomb the
shit out of ISIS” and then let its oil
fields be taken by Exxon, whose CEO is
now his secretary of state.
Trump can be criticized for many
things, but lack of clarity about his
intended war on terror approach is not
one of them. All along, Trump’s
“solution” to terrorism was as clear as
it was simple; as I described it in
September 2016:
Trump's anti-terror platform is explicitly 1) more bombing; 2) Israel-style police profiling; 3) say "radical Islam"
https://t.co/NyivdkUanp
The clarity of Trump’s
intentions regarding the war on terror
was often obfuscated by anti-Trump
pundits due to a combination of
confusion about and distortions of
foreign policy doctrine. Trump
explicitly ran as a
“non-interventionist” — denouncing, for
instance, U.S. regime change wars in
Iraq, Libya, and Syria (even though he
at some points expressed support for the
first two). Many commentators confused
“non-interventionism” with “pacifism,”
leading many of them — to this very day
— to ignorantly claim that Trump’s
escalated war on terror bombing is in
conflict with his advocacy of
non-interventionism. It is not.
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Despite being vehement
non-interventionists, neither Lindbergh
nor Buchanan were pacifists. Quite the
contrary: Both believed that when the
U.S. was genuinely threatened with
attack or attacked, it should use full
and unrestrained force against its
enemies. What they opposed was not
military force in general but rather
interventions geared toward a goal other
than self-defense, such as changing
other countries’ governments, protecting
foreigners from tyranny or violence, or
“humanitarian” wars.
What the Lindbergh/Buchanan
non-interventionism opposes is not
war per se, but a specific type of war:
namely, those fought for reasons other
than self-defense or direct U.S.
interests (as was true of regime change
efforts in Iraq, Libya, and Syria).
Lindbergh opposed U.S. involvement in
World War II
on the ground that it was designed
to help only the British and the Jews,
while Buchanan, on the eve of the Iraq
invasion, attacked neocons who “seek to
ensnare our country in a series of wars
that are not in America’s interests” and
who “have alienated friends and allies
all over the Islamic and Western world
through their arrogance, hubris, and
bellicosity.”
The anti-Semitism and white
nationalistic tradition of Lindbergh,
the ideological precursor to Buchanan
and then Trump, does not oppose war. It
opposes military interventions
in the affairs of other countries for
reasons other than self-defense —
i.e., the risking of American lives and
resources for the benefits of “others.”
Each time Trump drops another bomb,
various pundits and other assorted Trump
opponents smugly posit that his doing so
is inconsistent with his touted
non-interventionism. This is just
ignorance of what these terms mean. By
escalating violence against civilians,
Trump is, in fact, doing exactly what he
promised to do, and exactly what those
who described his foreign policy as
non-interventionist predicted he would
do: namely, limitlessly unleash the U.S.
military when the claimed objective was
the destruction of “terrorists,” while
refusing to use the military for other
ends such as regime change
or humanitarianism. If one were to
reduce this mentality to a motto, it
could be: Fight fewer wars and for
narrower reasons, but be more barbaric
and criminal in prosecuting the
ones that are fought.
Trump’s campaign pledges
regarding Syria, and now his actions
there, illustrate this point very
clearly. Trump never advocated a
cessation of military force in Syria. As
the above video demonstrates, he
advocated the opposite: an escalation of
military force in Syria and Iraq in the
name of fighting ISIS and al Qaeda.
Indeed, Trump’s desire to cooperate with
Russia in Syria was based on a desire to
maximize the potency of bombing there
(just as was true of Obama’s attempt to
forge a bombing partnership with
Putin in Syria).
What Trump opposed was the CIA’s
yearslong policy of
spending billions of dollars to arm
anti-Assad rebels (a policy Hillary
Clinton and her key advisers
wanted to escalate), on the ground
that the U.S. has no interest in
removing Assad. That is the
fundamental difference between
non-interventionism and pacifism
that many pundits are either unaware of
or are deliberately conflating in order
to prove their own vindication about
Trump’s foreign policy. Nothing Trump
has thus far done is remotely
inconsistent with the
non-interventionism he embraced during
the campaign, unless one confuses
“non-interventionism” with “opposition
to the use of military force.”
Trump’s reckless killing of civilians
in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen is many
things: barbaric, amoral, and criminal.
It is also, ironically, likely to
strengthen support for the very groups —
ISIS and al Qaeda — that he claims he
wants to defeat, given that nothing
drives support for those groups like
U.S. slaughter of civilians (perhaps the
only competitor in helping these groups
is another Trump specialty:
driving a wedge between Muslims and the
West).
But what Trump’s actions are not is a
departure from what he said he would do,
nor are they inconsistent with the
predictions of those who described his
foreign policy approach as
non-interventionist. To the contrary,
the dark savagery guiding U.S. military
conduct in that region is precisely what
Trump expressly promised his supporters
he would usher in.
Glenn Greenwald is one of three
co-founding editors of The Intercept. He is a journalist, constitutional lawyer,
and author of four New York Times
best-selling books on politics and law. His most recent book, No Place
to Hide, is about the U.S. surveillance state and his experiences
reporting on the Snowden documents around the world. Prior to co-founding The
Intercept, Glenn’s column was featured at TheGuardian and
Salon.
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