Dying for
the Empire Is Not Heroic
By Sheldon
Richman
October 21,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- Predictably, the news media spent most of the week
examining words Donald Trump may or may not
have spoken to the widow of an American Green Beret
killed in Niger, in northwest Africa, in early
October. Not only was this coverage tedious, it was
largely pointless. We know Trump is a clumsy boor,
and we also know that lots of people are ready to
pounce on him for any sort of gaffe, real or
imagined. Who cares? It’s not news. But it was
useful to those who wish to distract Americans from
what really needs attention: the U.S. government’s
perpetual war.
The
media’s efforts should have been devoted to
exploring — really exploring — why Green Berets (and
drones) are in Niger at all. (This
is typical of the establishment media’s
explanation.)
That
subject is apparently of little interest to media
companies that see themselves merely as cheerleaders
for the American Empire. For them, it’s all so
simple: a U.S president (even one they despise) has
put or left military forces in a foreign country —
no justification required; therefore, those forces
are serving their country; and that in turn means
that if they die, they die as heroes who were
protecting our way of life. End of story.
Thus
the establishment media see no need to present a
dissenting view, say, from an analyst who would
question the dogma that inserting American warriors
into faraway conflicts whenever a
warlord proclaims his allegiance to ISIS
is in the “national interest.” Patriotic media
companies have no wish to expose their audiences to
the idea that jihadists would be no threat to
Americans who were left to mind their own business.
Apparently the American people also must be shielded
from anyone who might point out that the jihadist
activity in Niger and neighboring Mali is directly
related to the U.S. and NATO bombing of Libya, which
enabled al-Qaeda and other Muslim militants to
overthrow the secular regime of Col. Muammar
Qaddafi. That Obama-Clinton operation in 2011,
besides producing Qaddafi’s grisly murder and
turning Libya into a nightmare, facilitated the
transfer of weapons and fanatical guerrillas from
Libya to nearby countries in the Sahel — as well as
Syria. Since then the U.S. government has been
helping the French to “stabilize” its former colony
Mali with surveillance drones and Green Berets based
in Niger. Nice work, Nobel Peace Prize winner Obama
and Secretary of State Clinton. (Citizen Trump was
an
early advocate of
U.S. intervention in Libya.) Need I remind you that
the U.S./NATO regime-change operation in Libya was
based on a lie?
Obama later said his failure to foresee the
consequences of the Libya intervention was the
biggest mistake of
his presidency. (For more on the unintended
consequences for the Sahel, see articles
here,
here, and
here.)
So the
media, which pretends to play a role in keeping
Americans informed, have decided the people need not
hear the truth behind the events in Niger. Instead,
“reporters” and “analysts” perform their role as
cheerleaders for the American Empire by declaring
the dead men “heroes” and focusing on the tragedy
that has befallen their families. Public scrutiny of
the military operation is discouraged because it
thought to detract from the Green Berets’ heroism.
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What
makes them heroes? They were killed by non-Americans
in a foreign land while wearing military uniforms.
That’s all it takes, according to the gospel of what
Andrew Bacevich calls the
Church of America the Redeemer
and its media choir.
But are
they really heroes? We can question this while
feeling sorrow for the people who will never see
their husbands, sons, brothers, and fathers again.
Reporters and analysts who emote over alleged
heroism base their claim on the dubious proposition
that the men were “serving their country” and
“protecting our freedom.” A brief examination,
however, is enough to show this is not so, although
the troops, their families, and many others believe
it.
First,
their “country,” if by this term we mean the
American people, did not call them to “service,”
which itself a question-begging word. The source of
the call was a collection of politicians and
bureaucrats (including generals) who wouldn’t know
the public interest from a hole in the ground.
Second,
U.S. intervention in the Muslim world, which
predates 9/11 and the creation of al-Qaeda and ISIS,
has not made Americans safe. On the contrary, it has
put them at risk, as the attacks on the World Trade
Center demonstrated. Is it hard to believe that
people will seek vengeance against those whose
government bombs them and starves their children, as
the U.S. government did in Iraq all through the
1990s (to take just one example)?
Dying (and
killing) for the Empire is not heroic. Allowing
yourself to be ordered to intervene in distant
conflicts you surely don’t understand is not worthy
of admiration. What’s heroic is resisting the
Empire.
Anyone who thought Trump would bring the troops back
should now know better. He, of all people, is not
about to give up imperial power. The Guardian quotes
a former military officer saying, “Since [President]
Trump took power, US forces deployed around the
world have had a lot more room to manoeuvre.
Decisions about when and what to engage have been
devolved right down to unit level. Any soldier knows
that if you give guys on the ground more
independence, then they will be that much more
aggressive and will take more risks.”
At this
point we can’t expect the corporate media to quit
propagandizing on behalf of the war state and start
informing the public of the harm “their” government
has inflicted abroad and at home. Fortunately, we
have virtually costless access to alternative
sources of information about the politicians’ and
military’s mischief. The conundrum is that most
people, having been fed a steady diet of pro-war
propaganda, won’t turn to those sources until they
become suspicious of power.
Sheldon
Richman is the executive editor of The Libertarian
Institute, senior fellow and chair of the trustees
of the Center for a Stateless Society, and a
contributing editor at Antiwar.com. He is the former
senior editor at the Cato Institute and Institute
for Humane Studies, former editor of The Freeman,
published by the Foundation for Economic Education,
and former vice president at the Future of Freedom
Foundation. His latest book is America’s
Counter-Revolution: The Constitution Revisited.
This
article was originally published by -
The Libertarian Institute
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