American Exceptionalism Driving World to War
– John Pilger
By
Finian Cunningham
November 27, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
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Australian-born John Pilger has worked for
over five decades as a reporter and
documentary film-maker covering wars and
conflicts all over the world. In the
following interview, the award-winning
journalist says the world is arguably at a
more perilous geopolitical juncture than
even during the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962
at the height of the Cold War. This is
because American “exceptionalism” – which,
he points out, mirrors that of Nazi Germany
– has developed into a hyper-rogue phase.
The relentless denigration of Russia by
American and Western media show that there
are few red lines left to restrain
aggression towards Moscow, as there were, at
least, during the past Cold War. Russia and
China’s refusal to bow down to Washington’s
dictate is infuriating the would-be American
hegemon and its desire for zero-sum world
domination.
John Pilger also gives his wide-ranging
views on the systematic deterioration of
Western mainstream journalism which has come
to function as a nakedly propaganda matrix
for power and corporate profit. He further
condemns the ongoing persecution and torture
of fellow-Australian publisher Julian
Assange who is being held in a
maximum-security British prison commonly
used for holding mass murderers and
convicted terrorists. Assange is being
persecuted for telling the truth and for
exposing huge crimes by the US and Britain,
says Pilger. It is a grim warning of a
covert war that is being conducted against
independent journalism and free speech, and,
more ominously, indicative of a slide
towards police-state fascism in so-called
Western democracies.
INTERVIEW
Question:
In your
documentary film,
The Coming War on China (2016), you assess
that the United States is on a strategic
collision path with China for control of
Asia-Pacific. Do you still see the threat of
war looming between these two powers?
John Pilger:
The threat of war may not be immediate, but
we know or should know that events can
change fast: a chain of incidents and
missteps can ignite a war which can spread
unpredictably. The calculations are not in
dispute: an “enemy” has barely 12 minutes to
decide whether and where to order a nuclear
retaliation.
Question:
Recently, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo
accused China of being “truly hostile to
America’s interests”. What in your view is
motivating US concerns about China?
John Pilger:
The State Department once declared, “To seek
less than preponderant power would be to opt
for defeat.” At the root of much of
humanity’s insecurity is, remarkably, the
self-belief and self-delusion of one nation:
the United States. America’s notion of
itself is often difficult for the rest of us
to comprehend. From the days of President
Teddy Roosevelt, the “sacred mission” has
been to dominate humanity and its vital
resources, if not by intimidation and
bribery then by violence. In the 1940s,
American “war intellectuals”, such as the
diplomat and historian George F Kennan,
described the necessity of American
dominance of the “Grand Area”, which is most
of the world, notably Eurasia, and
especially China. Non-Americans were to be
cast in “our image”, wrote Kennan; America
was the exemplar. Hollywood has reflected
this with striking accuracy.
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In
1945, this vision, or mania, was given a
moral makeover with the defeat of Nazi
Germany. Today, many Americans believe their
country won the Second World War and that
they are the “exceptional” human beings.
This mythology (reminiscent of Nazi
propaganda) has long had an evangelical hold
in the US and is the central pillar of the
need to dominate, which requires enemies and
fear. America’s long history of racism
towards Asia and its historic humiliation of
the Chinese people make China a perfect fit
as the current enemy.
I
should add that “exceptionalism” is not only
embraced by the American right. Although
they may not admit it, many liberals believe
it in it, as do those who describe
themselves as “left”. It’s the spawn of the
most rapacious ideology on earth:
Americanism. That this word is rarely
uttered is part of its power.
Question:
Do you think it is a strange anomaly that
the Trump administration has adopted an
aggressive policy towards China, yet this
American president appears to seek more
friendly relations with Russia?
John Pilger:
Dividing China and Russia with the aim of
weakening both is a venerable American game.
Henry Kissinger played it. As for Trump,
it’s impossible to know what he thinks.
Regardless of his overtures to Putin, the US
has aggressively subverted Ukraine and
militarized Russia’s western border and is a
more immediate threat to Russia than it is
to China.
Question:
Do you think the impeachment process
underway against Trump is tantamount to a
coup to get rid of him by the Deep State
because of his relatively benign stance
towards Russia?
John Pilger:
That’s one theory; I’m not so sure. Trump’s
election in 2016 disturbed a Mafia-like
system of tribal back-scratching, which the
Democrats dominate. Hillary Clinton was the
Chosen One; how dare Trump seize her throne.
Many American liberals refuse to see their
corrupt heroine as a standard bearer of Wall
Street, a warmonger and an emblem of
hi-jacked gender politics. Clinton is the
embodiment of a venal system, Trump is its
caricature.
Question:
You have worked for over five decades as a
war reporter and documentary film-maker in
Vietnam, elsewhere in Asia, Africa and Latin
America. How do you see current
international tensions between the US, China
and Russia? Do you think the danger of war
is greater now than in previous times?
John Pilger:
In 1962, we all may have been saved by the
refusal of a Soviet naval officer, Vasili
Arkhipov, to fire a nuclear torpedo at US
ships during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Are
we in greater danger today? During the Cold
War, there were lines that the other side
dared not cross. There are few if any lines
now; the US surrounds China with 400
military bases and sails its low-draught
ships into Chinese waters and flies its
drones in Chinese airspace. American-led
NATO forces mass on the same Russian
frontier the Nazis crossed; the Russian
president is insulted as a matter of
routine. There is no restraint and none of
the diplomacy that kept the old Cold War
cold. In the West, we have acquiesced as
bystanders in our own countries, preferring
to look away (or at our smart phones) rather
than break free of the post-modernism
entrapping us with its specious “identity”
distractions.
Question:
You travelled extensively in the US during
the Cold War years. You witnessed the
assassination of presidential candidate
Robert Kennedy in 1968. It seems the
American Cold War obsession with “communism
as an evil” has been replaced by an equally
intense Russophobia towards modern-day
Russia. Do you see a continuation in the
phobia from the Cold War years to today?
What accounts for that mindset?
John Pilger:
The Russians refuse to bow down to America,
and that is intolerable. They play an
independent, mostly positive role in the
Middle East, the antithesis of America’s
violent subversions, and that is unbearable.
Like the Chinese, they have forged peaceful
and fruitful alliances with people all over
the world, and that is unacceptable to the
US Godfather. The constant defamation of all
things Russian is a symptom of decline and
panic, as if the United States has departed
the 21st century for the 19th century,
obsessed with a proprietorial view of the
world. In the circumstances, the phobia you
describe is hardly surprising.
Question:
How has news journalism, specifically in
Western states, changed over the course of
your career? You have won multiple awards
for your writing and film-making, yet today
one rarely reads your articles published in
mainstream media even though you are still
actively working as a journalist as per your
own
website?
John Pilger:
Journalism wasn’t corporate when I began.
Most newspapers in Britain were a faithful
reflection of the interests of what was
known as the Establishment, but they could
also be idiosyncratic. When I came to Fleet
Street in London during the early 1960s,
then known as the “Mecca of newspapers”, the
times were optimistic and the most
right-wing newspapers tolerated, even
encouraged mavericks, who are often the best
journalists. The Daily Mirror, then the
biggest circulating newspaper on earth apart
from the People’s Daily, was the soldiers’
paper during the Second World War and
became, for millions of Britons, their
paper. To those of us on the Mirror, it was
something of an ideal to be the agents and
defenders of people, not power.
Today, true mavericks are redundant in the
mainstream media. Corporate public relations
is the real force in modern journalism. Look
at the way news is written: almost none of
it is straight. I wrote for many years for
the Guardian; my last piece was five years
ago after which I received a phone call. I
was purged, along with other independent
writers. The Guardian now promotes fiction
about Russia, obsessively, the interests of
Britain’s intelligence services, Israel, the
US Democratic Party, bourgeois gender
imperatives and an unctuous view of itself.
The paper’s witch-hunt against Julian
Assange – part of a campaign which the UN
Rapporteur on Torture refers to as “mobbing”
– includes fabrication of a kind previously
associated with the rightwing Murdoch press;
certainly, its cruelty towards Assange is a
profanity on the liberal values for which it
claims to stand.
Question:
You have been a prominent supporter of
Julian Assange, the founding editor of
WikiLeaks, who is currently imprisoned in
Britain awaiting an extradition trial next
year to the US on charges of espionage.
What’s really behind the incarceration of
Assange?
John Pilger: Julian Assange is what
journalists should be and rarely are: he is
a tireless, fearless truth-teller. He has
exposed, on a vast scale, the secret,
criminal life of great power: of “our”
governments, their lying and violence in our
name. Ten years ago, WikiLeaks leaked a
British Ministry of Defense document that
described investigative journalism as the
greatest threat to secretive power.
Investigative journalists were rated higher
on the threat scale than “Russian spies” and
“terrorists”. Assange and WikiLeaks can
claim that laurel. If the Americans come for
him and incarcerate him in a hell hole, they
will come for others, including those
journalists who simply do their job. And
they will come for their editors and
publishers too.
Question:
You make the point that Assange shames the
mainstream Western media because Wikileaks
published damning information exposing huge
war crimes committed by the US and its NATO
allies in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere,
while the mainstream media ignored those
crimes or give them relatively scant
coverage. Does that explain why these media
are ignoring Assange’s plight?
John Pilger:
There is, at last, a growing realization
that the gross injustice against Assange is
likely to happen to others. The recent
statement
by Britain’s National Union of Journalists
is a sign of change. The silence must be
broken if journalists are to reclaim their
honor.
Question:
You have recently visited Assange in
Britain’s maximum-security Belmarsh Prison
where he is being held in solitary
confinement. How would you describe his
physical and mental condition? You say he is
being subjected to a show-trial. Is his
mistreatment comparable to what Western
media would condemn as persecution under
dictatorships?
John Pilger:
Julian’s last court appearance on October 21
was effectively controlled by four Americans
from the US Embassy who sat behind the
prosecutor and passed their written
instructions to him by hand. The judge
watched this outrage and allowed it to
continue. At the same time, she treated
Julian’s lawyers with contempt. When Julian,
who is ill, struggled to speak his name, she
sneered. The difference from a Cold War
show-trial was that this was not broadcast
on state television; the BBC blacked it out.
Question:
With the arrest of Julian Assange and other
independent journalists like Max Blumenthal
in the US who exposed Washington’s
regime-change crimes in Venezuela, and given
the silent indifference of Western media, do
you think it is a real concern that the US
is sliding towards police-state fascism?
John Pilger:
Some would argue the slide has happened.
Finian Cunningham
has written extensively on international
affairs, with articles published in several
languages. He is a Master’s graduate in
Agricultural Chemistry and worked as a
scientific editor for the Royal Society of
Chemistry, Cambridge, England, before
pursuing a career in newspaper journalism.
He is also a musician and songwriter. For
nearly 20 years, he worked as an editor and
writer in major news media organisations,
including The Mirror, Irish Times and
Independent.