American Exceptionalism Is Killing the Planet
The Many Abuses of Endless War
By William J. Astore
December
02, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
- Ever since 2007, when I first started writing
for TomDispatch, I’ve been arguing
against America’s forever wars, whether in
Afghanistan,
Iraq, or
elsewhere.
Unfortunately, it’s no surprise that, despite my
more than 60 articles, American blood is still
being
spilled in war
after war across the Greater Middle East and
Africa, even as foreign peoples pay a far higher
price in
lives lost and
cities ruined.
And I keep asking myself: Why, in this century,
is the distinctive feature of America's wars
that they never end? Why do our leaders persist
in such repetitive folly and the seemingly
eternal disasters that go with it?
Sadly,
there isn’t just one obvious reason for this
generational debacle. If there were, we could
focus on it, tackle it, and perhaps even fix it.
But no such luck.
So why
do America’s disastrous wars
persist? I can
think of
many reasons,
some obvious and easy to understand, like the
endless pursuit of profit through
weapons sales
for those very wars, and some more subtle but no
less significant, like a deep-seated conviction
in Washington that a willingness to wage war is
a sign of national toughness and seriousness.
Before I go on, though, here’s another
distinctive aspect of our forever-war moment:
Have you noticed that
peace is no
longer even a topic in America today? The very
word, once at least part of the rhetoric of
Washington politicians, has essentially dropped
out of use entirely. Consider the current crop
of Democratic candidates for president. One,
Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard, wants to end
regime-change wars, but is otherwise a
self-professed
hawk on the
subject of the war on terror. Another, Senator
Bernie Sanders, vows to end “endless
wars” but is
careful to express strong support for Israel and
the ultra-expensive
F-35 fighter
jet. The other dozen or so tend to make vague
sounds about cutting defense spending or
gradually withdrawing U.S. troops from various
wars, but none of them even consider openly
speaking of peace.
And the Republicans? While President Trump may
talk of ending wars, since his inauguration he’s
sent
more troops to
Afghanistan and into the Middle East, while
greatly expanding drone and other
air strikes,
something about which he
openly boasts.
War, in
other words, is our new normal, America’s
default position on global affairs, and peace,
some ancient, long-faded dream. And when your
default position is war, whether against the
Taliban, ISIS, “terror” more generally, or
possibly even Iran or
Russia or
China, is it
any surprise that war is what you get? When you
garrison the world with an unprecedented
800 or so military bases,
when you configure your armed forces for what’s
called power projection, when you divide the
globe -- the total planet -- into
areas of dominance
(with acronyms like CENTCOM, AFRICOM, and
SOUTHCOM) commanded by four-star generals and
admirals, when you spend more on your military
than the next
seven countries
combined, when you insist on modernizing a
nuclear arsenal
(to the tune of perhaps
$1.7 trillion)
already quite capable of ending all life on this
and several other planets, what can you expect
but a reality of endless war?
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
Think
of this as the new American exceptionalism. In
Washington, war is now the predictable (and even
desirable) way of life, while peace is the
unpredictable (and unwise) path to follow. In
this context, the U.S. must continue to be the
most powerful nation in the world by a country
mile in all death-dealing realms and its wars
must be fought, generation after generation,
even when victory is never in sight. And if that
isn’t an “exceptional” belief system, what is?
If
we’re ever to put an end to our country’s
endless twenty-first-century wars, that mindset
will have to be changed. But to do that, we
would first have to recognize and confront war’s
many uses
in American life and culture.
War, Its Uses (and Abuses)
A
partial list of war’s many uses might go
something like this: war is
profitable,
most notably for America’s vast
military-industrial complex;
war is sold as being necessary for America’s
safety, especially to prevent terrorist attacks;
and for many Americans, war is seen as a measure
of national fitness and worthiness, a reminder
that “freedom isn’t free.” In our politics
today, it’s far better to be seen as strong and
wrong than meek and right.
As the title of a book by former war reporter
Chris Hedges so
aptly put it,
war is a force that gives us meaning. And let’s
face it, a significant part of America’s meaning
in this century has involved pride in having the
toughest military
on the planet, even as
trillions
of tax dollars went into a misguided attempt to
maintain bragging rights to being the world’s
sole superpower.
And
keep in mind as well that, among other things,
never-ending war
weakens
democracy while strengthening authoritarian
tendencies in politics and society. In an age of
gaping inequality,
using up the country’s resources in such
profligate and destructive ways offers a
striking exercise in consumption that profits
the few at the expense of the many.
In
other words, for a select few, war pays
dividends in ways that peace doesn’t. In a
nutshell, or perhaps an artillery shell, war is
anti-democratic, anti-progressive,
anti-intellectual, and anti-human. Yet, as we
know, history makes heroes out of its
participants and celebrates mass murderers like
Napoleon as “great captains.”
What
the United States needs today is a new strategy
of containment -- not against communist
expansion, as in the Cold War, but against war
itself. What’s stopping us from containing war?
You might say that, in some sense, we’ve grown
addicted to it,
which is true enough, but here are five
additional reasons for war’s enduring presence
in American life:
-
The delusional idea that
Americans are, by nature, winners and that
our wars are therefore winnable:
No American leader wants to be labeled a
"loser." Meanwhile, such dubious conflicts
-- see: the Afghan War, now in its 18th
year, with
several more
years, or even
generations,
to go -- continue to be treated by the
military as if they were indeed winnable,
even though they visibly aren’t. No
president, Republican or Democrat, not even
Donald J. Trump, despite his promises that
American soldiers will be coming home from
such fiascos, has successfully resisted the
Pentagon’s siren call for patience (and for
yet more trillions of dollars) in the cause
of ultimate victory, however poorly defined,
farfetched, or far-off.
-
American society’s almost
complete
isolation
from war's deadly effects: We’re not
being droned (yet). Our cities are not yet
lying in ruins (though they’re certainly
suffering from a lack of funding, as is our
most essential
infrastructure,
thanks in part to the cost of those overseas
wars). It’s nonetheless remarkable how
little attention, either in the media or
elsewhere, this country’s never-ending
war-making gets here.
-
Unnecessary and sweeping
secrecy: How can
you resist what you essentially don’t know
about? Learning its lesson from the Vietnam
War, the Pentagon now
classifies
(in plain speak: covers up) the worst
aspects of its disastrous wars. This isn’t
because the enemy could exploit such details
-- the enemy already knows! -- but because
the American people might be roused to
something like anger and action by it.
Principled
whistleblowers
like Chelsea Manning have been imprisoned or
otherwise dismissed or, in the case of
Edward Snowden, pursued and indicted for
sharing
honest details
about the calamitous Iraq War and America’s
invasive and intrusive surveillance state.
In the process, a clear message of
intimidation has been sent to other would-be
truth-tellers.
-
An unrepresentative
government: Long
ago, of course, Congress
ceded to
the presidency most of its constitutional
powers when it comes to making war. Still,
despite
recent attempts
to end America’s arms-dealing role in the
genocidal Saudi war in Yemen (overridden by
Donald Trump’s veto power), America’s duly
elected representatives generally don’t
represent the people when it comes to this
country’s disastrous wars. They are, to put
it bluntly, largely captives of (and
sometimes on leaving politics quite
literally
go to work
for) the military-industrial complex. As
long as money is speech (thank
you,
Supreme Court!), the weapons makers are
always likely to be able to shout louder in
Congress than you and I ever will.
-
America’s persistent empathy
gap. Despite our
size, we are a remarkably insular nation and
suffer from a serious
empathy gap
when it comes to understanding foreign
cultures and peoples or what we’re actually
doing to them. Even our globetrotting
troops, when not fighting and killing
foreigners in battle, often stay on vast
bases, referred to in the military as
“Little Americas,” complete with familiar
stores, fast food, you name it. Wherever we
go, there we are, eating our big burgers,
driving our big trucks, wielding our big
guns, and dropping our
very big
bombs. But what those bombs do, whom they
hurt or kill, whom they displace from their
homes and lives, these are things that
Americans turn out to care remarkably little
about.
All
this puts me sadly in mind of a song popular in
my youth, a time when Cat Stevens sang of a “peace
train”
that was “soundin’ louder” in America. Today,
that peace train’s been derailed and replaced by
an armed and armored one eternally prepared for
perpetual war -- and that train is indeed
soundin’ louder to the great peril of us all.
War on Spaceship Earth
Here’s
the rub, though: even the
Pentagon knows
that our most serious enemy is
climate change,
not China or Russia or terror, though in the age
of Donald Trump and his administration of
arsonists its
officials can’t express themselves on the
subject as openly as they otherwise might.
Assuming we don’t annihilate ourselves with
nuclear weapons
first, that means our real enemy is the endless
war we’re waging against Planet Earth.
The
U.S. military is also a major consumer of fossil
fuels and therefore a significant driver of
climate change. Meanwhile, the Pentagon, like
any enormously powerful system, only wants to
grow more so, but what’s welfare for the
military brass isn’t wellness for the planet.
There
is, unfortunately, only one Planet Earth, or
Spaceship Earth, if you prefer, since we’re all
traveling through our galaxy on it. Thought
about a certain way, we’re its crewmembers, yet
instead of cooperating effectively as its
stewards, we seem determined to fight one
another. If a house divided against itself
cannot stand, as Abraham Lincoln pointed out so
long ago, surely a spaceship with a disputatious
and self-destructive crew is not likely to
survive, no less thrive.
In
other words, in waging endless war, Americans
are also, in effect, mutinying against the
planet. In the process, we are spoiling the
last, best hope of earth: a concerted and
pacific effort to meet the shared challenges of
a rapidly warming and changing planet.
Spaceship Earth should not be allowed to remain
Warship Earth as well, not when the existence of
significant parts
of humanity is already becoming ever more
precarious. Think of us as suffering from a
coolant leak, causing cabin temperatures
to rise even as
food and other resources
dwindle.
Under the circumstances, what’s the best
strategy for survival: killing each other while
ignoring the leak or banding together to fix an
increasingly compromised ship?
Unfortunately, for America’s leaders, the real
“fixes” remain global military and resource
domination, even as those resources continue to
shrink on an ever-more fragile globe. And as
we’ve seen recently, the resource part of that
fix breeds its own madness, as in President
Trump’s recently stated desire to keep U.S.
troops in Syria
to steal
that country’s oil resources, though its wells
are largely wrecked (thanks in significant part
to American bombing) and even when repaired
would produce only a miniscule percentage of the
world’s petroleum.
If
America’s wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya,
Syria, Somalia, and Yemen prove anything, it’s
that every war scars our planet -- and hardens
our hearts. Every war makes us less human as
well as less humane. Every war wastes resources
when these are increasingly at a premium. Every
war is a distraction from higher needs and a
better life.
Despite
all of war’s uses and abuses, its allures and
temptations, it's time that we Americans showed
some self-mastery (as well as decency) by
putting a stop to the mayhem. Few enough of us
experience “our” wars firsthand and that’s
precisely why some idealize their purpose and
idolize their practitioners. But war is a
bloody, murderous mess and those practitioners,
when not killed or wounded, are marred for life
because war functionally makes everyone involved
into a murderer.
We need
to stop idealizing war and
idolizing
its so-called warriors. At stake is nothing less
than the future of humanity and the viability of
life, as we know it, on Spaceship Earth.
William Astore, a
TomDispatch regular,
is a retired lieutenant colonel (USAF) and
history professor. His personal blog is
Bracing Views.
Follow
TomDispatch
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join us on
Facebook. Check
out the newest Dispatch Books, John Feffer’s new
dystopian novel (the second in the Splinterlands
series)
Frostlands,
Beverly Gologorsky's novel
Every Body Has a Story,
and Tom Engelhardt's
A Nation Unmade by War,
as well as Alfred McCoy's
In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise
and Decline of U.S. Global Power
and John Dower's
The Violent American Century: War and Terror
Since World War II.
Copyright 2019 William J. Astore
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