January 01,
2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
One of the persistent themes of western
political leaders is that they support the
notion of “the rule of law”. By this they
generally mean the system of law as
developed by western nations, and in the
international context the formulation over
the past 120 years or so of international
law.
By this of
course, they mean “their law”. Any deviation
from this by non-western nations is to be
deplored and where appropriate punished.
The epitome of this approach was to be found
in the Nuremberg trials and their Japanese
equivalent that followed victory in the
Second World War. The waging of war was
declared to be the supreme international
crime. The chief American counsel at the
Nuremberg Tribunal, Robert Jackson, stated
that the Nuremberg trials placed
“international law squarely on the side of
peace as against aggressive warfare.”
The Nuremberg
and Tokyo trials may be seen in retrospect
as the apogee of the concept that waging war
was an offence against humanity. Since 1945
the major western powers, notably but not
exclusively limited to the United States,
have waged almost continuous war.
This has
mostly been directed at countries that lack
the ability, military or otherwise, to fight
back.
Neither is
this a new phenomena. Wikipedia has an
astonishing list of wars involving the
United States going back to the
Revolutionary War of 1775-1783 and
continuing almost unabated up to the present
day. With unintentional humour, World War
Two is listed as a “United States-Allied
victory.”
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As any
student of that war knows, the vast bulk of
the fighting and the casualties, took place
on the eastern front between Germany and its
allies and the Soviet Union. The war had
been waging for more than two years before
the Americans became a formal party. Total
American losses during World War II were
just over 407.000, fewer than Russia lost in
the battle of Stalingrad alone (478,000
killed or missing) over a period of five
months.
The West’s
proclivity for war continued unabated after
the end of World War Two. The Korean War
(1950-53), the Vietnam War 1945-1975),
Afghanistan (2001-?, Iraq 2003- ?) and Syria
(2008 – ?) are only some of the better known
conflicts. There were constant lesser
battles carried out by the United States and
its allies, particularly in the Caribbean
and Latin America, seen (by the United
States) as part of its own sphere of
influence since the Munro doctrine was first
proposed in December 1823.
One of the
outstanding features of these post-World War
II invasions, occupations, or warfare by
other means, is that they have shown a
diminishing degree of success. Where they
have been unsuccessful on the battlefield,
the United States has continued to wage
economic and financial war on its foes.
The classic
illustration of this is the Korean War, the
origins and conduct of which has always been
grossly misrepresented by the West. It is
however, instructive on a number of levels.
The North-South boundary was drawn by two
United States functionaries following the
defeat of the occupying Japanese in 1945.
The Soviet army, which occupied the North
following the end of the war, withdrew in
1948. The United States, which occupied the
South, has never left and today sees South
Korea as an essential element in its
encirclement of China.
There are
literally hundreds of United States military
bases in proximity to or aimed at China, yet
the western media are solely preoccupied
with alleged Chinese “aggression” actual or
potential. Apart from its multiple military
bases, the United States regularly carries
out military exercises with its regional
allies such as Japan and Australia that are
thinly disguised preparations for waging war
on China. One such regular exercise
practices blockading vital Chinese trade
routes through the Straits of Hormuz.
The Korean
War was instructive on a number of levels.
The invasion of the North by United States
and Allied troops reached the Chinese
border, which threatened the new PRC. We now
know that the United States military command
sought President Truman’s consent to
use their virtual monopoly of nuclear
weapons (certainly China had none) to bomb
the PRC.
The primary
objective was to reinstate the Chiang Kai
Shek Government that had fled to what was
then called Formosa following its defeat in
the Chinese Civil War.
The
intervention of the PRC in the Korean War
was decisive. United States and Allied
troops were rapidly expelled from the North.
What was instructive also however was that
the United States used its overwhelming air
superiority to effectively destroy North
Korea’s civilian infrastructure and food
producing capacity.
This was
instructive on a number of levels. Not only
was the destruction of civilian targets a
monumental war crime (for which they hung
Germans following the Nuremberg trials), but
there has never been legal accountability
for these crimes. Again, this precedent is
instructive for the actions and lack of
accountability for American war crimes to
this day.
Despite
enormous Western pressure, most of it
illegal under international law, the North
Koreans have survived to this day. There is
still no peace treaty to formally end the
war, although it is now more than 66 years
since the armistice. North Korea is now a
nuclear armed power and in this writer’s
view any expectation that they will disarm
is delusional.
Those nuclear
weapons, and the military protection of
Russia and China are the major deterrent to
further United States aggression in the
region.
Vietnam was a
similar defeat for United States imperialism
in the region. Again, a long war (1945-1975)
fought first by the French and then by the
United States and its Western allies
following the French defeat at Dien Bien Phu
In May 1954.
Although the
United States did not use nuclear weapons,
they employed a full range of other chemical
and biological mechanisms, the use of which
were again war crimes perpetrated on a
civilian population. The consequences of
this chemical and biological warfare persist
to the present day in the form of ravaged
agricultural land, and most distressingly,
children still being born with deformities
directly attributable to the chemical and
biological warfare agents employed by the
United States throughout the war.
Again, in
what is by now a manifestly common pattern,
the perpetrators of these war crimes remain
completely immune from prosecution,
notwithstanding token prosecutions of low
level military officers such as Lieutenant
William Calley for the My Lai massacre. An
article in the United States publication
Foreign Policy (21 May 2019) in titled
“America Loves Excusing its War Criminals”
is a perfect encapsulation of the reality.
More recently
two other major wars illustrate a number of
facets, including deceptive motivations for
the wars; persistent lying about the
realities following the invasions; and the
extraordinary difficulties by the victim
nations in dislodging the invaders, even
decades later.
The two wars
in question are Afghanistan (2001 – to the
present and counting) and Iraq (2003 to the
present and counting). In both cases the
ostensible justification for the invasion
were blatant lies. Ron Susskind’s book on
Bush’s Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill (The
Price of Loyalty 2004) revealed how the
decision to invade Afghanistan was made well
before the purported reason of the events of
11 September 2001. Rather, the invasion and
occupation had more to do with Afghanistan’s
strategic location and the oil routes from
the Caspian Sea basin than any alleged role
by Osama bin Laden who was alleged (falsely)
to have orchestrated the use of aeroplanes
to destroy public buildings in New York and
Washington.
In Iraq’s
case the monstrous lies told and repeated ad
nauseam by loyal allies, was Saddam
Hussain’s “weapons of mass destruction.”
It is not
difficult to perceive recurring patterns
here. Countries that are strategically
located with valuable resources become the
object of invasion, occupation and the theft
of those resources and suffering enormous
civilian casualties (well over 1 million
people in the case
of both countries). None of the allegations
ever bear any resemblance to the truth.
Similarly, in
another recurring pattern, none of the
perpetrators of these monstrous activities
ever face a court holding them to account
for their crimes. There are of course many
examples. When one examines the record of
invasions, occupations, demonstrable lies
uttered in justification, and ongoing theft
of natural resources it is impossible to
reconcile this history with the “rules based
international law” mantra so solemnly
repeated by western leaders.
There are
however, some encouraging signs that this
era of lawless banditry may be approaching
its end days. I refer here to the rapid rise
of China, or more accurately, the
reemergence of China as the dominant power
in the world.
Through a
variety of initiatives, of which the BRI is
the biggest and best known (and
significantly, opposed by the United States
and Australia). There are a variety of other
economic and political initiatives that are
of a truly transformative nature. Their very
successful present and likely future trends
are a major reason the United States is
using every weapon in its political,
economic and financial arsenal to oppose and
undermine these predominantly Chinese led
initiatives.
In this
writer’s view, that attempted sabotage will
ultimately fail, although at considerable
cost to a number of nations. As we enter
2020 however, these initiatives, from China
in the East to Russia in the West and
beyond, offer the best prospect of a stable
world than the past disastrous two centuries
of western dominance have proved to be.
James
O’Neill, an Australian-based Barrister at
Law, exclusively for the online magazine “New
Eastern Outlook”.
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