By Ramzy Baroud
August 09, 2021"Information
Clearing House" - Jonah Goldberg and
Michael Ledeen have much in common. They are both
writers and also cheerleaders for military
interventions and, often, for frivolous wars.
Writing in the conservative rag, The National
Review, months before the US invasion of Iraq in
2003, Goldberg paraphrased a statement which he
attributed to Ledeen with reference to the
interventionist US foreign policy.
“Every ten years or so, the United States needs
to pick up some small crappy little country and
throw it against the wall, just to show the world we
mean business,” Goldberg wrote, quoting Ledeen.
Those like Ledeen, the neoconservative
intellectual henchman type, often get away with this
kind of provocative rhetoric for various reasons.
American intelligentsias, especially those who are
close to the center of power in Washington DC,
perceive war and military intervention as the
foundation and baseline of their foreign policy
analysis. The utterances of such statements are
usually conveyed within friendly media and
intellectual platforms, where equally hawkish,
belligerent audiences cheer and laugh at the
war-mongering muses. In the case of Ledeen, the
receptive audience was the hardline,
neoconservative, pro-Israel American Enterprise
Institute (AEI).
Predictably, AEI was one of the loudest voices
urging for a war and invasion of Iraq prior to
that calamitous decision by the George W. Bush
Administration, which was enacted in March 2003.
Neoconservatism, unlike what the etymology of the
name may suggest, was not necessarily confined to
conservative political circles. Think tanks,
newspapers and media networks that purport - or are
perceived - to express liberal and even progressive
thought today, like The New York Times, The
Washington Post and CNN, have dedicated much time
and space to promoting an American invasion of Iraq
as the first step of a complete US geostrategic
military hegemony in the Middle East.
Like the National Review, these media networks
also provided unhindered space to so-called
neoconservative intellectuals who molded American
foreign policy based on some strange mix between
their twisted take on ethics and morality and the
need for the US to ensure its
global dominance throughout the 21st century. Of
course, the neocons’ love affair with Israel has
served as the common denominator among all
individuals affiliated with this intellectual cult.
No Advertising - No Government Grants - This Is
Independent Media
The main - and inconsequential - difference
between Ledeen, for example, and those like Thomas
Friedman of The New York Times, is that the former
is brazen and blunt, while the latter is delusional
and manipulative. For his part, Friedman also
supported the Iraq war, but only to bring
‘democracy’ to the Middle East and to fight
‘terrorism’. The pretense ‘war on terror’, though
misleading if not outright fabricated, was the
overriding American motto in its invasion of Iraq
and, earlier, Afghanistan. This mantra was readily
utilized whenever Washington needed to ‘pick up some
small crappy little country and throw it against the
wall’.
Even those who genuinely supported the war based
on concocted intelligence - that Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein, possessed weapons of mass
destruction, or the equally fallacious notion that
Saddam and Al-Qaeda cooperated in any way - must, by
now, realize that the entire American discourse
prior to the war had no basis in reality.
Unfortunately, war enthusiasts are not a rational
bunch. Therefore, neither they, nor their
‘intellectuals’, should be expected to possess the
moral integrity in shouldering the responsibility
for the Iraq invasion and its horrific consequences.
If, indeed, the
US wars in the Middle East and Afghanistan were
meant to fight and uproot terror, how is it possible
that, in June 2014, an erstwhile unknown group
calling itself the ‘Islamic State’ (IS),
managed to flourish, occupy and usurp massive
swathes of Iraqi and Syrian territories and resource
under the watchful eye of the US military? If the
other war objective was bringing stability and
democracy to the Middle East, why did many years of
US ‘state-building’ efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan,
for example, leave behind nothing but weak,
shattered armies and festering corruption?
Two important events have summoned up these
thoughts: US President Joe Biden’s ‘historic’ trip
to Cornwall, UK, in June, to attend the 47th G7 summit and, two weeks
later, the death
of Donald Rumsfeld, who is widely
depicted as “the architect of the Iraq war”. The
tone struck by Biden throughout his G7 meetings is
that ‘America is back’, another American coinage
similar to the earlier phrase, the ‘great reset’ -
meaning that Washington is ready to reclaim its
global role that had been betrayed by the chaotic
policies of former President Donald Trump.
The newest phrase - ‘America is back’ - appears
to suggest that the decision to restore the US’
uncontested global leadership is, more or less, an
exclusively American decision. Moreover, the term is
not entirely new. In his
first speech to a global audience at the Munich
Security Conference on February 19, Biden repeated
the phrase several times with obvious emphasis.
“America is back. I speak today as President of
the United States, at the very start of my
administration and I am sending a clear message to
the world: America is back,” Biden said, adding that
“the transatlantic alliance is back and we are not
looking backward, we are looking forward together.”
Platitudes and wishful thinking aside, the US
cannot possibly return to a previous geopolitical
standing, simply because Biden has made an executive
decision to ‘reset’ his country’s traditional
relationships with Europe - or anywhere else,
either. Biden’s actual mission is to merely
whitewash and restore his country’s tarnished
reputation, marred not only by Trump, but also by
years of fruitless wars, a crisis of democracy at
home and abroad and an impending financial crisis
resulting from the US’ mishandling of the Covid-19
pandemic. Unfortunately for Washington, while it
hopes to ‘look forward’ to the future, other
countries have already staked claims to parts of the
world where the US has been forced to retreat,
following two decades of a rudderless strategy that
is fueled by the belief that firepower alone is
sufficient to keep America aloft forever.
Though Biden was received warmly by his European
hosts, Europe is likely to proceed cautiously. The
continent's geostrategic interests do not fall
entirely in the American camp, as was once the case.
Other new factors and power players have emerged in
recent years.
China is now the European bloc’s largest trade
partner and Biden’s scare tactics warning of Chinese
global dominance have not, seemingly, impressed the
Europeans as the Americans had hoped. Following
Britain's unceremonious exit from the EU bloc, the
latter urgently needs to keep its share of the
global economy as large as possible. The limping US
economy will hardly make the substantial deficit
felt in Europe. Namely, the China-EU relationship is
here to stay - and grow.
There is something else that makes the Europeans
wary of whatever murky political doctrine Biden is
promoting: dangerous American military adventurism.
The US and Europe are the foundation of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) which, since its
inception in 1949, was almost exclusively used by
the US to assert its global dominance, first in the
Korean Peninsula in 1950, then everywhere else.
Following the September 11 attacks, Washington
used its hegemony over NATO to invoke
Article 5 of its Charter, that of collective
defense. The consequences were dire, as NATO
members, along with the US, were embroiled in their
longest wars ever, military conflicts that had no
consistent strategy, let alone measurable goals.
Now, as the US licks its wounds as it leaves
Afghanistan, NATO members, too, are leaving the
devastated country without a single achievement
worth celebrating. Similar scenarios are transpiring
in Iraq and Syria, too.
Rumsfeld’s death on June 29, at the age of 88,
should serve as a wake-up call to American allies if
they truly wish to avoid the pitfalls and
recklessness of the past. While much of the US
corporate media
commemorated the death of a brutish war criminal
with amiable non-committal language, some blamed him
almost entirely for the Iraq fiasco. It is as if a
single man had bent the will of the West-dominated
international community to invade, pillage, torture
and destroy entire countries. If so, then Rumsfeld’s
death should usher in an exciting new dawn of
collective peace, prosperity and security. This is
not the case.
Rationalizing his decision to leave Afghanistan
in a speech to the nation in April 2021, Biden did
not accept, on behalf of his country, responsibility
over that horrific war. Instead, he spoke of the
need to fight the ‘terror threat’ in ‘many places’,
instead of keeping ‘thousands of troops grounded and
concentrated in just one country’.
Indeed, a close reading of Biden’s decision to
withdraw from Afghanistan - a process which
began under Trump - suggests that the difference
between US foreign policy under Biden is only
tactically different from the policies of George W.
Bush when he launched his ‘preemptive
wars’ under the command of Rumsfeld. Namely,
though the geopolitical map may have shifted, the US
appetite for war remains insatiable.
Shackled with a legacy of unnecessary, fruitless
and immoral wars, yet with no actual ‘forward’
strategy, the US, arguably for the first time since
the inception of NATO in the aftermath of World War
II, has no decipherable foreign policy doctrine.
Even if such a doctrine exists, it can only be
materialized through alliances whose relationships
are constructed on trust and confidence. Despite the
EU’s courteous reception of Biden in Cornwall, trust
in Washington is at an all-time low.
Even if it is accepted, without any argument,
that America is, indeed, back, considering the
vastly changing geopolitical spheres in Europe, the
Middle East and Asia, Biden’s assertion should,
ultimately, make no difference.
- Ramzy Baroud is a journalist and the Editor
of The Palestine Chronicle. He is the author of five
books. His latest is “These
Chains Will Be Broken: Palestinian
Stories of Struggle and Defiance in Israeli Prisons”
(Clarity Press). Dr. Baroud is a Non-resident Senior
Research Fellow at the Center for Islam and Global
Affairs (CIGA) and also at the Afro-Middle East
Center (AMEC). His website is
www.ramzybaroud.net
Registration is necessary to post comments.
We ask only that you do not use obscene or offensive
language. Please be respectful of others.