License to Kill
By Dmitry Orlov
March 31, 2015 "ICH"
- The story is the same every time:
some nation, due to a confluence of lucky
circumstances, becomes powerful—much more
powerful than the rest—and, for a time, is
dominant. But the lucky circumstances, which
often amount to no more than a few
advantageous quirks of geology, be it Welsh
coal or West Texas oil, in due course come
to an end. In the meantime, the erstwhile
superpower becomes corrupted by its own
power.
As the endgame approaches, those still
nominally in charge of the collapsing empire
resort to all sorts of desperate
measures—all except one: they will refuse to
ever consider the fact that their imperial
superpower is at an end, and that they
should change their ways accordingly. George
Orwell once offered an excellent explanation
for this phenomenon: as the imperial
end-game approaches, it becomes a matter of
imperial self-preservation to breed a
special-purpose ruling class—one that is
incapable of understanding that the end-game
is approaching. Because, you see, if they
had an inkling of what's going on, they
wouldn't take their jobs seriously enough to
keep the game going for as long as possible.
The approaching imperial collapse can be
seen in the ever worsening results the
empire gets for its imperial efforts. After
World War II, the US was able to do a
respectable job helping to rebuild Germany,
along with the rest of western Europe. Japan
also did rather well under US tutelage, as
did South Korea after the end of fighting on
the Korean peninsula. With Vietnam, Laos and
Cambodia, all of which were badly damaged by
the US, the results were significantly
worse: Vietnam was an outright defeat,
Cambodia lived through a period of genocide,
while amazingly resilient Laos—the most
heavily bombed country on the
planet—recovered on its own.
The first Gulf War went even more badly:
fearful of undertaking a ground offensive in
Iraq, the US stopped short of its regular
practice of toppling the government and
installing a puppet regime there, and left
it in limbo for a decade. When the US did
eventually invade, it succeeded—after
killing countless civilians and destroying
much of the infrastructure—in leaving behind
a dismembered corpse of a country.
Similar results have been achieved in other
places where the US saw it fit to get
involved: Somalia, Libya and, most recently,
Yemen. Let's not even mention Afghanistan,
since all empires have failed to achieve
good results there. So the trend is
unmistakable: whereas at its height the
empire destroyed in order to rebuild the
world in its own image, as it nears its end
it destroys simply for the sake of
destruction, leaving piles of corpses and
smoldering ruins in its wake.
Another unmistakeable trend has to do with
the efficacy of spending money on “defense”
(which, in the case of the US, should be
redefined as “offense”). Having a lavishly
endowed military can sometimes lead to
success, but here too something has shifted
over time. The famous American can-do spirit
that was evident to all during World War II,
when the US dwarfed the rest of the world
with its industrial might, is no more. Now,
more and more, military spending itself is
the goal—never mind what it achieves.
And what it achieves is the latest F-35 jet
fighter that can't fly; the latest aircraft
carrier that can't launch planes without
destroying them if they are fitted with the
auxiliary tanks they need to fly combat
missions; the most technologically advanced
AEGIS destroyer that can be taken out of
commission by a single unarmed Russian jet
carrying a basket of electronic warfare
equipment, and another aircraft carrier that
can be frightened out of deep water and
forced to anchor by a few Russian submarines
out on routine patrol.
But the Americans like their weapons, and
they like handing them out as a show of
support. But more often than not these
weapons end up in the wrong hands: the ones
they gave to Iraq are now in the hands of
ISIS; the ones they gave to the Ukrainian
nationalists have been sold to the Syrian
government; the ones they gave to the
government in Yemen is now in the hands of
the Houthis who recently overthrew it. And
so the efficacy of lavish military spending
has dwindled too. At some point it may
become more efficient to modify the US
Treasury printing presses to blast bundles
of US dollars in the general direction of
the enemy.
With the strategy of “destroying in order to
create” no longer viable, but with the blind
ambition to still try to prevail everywhere
in the world somehow still part of the
political culture, all that remains is
murder. The main tool of foreign policy
becomes political assassination: be it
Saddam Hussein, or Muammar Qaddafi, or
Slobodan Milošević, or Osama bin Laden, or
any number of lesser targets, the idea is to
simply kill them.
While aiming for the head of an organization
is a favorite technique, the general
populace gets is share of murder too. How
many funerals and wedding parties have been
taken out by drone strikes? I don't know
that anyone in the US really knows, but I am
sure that those whose relatives were killed
do remember, and will remember for the next
few centuries at least. This tactic is
generally not conducive to creating a
durable peace, but it is a good tactic for
perpetuating and escalating conflict. But
that's now an acceptable goal, because it
creates the rationale for increased military
spending, making it possible to breed more
chaos.
Recently a retired US general went on
television to declare that what's needed to
turn around the situation in the Ukraine is
to simply “start killing Russians.” The
Russians listened to that, marveled at his
idiocy, and then went ahead and opened a
criminal case against him. Now this general
will be unable to travel to an
ever-increasing number of countries around
the world for fear of getting arrested and
deported to Russia to stand trial.
This is largely a symbolic gesture, but
non-symbolic non-gestures of a preventive
nature are sure to follow. You see, my
fellow space travelers, murder happens to be
illegal. In most jurisdictions, inciting
others to murder also happens to be illegal.
Americans have granted themselves the
license to kill without checking to see
whether perhaps they might be exceeding
their authority. We should expect, then,
that as their power trickles away, their
license to kill will be revoked, and they
find themselves reclassified from global
hegemons to mere murderers.
As empires collapse, they turn inward, and
subject their own populations to the same
ill treatment to which they subjected
others. Here, America is unexceptional: the
number of Americans being murdered by their
own police, with minimal repercussions for
those doing the killing, is quite stunning.
When Americans wonder who their enemy really
is, they need look no further.
But that is only the beginning: the
precedent has already been set for deploying
US troops on US soil. As law and order break
down in more and more places, we will see
more and more US troops on the streets of
cities in the US, spreading death and
destruction just like they did in Iraq or in
Afghanistan. The last license to kill to be
revoked will be the license to kill
ourselves. Dmitry
Orlov is a Russian-American engineer and a
writer on subjects related to "potential
economic, ecological and political decline
and collapse in the United States,"
something he has called “permanent crisis”.
http://cluborlov.blogspot.com
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