States of TerrorBy
Chris Hedges
November 24, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Truthdig"
- It is nearly certain that we will endure, sooner rather than
later, another catastrophic terrorist attack on American soil. The
blundering of our military into the Middle East; the failed states
that have risen out of the mismanagement and chaos of Iraq and
Afghanistan; the millions of innocents we have driven from their
homes, terrorized or slaughtered; the bankrupt puppet regimes we
have equipped and trained that will not fight; the massive amounts
of munitions and military hardware we have allowed to fall into the
hands of jihadis—thousands of them carrying Western passports; and
the myopic foreign policy whose single tenet is that more industrial
violence will get us out of the morass created by our industrial
violence in the first place means that we, like France, are in for
it.
All the major candidates for president, including
Bernie Sanders, along with a media that is a shameless echo chamber
for the elites, embrace endless war. Lost are the art of diplomacy,
the ability to read the cultural, political, linguistic and
religious landscape of those we dominate by force, the effort to
dissect the roots of jihadi rage and violence, and the simple
understanding that Muslims do not want to be occupied any more than
we would want to be occupied.
Another jihadi terrorist attack in the United
States will extinguish what remains of our anemic and largely
dysfunctional democracy. Fear will be even more fervently stoked and
manipulated by the state. The remnants of our civil liberties will
be abolished. Groups that defy the corporate state—Black Lives
Matter, climate change activists and anti-capitalists—will be
ruthlessly targeted for elimination as the nation is swept into the
Manichean world of us-and-them, traitors versus patriots. Culture
will be reduced to sentimental doggerel and patriotic kitsch.
Violence will be sanctified, in Hollywood and the media, as a
purifying agent. Any criticism of the crusade or those leading it
will be heresy. The police and the military will be deified.
Nationalism, which at its core is about self-exaltation and racism,
will distort our perception of reality. We will gather like
frightened children around the flag. We will sing the national
anthem in unison. We will kneel before the state and the organs of
internal security. We will beg our masters to save us. We will be
paralyzed by the psychosis of permanent war.
In wartime, public discourse emits the insane
sputterings of King Lear: “Then, kill, kill, kill, kill, kill,
kill!” Demagogues bellow for more bombs and more enemy corpses. The
military and the war profiteers provide them. The public cheers on
the slaughter. Victory is assured. The nation rejoices when the
newest face of evil is eradicated. But when one face of evil—Sheikh
Ahmed Yassin, Saddam Hussein, Osama bin Laden, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi
or Abdelhamid Abaaoud—is exterminated, another swiftly rises to take
his or her place. It is an endless and futile quest.
Violence generates counterviolence. The cycle does
not stop until the killing stops. All that makes us human—love,
empathy, tenderness and kindness—is dismissed in wartime as useless
and weak. We revel in a demented hypermasculinity. We lose the
capacity to feel and understand. We pity only our own. We too
celebrate our glorified martyrs. We endow our sanctified dead with
the lofty virtues and goodness that define our national myth,
ignoring our complicity in perpetuating the ceaseless cycle of
death. Our drones and airstrikes, after all, have decapitated far
more people, including children, than Islamic State.
Jihadis troll websites and the dingy corridors of
housing projects outside French cities and in the slums of Iraqi
cities looking for young people discarded by war and
neoliberalism, just as Army recruiters sniff out our own
discarded and dispossessed and send them off to fight.
Disenfranchised youths, offered the illusion of heroism, glory and
even martyrdom, promised a chance to be armed and powerful, are
seduced by these scavengers. Hundreds of millions of people across
the globe have been cast aside by globalization as human refuse.
They are worth nothing to the corporate state. They are denied jobs,
benefits, dignity and self-worth. They are easy prey for the siren
calls of those for whom war is a lucrative business. They dress in
uniforms. They surrender their individuality. They experience the
intoxicating drug of violence. They assume a new identity—that of
warrior.
By the time they see through the illusions and
lies, by the time they grasp how they have been used and betrayed,
they are broken, maimed or dead. No matter. There are legions behind
them waiting eagerly for their chance.
We have lost the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Iraq as a unified nation has been splintered into antagonistic and
warring enclaves. It will never be reunited. We ensured that Iraq
would become a failed state the moment we invaded and disbanded its
army, police force and government bureaucracy, the moment we
foolishly attempted to dominate the country by force—including our
arming and organizing of Shiite death squads that carried out a
reign of terror against the Sunnis. The Iraqi insurgents, al-Qaida
and, later, Islamic State, easily recruited the masses of enraged
dispossessed whose families have been torn apart since the 2003
invasion, whose childhoods have been colored by extreme poverty,
fear, a lack of education and basic services and horrific acts of
violence, and who correctly see no future under continued U.S.
occupation. Islamic State now controls an area
the size of Texas, carved out of the remnants of Syria and Iraq.
All our air attacks will not drive it out.
The situation is no better in Afghanistan. The
Taliban controls
more of Afghanistan than it did when we invaded 14 years ago.
The puppet regime in Kabul we arm and support is hated, brutal,
corrupt, involved in drug trafficking and crippled by cowardice. It
is also heavily infiltrated by the Taliban. The Kabul regime will
crumble the moment we depart. Trillions and trillions of dollars,
along with hundreds of thousands of lives, have been squandered for
nothing, even as climate change moves closer and closer to ensuring
the extinction of the human species.
We waded into conflicts we did not understand. We
were propelled forward by fantasy. The occupation of Iraq was
supposed to have seen us greeted as liberators. We planned to
implant democracy in Baghdad and have it spread across the Middle
East. We were fed the absurd promise that the oil revenues would pay
for reconstruction. Instead, our folly spawned political, social and
economic collapse, widespread poverty, massive displacement, misery
and a rage that gave birth to radical jihadism in Iraq and
throughout the region.
The disintegration in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan
has forced us to form a de facto alliance with Iran to battle
Islamic State and the Taliban. This disintegration has upended our
goal of overthrowing the Syrian regime of Bashar Assad. We now
function, along with the Russians, as Assad’s surrogate air force.
And because Hezbollah fighters, whom the United States and Israel
condemn as terrorists and have vowed to destroy, are integrated into
Assad’s army, we also serve as Hezbollah’s surrogate air force. The
Iraqi regime is dominated by the mullahs in Iran. The objectives
used to justify these conflicts—including the promise to root out
radical jihadism—have all failed.
In endless war, yesterday’s enemies eventually
become today’s allies. This is a theme George Orwell captured in his
dystopian novel “1984”:
At this moment, for example, in 1984 (if it
was 1984), Oceania was at war with Eurasia and in alliance with
Eastasia. In no public or private utterance was it ever admitted
that the three powers had at any time been grouped along
different lines. Actually, as Winston well knew, it was only
four years since Oceania had been at war with Eastasia and in
alliance with Eurasia. But that was merely a piece of furtive
knowledge, which he happened to possess because his memory was
not satisfactorily under control. Officially the change of
partners had never happened. Oceania was at war with Eurasia:
therefore Oceania had always been at war with Eurasia. The enemy
of the moment always represented absolute evil, and it followed
that any past or future agreement with him was impossible.
This will not end well. The massive violence we
employ throughout the Middle East will never achieve its goals.
State terror will not defeat individual acts of terror. More and
more innocents will be sacrificed, here and abroad, in a furious and
futile campaign. Rage and collective humiliation will mount. As we
continue to fail to blunt attacks against us, we will become more
aggressive and more lethal. Internal enemies—especially Muslims—will
be demonized, endure hate crimes and be hunted down. The most tepid
forms of criticism and dissent will be criminalized.
We are hostages, like Israel, to an accelerating
death spiral. Only when we are exhausted and depleted, when the
numbers of dead and maimed overwhelm us, will this lust for blood
end. By then the world around us will be unrecognizable and, I fear,
irredeemable.
Chris Hedges previously
spent nearly two decades as a foreign correspondent in Central
America, the Middle East, Africa and the Balkans. He has reported
from more than 50 countries and has worked for The Christian Science
Monitor, National Public Radio, The Dallas Morning News and The New
York Times, for which he was a foreign correspondent for 15 years.
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