The Great
Leap Backward: America’s Illegal Wars on the World
By Luciana Bohne
May 13, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Counterpunch"
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Can we face it
in this election season? America is a weapons
factory, the White House a war room, and the
president the manager of the neoliberal conspiracy
to recolonize the planet. It exports war and mass
poverty. On the economic front, usurious
neoliberalism; on the military front, illegal wars.
These are the trenches of America’s battle for world
domination in the 21st century.
If not
stopped, it will be a short century.
Since 1945,
America’s Manifest Destiny, posing as the Free
World’s Crusade against the Red Menace, has claimed
20 to 30 million lives worldwide and bombed
one-third of the earth’s people. In the 19th
century, America exterminated another kind of “red
menace,” writing and shredding treaties, stealing
lands, massacring, and herding Native populations
into concentration camps (“Indian reservations”), in
the name of civilizing the “savages.” By 1890, with
the massacre of Lakota at Wounded Knee, the frontier
land grab—internal imperialism– was over. There was
a world to conquer, and America trained its
exceptionally covetous eye on Cuba and the
Philippines.
American
external imperialism was born.
Then,
something utterly dreadful happened in 1917—a
successful social revolution in Russia, the second
major after the French in 1789, to try to
redistribute the wealth of the few to the advantage
of the many. The rulers of the world—US, Britain,
France and sundry acolytes—put aside their
differences and united to stem the awful threat of
popular democracy rising and spreading. They invaded
Russia, fomented a civil war, funding and arming the
counter-revolutionary forces, failed, and tried
again in 1939. But Hitler’s war of extermination on
the USSR ended in a spectacular victory for Moscow.
For a
while, after 1945, the US had to behave as a
civilized country, formally. It claimed that the
USSR had a barbarian, all-conquering ideology,
rooted in terror, disappearances, murder, and
torture. By contrast, the US was the shining city on
the hill, the beacon of hope for a “the free world.”
Its shrine was the United Nations; its holy writ was
international law; its first principle was the
inviolability of the sovereignty of nations.
All this
was rubbish, of course. It was an apartheid society.
It nuked Japan not once but twice, deliberately
selecting civilian targets. It shielded from justice
top Nazi criminals to absorb them as partners in
intelligence structures. It conducted virtual “show
trials” against dissidents during the hysteria of
the McCarthy congressional hearings, seeding the
country with a harvest of fear. It waged a genocidal
war on Vietnam to prevent independence and
unification. It assassinated African independence
leaders and bestowed fascist dictators on Latin
America. It softly occupied Western Europe, tied it
to itself through military “cooperation” in NATO,
and it waged psy-op war on its opposition parties.
Behind the civilized façade was a ruthless effort to
take out the Soviet Union and crush
self-determination in the colonial world.
By hook and
by crook, the Soviet Union dissolved in 1991, and
America went berserk with triumphalism. Now, at
last, the conquest of the world, interrupted in
1917, could resume. The global frontier reopened and
America’s identity would be regenerated through
violence, which had delivered the American West to
the European invaders in the 19th
century. The benign mask dropped. Behind it came a
rider on a pale horse. According to the
ideologically exulted, history had ended, ideologies
had died, and the messianic mission of the US to
become the steward of God’s property on earth could
be fulfilled.
The
“civilizing mission” was afoot.
A cabal of
neo-conservative policy wonks first sketched what I
call the Great Leap Backward into lawlessness as a
revival of the myth of the frontier in the 1990s.
“The Plan for a New American Century” (PNAC)
envisaged the 21st century as a
unilateralist drive to entrench American values
globally—what the PNAC ideologues call “freedom and
democracy”—through preemptive wars and regime
change. This frenzied delirium of US military
domination turned into official foreign policy with
the Bush Doctrine after 9/11, but it was the Clinton
administration’s Doctrine of Humanitarian Warfare
before 9/11, that shut the door on the prohibition
of aggressive wars by the UN Charter, remaking the
map of the world into a borderless American hunting
reserve by removing the principle of sovereignty and
replacing it with “right to protect” (R2P)—or
humanitarian pretext for use of force.
Clinton’s
doctrine was an act of supreme, even witty,
exploitation of liberal principles and commitment to
policies of human rights. It was how the liberal
left was induced to embrace war and imperialism as
the means of defending human rights. The Carnegie
Endowment cooked up the doctrine in 1992. Its
report, “Changing Our Ways: America’s Role in the
New World,” urged “a new principle of international
relations: the destruction or displacement of groups
of people within states can justify international
intervention.” The report recommended that the US
use NATO as the enforcer. It must be noted, too,
that the principle of “humanitarian war” has no
authority in international law. The Charter of the
United Nations sought to outlaw war by making it
impossible for unilateral interventions in the
business of sovereign states by self-appointed
guardians of human rights. The reason behind the
proscription was not heartlessness but the
consciousness that WW II had been the result of
serial violations of sovereignty by Germany, Italy,
and Japan—by militarist imperialism, in other words.
The bell
tolled for the UN and the old order in the 1999
Kosovo War. The bi-partisan effort to dismantle the
architecture of the post war’s legal order played
out there. With the Kosovo War, the Clinton
administration launched the first humanitarian war
and set the precedent for waging war without
Security Council clearance of many to follow by both
Republican and Democrat administrations. The
Clintonites who used NATO to bomb Serbia to protect
ethnic Albanians in Kosovo from non-existing Serbian
genocide may or may not have appreciated the fact
that Hitler had used the pretext of R2P—humanitarian
intervention—to launch WW II by claiming to protect
German minorities in Poland, but they certainly knew
that the monopoly on use of force rested with the
UN’s Security Council. This monopoly was secured
after WW II precisely to prevent unilateral attacks
on sovereign states through bogus claims of
altruistic interventions, such as Hitler had
championed and pursued. Ironically for critics of
the Soviet leader, it was Stalin who insisted at the
Yalta Conference that if the USSR were to join the
United Nations a veto in the Security Council was a
must to insure that any war would be a multilateral
consensus and a multilateral action.
As the
Clintonites understood, the postwar legal authority
for peacekeeping and the prevention of war entrusted
to the UN Security Council posed a colossal obstacle
to the pursuit of American world domination. For the
vision of PNAC and the Carnegie Endowment to become
reality, the United Nations, the guarantor of
sovereignty, had to go. In the run-up to the Kosovo
War, the Clintonites fatally and deliberately
destabilized the United Nations, substituting the
uncooperative UN Secretary General Boutros
Boutros-Ghali with the subservient NATO shill, Kofi
Annan. Annan obligingly opined that in the matter of
war and peace, UN Security Council resolutions were
not the only way to skin a country– especially one
chosen by the US for remaking, partitioning, or
regime changing, a cynic might add.
So now we
live in a dangerous world. Once again, since the
1930s, the world is being stalked by an expansionist
power answering to no law but its own unilateral,
humanitarian vigilantism. The Kosovo precedent has
spun out of control. Libya smolders in the ashes of
NATO bombs, dropped to prevent “genocide”; Syria
fights for survival under attack by genocidal
terrorist groups, armed, trained and funded by
genocide preventers grouped in the NATO alliance and
the Gulf partners; Afghanistan languishes in a
permanent state of war, present ten thousand
American troops which bomb hospitals to promote
human rights; in Iraq, the humanitarians are back,
after twenty-five years of humanitarian failure. And
in Ukraine, Nazi patriots are promoting American
democratic and humanitarian values by shelling
Donbass daily. I hesitate to mention Africa, where
humanitarian Special Forces are watering the fields
where terrorists sprout like mushrooms after rain—in
Mali, Nigeria, Somalia, Kenya.
Then there
is Yemen, perhaps the most callous, vicious, and
careless humanitarian crime of a litany of crimes
against humanity in the Middle East. The US
government has recently admitted deploying troops to
Yemen. The Pentagon claims that the deployment will
assist Saudi Arabia (“the Arab coalition”) to fight
al-Qaeda in Arabian Peninsula. Can a sentient being
meet such a grotesque claim with anything but
infernal laughter? Help Saudi Arabia to fight its
own creature? Are we stupid yet?
$4 trillion
dollars later, spent on the
War-on-Terror/Humanitarian-R2P, the pattern of
military destabilization of sovereign states
proceeds apace, one recalcitrant, independent
country at a time in the Middle East and North
Africa. For the rest of the world, the surrender of
sovereignty is sought by means of economic
globalization through trade pacts—TTP, TTIP,
etc.—that virtually abolish the constitution of
states, including our own. Spearheading the economic
effort to control the periphery and the entire world
is the so-called “Washington Consensus.”
It hugs the
market-fundamentalist idea that global neoliberalism
and core finance capital’s economic control of the
planet by means of the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) and the World Trade Organization (WTO) is the
option to poverty and social chaos.
Neither
military nor economic war on the sovereignty of
nations has yielded anything close to a stable,
prosperous, and peaceful world. It had delivered
death, destruction, debt, market crises, tidal waves
of refugees and displaced persons, and concentrated
masses of wealth in a few but powerful hands. What
the poet W.H. Auden called “the international
wrong,” which he named “imperialism” in his poem
“September 1939,” is the crisis that stares out of
the mirror of the past into our faces, and it bodes
war, war, and more war, for that is where
imperialism drives.
In this
scenario, no potential presidential candidate—even
establishment-party dissenter—who does not call for
both the end of the bi-partisan “Washington
Consensus” and the end of bipartisan
militarist aggression can reverse the totality of
the “international wrong” or stem the domestic
descent into social brutalization. If none calls
this foreign policy debacle “imperialism,” elections
will be a sleepwalker’s exercise. Nothing will
change. Except, almost certainly, for the worse.
Luciana Bohne is
co-founder of Film Criticism, a journal of
cinema studies, and teaches at Edinboro
University in Pennsylvania. She can be reached
at: lbohne@edinboro.edu
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