United
States Bombings Of Other Countries
By William
Blum
It
is a scandal in contemporary international law,
don’t forget, that while “wanton destruction of
towns, cities and villages” is a war crime of
long standing, the bombing of cities from
airplanes goes not only unpunished but virtually
unaccused. Air bombardment is state terrorism,
the terrorism of the rich. It has burned up and
blasted apart more innocents in the past six
decades than have all the antistate terrorists
who ever lived. Something has benumbed our
consciousness against this reality. In the
United States we would not consider for the
presidency a man who had once thrown a bomb into
a crowded restaurant, but we are happy to elect
a man who once dropped bombs from airplanes that
destroyed not only restaurants but the buildings
that contained them and the neighborhoods that
surrounded them. I went to Iraq after the Gulf
war and saw for myself what the bombs did;
“wanton destruction” is just the term for it.
– C. Douglas Lummis, political
scientist
June 24,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- The above was written in 1994, before the
wanton destruction generated by the bombing of
Yugoslavia, another in a long list of countries the
United States has bombarded since the end of World
War II, which is presented below.
There
appears to be something about launching bombs or
missiles from afar onto cities and people that
appeals to American military and political leaders.
In part it has to do with a conscious desire to not
risk American lives in ground combat. And in part,
perhaps not entirely conscious, it has to do with
not wishing to look upon the gory remains of the
victims, allowing American GIs and TV viewers at
home to cling to their warm fuzzy feelings about
themselves, their government, and their marvelous
“family values”. Washington officials are careful to
distinguish between the explosives the US drops from
the sky and “weapons of mass destruction” (WMD),
which only the officially-designated enemies (ODE)
are depraved enough to use. The US government speaks
sternly of WMD, defining them as nuclear, chemical
and biological in nature, and “indiscriminate”
(meaning their use can’t be limited to military
objectives), as opposed to the likes of American
“precision” cruise missiles. This is indeed a shaky
semantic leg to stand on, given the well-known
extremely extensive damage to non-military targets,
including numerous residences, schools and
hospitals, even from American “smart” bombs, in
almost all of the bombings listed below.
Moreover,
Washington does not apply the term “weapons of mass
destruction” to other weapons the US has regularly
used, such as depleted uranium and cluster bombs,
which can be, and often are, highly indiscriminate.
WMD are
sometimes further defined as those whose effects
linger in the environment, causing subsequent harm
to people. This would certainly apply to cluster
bombs, and depleted uranium weapons, the latter
remaining dangerously radioactive after exploding.
It would apply less to “conventional” bombs, but
even with those there are unexploded bombs lying
around, and the danger of damaged buildings later
collapsing. But more importantly, it seems highly
self-serving and specious, not to mention
exceptionally difficult, to try to paint a human
face on a Tomahawk Cruise missile whose payload of a
thousand pounds of TNT crashes into the center of a
densely-populated city, often with depleted uranium
in its warhead.
A
terrorist is someone who has a bomb but doesn’t
have an air force.
The bombing list
- Korea
and China 1950-53 (Korean War)
-
Guatemala 1954
-
Indonesia 1958
- Cuba
1959-1961
-
Guatemala 1960
- Congo
1964
- Laos
1964-73
-
Vietnam 1961-73
-
Cambodia 1969-70
-
Guatemala 1967-69
-
Grenada 1983
-
Lebanon 1983, 1984 (both Lebanese and Syrian
targets)
- Libya
1986
- El
Salvador 1980s
-
Nicaragua 1980s
- Iran
1987
- Panama
1989
- Iraq
1991 (Persian Gulf War)
- Kuwait
1991
-
Somalia 1993
- Bosnia
1994, 1995
- Sudan
1998
-
Afghanistan 1998
-
Yugoslavia 1999
- Yemen
2002
- Iraq
1991-2003 (US/UK on regular basis)
- Iraq
2003-2015
-
Afghanistan 2001-2015
-
Pakistan 2007-2015
-
Somalia 2007-8, 2011
- Yemen
2009, 2011
- Libya
2011, 2015
- Syria
2014-2015
Plus
Iran, April
2003 – hit by US missiles during bombing of Iraq,
killing at least one person
Pakistan,
2002-03 – bombed by US planes several times as part
of combat against the Taliban and other opponents of
the US occupation of Afghanistan
China, 1999
– its heavily bombed embassy in Belgrade is legally
Chinese territory, and it appears rather certain
that the bombing was no accident (see chapter 25 of
Rogue State)
France,
1986 – After the French government refused the use
of its air space to US warplanes headed for a
bombing raid on Libya, the planes were forced to
take another, longer route; when they reached Libya
they bombed so close to the French embassy that the
building was damaged and all communication links
knocked out.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, May 13, 1985 – A bomb
dropped by a police helicopter burned down an entire
block, some 60 homes destroyed, 11 dead, including
several small children. The police, the mayor’s
office, and the FBI were all involved in this effort
to evict a black organization called MOVE from the
house they lived in.
Them other guys are really
shocking
“We should
expect conflicts in which adversaries, because of
cultural affinities different from our own, will
resort to forms and levels of violence shocking to
our sensibilities.” – Department of Defense,
1999
The Targets
It’s become
a commonplace to accuse the United States of
choosing as its bombing targets only people of
color, those of the Third World, or Muslims. But it
must be remembered that one of the most sustained
and ferocious American bombing campaigns was carried
out against the people of the former Yugoslavia –
white, European, Christians. The United States is an
equal-opportunity bomber. The only qualifications
for a country to become a target are:
- It
poses a sufficient obstacle to the desires of
the American Empire;
- It is
virtually defenseless against aerial attack.
The survivors
A study by
the American Medical Association: “Psychiatric
disorders among survivors of the 1995 Oklahoma City
bombing”:
Nearly
half the bombing survivors studied had an active
postdisaster psychiatric disorder, and full
criteria for PTSD [posttraumatic stress
disorder] were met by one third of the
survivors. PTSD symptoms were nearly universal,
especially symptoms of intrusive reexperience
and hyperarousal.
Martin
Kelly, publisher of a nonviolence website:
We
never see the smoke and the fire, we never smell
the blood, we never see the terror in the eyes
of the children, whose nightmares will now
feature screaming missiles from unseen
terrorists, known only as Americans.
Notes
This is a
chapter from
Rogue State: A Guide to the World’s Only
Superpower by William Blum. |