The Myth of
the ‘War on Terrorism’
Debunked at last
By Justin Raimondo
July 14, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
- "Antiwar"
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Remember “We’re
fighting them over there so we don’t have to fight
them over here”? That was the justification for
the worldwide war on terrorism the Bush
administration trumpeted in the early days of the
post-9/11 era. Keeping in mind that the American
people don’t really care about what goes on
thousands of miles away, and that the purpose of our
foreign policy is – ostensibly – to keep us safe
here at home, the Bushies and their neocon
Praetorian Guard always kept their focus on the
threat that was supposedly hanging over our heads:
another 9/11. As that Old Right prophet Garet
Garrett put it some sixty years ago, US foreign
policy was rationalized to the public with “a
complex of vaunting and fear,” and this was the
fear part.
But now we
hear that the latest iteration of the Terrorist
Threat – ISIS – is losing ground in Syria, its home
base: some 12 percent of its territory has been lost
to a combination of opponents, and the Caliphate,
we’re told, is shrinking. So does that mean the
Terrorist Threat is abating, and we can get back to
living our lives?
Heck no!
As CNN
reports:
“IHS
[Information Handling Services] senior analyst
Columb Strack says that ‘as the Islamic State’s
caliphate shrinks and it becomes increasingly clear
that its governance project is failing, the group is
re-prioritizing insurgency."
“He told
CNN: ‘As a result, we unfortunately expect an
increase in mass casualty attacks and sabotage of
economic infrastructure, across Iraq and Syria, and
further afield, including Europe.’
“In
other words, ISIS is going to become a more
‘traditional’ terror group, boasting
of its international reach to attract recruits
and bolster morale as it loses ground in Iraq and
Syria.”
So let’s
see if I have this straight: we fought them over
there so we don’t have to fight them over here, but
now that we’re winning over there they’re coming
over there.
Got that?
This
preposterous shell game is becoming so transparently
phony that not even the “experts” and government
officials pushing it can possibly believe it.
In reality,
the “war on terrorism” had nothing to do with
protecting the American people from harm: it was
always all about projecting US power as far as
possible and effecting “regime change” throughout
the Middle East. And not only there …
The real
regime change came about right here in the good ol’
US of A: a system of
universal surveillance was instituted as the
“Patriot” Act was passed by a Congress that never
bothered to read it. The police were
militarized – after all, the Bad Guys were about
to launch an attack on Peoria, or wherever, and we
had to be ready. The banks were forced to report all
“suspicious”
transactions, and if you bought
a pressure cooker your name went on a list of
“terror suspects.” This was followed, more recently,
by
an attack by the Left on the Second Amendment:
if your name is on a “terrorist watch list,” or the
mysterious “no fly list,” the Nanny State would
prevent you from getting your hands on a gun – and
screw the Constitution.
Regime
change at home and abroad – that’s the real point of
the “war on terrorism.” The idea was and is to
overthrow not only whatever government dares to get
in the War Party’s way, but also to overthrow the
Constitution and the rule of law in the United
States. A real double-header!
In fact,
our “strategy” empowers what might have been
marginal terrorist groups, and seems almost designed
to do so. We attacked Iraq, and created a power
vacuum which al-Qaeda and ISIS filled: then we
aligned with “moderate” jihadists in Syria in order
to overthrow Bashar al-Assad and drain off support
from ISIS. Instead we accomplished exactly
the opposite of our intended goal: the
“moderates”
defected to ISIS and al-Qaeda, and the
“Caliphate” grew in size and stature. Thousands of
Muslims flocked to the region to fight the latest
holy war. So we essentially
re-invaded Iraq – Obama just sent in more
troops, with more to come – and retook 12 percent of
their territory. And now they’re spreading into
Europe – and trying to reach the US, as they did in
San Bernardino and Orlando.
ISIS split
off from al-Qaeda over a strategic issue: where to
concentrate their forces. The original strategic
vision of Osama bin Laden was to go after the “far
enemy” – that is, to hit America – and wait
until going for their ultimate goal: the creation of
a global “Caliphate.” ISIS disagreed with this
gradualism, and determined that it was time to
establish the Caliphate here and now. The advantages
of this strategy were twofold: 1) It would show that
they could actually govern, and that their program
wasn’t just a nihilistic vision of destruction for
its own sake, and 2) The Caliphate would attract
foreign fighters in sufficient numbers to fight the
infidels and win.
Like all
successful revolutionaries, the leadership of ISIS
employs an entrepreneurial strategic and tactical
flexibility while never losing sight of its ultimate
goal. So while the Caliphate may be losing territory
at the moment, it is extending its reach to make the
enemy pay a high price – and attracting more
recruits in the process.
The idea
that we can stamp out these terrorist outfits by
going on the offensive in distant Syria, or wherever
– denying them “safe havens” – is a delusion that
never seems to die. That’s because the delusion
serves the domestic interests of our rulers so well.
The
“nations” of the Middle East were never real
entities to begin with: the borders of Iraq, Syria,
Jordan, and the Gulf states were determined by the
European colonialists who carved up the remnants of
the old Ottoman empire to suit their own purposes.
And when these “nations” achieved “independence,”
they did not suddenly become more real. What is
happening today is the shakeout of competing
factions along religious and ethnic lines: the
Sunnis, the Shi’ites, the Kurds, etc. etc. are all
asserting their right to self-determination. When
ISIS
demolished the flimsy barrier that separated
Syria from Iraq, and
proclaimed the abolition of the
Sykes-Picot agreement, they were expressing
their contempt for the post-World War I order
imposed by the West – an order that is dying a
bloody and chaotic death in spite of our futile
efforts to preserve it.
So what’s
the solution?
Terrorist
attacks on the West won’t stop any time soon, no
matter what we do or don’t do. Too much blood has
been spilled, and the dead cry out for vengeance. We
can’t undo the invasion of Iraq – the single most
destructive act in the modern history of the Middle
East – but we can stop making the same mistake unto
eternity. As I’ve written before, we should
quarantine the entire region. Stop intervening,
and let the religious fanatics who are making the
region a killing field stew in their own poisonous
juices. Stop supporting the Saudis – the main
agitators of jihadism; stop supporting Israel: stop
supporting the Iraqi “government”; stop sending in
troops – and concentrate our limited resources on
making sure the terrorists don’t make it to the
continental United States.
And if this
be “isolationism,” then let the War Party make the
most of it. Because the American people are done
with global crusading. Enough is enough: let them
kill each other if that’s what they’re intent on
doing. Let’s just make sure that they aren’t killing
us.
Justin Raimondo is the editorial director of
Antiwar.com, and a senior fellow at the Randolph
Bourne Institute. He is a contributing editor at
The American Conservative, and writes a monthly
column for Chronicles. He is the author of
Reclaiming the American Right: The Lost Legacy
of the Conservative Movement [Center for
Libertarian Studies, 1993; Intercollegiate Studies
Institute, 2000], and An
Enemy of the State: The Life of Murray N. Rothbar
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