A Good
Beginning
US Global Imperialism Is Coming To An End
By Kathy
Kelly
September
08, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- It seems that some who have the ears of U.S. elite
decision-makers are at least shifting away from
wishing to provoke wars with Russia and China.
In recent
articles,
Zbigniew Brzezinski and
Thomas Graham, two architects of the US cold war
with Russia, have acknowledged that the era of
uncontested US global imperialism is coming to an
end. Both analysts urge more cooperation with Russia
and China to achieve traditional, still imperial, US
aims. Mr. Graham recommends a shifting mix of
competition and cooperation, aiming toward a
"confident management of ambiguity." Mr. Brzezinski
calls for deputizing other countries, such as
Israel, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Iran to carry out
the combined aims of the US, Russia and China so
that this triumvirate could control other people’s
land and resources.
It’s surely
worthwhile to wonder what effect opinions such as
Brzezinski’s and Graham’s might have upon how US
resources are allotted, whether to meet human needs
or to further enlarge the US Department of Defense
(DOD) and further enrich the corporations that
profit from US investments in weapons technology.
If the US
might diminish offensive war preparations against
Russia, when would
DOD budget proposals begin to reflect this? As
of April 15, 2016, the US DOD was proposing that the
US Fiscal Year 2017 budget significantly increase
funding for the "European Reassurance Initiative" (ERI)
from $789.3 million the previous year to $3.4
billion. The document reads: "the expanded focus is
a reflection of the United States’ strong and
balanced approach to Russia in the wake of its
aggression in Eastern Europe." The requested funds
will enable the US"defense" establishment to expand
purchases of ammunition, fuel, equipment, and combat
vehicles. It will also enable the DOD to allocate
money to airfields, training centers, and ranges, as
well as finance at least "28 joint and multinational
exercises which annually train more than 18,000 US
personnel alongside 45,000 NATO Allies." This is
good news for major "defense" contractors.
In the past
year, the National Guard of my home state of
Illinois has participated in the DOD reserve
component. 22 US states matched up with 21 European
countries to practice maneuvers designed to build up
the ERI.
The IL National Guard and the Polish Air Force
have acquired “Joint Terminal Attack Controller”
systems that enable them to practice coordinating
airstrikes with Poland in support of ground forces
combating enemies in the region. Members of the IL
National Guard were part of NATO’s July 2016
“Anakonda” exercises on the Russian border. As the
state of Illinois spent an entire year without a
budget for social services or higher education,
millions of dollars were directed toward joint
military maneuvers with Poland that ratcheted up
tensions between the U.S. and Russia.
Many
families in Illinois can relate to the impact of
rising food prices in Russia while family income
stays the same or decreases. People in both the US
and Russia would benefit from diversion of funds
away from billion dollar weapons systems toward the
creation of jobs and infrastructure that improve the
lives of ordinary people.
But people
are bombarded with war propaganda. Consider a recent
piece of propaganda-lite, just under 5 minutes,
which aired on
ABC news, showing Martha Raddatz in the back
seat of an F-15 US fighter jet, flying over Estonia.
"That was awesome," Raddatz coos, as she witnesses
war-games from the F-15’s open cockpit. She calls
the American show of force a critical deterrent to
Russian forces. The piece neglects to mention
ordinary Russians on whose borders, in June 2016, 10
days of US / NATO military exercises involving
31,000 troops took place.
In the high
plateaus of Afghanistan, peasant women provide a
striking example of risk-taking in order to
literally plant new seeds. The New York Times
recently reported on
women in Afghanistan’s Bamiyan province who have
formed unions, risking ridicule and possible
physical abuse to form cooperative groups. These
women help one another acquire seeds for vegetables
other than potatoes and also for new varieties of
potatoes. They manage to feed their families and to
pool resources so that they can spend less on
delivering their crops to the market.
These women
are acting with clarity and bravery, creating a new
world within the shell of the old. We should be
guided by such clarity as we insist that lasting
peace can’t be founded on military power. The end of
US empire would be a welcome end. I hope that policy
makers will let themselves be guided by sanity and
the courage to clarify the US’ vast potential to
make a positive difference in our world by asking
themselves a simple, indispensable question: how can
we learn to live together without killing one
another? An indispensable follow-up is: When do we
start?
Kathy Kelly (Kathy@vcnv.org)
co-coordinates Voices
for Creative Nonviolence. Voices is organizing a
small delegation to Russia in October 2016.
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