Pillaging
resources, not enlightenment, were - and
remain - the true colonial
motivation.
Toronto, Canada, Sunday, January 4,
2004 CIA
enraged by cynical White House end-run
around its sources America:
The real danger lies within By ERIC MARGOLIS Contributing Foreign
Editor PALM BEACH -- The year
2003 dramatically and dolefully
illustrated Lord Acton's famous dictum
that absolute power corrupts
absolutely. An almighty United States, unrestrained
by any rival, international body, or world
opinion, bestrode the globe, a belligerent
colossus determined to monopolize global
oil reserves and use its vast military
power to crush lesser nations or
malefactors that disturbed the Pax
Americana. For America's hard right - a
curious farrago of Armageddon-seeking
southern Protestants; neo-conservative
supporters of Israel's right-wing Likud
party; and the
military-industrial-petroleum complex -
the Bush administration's aggressive
foreign policy of world domination, and
utter contempt for international laws and
old allies, marks a new era of national
greatness. President George Bush,
who vowed his foreign policy would be
"humble" and "compassionate," has turned
out to be the most radical president in
modern U.S. history. But for those Americans whose primary
loyalty was to their country, rather than
to religious cultism, foreign nations, or
financial profit, the rapid emergence of
the U. S. as an imperial power waging two
hugely expensive colonial wars in Asia was
a disaster, both for America's democratic
system and for the rest of the world. Bush's vow to bring "democracy" to the
Mideast rang as hollow as pious assurances
by 19th century European colonialists they
were gobbling up Africa and Asia to bring
the blessings of Christianity and
civilization to benighted savages.
Pillaging resources, not enlightenment,
were - and remain - the true colonial
motivation. Bush's claims to hold the mandate of
heaven to wage global warfare against the
nebulous forces of "terrorism" sounded as
dangerous and nonsensical as old Chairman
Leonid Brezhnev's drunken claims it
was the Soviet Union's "sacred
internationalist duty" to launch military
adventures anywhere on Earth where
socialism was threatened. Columnist Georgie Anne Gayer put
it perfectly when she recently wrote that
whereas America used to lead the world as
champion of democracy, personal freedom
and human rights, today, under Bush, it
instead seeks to dominate the world
through raw military and monetary
power. Carte
blancheIn 2003, we saw an abject, cowardly
Congress violate its duty as the
republic's premier political organ by
disgracefully handing the barely elected
president carte blanche to wage an
unprovoked war against Iraq that was
justified by a torrent of ludicrous lies
worthy of Dr. Goebbels. Lies and
propaganda that were packaged in the best
tradition of Soviet agitprop as news, then
force-fed by a servile media to an
ill-informed public shockingly deficient
in any sense of history, geography, or
foreign affairs. The invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq,
and sundry military adventures around the
globe, were made possible by a steady
drumbeat of warnings from the White House
and its neo-con trumpets that the U.S. was
in dire national peril from "terrorists"
and "rogue states." Paranoia again swept
America during the holiday season as
planes were grounded and orange alerts
flashed at a populace that responded to
these synthetic alarms with well-trained
Pavlovian
reflexes. Though the mighty United States,
with only 5% of world population, accounts
for nearly 50% of total global military
spending, the continuing Orwellian message
from Washington was of fear and
vulnerability. Vague threats of terrorist
attack and menacing Muslims were used to
curtail American civil liberties, and
expand the government's powers of
repression and intrusion. The public
barely noticed this sinister,
proto-totalitarian campaign. The so-called "war on terrorism" was a
hoax used to mask and justify the
long-planned expansion of U.S. military
power around the globe. What were in
reality a series of police actions waged
against tiny anti-American groups was no
more a war than the farcical "war on
drugs." But invoking war trumped criticism
and dissent - and justified a real war of
aggression against oil-rich Iraq. The very term "terrorism" is a nonsense
designed for propaganda effect; a damning
label applied by the administration to
groups or states strongly opposing U.S.
policy. A "war on terrorism" makes no more
sense than waging war on evil. Those who opposed Washington's surging
imperial and totalitarian impulses were
branded "leftists" and "anti-Americans."
The French thinker Regis Debray,
writing about past colonial powers,
answers thus: "The free man is not
anti-American, but anti-imperial.
America (now) revisits the time of
colonizers drunk on their superiority,
convinced of their liberating mission,
and counting on reimbursing themselves
directly." Criticizing U.S. foreign policy
run-amok and George Bush does not equal
anti-Americanism. It is the citizen's
birthright, and the friend's duty. This writer has witnessed nine colonial
wars and saw how they corrupted the
armies, and then the nations, that waged
them, brutalizing conquered and conqueror
alike. Iraq is the latest. Mankind's three worst scourges are
religious fanaticism, nationalism and
imperialism. Each of these three evils has
been whipped up by the Bush administration
to justify domination abroad, repression
of dissidence at home and, of course,
re-election. Those who truly love and respect the
United States, like this writer, a
conservative and U.S. Army veteran, see
the very qualities that made America a
beacon to the world - its very soul - now
under heavy assault by a cabal of
religious fanatics, foreign-leaning
ideological extremists, and self-enriching
Enron-Republicans. That is a danger
considerably greater than
al-Qaida.. -
Eric
Margolis: The crusade against
'terrorism'
-
Eric
Margolis: Is Tony Blair crazy, or just
plain stupid?
-
Eric
Margolis: The hijacking of
America
-
Eric
Margolis: Bush's war is not about
democracy
-
The
Israeli lobby's influence: appointments
of advisors to White House and
Executive Branch
-
Pentagon
hawks make haste
-
Robert Fisk exposes
President Bush and his pro-Israel lobby
by name
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