From The Idiot Factor:
If there is one thing
I detest politically, more than anything else, it is this country’s (USA ) addiction
to war. Over the last 30 years there has been nearly NO discussion on US foreign
policy. That means no politician; neither Democrat nor Republican in Congress
have discussed alternatives to the endless wars this nation is involved in. The
mainstream press, which is The Wichita Eagle here in this part
of Kansas , has also ignored any dissent
of the US military
industrial complex.
During the presidency
of Ronald Reagan there was a powerful peace movement to
oppose his intervention in Central America .
That included Reagan’s attempts to topple the Marxist oriented Sandinista regime in Nicaragua and to stop his attacks on the
leftist Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN) guerrilla
movement in El Salvador .
Despite all the variations of Marxists and left oriented groups in Central
America and the Caribbean , Reagan treated
all those nations as part of a cold war strategy that was by now obsolete. He
treated his strategy of war in Central America as if he were fighting in Eastern Europe . Reagan was delusional about the cold war
and no one close to him made any effort to change any of that. Many US conservatives played along with Reagan’s
delusions that Central America leftist movements were nothing more than an
extension of Eastern Europe and satellite nations of the Soviet
Union . Before Reagan left office he invaded Grenada , a small Island nation
that had been run by the Marxist government of Maurice Bishop. Bishop had come
to power through a revolution (or coup), in 1979. He was overthrown by
another Marxist, on the 19th of October 1983 Bernard
Coard. Reagan invaded the country on
the flimsy excuse that there were nearly 1,000 Americans in Grenada
at the time and they were in danger from the Coard Government.
Many of the Americans were students at the island’s medical school. Reagan
claimed that the invasion was needed to protect those students. Nearly the
entire world condemned the invasion of Grenada ,
but the US simply
ignored world opinion and did what was popular with US conservatives. Before
the invasion Reagan had included Grenada in
his cold war agenda of destroying all Marxist governments in Central America
and the Caribbean . Now it was clear that
the US had
no respect for international law.
After the fall of the
Soviet Union, the US took
on a new role, now that this country saw itself as the winner of the Cold War.
That lead to the idea that the US was now the only super
power and Marxist regimes were abandoning their Marxist, anti-imperialist
ideology for that of European Democratic Socialism. With the Soviet Union out
of the way, the US began
to flex its muscles, making invasions common place in combination with the idea
of world conquest. Reagan’s follow up, President George Bush, invaded Panama , about 1989, to remove
Manuel Noriega and replaced him with a US puppet regime. Communism
was no longer the reason behind the conquest of nations. Noriega was accused of
being a drug dealer. In the later part of his term in office, Bush began
the first war in Iraq,on the 28th February 1991.
In many ways this was the beginning of what Bush himself called “the new world
order.” Since that time the US has
invaded and occupied Iraq and Afghanistan .
Today the US is
involved in about 7 wars, including the two occupied nations just
mentioned Yemen ,
the Korean Peninsula and Syria . We can also include Venezuela , a
nation we may be at war with soon.
This country has
become the major military power. By now most leaders realize that invasion by
the US is
no contest. Losing is a sure thing by all those who dare stand up to the US
Empire. And the invading warier is now a part of the American culture. We see
army personnel honored as “heroes” even though many have not done anything that
heroic. Army people are constantly on television, in commercials, TV shows,
news shows, as they surprise their loved ones, such as their children, after
coming back from conquering and plundering other nations. We see them in the
movies and TV dramas. The US warrior
is now a part of the American psyche. No nation spends more money on their
military than the US .
Nearly half the US budget
goes to the military. Unlike the days of Ronald Reagan there is virtually no
opposition to the US war
machine. That includes the US Congress, all US presidents
since Reagan and the overwhelming majority of the US mainstream
media.
Some activists blame
Barack Obama for the end of an active peace movement. A lot of political
activists believed Obama would put an end to the endless wars the US was
fighting. Most were disappointed when he made no effort to rein in on
this country’s many wars. It was as if this country just gets into one more
endless war after another one. Since that time many anti-war activists have
become disillusioned as well as just plain overwhelmed with this country’s
militarism.
National Public Radio
(NPR), usually considered to be a liberal source of news, has been very supportive
of the military, covering its “warier heroes” and US’ wars.
Here in Wichita I have written to The
Wichita Eagle, with a letter opposing this country’s meddling
in Venezuela .
It has not been published. But they ran a pro-war editorial column Sunday by
Marc A. Thiessen,[1] “Great nations don't quit wars before they prevail.”
While complaining that we have endless wars, his way of fixing them is to
try and win all of these un-winnable “anti-terrorism” wars:
“Great nations do not
fight endless wars,” President Donald Trump declared in his State of the Union
address. It was a line that could have been delivered by President Barack
Obama, who in 2015 memorably said, “I do not support the idea of endless war.”
Just a few days before
Trump’s address, his own party delivered the president a stinging rebuke when
Senate Republicans passed a resolution opposing his Syrian and Afghan
withdrawals by an overwhelming bipartisan 68-to-23 vote. Trump’s defenders say:
That’s just the foreign policy establishment advocating “forever war.” When,
they ask, will these wars end? When will we be able to declare victory and go
home?”
His article is full of
contradictions. Just how many materials, assets and how many lives are we
supposed to sacrifice in order to win these wars? How do we know when we have
won such a war? Will we ever consider ending these wars? We have had 30 years
of people running around with those giant styrofoam hands yelling “we’re number
one,” as if we were simply at a football game. Enough is enough. A country
dedicated to the conquest of others can never feel safe. Such attitudes erode
civility and lead to a false sense of security. And for those who want to bring
about change in this country, how will that be tolerated when change is not
tolerated in our puppet regimes or of those democratic countries we are
supposedly installing around the world. Change will not come easy to a nation
that has forged a culture of force and coercion.
Maduro: U.S. manufacturing ‘humanitarian crisis’ to
justify its military intervention in Venezuela
[1] Marc A. Thiessen, “Great nations don't quit wars
before they prevail,” The Wichita Eagle, February 10, 2019, p.
21A.
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