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Tap Root of U.S. Aggression. Pick your war, pick your president ( 0) Printer friendly page Print This
By Les Blough (Axis of Logic). Linda S. Heard (Online Journal)
Axis of Logic. Online Journal.
Wednesday, Aug 8, 2007

Linda S. Heard's essay* on the warmongering credentials of those pushing to be the next U.S. president in 2008 is rooted in the history of wars executed by the United States government. We add to her timely assessment that the current White House hopefuls follow a long tradition of U.S. presidents. Throughout U.S. history, presidents and presidential candidates have one thing in common: promoting war, making war, escalating war, continuing war or participating in wars on other sovereign nations.

The people in the U.S. who support these wars always defend them under the pretext of "national defense", "national security" and "in the national interest". The United States government has been intent on aggression, imperialism, war and dominion from the very beginning. U.S. wars spring from a capitalist system that must feed on unlimited economic growth for its survival with dependency on the theft of the natural resources, foreign markets and cheap labor available in other countries. This voracious appetite has always been in the service of profit for a wealthy few.

Alternative approaches to the economy (e.g. redistribution of the wealth, national health care, public housing and education, community property, other programs to benefit the people and socialist economic systems) are roundly attacked by politicians and the corporate media. The attacks take the form of argument, misrepresentations, economic sanctions and blockades, covert military operations and ultimately war - on the pretext that they all threaten the U.S. in one way or another. When a threat sufficient to gain the people's support for a new war does not exist - the threat is created by Washington rhetoric, corporate media propaganda, U.S.-provoked counter-attacks and sometimes even false flag operations.

We argue that the people of the United States have been born into this system from the beginning and continue to be conditioned to believe that international wars are necessary for protection of their security, material needs, excessive pleasures and acquired indulgences (the latter clearly ramped by the corporate advertising and entertainment media). That conditioning is spawned by Washington's foreign policy makers, corporate advertising and media. Inciting fear among the people is an important part of the equation.

All this is accomplished using the myth of "representative government". The people have been trained to believe the myth that they freely elect their new presidents, senators or house members. But at some level we all know that the choices offered in the voting booth are pre-selected by corporate funding and a two-party system that guards against any candidate who might threaten the in-situ system. Thus, many explain their voting behavior as "a vote for the lesser of two evils".

From the historic wars against the Native North American peoples to today's "War on Terror", the United States has always been involved in wars of aggression. We ask, "Are U.S. wars carried out because the majority of the people want war?" We think not. When the blood of the sons and daughters of the people is spilt in sufficient quantities, the people of the United States lose their commitment to the war of their time. People lose their commitment to war when, deep-down, they know the aggression is not truly a war of defense. On the other hand, people who fight defensive wars do not give up. We can see this clearly in the Vietnamese, Iraqi, Afghan and Palestinian resistance.

The length of time required for loss of commitment to non-defensive wars depends upon the effectiveness of the pro-war propaganda, blood-fatigue and the anti-war action of their peers. When the commitment wanes, the government initially ignores people's opposition to war just as it has ignored the U.S. poplulation's opposition seen in the anti-war movement and in the U.S. mid-term elections last November. They ignore anti-war opposition until the U.S. is being soundly defeated (Vietnam) or until the people themselves shut the war down. People oppose war for any of three reasons: (1) they morally disagree; (2) they see the war's economic damage to their own lives and country; (3) they see their country losing. All 3 are operating in one or more sectors of today's anti-war movement in the U.S.

We endorse Linda S. Heard's view, (in her essay, Pick your war. Pick your President below) of the warmongering rhetoric of today's presidential hopefuls like Hillary Clinton, Rudolph Guiliani, Barack Obama and others. We also see their bombastic claims in the context of U.S. history and a U.S. government hell-bent on spreading its tenacles into every land that serves the appetite of capitalism. The U.S. government will not end the war in Iraq until they realize total military defeat or until we, the people, stop them.

Join us at The National March and Encampment to Stop the War in Washington next month. Read more below about what you can do to participate.

- Les Blough, Editor

© Copyright 2007 by AxisofLogic.com

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Biography and additional essays by Les Blough

From Axis of Logic

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Unite to Shut Down the War

Endorse the S29 Call for Unity!

Visit the Encampment to Stop the War Blogspot!


*Pick your war, pick your president
by Linda S. Heard
Online Journal
August 8, 2007

There seems to be a new fashion among US presidential hopefuls. No, I'm not talking about Gucci or Gap or the Hamptons versus Cape Cod. Whether they're Republican, Democrat or independent current contenders for the top job appear to hold to the same neo-motto: If you wanna get ahead, get a war.

Should you find the above statement rather far-fetched I wouldn't blame you. After all, if you or I were to get up on podiums to tell passersby that we fancied bombing some unfortunate far flung country back to its Neolithic origins we would either be escorted to the nearest mental institution or, depending on our ethnicity, to a secure facility pending investigation.

We would be deemed to be a serious public menace unless we happened to be drumming up support for a stint in the White House.

Warped logic you might think since few of us can get our hands on carriers, tanks, Apache helicopters or fighter jets, let alone missiles even if we felt so disposed, while the president of the United States can simply press a button and blow the planet to smithereens.

Be that as it may, a war is now an essential component of a US presidential portfolio unless it's an old hat, past its sell-by date war, such as that still going on in Iraq.

Individuals with an eye to being commander-in-chief are naturally averse to being associated with that failed endeavour, even those who enthusiastically cheered it on from the outset.

Those poor souls were, of course, duped by inaccurate intelligence and are disappointed to the core that the invasion and subsequent occupation was so inexpertly handled, so expensive and so terribly frivolous with the lives of America's finest.

Just to put a fine point upon it, not any old war will do. To my knowledge there's no fresh-faced hopeful -- or even a wrinkled one for that matter -- eager to have a go at Sweden or Seoul. So Swedes and Koreans you can sleep well tonight.

Unfortunately, the people of this region aren't quite as lucky. The new designer wars are planned around this part of the world as a continuation of Bush's "war on terror," a phrase, which, by the way, is as passé as its originator.

It also wouldn't do for every presidential aspirant to hang their hat on the same war. They've got an election to win and plenty of debates ahead that will allow them to stand up proudly and say, "My war is better than yours."

Take the Democrats' golden boy, Barack Obama, for instance. He railed against invading Iraq when it was just a gleam in neocon eyes. And unlike the present incumbent he's up for shaking hands and making nice with the leaders of Syria, Iran, Venezuela and North Korea without preconditions.

So far so good, but then he goes and spoils it all by threatening to invade the northwest tribal areas of Pakistan with the aim of hunting down Osama bin Laden should Pakistan's president, Pervez Musharraf, not be up to the task.

Good chance

Never mind there's a good chance bin Laden, known to be a sick man, might already be dead. Never mind that the Pakistani leader is already hanging on to office by his fingernails amid opposition parties, the judiciary and more and more of his people clamouring for his exit.

Never mind that under the Pakistani constitution government troops are forbidden from entering those sensitive regions where a gun is a must have accessory. Never mind that if the government topples the country's nuclear weapons may fall into the hands of people who hate the US.

Bush once wrote bin Laden off as irrelevant in the great scheme of things, as indeed he is. So why is Obama re-elevating the gangly bearded-one by promoting a war just to fish him out when the franchise agreements have already been signed, sealed and delivered?

His Democratic rival, Hillary Rodham Clinton, has been forced to share a war with Republican contenders Senator John McCain and the former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, rather like three fashionable ladies embarrassingly turning up at a do wearing the same frock.

Their war de jour is against Iran. One or more of them might have opted for North Korea if Kim Jong-Il hadn't bolted the door on his reactor.

"A nuclear Iran is a danger to Israel, to its neighbours and beyond," said the good lady senator last year. "The regime's pro-terrorist, anti-American and anti-Israel rhetoric only underscores the urgency of the threat it poses . . . and we cannot take any option off the table in sending a clear message to the current leadership of Iran that they will not be permitted to acquire nuclear weapons."

Giuliani goes a step further recently telling CNN that he would approve using tactical nuclear weapons against Iran. "This war's not a bumper sticker," he said. "This is a real war." And what was Iraq Macho man, a video game?

Republican candidate Tom Tancredo, who styles himself as a lifelong pro-life conservative believes bombing holy Islamic sites would deter extremists from attacking the US and warns that if there is another attack on the homeland, he would advocate "an attack on the holy sites in Mecca and Medina."

If he's a pro-lifer, I'd hate to meet an anti down a dark ally.

I never thought I would ever say the following but who knows! In another 18 months or so we may all be saying, "Come back Mr. Bush, all is forgiven."

It's a sad old world when a bird called Bush may be better than several twittering their dangerous fantasies out there on the stump.

Linda S. Heard is a British specialist writer on Middle East affairs. She welcomes feedback and can be contacted by email at heardonthegrapevines@yahoo.co.uk.

Copyright © 1998-2007 Online Journal


From Axis of Logic

Join us at The National March and Encampment to Stop the War in Washington next month.

Join us at The National March and Encampment to Stop the War in Washington next month.

Call for Encampment and March Sept 22-29
September 29 Coalition
Unite to Shut Down the War

Endorse the S29 Call for Unity!

Visit the Encampment to Stop the War Blogspot!

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