The Pentagon Admits: The "War On Terror" Will Never End
Mike Krieger
21
May, 2013
Submitted
by Michael Krieger of Liberty
Blitzkrieg blog
It
is hard to resist the conclusion that this war has no purpose other
than its own eternal perpetuation. This war is not a means to any end
but rather is the end in itself. Not only is it the end itself, but
it is also its own fuel: it is precisely this endless war –
justified in the name of stopping the threat of terrorism – that is
the single greatest cause of that threat.
- Glenn Greenwald from his recent article: Washington Gets Explicit: Its “War on Terror” is Permanent
So
last Thursday at a hearing held by the Senate Armed Services
Committee, we found out what many of us already knew. That the
“war on terror” is never going to end. Indeed, it was never
supposed to end. This never-ending “war” on a fantastical
enemy provides the American oligarch class with too much money and
too much power to ever make it worthwhile for the establishment to
shut down. It matters not to them that this civil liberties
destroying fraud has been going on for my entire post-college life
and, if they have their way, for the remainder of it. It
matters not to them that the “war on terror” itself has done more
to destroy the Constitution and vital essence of this nation than any
terrorist act ever could. No, it matters very little indeed.
What matters to them is money and power, and the “war on
terror” provides them with boatloads of both.
My
favorite excerpts from Glenn’s article are below:
On
Thursday, the Senate Armed Services Committee held a hearing on
whether the statutory basis for this “war” – the 2001
Authorization to Use Military Force (AUMF) – should be revised
(meaning: expanded). This
is how Wired’s
Spencer Ackerman (soon to be the Guardian US’s national security
editor) described the most significant exchange:
“Asked at a Senate hearing today how long the war on terrorism will last, Michael Sheehan, the assistant secretary of defense for special operations and low-intensity conflict, answered, ’At least 10 to 20 years.’ . . . A spokeswoman, Army Col. Anne Edgecomb, clarified that Sheehan meant the conflict is likely to last 10 to 20 more years from today – atop the 12 years that the conflict has already lasted. Welcome to America’s Thirty Years War.”
That
the Obama administration is now repeatedly declaring that the “war
on terror” will last at least another decade (or two) is
vastly more significant than all three of this week’s big media
controversies (Benghazi, IRS, and AP/DOJ) combined. The military
historian Andrew Bacevich has spent
years warning that
US policy planners have adopted an explicit doctrine of “endless
war”. Obama officials, despite repeatedly
boasting that
they have delivered permanently
crippling blows to al-Qaida,
are now, as clearly as the English language permits, openly declaring
this to be so.
It
is hard to resist the conclusion that this war has no purpose other
than its own eternal perpetuation. This war is not a means to any end
but rather is the end in itself. Not only is it the end itself, but
it is also its own fuel: it is precisely this endless war –
justified in the name of stopping the threat of terrorism – that is
the single greatest cause of that threat.
(1) it is designed by its very terms to be
permanent, incapable of ending, since the war itself ironically
ensures that there will never come a time when people stop wanting to
bring violence back to the US (the operational definition of
“terrorism”), and
(2) the nation’s most powerful political and
economic factions reap a bonanza of benefits from its continuation.
Whatever else is true, it is now beyond doubt that ending this war is
the last thing on the mind of the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize winner and
those who work at the highest levels of his administration. Is there
any way they can make that clearer beyond declaring that it will
continue for “at least” another 10-20 years?
And
then there’s the most intangible yet most significant cost: each
year of endless war that passes further normalizes the endless rights
erosions justified in its name. The
second term of the Bush administration and first five years of the
Obama presidency have been devoted to codifying and
institutionalizing the vast and unchecked powers that are typically
vested in leaders in the name of war. Those powers of secrecy,
indefinite detention, mass surveillance, and due-process-free
assassination are not going anywhere. They are now permanent fixtures
not only in the US political system but, worse, in American political
culture.
Each
year that passes, millions of young Americans come of age having
spent their entire lives, literally, with these powers and this
climate fixed in place: to them, there is nothing radical or
aberrational about any of it. The post-9/11 era is all they have been
trained to know. That is how a state of permanent war not only
devastates its foreign targets but also degrades the population of
the nation that prosecutes it.
This
war will end only once Americans realize the vast and multi-faceted
costs they are bearing so that the nation’s political elites can be
empowered and its oligarchs can further prosper. But Washington
clearly has no fear that such realizations are imminent. They are
moving in the other direction: aggressively planning how to further
entrench and expand this war.
Newly
elected independent Sen. Angus King of Maine said
after listening to how the Obama administration interprets its war
powers under the AUMF:
This is the most astounding and most astoundingly disturbing hearing that I’ve been to since I’ve been here. You guys have essentially rewritten the Constitution today.”
Former
Bush DOJ official Jack Goldsmith, who testified at the
hearing,summarized
what was said after it was over: Obama officials argued that “they had domestic authority to use
force in Mali, Syria, Libya, and Congo, against Islamist terrorist
threats there”; that “they were actively considering emerging
threats and stated that it was possible they would need to return to
Congress for new authorities against those threats but did not at
present need new authorities”; that “the conflict authorized by
the AUMF was not nearly over”; and that “several members of the
Committee were surprised by the breadth of DOD’s interpretation of
the AUMF.”
Conveying the dark irony of America’s war machine,
seemingly lifted right out of the
Cold War era film Dr. Strangelove,
Goldsmith added:
Amazingly, there is a very large question even in the Armed Services Committee about who the United States is at war against and where, and how those determinations are made.”
Nobody
really even knows with whom the US is at war, or where. Everyone just
knows that it is vital that it continue in unlimited form
indefinitely.
1984
really was an instruction manual for the people in power.
Terrifying.
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