The
silent military coup that took over Washington
This
time it's Syria, last time it was Iraq. Obama chose to accept the
entire Pentagon of the Bush era: its wars and war crimes
John
Pilger
Children,
many of whose deformities are believed to be the results of the
chemical dioxin that the US used in the Vietnam war, play outside a
hospital in Ho Chi Minh City. Photograph: Paula Bronstein/Getty
Images
10
September, 2013
On
my wall is the Daily Express front page of September 5 1945 and the
words: "I write this as a warning to the world." So began
Wilfred
Burchett's report from Hiroshima.
It was the scoop of the century. For his lone, perilous journey that
defied the US occupation authorities, Burchett was pilloried, not
least by his embedded colleagues. He warned that an act of
premeditated mass murder on an epic scale had launched a new era of
terror.
Almost
every day now, he is vindicated. The intrinsic criminality of the
atomic bombing is borne out in the US National Archives and by the
subsequent decades of militarism camouflaged as democracy. The Syria
psychodrama exemplifies this. Yet again we are held hostage by the
prospect of a terrorism whose nature and history even the most
liberal critics still deny. The great unmentionable is that
humanity's most dangerous enemy resides across the Atlantic.
John
Kerry's farce and Barack Obama's pirouettes are temporary. Russia's
peace deal over chemical weapons
will, in time, be treated with the contempt that all militarists
reserve for diplomacy. With al-Qaida now among its allies, and
US-armed coupmasters secure in Cairo, the US intends to crush the
last independent states in the Middle East: Syria first, then Iran.
"This operation [in Syria]," said the former French foreign
minister Roland Dumas in June, "goes way back. It
was prepared, pre-conceived and planned."
When
the public is "psychologically scarred", as the Channel 4
reporter Jonathan Rugman described the British people's overwhelming
hostility to an attack on Syria, suppressing the truth is made
urgent. Whether or not Bashar al-Assad or the "rebels" used
gas in the suburbs of Damascus,
it is the US, not Syria, that is the world's most prolific user of
these terrible weapons.
In
1970 the Senate reported: "The US has dumped on Vietnam a
quantity of toxic chemical (dioxin) amounting to six pounds per head
of population." This was Operation
Hades, later renamed the friendlier Operation Ranch Hand
– the source of what Vietnamese doctors call a "cycle of
foetal catastrophe". I have seen generations of children with
their familiar, monstrous deformities.
John Kerry, with his own blood-soaked war
record,
will remember them. I have seen them in Iraq too, where the US used
depleted uranium and white phosphorus, as did the Israelis in Gaza.
No Obama "red line" for them. No showdown psychodrama for
them.
The
sterile repetitive debate about whether "we" should "take
action" against selected dictators (ie cheer on the US and its
acolytes in yet another aerial killing spree) is part of our
brainwashing. Richard Falk, professor emeritus of international law
and UN special rapporteur on Palestine, describes it as "a
self-righteous, one-way, legal/moral screen [with] positive images of
western values and innocence portrayed as threatened, validating a
campaign of unrestricted political violence". This "is so
widely accepted as to be virtually unchallengeable".
It
is the biggest lie: the product of "liberal realists" in
Anglo-American politics, scholarship and media who ordain themselves
as the world's crisis managers, rather than the cause of a crisis.
Stripping humanity from the study of nations and congealing it with
jargon that serves western power designs, they mark "failed",
"rogue" or "evil" states for "humanitarian
intervention".
An
attack on Syria or Iran or any other US "demon" would draw
on a fashionable variant, "Responsibility
to Protect", or R2P
– whose lectern-trotting zealot is the former Australian foreign
minister Gareth
Evans,
co-chair of a "global
centre"
based in New York. Evans and his generously funded lobbyists play a
vital propaganda role in urging the "international community"
to attack countries where "the security council rejects a
proposal or fails to deal with it in a reasonable time".
Evans
has form. He appeared in my 1994 film Death
of a Nation,
which revealed the scale of genocide in East Timor. Canberra's
smiling man is raising his champagne glass in a toast to his
Indonesian equivalent as they fly over East Timor in an Australian
aircraft, having signed a treaty to pirate the oil and gas of the
stricken country where the tyrant Suharto killed or starved a third
of the population.
Under
the "weak" Obama, militarism has risen perhaps as never
before. With not a single tank on the White House lawn, a military
coup has taken place in Washington. In 2008, while his liberal
devotees dried their eyes, Obama accepted the entire Pentagon of his
predecessor, George Bush: its wars and war crimes. As the
constitution is replaced by an emerging police state, those who
destroyed Iraq with shock and awe, piled up the rubble in Afghanistan
and reduced Libya to a Hobbesian nightmare, are ascendant across the
US administration. Behind their beribboned facade, more former US
soldiers are killing themselves than are dying on battlefields. Last
year 6,500
veterans took their own lives.
Put out more flags.
The
historian Norman Pollack calls this "liberal fascism": "For
goose-steppers substitute the seemingly more innocuous militarisation
of the total culture. And for the bombastic leader, we have the
reformer manqué, blithely at work, planning and executing
assassination, smiling all the while." Every Tuesday the
"humanitarian" Obama personally oversees a worldwide terror
network of drones that "bugsplat" people, their rescuers
and mourners. In the west's comfort zones, the first black leader of
the land of slavery still feels good, as if his very existence
represents a social advance, regardless of his trail of blood. This
obeisance to a symbol has all but destroyed the US anti-war movement
– Obama's singular achievement.
In
Britain, the distractions of the fakery of image and identity
politics have not quite succeeded. A stirring has begun, though
people of conscience should hurry. The judges at Nuremberg were
succinct: "Individual citizens have the duty to violate domestic
laws to prevent crimes against peace and humanity." The ordinary
people of Syria, and countless others, and our own self-respect,
deserve nothing less now.
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