Retired US General Admits Military’s Role in Creating ISIS
By
Carey Wedler
17
July, 2015
In
a forthcoming
interview with Al Jazeera English set
to air on July 31st, a former United States general—who helped
craft some of the most controversial
tactics in America’s foreign wars—warned
that drone strikes create terrorists. Retired Army General Mike Flynn
also criticized American torture tactics and condemned the United
States for the integral role its foreign policy has played in
spurring the creation of the notorious Islamic State.
Flynn
was a top intelligence official following 9/11. He worked for the
Pentagon’s internal intelligence agency—the Defense Intelligence
Agency—before conflict with Director of National Intelligence James
R. Clapper forced
him to resign a year ahead of schedule.
Following his resignation, Flynn became anoutspoken
opponent of
Obama’s foreign policy because, in spite of the
president’s expansion
of military operations,
the general believed Obama had not been sufficiently aggressive in
battling the Islamic State.
Now,
however, the hawkish general is open about his concerns about the
American military’s role in the world. In his interview with Mehdi
Hasan of Al Jazeera, he addresses the
drone war, which grew
considerably under President Obama:
“When
you drop a bomb from a drone … you are going to cause more damage
than you are going to cause good,” he said.
When
Hasan suggests drone
strikes create more terrorists than they kill,
he responds, “I don’t disagree with that,” calling the drone
program a “failed strategy.”
He
also indicts America’s infamous—and widespread use—of torture.
“You know I hope that as more and more information comes out that
people are held accountable,” he says. “History is not
going to look kind on those actions … and we will be held, we
should be held accountable for many, many years to come.”
His
statements parallel sentiments he expressed previously. Earlier this
year, he condemned the
findings of the highly publicized CIA torture report, which revealed
the use of inhumane and grotesque “enhanced interrogation
techniques.” Flynn said history “will look back on it, and it
won’t be a pretty picture.”
As
the director of Intelligence for the Joint Special Operations
Command—a secretive
unit that reports directly to the White House—Flynn
oversaw the transformation of JSOC into an intelligence-based unit.
As detailed by journalist Jeremy Scahill’s documentary, “Dirty
Wars,”
JSOC was responsible for thousands of raids—many deadly—on
Afghani civilians, many of whom had no ties to terrorism.
When
he was asked (on a separate occasion from the Al Jazeera interview)
how many people JSOC killed in Iraq, Flynn reportedly responded,
“Thousands, I don’t even know how many.”
Now,
however, Flynn acknowledges the aggressive
military approach that
encompassed his actions may not have been wise—an analysis not to
be taken lightly considering his extensive role in military
operations in the Iraq. In fact, he admitted U.S. military policy
played a significant part in the rise of the Islamic State. As The
Intercept reported of
his interview with Al Jazeera,
“Flynn says that the invasion of Iraq was a strategic mistake that directly contributed to the rise of the extremist group the Islamic State. ‘We definitely put fuel on a fire,’ he told Hasan. ‘Absolutely … there’s no doubt, I mean … history will not be kind to the decisions that were made certainly in 2003.’”
His
statements are further evidence that the military’s misadventures
are not the brave, noble missions they are so often made out to be. A
recent declassified report suggested
the military knowingly contributed to
the rise of ISIS. As far back as 2006, intelligence
agencies warned that
waging war in the Middle East would result in increased terrorist
activity.
Whether
increased terror activity is precipitated by drone strikes, full-on
invasions, or both of Flynn’s admissions, what is clear is that the
United States now reaps what it sows in the Middle East. It is
becoming astoundingly clear that the U.S.’ wars in the Middle
East—many times justified
by lies for
the sake of securing
resources—cause
more harm than good.
The
Saker Podcast No 8 (The Origins of Daesh)
Dear
friends,
Al-Qaeda
CIAHere is my 8th podcast. This one is short and deal with one topic
only: the origins of the group known today as ISIS/IS/Daesh/etc.
Please let me know if you find some short(er) single-topic podcasts
useful or not, or if you prefer to previous Q&A format.
Note about the music:
The
music for this show are two compositions of the wonderful Florida
guitarist Walter Parks. The tunes are “Epiphany” and “Requiem”
both of which are on the same album which you can buy here and here.
Parks
is a great guy and a fantastic musician whom the big corporations are
ignoring but who deserves much more recognition than he got so far.
So allow me to shamelessly plug him and his music here, especially
his solo album “Walter Parks” – get something *truly*
Floridian, beautiful and not very well-known :-)
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