John
Pilger – Have a nice world war, folks
26
November, 2014
Every
weekend we feature an article written by highly acclaimed film-maker,
author and journalist John Pilger who, with such foresight
encapsulates how our world is being shaped by corporations, corrupted
political systems, propaganda, globalisation and war. This piece was
written originally March 2010 and is just as applicable today, if not
more so.
In
his latest column for the New Statesman, John Pilger describes the
increasing American war front across the world: from Afghanistan to
Africa and Latin America. This is the Third World War in all but
name, waged by the only aggressive “ism” that denies it is an
ideology and threatened not by introverted tribesmen in faraway
places but by the anti-war instincts of its own citizens.
Here
is news of the Third World War. The United States has invaded Africa.
US troops have entered Somalia, extending their war front from
Afghanistan and Pakistan to Yemen and now the Horn of Africa. In
preparation for an attack on Iran, American missiles have been placed
in four Persian Gulf states, and “bunker-buster” bombs are said
to be arriving at the US base on the British island of Diego Garcia
in the Indian Ocean.
In
Gaza, the sick and abandoned population, mostly children, is being
entombed behind underground American-supplied walls in order to
reinforce a criminal siege. In Latin America, the Obama
administration has secured seven bases in Colombia, from which to
wage a war of attrition against the popular democracies in Venezuela,
Bolivia, Ecuador and Paraguay. Meanwhile, the secretary of “defence”
Robert Gates complains that “the general [European] public and the
political class” are so opposed to war they are an “impediment”
to peace. Remember this is the month of the March Hare.
According
to an American general, the invasion and occupation of Afghanistan is
not so much a real war as a “war of perception”. Thus, the recent
“liberation of the city of Marja” from the Taliban’s “command
and control structure” was pure Hollywood. Marja is not a city;
there was no Taliban command and control. The heroic liberators
killed the usual civilians, poorest of the poor. Otherwise, it was
fake. A war of perception is meant to provide fake news for the folks
back home, to make a failed colonial adventure seem worthwhile and
patriotic, as if The Hurt Locker were real and parades of
flag-wrapped coffins through the Wiltshire town of Wooten Basset were
not a cynical propaganda exercise.
“War is fun”, the helmets in Vietnam used to say with bleakest irony, meaning that if a war is revealed as having no purpose other than to justify voracious power in the cause of lucrative fanaticisms such as the weapons industry, the danger of truth beckons. This danger can be illustrated by the liberal perception of Tony Blair in 1997 as one “who wants to create a world [where] ideology has surrendered entirely to values” (Hugo Young, the Guardian) compared with today’s public reckoning of a liar and war criminal.
Western
war-states such as the US and Britain are not threatened by the
Taliban or any other introverted tribesmen in faraway places, but by
the anti-war instincts of their own citizens. Consider the draconian
sentences handed down in London to scores of young people who
protested Israel?s assault on Gaza in January last year. Following
demonstrations in which paramilitary police “kettled” (corralled)
thousands, first-offenders have received two and a half years in
prison for minor offences that would not normally carry custodial
sentences. On both sides of the
Atlantic, serious dissent exposing
illegal war has become a serious crime.
Silence
in other high places allows this moral travesty. Across the arts,
literature, journalism and the law, liberal elites, having hurried
away from the debris of Blair and now Obama, continue to fudge their
indifference to the barbarism and aims of western state crimes by
promoting retrospectively the evils of their convenient demons, like
Saddam Hussein. With Harold Pinter gone, try compiling a list of
famous writers, artists and advocates whose principles are not
consumed by the market or neutered by their celebrity. Who among them
have spoken out about the holocaust in Iraq during almost 20 years of
lethal blockade and assault. And all of it has been deliberate. On 22
January 1991, the US Defence Intelligence Agency predicted in
impressive detail how a blockade would systematically destroy Iraq’s
clean water system and lead to increased incidences, if not epidemics
of disease. So the US set about eliminating clean water for the Iraqi
population: one of the causes, noted Unicef, of the deaths of half a
million Iraqi infants under the age of five. But this extremism
apparently has no name.
Norman
Mailer once said he believed the United States, in its endless
pursuit of war and domination, had entered a “pre-fascist era”.
Mailer seemed tentative, as if trying to warn about something even he
could not quite define. “Fascism” is not right, for it invokes
lazy historical precedents, conjuring yet again the iconography of
German and Italian repression. On the other hand, American
authoritarianism, as the cultural critic Henry Giroux pointed out
recently, is “more nuance, less theatrical, more cunning, less
concerned with repressive modes of control than with manipulative
modes of consent.”
This
is Americanism, the only predatory ideology to deny that it is an
ideology. The rise of tentacular corporations that are dictatorships
in their own right and of a military that is now a state with the
state, set behind the façade of the best democracy 35,000 Washington
lobbyists can buy, and a popular culture programmed to divert and
stultify, is without precedent. More nuanced perhaps, but the results
are both unambiguous and familiar. Denis Halliday and Hans von
Sponeck, the senior United Nations officials in Iraq during the
American and British-led blockade, are in no doubt they witnessed
genocide. They saw no gas chambers. Insidious, undeclared, even
presented wittily as enlightenment on the march, the Third World War
and its genocide proceeded, human being by human being.
In
the coming election campaign in Britain, the candidates will refer to
this war only to laud “our boys”. The candidates are almost
identical political mummies shrouded in the Union Jack and the Stars
and Stripes. As Blair demonstrated a mite too eagerly, the British
elite loves America because America allows it to barrack and bomb the
natives and call itself a “partner”. We should interrupt their
fun.
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