On
Actually Existing Fascism and the Hypocrisy of the Left
Under
Obama, the U.S. extended secret “special forces” operations to
138 countries, or 70 percent of the world’s population.
John
Pilger
16
January, 2017
On
the day President Trump is inaugurated, thousands of writers in the
United States will express their indignation. “In order for us to
heal and move forward,” say Writers Resist, “we wish to bypass
direct political discourse, in favor of an inspired focus on the
future, and how we, as writers, can be a unifying force for the
protection of democracy.”
They
continue, “We urge local organizers and speakers to avoid using the
names of politicians or adopting ‘anti’ language as the focus for
their Writers Resist event. It’s important to ensure that nonprofit
organizations, which are prohibited from political campaigning, will
feel confident participating in and sponsoring these events.”
Thus,
real protest is to be avoided, for it is not tax exempt.
Compare
such drivel with the declarations of the Congress of American
Writers, held at Carnegie Hall, New York, in 1935, and again two
years later. They were electric events, with writers discussing how
they could confront ominous events in Abyssinia, China and Spain.
Telegrams from Thomas Mann, Cecil Day-Lewis, Upton Sinclair and
Albert Einstein were read out, reflecting the fear that great power
was now rampant and that it had become impossible to discuss art and
literature without politics or, indeed, direct political action.
“A
writer,” the journalist Martha Gellhorn told the second congress,
“must be a man of action now … A man who has given a year of his
life to steel strikes, or to the unemployed, or to the problems of
racial prejudice, has not lost or wasted time. He is a man who has
known where he belonged. If you should survive such action, what you
have to say about it afterwards is the truth, is necessary and real,
and it will last.”
Her
words echo across the unction and violence of the Barack Obama era
and the silence of those who colluded with his deceptions.
That
the menace of rapacious power — rampant long before the rise of
Trump — has been accepted by writers, many of them privileged and
celebrated, and by those who guard the gates of literary criticism
and culture, including popular culture, is uncontroversial. Not for
them, the possibility of writing and promoting literature filled with
politics. Not for them, the responsibility of speaking out,
regardless of who occupies the White House.
Today,
false symbolism is all. “Identity” is all. In 2016, Hillary
Clinton stigmatized millions of voters as “a basket of deplorables,
racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic — you name
it.” Her abuse was handed out at an LGBTQ rally as part of her
cynical campaign to win over people of color by abusing a white
mostly working-class majority. Divide and rule, this is called; or
identity politics in which race and gender conceal class, and allow
the waging of class war. Trump understood this.
“When
the truth is replaced by silence,” said the Soviet dissident poet
Yevtushenko, “the silence is a lie.”
This
is not a U.S. phenomenon. A few years ago, Terry Eagleton, then
professor of English literature at Manchester University, reckoned
that “for the first time in two centuries, there is no eminent
British poet, playwright or novelist prepared to question the
foundations of the western way of life.”
No
Shelley speaks for the poor, no Blake for utopian dreams, no Byron
damns the corruption of the ruling class, no Thomas Carlyle and John
Ruskin reveal the moral disaster of capitalism. William Morris, Oscar
Wilde, H.G. Wells, George Bernard Shaw have no equivalents today.
Harold Pinter was the last to raise his voice. Among today’s
insistent voices of consumer-feminism, none echoes Virginia Woolf,
who described “the arts of dominating other people … of ruling,
of killing, of acquiring land and capital.”
There
is something both venal and profoundly stupid about famous writers as
they venture outside their cosseted world and embrace an “issue.”
Across the review section of the Guardian on Dec. 10 was a dreamy
picture of Barack Obama looking up to the heavens and the words,
“Amazing Grace” and “Farewell the Chief.”
The
sycophancy ran like a polluted babbling brook through page after
page. “He was a vulnerable figure in many ways … But the grace.
The all-encompassing grace: in manner and form, in argument and
intellect, with humour and cool … (He) is a blazing tribute to what
has been, and what can be again … He seems ready to keep fighting,
and remains a formidable champion to have on our side … The grace …
the almost surreal levels of grace.”
I
have conflated these quotes. There are others even more hagiographic
and bereft of mitigation. The Guardian’s chief apologist for Obama,
Gary Younge, has always been careful to mitigate, to say that his
hero “could have done more,” oh, but there were the “calm,
measured and consensual solutions.”
None
of them, however, could surpass the U.S. writer, Ta-Nehisi Coates,
the recipient of a “genius” grant worth US$625,000 from a liberal
foundation. In an interminable essay for the Atlantic titled, “My
President Was Black,” Coates brought new meaning to prostration.
The final “chapter,” titled, “When You Left, You Took All of Me
With You,” a line from a Marvin Gaye song, describes seeing the
Obamas “rising out of the limo, rising up from fear, smiling,
waving, defying despair, defying history, defying gravity.” The
Ascension, no less.
One
of the persistent strands in U.S. political life is a cultish
extremism that approaches fascism. This was given expression and
reinforced during the two terms of Barack Obama. “I believe in
American exceptionalism with every fiber of my being,” said Obama,
who expanded the United States’ favorite military pastime: bombing
and death squads (“special operations”) as no other president has
done since the Cold War.
According
to a Council on Foreign Relations survey, in 2016 alone Obama dropped
26,171 bombs. That is 72 bombs every day. He bombed the poorest
people on earth, in Afghanistan, Libya, Yemen, Somalia, Syria, Iraq,
Pakistan.
Every
Tuesday — reported the New York Times — he personally selected
those who would be murdered by mostly hellfire missiles fired from
drones. Weddings, funerals, shepherds were attacked, along with those
attempting to collect the body parts festooning the “terrorist
target.” A leading Republican senator, Lindsey Graham, estimated,
approvingly, that Obama’s drones killed 4,700 people. “Sometimes
you hit innocent people and I hate that,” he said, “but we’ve
taken out some very senior members of Al Qaeda.”
Like
the fascism of the 1930s, big lies are delivered with the precision
of a metronome, thanks to an omnipresent media whose description now
fits that of the Nuremberg prosecutor: “Before each major
aggression, with some few exceptions based on expediency, they
initiated a press campaign calculated to weaken their victims and to
prepare the German people psychologically … In the propaganda
system … it was the daily press and the radio that were the most
important weapons.”
Take
the catastrophe in Libya. In 2011, Obama said Libyan president
Muammar Gaddafi was planning “genocide” against his own people.
“We knew … that if we waited one more day, Benghazi, a city the
size of Charlotte, could suffer a massacre that would have
reverberated across the region and stained the conscience of the
world.”
This
was the known lie of Islamist militias facing defeat by Libyan
government forces. It became the media story and NATO — led by
Obama and Hillary Clinton — launched 9,700 “strike sorties”
against Libya, of which more than a third were aimed at civilian
targets. Uranium warheads were used; the cities of Misurata and Sirte
were carpet-bombed. The Red Cross identified mass graves, and UNICEF
reported that “most (of the children killed) were under the age of
ten.”
Under
Obama, the U.S. extended secret “special forces” operations to
138 countries, or 70 percent of the world’s population. The first
African-American president launched what amounted to a full-scale
invasion of Africa. Reminiscent of the “Scramble for Africa” in
the late 19th century, the U.S. African Command has built a network
of supplicants among collaborative African regimes eager for U.S.
bribes and armaments. Africom’s “soldier to soldier” doctrine
embeds U.S. officers at every level of command from general to
warrant officer. Only pith helmets are missing.
It
is as if Africa’s proud history of liberation, from Patrice Lumumba
to Nelson Mandela, is consigned to oblivion by a new master’s Black
colonial elite whose “historic mission,” warned Frantz Fanon half
a century ago, is the promotion of “a capitalism rampant though
camouflaged.”
It
was Obama who, in 2011, announced what became known as the “pivot
to Asia,” in which almost two-thirds of U.S. naval forces would be
transferred to the Asia-Pacific area to “confront China,” in the
words of his defense secretary. There was no threat from China; the
entire enterprise was unnecessary. It was an extreme provocation to
keep the Pentagon and its demented brass happy.
In
2014, the Obama administration oversaw and paid for a fascist-led
coup in Ukraine against the democratically-elected government,
threatening Russia in the western borderland through which Hitler
invaded the Soviet Union, with a loss of 27 million lives. It was
Obama who placed missiles in Eastern Europe aimed at Russia, and it
was this winner of the Nobel Peace prize who increased spending on
nuclear warheads to a level higher than that of any administration
since the cold war, having promised, in an emotional speech in Prague
to “help rid the world of nuclear weapons.”
Obama,
the constitutional lawyer, prosecuted more whistleblowers than any
other president in history, even though the U.S. constitution
protects them. He declared Chelsea Manning guilty before the end of a
trial that was a travesty. He has refused to pardon Manning who has
suffered years of inhumane treatment which the U.N. says amounts to
torture. He has pursued an entirely bogus case against Julian
Assange. He promised to close the Guantanamo concentration camp and did’t.
Following
the public relations disaster of George W. Bush, Obama, the smooth
operator from Chicago via Harvard, was enlisted to restore what he
calls “leadership” throughout the world. The Nobel prize
committee’s decision was part of this: the kind of cloying reverse
racism that beatified the man for no reason other than he was
attractive to liberal sensibilities and, of course, U.S. power, if
not to the children he kills in impoverished, mostly Muslim
countries.
This
is the Call of Obama. It is not unlike a dog whistle: inaudible to
most, irresistible to the besotted and boneheaded, especially
“liberal brains pickled in the formaldehyde of identity politics,”
as Luciana Bohne put it. “When Obama walks into a room,” gushed
George Clooney, “you want to follow him somewhere, anywhere.”
William
I. Robinson, professor at the University of California, and one of an
uncontaminated group of U.S. strategic thinkers who have retained
their independence during the years of intellectual dog-whistling
since 9/11 wrote this last week, “President Barack Obama … may
have done more than anyone to assure Trump’s victory.
While
Trump’s election has triggered a rapid expansion of fascist
currents in U.S. civil society, a fascist outcome for the political
system is far from inevitable … But that fight back requires
clarity as to how we got to such a dangerous precipice. The seeds of
21st-century fascism were planted, fertilized and watered by the
Obama administration and the politically bankrupt liberal elite.”
Robinson
points out that “whether in its 20th or its emerging 21st-century
variants, fascism is, above all, a response to a deep structural
crisis of capitalism, such as that of the 1930s and the one that
began with the financial meltdown in 2008 … There is a
near-straight line here from Obama to Trump … The liberal elite’s
refusal to challenge the rapaciousness of transnational capital and
its brand of identity politics served to eclipse the language of the
working and popular classes … pushing white workers into an
‘identity’ of white nationalism and helping the neo-fascists to
organize them.”
The
seedbed is Obama’s Weimar Republic, a landscape of endemic poverty,
militarized police and barbaric prisons, the consequence of a
“market” extremism which, under his presidency, prompted the
transfer of US$14 trillion in public money to criminal enterprises in
Wall Street.
Perhaps
his greatest “legacy” is the co-option and disorientation of any
real opposition. Bernie Sanders’ specious “revolution” does not
apply. Propaganda is his triumph.
The
lies about Russia — in whose elections the U.S. has openly
intervened — have made the world’s most self-important
journalists laughing stocks. In the country with constitutionally the
freest press in the world, free journalism now exists only in its
honorable exceptions.
The
obsession with Trump is a cover for many of those calling themselves
“left/liberal,” as if to claim political decency. They are not
“left,” neither are they especially “liberal.” Much of the
United States’ aggression towards the rest of humanity has come
from so-called liberal democratic administrations such as Obama’s.
The U.S.’ political spectrum extends from the mythical center to
the lunar right. The “left” are homeless renegades Martha
Gellhorn described as “a rare and wholly admirable fraternity.”
She excluded those who confuse politics with a fixation on their
navels.
While
they “heal” and “move forward,” will the Writers Resist
campaigners and other anti-Trumpists reflect upon this? More to the
point: when will a genuine movement of opposition arise — angry,
eloquent, all-for-one-and-one-for all. Until real politics return to
people’s lives, the enemy is not Trump, it is ourselves.
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