Of course, Bernie would only drop bombs for HUMANITARIAN reasons
Sanders
tells New York
Times he would consider a
preemptive strike against
Iran or North Korea
14
February, 2020
Bernie
Sanders has won the popular vote in both the New Hampshire and Iowa
presidential primary contests in considerable part by presenting
himself as an opponent of war. Following the criminal assassination
of Iranian General Qassem Suleimani last month, Sanders was the most
vocal of the Democratic presidential aspirants in criticizing Trump’s
action. His poll numbers have risen in tandem with his stepped-up
anti-war rhetoric.
He
has repeatedly stressed his vote against the 2003 invasion of Iraq,
reminding voters in the Iowa presidential debate last month, “I not
only voted against that war, I helped lead the effort against that
war.”
At
the end of the day Sanders, in the remote eventuality he should
become president, would quickly move to “stabilise” his regime by
offering placating assurances to the plutocracy and its deep state,
behaving in similar fashion to Trump, and thereby executing the same
abominable programs he supposedly campaigned against. Sanders, like
all milketoast socialists (socdems), is liable to act like his
counterparts in Spain and Greece, Syriza offering the most sobering
lesson in that regard.
However,
when speaking to the foremost newspaper of the American ruling class,
the New York Times, the Sanders campaign adopts a very different tone
than that employed by the candidate when addressing the public in
campaign stump speeches or TV interviews.
The
answers provided by Sanders’ campaign to a foreign policy survey of
the Democratic presidential candidates published this month by the
Times provides a very different picture of the attitude of the
self-styled “democratic socialist” to American imperialism and
war. In the course of the survey, the Sanders campaign is at pains to
reassure the military/intelligence establishment and the financial
elite of the senator’s loyalty to US imperialism and his readiness
to deploy its military machine.
Perhaps
most significant and chilling is the response to the third question
in the Times’ survey.
Question:
Would you consider military force to pre-empt an Iranian or North
Korean nuclear or missile test?
Answer:
Yes.
A
Sanders White House, according to his campaign, would be open to
launching a military strike against Iran or nuclear-armed North Korea
to prevent (not respond to) not even a threatened missile or nuclear
strike against the United States, but a mere weapons test. This is a
breathtakingly reckless position no less incendiary than those
advanced by the Trump administration.
In
terms of real change, in domestic policies Sanders won’t go far
enough, and in foreign policy he won’t go at all. In fact they
align perfectly with the empire’s current international agenda of
endless wars and confrontations to maintain and expand hegemony.
Sanders
would risk a war that could easily involve the major powers and lead
to a nuclear Armageddon in order to block a weapons test by countries
that have been subjected to devastating US sanctions and diplomatic,
economic and military provocations for decades.
Moreover,
as Sanders’ response to the Times makes clear, the so-called
progressive, anti-war candidate fully subscribes to the doctrine of
“preemptive war” declared to be official US policy in 2002 by the
administration of George W. Bush. An illegal assertion of aggressive
war as an instrument of foreign policy, this doctrine violates the
principles laid down at the Nuremberg Trials of Nazi officials after
World War II, the United Nations charter and other international laws
and conventions on war. Sanders’ embrace of the doctrine, following
in the footsteps of the Obama administration, shows that his
opposition to the Iraq war was purely a question of tactics, not a
principled opposition to imperialist war.
The
above question is preceded by another that evokes a response fully in
line with the war policies of the Obama administration, the first
two-term administration in US history to preside over uninterrupted
war.
Question:
Would you consider military force for a humanitarian intervention?
Answer:
Yes.
Among
the criminal wars carried out by the United States in the name of
defending “human rights” are the war in Bosnia and the bombing of
Serbia in the 1990s, the 2011 air war against Libya that ended with
the lynching of deposed ruler Muammar Gaddafi, and the civil war in
Syria that was fomented by Washington and conducted by its Al
Qaeda-linked proxy militias.
The
fraudulent humanitarian pretexts for US aggression were no more
legitimate than the lie of “weapons of mass destruction” used in
the neo-colonial invasion of Iraq. The result of these war crimes has
been the destruction of entire societies, the death of millions and
dislocation of tens of millions more, along with the transformation
of the Middle East into a cauldron of great power intervention and
intrigue that threatens to erupt into a new world war.
Sanders
fully subscribes to this doctrine of “humanitarian war” that has
been particularly associated with Democratic administrations.
In
response to a question from the Times on the assassination of
Suleimani, the Sanders campaign calls Trump’s action illegal, but
refuses to take a principled stand against targeted assassinations in
general and associates itself with the attacks on Suleimani as a
terrorist.
The
reply states:
Clearly
there is evidence that Suleimani was involved in acts of terror. He
also supported attacks on US troops in Iraq. But the right question
isn’t ‘was this a bad guy,’ but rather ‘does assassinating
him make Americans safer?’ The answer is clearly no.
In
other words, the extra-judicial killing of people by the US
government is justified if it makes Americans “safer.” This is a
tacit endorsement of the policy of drone assassinations that was
vastly expanded under the Obama administration—a policy that
included the murder of US citizens.
At
another point, the Times asks:
Would
you agree to begin withdrawing American troops from the Korean
peninsula?
The
reply is:
No,
not immediately. We would work closely with our South Korean partners
to move toward peace on the Korean peninsula, which is the only way
we will ultimately deal with the North Korean nuclear issue.
Sanders
thus supports the continued presence of tens of thousands of US
troops on the Korean peninsula, just as he supports the deployment of
US forces more generally to assert the global interests of the
American ruling class.
On
Israel, Sanders calls for a continuation of the current level of US
military and civilian aid and opposes the immediate return of the US
embassy from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv.
On
Russia, he entirely supports the Democratic Party’s McCarthyite
anti-Russia campaign and lines up behind the right-wing basis of the
Democrats’ failed impeachment drive against Trump:
Question:
If Russia continues on its current course in Ukraine and other former
Soviet states, should the United States regard it as an adversary, or
even an enemy?
Answer:
Yes.
Question:
Should Russia be required to return Crimea to Ukraine before it is
allowed back into the G-7?
Answer:
Yes.
Finally,
the Times asks the Sanders campaign its position on the National
Security Strategy announced by the Trump administration at the
beginning of 2018. The new doctrine declares that the focus of
American foreign and military strategy has shifted from the “war on
terror” to the preparation for war against its major rivals, naming
in particular Russia and China.
In
the following exchange, Sanders tacitly accepts the great power
conflict framework of the National Security Strategy, attacking Trump
from the right for failing to aggressively prosecute the conflict
with Russia and China:
Question:
President Trump’s national security strategy calls for shifting the
focus of American foreign policy away from the Middle East and
Afghanistan, and back to what it refers to as the ‘revisionist’
superpowers, Russia and China. Do you agree? Why or why not?
Answer:
Despite its stated strategy, the Trump administration has never
followed a coherent national security strategy. In fact, Trump has
escalated tensions in the Middle East and put us on the brink of war
with Iran, refused to hold Russia accountable for its interference in
our elections and human rights abuses, has done nothing to address
our unfair trade agreement with China that only benefits wealthy
corporations, and has ignored China’s mass internment of Uighurs
and its brutal repression of protesters in Hong Kong. Clearly, Trump
is not a president we should be taking notes from. [Emphasis added].
In
a recent interview Ro Khanna, a Democratic congressman and national
co-chair of the Sanders campaign, assured Atlantic writer Uri
Friedman that Sanders would continue provocative “freedom of the
seas” navigation operations in the Persian Gulf and the South China
Sea, while committing a Sanders administration to “maintain some
[troop] presence” on the multitude of bases dotting “allied”
countries from Japan to Germany.
Millions
of workers, students and young people are presently attracted to
Sanders because they have come to despise and oppose the vast social
inequality, brutality and militarism of American society and
correctly associate these evils with capitalism. However, they will
soon learn through bitter experience that Sanders’s opposition to
the “billionaire class” is no more real than his supposed
opposition to war. His foreign policy is imperialist through and
through, in line with the aggressive and militaristic policy of the
Democratic Party and the Obama administration.
The
Democrats’ differences with Trump on foreign policy, though bitter,
are tactical. Both parties share the strategic orientation of
asserting US global hegemony above all through force of arms.
No
matter how much Sanders blusters about inequality, it is impossible
to oppose the depredations of the ruling class at home while
supporting its plunder and oppression abroad.
Sanders
is no more an apostle of peace than he is a representative of the
working class. Both in foreign and domestic policy, he is an
instrument of the ruling class for channeling the growing movement of
the working class and opposition to capitalism back behind the
Democratic Party and the two-party system of capitalist rule in
America.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.