“Fear! Fear!”
shouted hawks and
profiteers
By Brian Bogart
08/11/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- As soon as it came out that
the apparent “new 9-11” threat had been thwarted with the help
of Pakistani Intelligence Services (ISI), it also became clear
that it was a political tool for further legitimizing the
lucrative “war on terror.” After all, the ISI with Saudi
financing and covert CIA training created al-Qaeda in the first
place, to counter another “threat”: Soviet communist
“enslavement.”
In 1940, President Franklin Roosevelt
appointed a handful of Wall Street lawyers and investors to
posts in his administration, including James Conant, James
Forrestal, and Paul Nitze. Upon Roosevelt’s death (and the
coinciding fall of the Third Reich), this influential group
began an attempt to fill the trade vacuum left in postwar
Europe. While Europeans and Soviets would have preferred a
neutralist trade environment, these State Department officials
in the final years of the 1940s sought US trade supremacy, and
thus set about creating a Soviet “communist threat” that ran
counter to the CIA’s own National Intelligence Estimates.
By 1951, this group had formed the
Committee on the Present Danger (CPD), which by March of that
year successfully motivated Congress and the public to buy into
the “threat of communist enslavement” through fear-based
rhetoric in the media, setting in motion the Cold War and a US
economy driven by conflict.
As CPD members moved from administration to
administration regardless of party affiliation, the Cold War
policy of “containment militarism” ran strong through the late
1960s. In the wake of the 1968 Tet Offensive in Vietnam,
according to Richard Falk, a split between foreign policy elites
emerged: Imperialists, who sought to remilitarize the US for
global conquest still using the fear-inciting Soviet “communist
threat”; and managers (Trilateralists), who attempted to rally
the corporate spheres of Europe, East Asia, and the US to adopt
a new era of interdependent international trade.
In 1976, this split led to the first CPD-free
administration in the office of President Carter, though CPD
quickly regrouped to kill détente, oust Carter, and reestablish
itself in the Reagan administration, using “Soviet-backed
international terrorism” as the new fear factor.
Around June of 1979, according to Zbigniew
Brzezinski, “The United States launched a covert operation to
bolster anticommunist guerrillas in Afghanistan at least six
months before the 1979 Soviet invasion of that country. We did
not push the Russians into invading, but we knowingly increased
the probability that they would.”
The US had actively recruited Afghan
warlords to form terrorist groups along the northern border,
forcing the USSR to conduct a full-scale invasion in December
1979 to counter the US destabilization program. Among the
methods used by the US in this program was the production and
distribution of textbooks to schools (madrassas), promoting the
war-values of murder and fanaticism, and fostering a generation
steeped in violence.
Upon taking office in January 1981, Reagan
outlined his new foreign policy in a speech by Alexander Haig,
which boiled down to: “International terrorism will take the
place of human rights in our concern.” Thus, the 1979 US
destabilization program using terrorist groups to lure the
Soviets into Afghanistan was used by the US to call the Soviet
invasion “terrorism” and to point to that invasion as a model
for the newly invented phenomenon of “Soviet-backed terrorism”
around the world.
This cemented the
CPD’s original hegemonic goal of a fear-based structure.
Despite the collapse of the Soviet Union and its “communist
threat,” this structure still prevails, requiring new external
threats to maintain today’s US-global trade supremacy. Absent
the old communist threat, the degree of deceit necessary to sway
public opinion increasingly grew, ultimately employing first
strikes against Western assets both to satisfy this demand for
public acceptance and acquiescence, and to serve as pretexts for
the placement of US forces in geostrategic regions. The US
currently has 750,000 troops in 135 countries.
What we are left
with is simply “international terrorism,” a perpetual “threat”
straight out of the plotline of the film V for Vendetta,
and one that satisfies most corporate executives and serves to
cover such inconvenient truths as climate change –
imperialism’s product and archenemy – the raging and
disproportionate conflict in Lebanon and the Gaza Strip, and the
criminal invasion of Iraq (not to
mention that this particular “thwarted 9-11” is a timely
boost for the pro-war Senator Joe Lieberman).
Immediately
after 9-11, Vladimir Putin promised support for George Bush’s
“war on terror,” with the caveat that NATO cease its eastward
push. Bush agreed, and just as immediately set about pushing
NATO eastward. Professor Stephen Cohen of NYU points out that
with the US today openly stating that Georgia and Ukraine are to
become NATO partners – and with Putin having drawn the line with
Ukraine, as Russia subsidizes much of Ukraine’s economy – a new
and very real tension has risen between the two largest
possessors of nuclear arms. In fact, a US warship and 200
Marines were recently chased out of the Russian province of
Crimea by a group of protesters.
The heightened
illusion of what Bush calls a “global war against Islamic
fascists” also serves to back Putin into a corner, as Putin must
be perceived as even-handed toward the 25 million Muslims in
Russia.
Most people would find all of this easy to
digest had they the time to read two excellent books on US
post-World War II and post-Cold War imperialism respectively:
Peddlers of Crisis, by Jerry Sanders, and The War on
Truth, by Nafeez Ahmed. Unfortunately, few will take the
time to do so, and thus the rush of fear derived from such an
event as just occurred means a near total success for
maintaining the Conflict Incorporated status quo.
In other
words, in the last 25 years the US created the threat and,
through the resultant fear, the worldwide authoritarian means to
pretend to deal with it while exercising the full scope of its
imperial ambitions, with friends and puppets tagging along.
Moreover, that the US (and apparently now the UK) knowingly
harbored al-Qaeda cells throughout the 1990s and up to and
beyond 9-11 lends a new perspective to President Bush’s
post-9-11 promise to “make no distinction between those who
committed these terrible acts and those who harbor them.”
Who gained? The ruling elite (the
minority). Who lost? The majority, everywhere. Who were the
“terrorists”? Patsies. The need for a new and real (fully
allowed to unfold) 9-11 has been forestalled for the moment as
one waits for the other shoe to drop: the linking of Syria and
Iran and whomever else to the current “investigation.”
Funny how Bush administration officials
denied any foreknowledge that planes could be used as weapons
after 9-11, particularly when the same officials are now saying
that they recognized this plot because of its similarities to
one carried out by Ramsey Yousef in 1995. What a fine spin.
Already, US news outlets are calling the 24
suspects “Pakistanis,” failing to mention that most if not all
are British citizens, born and raised.
“If ever there was a verification that
there is a war on terror, this was it,” said one reporter – and
that is precisely what it was intended to be. And so much for
the so-called “national threat level,” which apparently stays
low during months of intensely high threat levels and rises
after a threat is “thwarted.”
The state of
global affairs from the US perspective can be summed up in one
statement from a lengthy essay,
Constant Conflict,
by Major Ralph Peters: “There will be no peace. The de
facto role of the US armed forces will be to keep the world safe
for our economy, and open to our cultural assault. To those
ends, we will do a fair amount of killing.”
Where once
they shouted “Hear! Hear!” toward progress in public chambers,
one can almost catch the resonant echoes of some Western leaders
happily whispering in private “Fear! Fear!” while their profits
soar and their people tremble. Somebody should be checking
market “put options” right about now.
A human rights activist for 45 years,
Brian Bogart is the first graduate student in Peace Studies from
the University of Oregon. He can be reached at bdbogart@gmail.com
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