Soldiers and Imperial
Presidents
By Charles Sullivan
01/03/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- The vast majority of those who
serve in the United States military probably do so with
the best of intentions and with honor. The belief that
they are defending their country from foreign attackers
and doing their patriotic duty as citizens is
persistently reinforced. Military service is one of
America’s sacred cows; it is something that is rarely
questioned and is surrounded by an invisible aura of
nobility. No one, especially those who serve, wants to
think of their time in the military as anything less
than honorable and worthy of glorification.
But the trouble with sacred cows is that they tend to
preclude critical examination and often escape the
scrutiny of rational thinking and moral judgments. The
premise of honorary military service thus goes virtually
unchallenged, and often becomes the essence of dogma.
But it seems to me that anyone contemplating a military
career, especially since it may require killing other
human beings and broad scale environmental destruction,
should do so with open eyes and clear senses. They need
to know who they are serving and whose interests they
are protecting.
There is no escaping the fact that the U.S. is an
imperialist nation conceived in genocide and racism that
has continued through the ages, and worsened with the
rise of modern technology and weaponry. With the advent
of smart bombs came stupid and immoral leaders. Our
litany of crimes against earth and humanity are
concealed under layers of moral language, but the actual
deeds belie the intent behind what is being done in our
name. Ignorance, however, does not absolve anyone from
culpability.
Anyone considering military service should deliberate
upon the promises proffered by recruiters with extreme
skepticism. Recruiters are trained to exalt war as the
highest expression of patriotism and love of country;
when, in fact, it is often the most debasing expression
of our humanity that makes a shallow mockery of real
service to god and country. The war resister and the
conscientious objector may be the true patriot.
I will make no effort to conceal my contempt for
military recruiters who prey upon unsuspecting and
inexperienced youth, especially the poor and
economically disadvantaged. No parent should expose
their children to these predators. Recruiters are the
moral equivalent of ambulance chasers, and they should
be accorded no more respect than them, or the corporate
con men who sell us goods that are detrimental to our
health. These people are not concerned about the welfare
of our children or the country; they are the
representatives of imperialism, empire, and Plutocracy;
and they are in search of cannon fodder.
Marketing militarism and war to society at large is no
different than selling potato chips laced with
trans-fats or carcinogenic chemicals, without regard to
public health and its attendant social costs. It is all
about managing public perception and providing widening
profit margins to the corporations that are running the
government. To hell with the public welfare and moral
pronouncements, the plantation owner demands blood
sacrifices as a show of loyalty and gratitude.
Thus it is not surprising that military sacrament is
couched in the language of service to country,
patriotism, and other noble causes that are as divorced
from reality as the President is removed from sanity.
The hypocrisy of righteous language contrasted to the
actual deed is readily apparent to anyone who knows
history. It is propaganda in the purest and most lethal
form.
No doubt, the millions of men and women working in the
armed forces today do so in the belief that they are
heroically serving their country, as well as the cause
of freedom and democracy. But in fact, they are serving
the ruling clique, the Illuminati, and a few thousand
wealthy investors, which represent less than 0.02% of
the population. There must be no confusion that the
financial interests of Halliburton, Bechtel, and the
Bush dynasty are not the interests of America’s
citizens, especially those in the armed forces.
There is nothing noble or moral about invading
defenseless sovereign nations and killing hundreds of
thousands, if not millions, of innocent human beings.
There is no morally justifiable way of making occupation
and the outright theft of natural capital, such as oil,
respectable or gallant. Genocide and theft are crimes
against humanity, regardless how the corporate
advertisers and public relations firms couch them; and
the military is complicit in the commission of those
crimes, whether they are ignorant of their role in them
or not.
Consider, for example, the role the military has
traditionally played in carrying out the plans of one
imperial president after another. We have troops
permanently stationed in 135 nations protecting
America’s corporate interests from democracy. Stifling
democracy is quite different from nurturing it. Either
most of our presidents are pathological liars or they do
not know the difference between nurturing and
destroying. America’s record of imperialism speaks for
itself; and it is something that, when critically
examined, is not easily mistaken for anything other than
what it is.
Similarly, the bogus war on terror is a contradiction in
terms, as historian Howard Zinn has so aptly pointed
out. War is terrorism. Terrorism begets terrorism, and
nothing but terrorism. War does not, and cannot ever
lead to peace.
Aided by the CIA and death squads trained at the School
of the America’s at Fort Benning, Georgia, the U.S. has
crushed one fledgling democracy after another and
replaced them with brutally oppressive right wing
dictatorships friendly to American corporations and
financial investors. Let us recall that Saddam Hussein
was our man in Iraq until he converted from the dollar
to the euro. From Iran to Chile there are hundreds, if
not thousands, of cases that could be cited. For a more
detailed analysis of these incursions, I refer readers
to William Blum’s provocative book, Killing Hope: U.S.
Military and CIA Interventions since World War Two.
Let us assume that the U.S. invasion and occupation of
Iraq is a fairly typical example of imperial policies
that have been in vogue for well over a century. Like
previous military actions, the invasion of Iraq was
based upon a litany of lies set forth by the president
and his cabinet, and carried forth in the corporate
media. Iraq did not pose a threat to America or to the
interests of the American people, and both the President
and the commercial media knew it. Their intent was to
deceive and to garner support for unconscionable acts of
aggression and terror that are not in the people’s
interest.
Thus our armed forces are in Iraq under false pretenses
that have nothing to do with spreading democracy or
liberating oppressed people from tyranny. They are there
for reasons that are as nefarious as they are
treasonous. More than anyone, the men and women in the
armed forces need to know why they are in Iraq and what
is expected of them by the commander in chief.
The Plutocratic interests in Iraq may be summarized as
the use of technologically advanced military forces and
high tech weaponry that provide incalculable wealth to a
privileged few. In this context, soldiers are nothing
more than a means to and end; a Machiavellian way of
socializing costs and privatizing profits—the ultimate
in corporate welfare. Well over $50 billion in profits
have been hauled out of Iraq by 150 U.S. corporations,
including the privatization of lucrative Iraqi oil. The
profits and the death toll continue to rise
simultaneously.
To date, some 700,000 Iraqi people have died in the war
and occupation, and the violence is rapidly escalating.
Most of the dead are civilians, many of them women and
children. Over 3,000 American soldiers have died on the
basis of lies and thousands more are permanently maimed
and traumatized—all to enhance the bottom line of
America’s wealthiest and most privileged elite.
It is not well publicized in the western mainstream
media that fourteen permanent military bases are under
construction in Iraq. The occupation is growing deep tap
roots that are drawing the life, and the oil, out of the
region, and consuming it in a firestorm of
self-perpetuating violence.
President Bush and his kind, always eager to exploit a
photo opportunity, frequently pay homage to the troops
stationed around the world and in return garner their
respect and admiration, neither of which is deserved.
Placing soldiers in peril when there is no threat to
America or to national security is an expression of
utter contempt for them; it is a treasonous offense
worthy of the most severe punishment short of execution.
Aside from photo ops, Bush and his wealthy brethren do
not associate with enlisted men, whose petty lives
transpire far below the lofty socio-economic status the
elite were born into. Enlisted men and women are
permitted to wipe the cow dung from the president’s
cowboy boots, but they are not allowed to wear them or
travel in the same social circles as their owner.
The parasites that are running the country produce
nothing, and have no more loyalty to the American people
or to the Constitution than Frito-Lay or Halliburton.
Their only allegiance is to accruing ever more wealth
and power to themselves by all possible means, including
war. You see, America is also an occupied country.
Neither the Iraqi nor American people’s interest is
served by the military industrial complex. War is never
in the interest of those who are fooled into fighting
them. War benefits those who instigate them and reap
their financial reward from the safety of posh offices
and marbled halls. War is the century’s old tradition of
peasants doing the bidding of kings and queens. That is
whose interest is being served by our soldiers.
The truth is that soldiering is a particularly virulent
manifestation of America’s unending class war; the
continued exploitation of the working class by the
ruling elite—the rich preying upon the poor. Now the
President and his accomplices in Congress intend to send
even more soldiers to Iraq, further escalating the
violence, and acting contrary to public sentiment. The
lives of these men and women mean nothing to the emperor
and his minions. They are only so much excrement to be
wiped from their boots; the sacrificial lambs of empire
crawling beneath their ignoble gaze.
Despite my severe criticism, it is not my intention to
disparage either soldiers or military service. However,
these men and women are being duped and exploited, and
someone has to tell them what they are killing and dying
for. It will remain for each individual to weigh the
evidence and decide whether it is right or wrong,
courageous or foolish.
Sources:
The Bush Agenda: Invading the World One Economy at a
Time, Regan Books, 2006
Information Clearinghouse,
www.informationclearinghouse.info
Killing Hope, William Blum, Common Courage Press, 1995
Charles Sullivan is a photographer, free-lance writer
and social activist residing in West Virginia. He
welcomes your comments at
csullivan@phreego.com.
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