Alive and
Bleeding
By Robert C. Koehler
February 19, 2015 "ICH"
- Good and evil leap from the headlines:
“Egyptian planes pound ISIS in Libya in
revenge for mass beheadings of Christians.”
It’s nonstop
action for the American public. It’s the
history of war compressed into a dozen
words. It’s Fox News, but it could be just
about any mainstream purveyor of current
events.
Once again, I
feel a cry of despair tear loose from my
soul and spill into the void. Our politics
are out of control. There’s no sanity left —
no calmness of strategic assessment, no
impulse control. At least none of that stuff
is allowed into the mainstream conversation
about national security, which amounts to:
ISIS is bad. The more of them we (or our
allies of the moment) kill, the better. USA!
USA!
We’re in a
state of perpetual war and have no intention
of escaping it. Certainly we have no
intention of critiquing our own actions or —
don’t be silly — questioning the
effectiveness of war, occupation or
high-tech terror (think: “shock and awe”) as
a means to create a stable, secure world.
The interests of war have dug in for the
long haul, fortified by the cynicism of the
media they own. The voices of reason cry
from the margins. When a trickle of sanity
finds its way into the mainstream, it’s
mocked until it goes away.
Thus Marie
Harf, deputy State Department spokesperson,
had her moment of right-wing ridicule when
she said of ISIS this week, during an
interview on MSNBC with Chris Matthews:
“We’re
killing a lot of them, and we’re going to
keep killing more of them. So are the
Egyptians, so are the Jordanians — they’re
in this fight with us. But we cannot win
this war by killing them. We cannot kill our
way out of this war. We need in the medium
to longer term to go after the root causes
that lead people to join these groups,
whether it’s a lack of opportunity for jobs,
whether . . .”
The snort of
contempt began immediately, as Matthews
interrupted her. It spread through the
conservative media, as the Society of Media
Chicken Hawks gleefully pecked her words
apart, joking that she wanted to defeat ISIS
with a jobs program, etc. What fun! “Can
political correctness defeat terrorism?” the
Wall Street Journal asked. That was it. End
of discussion.
Well, no it’s
not. I insist on opening it back up:
“We cannot
kill our way out of this war. We need . . .
to go after the root causes that lead people
to join these groups . . .”
Tepid and
tentative as Harf’s words were, the fact
that they were either instantly mocked and
dismissed as “politically correct,” or
ignored completely, indicates the extent to
which a war mentality has supplanted thought
in the mainstream realm of the American
empire. Root causes? Come on. Only one side
of any war, our own, ever has root causes.
If Harf’s
line of thinking were actually allowed into
the discussion, before you know it, people
would begin wondering what the Global War on
Terror has accomplished and, indeed, the
extent to which it has contributed to the
root causes in question. Who is ISIS? What’s
their agenda? What’s our agenda?
Unavoidably, marginal voices of dissent
would start being heard, such as Glenn
Greenwald’s, writing this week at The
Intercept:
“Since 2011,
Libya has rapidly unraveled in much the way
Iraq did following that invasion: swamped by
militia rule, factional warfare, economic
devastation, and complete lawlessness. And
to their eternal shame, most self-proclaimed
‘humanitarians’ who advocated the Libya
intervention completely ignored the country
once the fun parts — the war victory dances
and mocking of war opponents — were over.
The feel-good ‘humanitarianism’ of war
advocates, as usual, extended only to the
cheering from a safe distance as bombs
dropped. . . .
“Into the
void of Libya’s predictable disintegration
has stepped ISIS, among other groups.”
Beyond this,
the national security discussion could begin
to consider the nature of war and
militarism: “The barbarism we condemn is the
barbarism we commit,” Chris Hedges wrote
recently. “The line that separates us from
the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria is
technological, not moral. We are those we
fight.”
And the maw
of uncertainty opens. The horror of the ISIS
beheadings might become unbearably real to
the public at large as people consider the
nature of warfare itself and suddenly, my
God, get it: We’re doing the same thing, but
with technology a thousand times more
powerful.
The “shock
and awe” bombing we inflicted on Baghdad in
2003, for instance, was an act of terrorism
meant to deliver “incomprehensible levels of
massive destruction” and, in the process,
shatter a society’s will to resist us,
according to Harlan K. Ullman and James P.
Wade, who described the concept in a 1996
Defense Department publication. I haven’t
heard anyone talk about this bombing
campaign recently, but its consequences are
nonetheless alive and bleeding.
“We cannot
kill our way out of this war.” Or the next
one. It’s time to stop.
Robert
Koehler is an award-winning, Chicago-based
journalist and nationally syndicated writer.
His book, Courage
Grows Strong at the Wound
(Xenos Press), is still
available. Contact him at
koehlercw@gmail.com or visit his website
at commonwonders.com.
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