Obama Taunts Putin over Syria
President Obama mocked Russian President Putin for not fixing Syria
during the past month and chided him about Moscow’s Afghan quagmire
in the 1980s, proving that Obama has either no self-awareness or no
sense of irony given the U.S. misadventures in both countries, as
Sam Husseini describes.
By Sam HusseiniPresident Barack
Obama’s remarks about Russian President Vladimir Putin’s
intervention in the Syria conflict were remarkably ironic: “The
Russians now have been there for several weeks, over a month, and I
think fair-minded reporters who have looked at the situation would
say that the situation hasn’t changed significantly.
“In the interim, Russia has lost a commercial
passenger jet. You’ve seen another jet shot down. There have been
losses in terms of Russian personnel. And I think Mr. Putin
understands that with Afghanistan fresh in the memory, for him to
simply get bogged down in an inconclusive and paralyzing civil
conflict is not the outcome that he’s looking for.”
In those remarks on Tuesday in Paris, Obama
scrutinized the hard effects of Russian foreign policy, but not his
own. “With Afghanistan fresh in the memory,” said the U.S.
President, presumably referring to the Russian intervention there
that ended in 1989 — and not the 14-year U.S. intervention in the
same country which is ongoing.
Obama can see the speck in Putin’s eye, but not
the log in his own. To say nothing of the fact that the U.S.
started the modern movement of Islamic jihadists in the 1980s by
organizing, funding and arming
the Afghan mujahedeen to make the Russians bleed.
Gore Vidal called the USA the “United States of
Amnesia” — but it’s more like the USSA: The United States of
Selective Amnesia.
The U.S. has been bombing the Mideast for decades
now — not a month — and has yet to make a serious accounting of all
the people killed, cities destroyed and hatred engendered. Would
some “fair-minded” reporter look at the U.S. experience from
Afghanistan since the 1980s to Iraq in the 1990s and 2000s to Libya
and Syria this decade and judge that Washington has solved the
problems – or made them markedly worse?
A few hours after Obama made his remarks, Defense
Secretary Ash Carter announced the U.S. was again expanding
its military actions in Iraq.
Why Terrorism?
While it rarely occurs to anyone to question that
the stated goals of the U.S. government might not be the actual
goals, it’s rarely thought to examine the stated goals of the 9/11
or Paris attackers. Many have rightly noted that the “terrorism”
label is applied selectively, most recently regarding
the shooting at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado, but
beyond the use of the word “terrorism,” the notion of explicitly
articulating an attacker’s motive is selective.
When talking about events like the Nov. 13 Paris
attacks, “motive” doesn’t enter into it; indeed, talk of “terrorism”
or “war” is partly a substitute for thinking through a motive. In
the case of the Planned Parenthood attack, it’s seemingly taken for
granted that someone can be opposed to abortion rights and be
opposed to violent attacks on abortion clinics. But it’s not a point
taken to heart when examining U.S. — or French, or British — foreign
policy.
One nation seems to have come to grips with this
contradiction, at least to an extent: On March 11, 2004, a series of
nearly simultaneous bombs exploded on four commuter trains in
Madrid. The blasts killed 191 people and wounded nearly 2,000.
That same day, the UN Security Council passed
resolution 1530 that
condemned in “the strongest terms the bomb attacks in Madrid, Spain,
perpetrated by the terrorist group ETA.” Of course, it quickly
became evident ETA — a Basque separatist group — had nothing to do
with it.
This was a rare instance of officialdom not
immediately trying to “blame the Muslims” after a bombing. And for
good reason. The then right-wing ruling party in Spain, the inaptly
named Peoples Party, had dragged the country into the Iraq War a
year before and, with elections looming just three days later, there
was fear that if the attack was shown to be Mideast-related, the
public would be furious. In fact, the day of the election, Al
Qaeda claimed responsibility.
Before the Madrid bombing, the Peoples
Party led the polls by 5 percentage points, but the
Socialist Party ended up winning by 5 percent. The victorious
Socialist Party had called for the removal of Spanish troops from
Iraq during the campaign.
Part of what was pivotal and crucial was that
there were substantial protests in the immediate aftermath of the
bombings. This included protests under the banner “No to Terrorism —
No to War.” [See picture.]
The Socialist Party had promised to remove Spanish
troops by June 30, 2004, and, after winning the election, the troops
were withdrawn a
month earlier than expected. I can’t find a record of any
Mideast-related attacks in Spain since.
The story has been different with Great Britain
and France, which took more prominent roles in interventions in
their former colonies, Iraq and Syria, respectively. British Prime
Minister Tony Blair was President George W. Bush’s principal
sidekick during the invasion and occupation of Iraq, while French
President Francois Hollande has joined Obama as leading voices in
demanding “regime change” in Syria and in escalating war talk about
the Islamic State.
There’s been much made in some circles about the
French, who were derided in the U.S. for not supporting the 2003
Iraq invasion, now leading the fight in Syria and Hollande’s pro-war
rhetoric. But Syria was a former French colony.
Yet, the fact that the interventionist dynamics
line up with the imperial histories is damning to the Western powers
by playing into the anti-Western narrative that today’s
interventions are just modern versions of the Christian world’s war
on and exploitation of the Muslim world dating back to the Crusades.
This Western imperial mindset toward the Mideast
is evident, including the case of Israel’s active settler colonial
project against the Palestinians. It’s also evident in the alliance
between the U.S. establishment and the Western-installed monarchies
of Saudi Arabia, Jordan and other regimes.
And the mindset is even evident in the case of
Iran, as former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton stated after the
nuclear agreement with Iran earlier this year at the Brookings
Institution: “I don’t see Iran as the partner in this agreement, I
see Iran as the subject of this agreement.”
The imperial legacy is shown in restrictions to
domestic freedoms as well. There’s the rhetoric of “liberté” in
France, but the state of emergency in France and prohibition of
protests has its roots in laws enacted from France’s colonial war
with Algeria. (Many in France also seem to be letting “the
terrorists win” by abrogating their own freedoms.)
A Pressing Need
The proclaimed motives of those claiming
responsibility for attacks like 9/11 were never meaningfully
discussed. They should be now, especially given the widespread sense
that
ISIS is now adopting Al Qaeda’s tactic of striking at the West,
rather than simply focusing on constructing its own Mideast
caliphate.
Al Qaeda’s leader Osama bin Laden addressed the
U.S. public just
before the 2004 election thus: “Contrary to Bush’s claim
that we hate freedom — if so, then let him explain to us why we
don’t strike for example — Sweden? … But I am amazed at you. Even
though we are in the fourth year after the events of September 11th,
Bush is still engaged in distortion, deception and hiding from you
the real causes. And thus, the reasons are still there for a repeat
of what occurred.”
Around the same time, said bin Laden: “When I saw
those destroyed towers in Lebanon it sparked in my mind that the
oppressors should be punished in the same way and that we should
destroy towers in America so that they can taste what we tasted and
so they will stop killing our women and children.” (See my piece “U.S.
Policy: ‘Putting out the fire with gasoline?” based on
interviews with Lee Hamilton and Thomas Kean.)
This passage is almost never cited, and its
context was outright falsified by former Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld in his
book, where he claims Bin Laden was “referring to the
destruction of the Marine barracks and the bombing of the U.S.
embassy in Beirut.” Robin Wright correctly notes
in her book the context was that bin Laden was referring
to “Israeli’s 1982 invasion of Lebanon with American arms.”
Paris and London should be looking toward Madrid’s
example in taking steps toward shedding their imperial mindsets in
stopping their war-obsessed elites. You can either be an emissary of
empire or a decent democracy, but not both.
Hollande is clearly escalating the bombing that
France has been conducting in Syria for over a year — now calling
for “merciless” bombing. British Prime Minister David Cameron
is pushing for Britain to join the bombing in Syria — in effect
adopting a U.S. style of ecumenical imperialism — and not just in
Britain’s traditional domains like Iraq.
It doesn’t have to be this way. History can
change. And the fact is that there is a great legacy of
anti-imperialism in the U.S. that’s continually overlooked. Mark
Twain – the pen name of author Samuel Clemens – is revered now, but
what’s typically ignored is Twain’s opposition to the U.S. becoming
a global imperial power.
In 1898, he helped found the Anti-Imperialist
League and wrote in 1900: “I have read carefully the Treaty of Paris
[between the United States and Spain], and I have seen that we do
not intend to free, but to subjugate the people of the Philippines.
We have gone there to conquer, not to redeem. … And so I am an
anti-imperialist. I am opposed to having the eagle put its talons on
any other land.”
Of course, U.S. colonialism actually goes backs to
its own roots as a settler colonial state against the native peoples
of North America.
Though Spain is still a NATO member and gave NATO
support during the 2011 bombing of Libya (which has led to a massive
disaster there), Madrid at least took a step away from the abyss
with some positive results. This is in contrast to “leaders” in
Paris, London, Washington and elsewhere who are plunging headlong
into it.
In 2013, a British soldier was killed in the
English town of Woolwich, a southeast part of London. Michael
Adebolajo, one of the killers, explained his aim in vivid terms —
literally with blood and knives in hand:
“Remove your governments, they don’t care about
you. You think David Cameron is going to get caught in the street
when we start busting our guns? You think politicians are going to
die? No, it’s going to be the average guy, like you and your
children. So get rid of them. Tell them to bring our troops back so
can all live in peace. So leave our lands and we can all live in
peace. That’s all I have to say.” [transcript
and video]
People should listen closely for motive to better
understand the choices before us.
Sam Husseini is communications director for the
Institute for Public Accuracy. Follow him on twitter:
@samhusseini. Research
assistance: Michael Getzler.