Tuesday, August 31, 2021
Friday, August 27, 2021
We Have No Idea What We're Fighting For Anymore
by Karl
Marlantes
Why do we keep
doing this? How can we stop?
We get into these
wars on the recommendations of presidents who are influenced by their staffs,
most of whom are selected by the president and share the president’s viewpoint.
These come after we are already involved militarily. Before the Gulf of Tonkin
resolution, Green Berets were advising the South Vietnamese armed forces, our
Air Force was bombing North Vietnamese supply routes in Laos, and our Navy was
supporting South Vietnamese raids against the North Vietnamese coastline.
Before the October 2002 authorization of the use of force (AUF) in Iraq, we
were operating a “no fly zone,” and had military bases in several neighboring
countries, a clear signal we were prepared to use military force if Saddam
Hussein didn’t behave. A decade before the October 2001 AUF in Afghanistan the
CIA had been helping the Taliban fight the Russians and we had supplied them
with sophisticated weapons. One month before that resolution, President Bush
was openly talking about “the war on terror.” What debates there were over
these AUFs were largely full of jingoism and rah-rah warrior language, the last
thing we want when committing our young to their possible deaths.
Most Americans
don’t seem to care about any of this until, after a series of escalations, the
national pain crosses some hard to define threshold and the American people
want out. The policy makers usually do not want out. Their reasons range from
genuine belief in the war’s objectives to self-serving fear of being blamed for
failure and the ensuing damage to their political or bureaucratic careers.
We often hear
about fighting to defend “American interests.” There are a host of American
interests ranging from protecting American citizens abroad to protecting
American trade and markets. If we’re being honest most U.S. foreign policy
focuses on the latter. There is nothing wrong with this. They are American
interests. They are just not worth killing and dying over, ever. Yes, we need
to defend American interests, but with the powerful tools of the Departments of
State, Justice, Commerce, the Treasury, and the intelligence services, not
those of the Department of Defense. Yes, we need to hunt down terrorists, but
terrorists are not trying to destroy the foundation of American democracy; they
are generally using terror to try to change U.S. foreign policy by killing
innocent people with highly symbolic attacks against such targets as the Twin
Towers, the Pentagon and the satiric newspaper Charlie Hebdo, or by making us
afraid to use airplanes. These are criminal acts. They are not attempts to
overthrow our government. They do not threaten our values; they threaten our
lives. By giving terrorists, as we have proclaimed for 20 years, the status of
being involved in a “war” against the U.S., we give them the prestige of
“warriors,” which aids their recruiting and propaganda efforts and builds their
morale. Moreover, holding them for years as “prisoners of war” without trial is
a direct violation of American values and our hypocrisy helps fuel their
recruiting.
Instead, we
need to rethink our entire approach to the so called “war on terrorism.”
Terrorists commit criminal acts which should primarily be in the province of
international courts and police, such as Interpol, the FBI, and the French
Gendarmerie Nationale. These organizations can be greatly aided by
organizations such as British MI6, the American CIA, and the French DGSE. Only
rarely should they be aided by the judicious use of special military units,
such as the SEALS, who are trained and designed to strike and get out.
Unleashing the
awesome and massive power of the American military should only be done to
defend against threats to our democracy and the values and hard-won rights of
its citizens. Since World War Two, we have repeatedly used this power unwisely,
resulting in a humiliating cycle of wasted lives and money.
But there are a
wide range of ways to stop this. One way is getting more combat veterans, who
have personally experienced war’s horrible costs, involved in decision-making,
reigning in the corruptive elements of the military-industrial complex, and
weeding out people whose careers are more important than what’s good for the
country. But the best and overriding means of ending this cycle, however, is to
get back in touch with what ultimately is worth fighting for. In Vietnam,
Afghanistan, and Iraq we sacrificed our young and spent massive amounts of
money fighting to build nations that look and think like we do, a. goal that
most Americans don’t really care about, especially when they don’t face getting
drafted. In those wars there was no direct threat to Americans that our
fundamental values would be taken from us. The reason we lose these wars is
that our opponents are fighting for something they care about very much indeed.
These rights
and values are broadly defined and open to interpretation. There is no hard
line about when these rights and values are jeopardized enough to go to war.
That is why our founders required that the Congress declare war, not the
President, so that Congress can debate and discuss our choices. At best, in our
current political balance, just over half of the American electorate has voted
for a President and the policy debate about using military force takes place
among people who work for and are chosen by the President. The Congress is a
broad representation of the American people and therefore has a much better
chance of expressing in open debate the wide range of opinion about what is at
stake and how scared we should be about it. The debate should range over numerous
interpretations and judgements, but then there is a vote. The result of the
vote is an unambiguous hard line. What follows then is the strongest military
organization in the world doing its Constitutional duty to fight or not fight
and members of Congress having to go back to their states and districts to
justify and defend their vote in open debate before their electorate.
Politicians have sensitive antenna about voter opinion. If the American people
decide they want out of a war, the Congress has far more incentive to do so
than the Executive. Members of the House face a vote every two years. The
President only faces a vote if the decision came in the first half of a
two-term presidency.
The rights and
values that I really care about, and I think I’m with a vast majority of
Americans, are those clearly articulated in our nation’s founding documents.
I will fight if
someone tries to take away from me and those I love the rule of law, trial by
jury, the writ of habeas corpus, and a government with nobody above the law. I
will fight to preserve government of the people, by the people, and for the
people. I will fight to defend the self-evident truths that all people are
created equal and have an unalienable right to life, liberty, and the pursuit
of individual fulfillment. I will fight to protect those I love from violence.
And I will fight to preserve a constitution that has wisely established a
balance of power between the three branches government, which we are in danger
of losing not from external threat, but from dereliction of duty.
We have sent
our young to fight espousing these values, but we send them off to countries
most Americans couldn’t locate on a map, and few really care about. Worse, too
many people in power in those countries don’t really care about these values
either, other than to mouth the rhetoric of American democracy to secure
massive amounts of money and materiel, which in turn fuels massive amounts of
corruption, both political and societal. In Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan we found
ourselves involved in civil wars where the opposing sides were battling for
power and control, not American values. In Vietnam we sided with a corrupt
post-colonial government dominated by minority Catholics in a majority Buddhist
nation. The South Vietnamese government was seen by the North Vietnamese
government, not incorrectly, as stooges of the U.S. We saw the North Vietnamese
government, not incorrectly, as a totalitarian police state that ruled its
people by terror.
In Iraq we
deposed a dictator who led a totalitarian police state ruling by terror who
headed a minority Sunni Muslim government in a majority Shiite country. We put
the Shiites in power by stripping the Sunnis of theirs and immediately were
caught up in a civil war between the now deposed Sunnis fighting the
American-blessed Shiites. In Afghanistan we kicked out the Taliban because we
said, not incorrectly, that they were harboring al-Qaeda who had seriously hurt
our people and were also horrible and repressive. However, instead of staying
focused on eliminating al-Qaida and their leader, Osama bin Laden, we replaced
the Taliban government with one riven with corruption and we also exacerbated
tension between rival tribes and warlords. We then found ourselves in the
middle of yet another civil war when the Taliban returned to fight against the
new government.
We often hear
the old shibboleth that “we’re fighting them abroad, so we won’t have to fight
them at home.” That comes from a time when the only means of projecting power
through violence was to invade someone else’s country.
The last nation
that could have credibly invaded our own shores was Japan at the peak of its
naval power in 1941 and they wouldn’t have gotten off the West Coast. The
Taliban and the NVA were never capable of storming the beaches at Santa Monica.
Sending in our ground forces to “fight them on foreign soil so we won’t have to
fight them on our own” is a specious argument.
What threatens
America today are nations with long-range missiles that can be launched intercontinentally
from bases deep within their own territory or from submarines. We face
cyber-attacks. We face possible chemical weapons attacks. We do not face
invasion by China, Russia or North Korea. We are way better and far more
experienced in amphibious warfare than any of these nations, and we would fail
if we tried to invade them.
Sending in
military forces to establish lasting governments in our own image has been
demonstrated as a bad idea three times now. Democracy can’t be exported. It has
to be home grown over a long time. Those ideals expressed in our founding
documents didn’t just arrive in America full-blown in 1776; they developed over
centuries in England and Western Europe through the sacrifices of brave men and
women who suffered terrible torture, were burned alive, and spent decades in
filthy prisons to establish them. The U.S. endured one of the bloodiest civil
wars in history to affirm them. And even today in the U.S. we’re still fighting
and debating how to uphold these sacred values. Telling nineteen-year-old
Marines or paratroopers that they were fighting and losing friends in Vietnam,
Iraq and Afghanistan to protect American democracy and American values was seen
as bullshit. It is.
“Protecting
American democracy” must be a truthful statement, or it will not sustain the
morale of those doing the fighting nor the will of the American people to
endure the pain of war no matter what the cost and how long the war takes.
The last time
Congress declared war was June 4, 1942, when we declared war against Romania,
Hungary, and Bulgaria, then allies of Nazi Germany. American presidents have
gone to war ever since then without Congress fulfilling its Constitutional
responsibility. True, Congress has passed authorizations for the use of force.
These, however, fall far short of a declaration of war, primarily because of
the symbolism of a declaration of war. They also land the decision – and the
blame for possible failure—squarely with the Presidency. Authorizing someone
else to take responsibility for a decision is very different from taking
responsibility yourself.
However
imperfect, an openly debated Declaration of War focused on a threat to our
fundamental values is one of our best safeguards against repeating the mistakes
we made in Vietnam and then repeated in Iraq and now in Afghanistan. We will
continue to repeat those mistakes unless we have open, vigorous, and continuing
debates about what we are fighting for and why it matters.
Thursday, August 26, 2021
Saturday, August 21, 2021
Friday, August 20, 2021
NOT A JOKE, BUT A SUBTLE THREAT
More
information,
if
and when I get some,
but
I most definitely have
work
in the latest print edition of
Harbinger
Asylum.
https://www.amazon.com/Harbinger-Asylum-Z-M-Wise/dp/B09CGCXK47/
Thursday, August 19, 2021
Tuesday, August 17, 2021
Saturday, August 14, 2021
TWO FOR THE NEW DARK AGE
a. mammon and his rotting soul
fat whore with all the
wisdom he has spilling from his
toxic asshole and so the future
reeks of shit
do you see
how we arrived here?
fear and oppression until
every day is a good day
for killing tyrants
blindness and lies until
every priest is a guilty dog
how much longer will you let your
children be raped to protect
some inbred idea of god?
will the rivers finally fill
with corpses in an
attempt to purify the land?
there is no art that should ever be
constructed from human atrocity
of course
but there i also no way to
make art without it
there is only the moment when
truth becomes a weapon
this fat fucker with his
petty grievances
his lists of enemies
his hands stained with other
people’s pain
his death arriving
in small doses
each one a small mouthful
of sunlight to
warm our hearts with
tie yourself to the absolute
weight of your ignorance and
i will give you the gift
of the ocean floor
i will give you a plateful
of famine and a glassful of
tainted blood to wash
it down with
there will only be laughter
when you’re done
Friday, August 13, 2021
Tuesday, August 10, 2021
BECAUSE KATHLEEN KIRK IS THE BOMB
and she
has yet to unfriend me
on any
social media site.
so
there.
oh yeah.....
and here are some reviews of
essential feel-good
john sweet summer reading.
https://kathleenkirkpoetry.blogspot.com/2021/08/sweet-two-fer.html