Is America a
Force for Good in the World?
By Justin Raimondo
With the “liberation” of Libya from the grip of Muammar Gadhafi, progressives like E. J. Dionne and other cheerleaders for this administration are hailing the joint US-NATO
operation as a new model for American intervention – an exemplar of the “good”
way to push our weight around on the international stage, as opposed to the “bad” way pursued by George W. Bush and the neoconservatives in
Iraq. As Glenn Greenwald points out, the same triumphalist message being trumpeted by
this administration’s supporters over Libya was uncritically broadcast by the “mainstream” media in the wake of “mission
accomplished” in Iraq.
That reality
will soon intrude, and correct this “irrational exuberance” – as a certain Federal Reserve chairman would put it – is an absolute certainty. Indeed, a few
skeptical voices are already being raised, notably Patrick Cockburn, reporting from Benghazi:
“Any black
African in Libya is open to summary arrest unless he can prove that he was not
a member of Colonel Gadhafi’s forces… The rebels claim that many of Colonel
Gadhafi’s soldiers were black African mercenaries. Amnesty International says
these allegations are largely unproven and, from the beginning of the conflict,
many of those arrested or, in some cases, executed by the rebels were
undocumented laborers caught in the wrong place at the wrong time.
“But there
is no doubt that all black Africans are now under suspicion. The head of the
militia in Faraj, a short bearded man in a brown robe named Issam, explained
how well-prepared local insurgents had taken over the area on 19 August,
telling Colonel Gadhafi’s supporters to hand over their weapons and stay at
home. There was almost no resistance from the demoralized regime and few people
had been arrested. Then Issam added, as an aside, that his men had also
detained ‘tens of Africans whom we sent off to prison.’ He did not explain why
they had been jailed.”
Across
“liberated” Libya, black Africans are being rounded up by the rebel forces, and
often either summarily executed or else imprisoned. See here, here, and here for more disgusting evidence of the rebels’
anti-black campaign.
Gadhafi reportedly hired African mercenaries to fight for his regime, and
this is the ostensible reason why the rebels are rounding up blacks, but this
explanation seems more like an excuse than an actual reason in view of the fact
that there have been periodic anti-black riots in the country, notably in 2000.
The idea
that American imperialism could be a force for “good,” with a “progressive” president holding the reins, was
never very convincing. But even I never expected to be confronted with the
ultimate irony: the first African-American President appears to be responsible,
in part, for a large scale anti-black pogrom. This is
his signal foreign policy “accomplishment” – a mass lynching.
One could
argue, however, that this is not the fault of the Obama administration, since
it was their Libyan proxies, and not US troops, who committed that particular
atrocity. We can still see the US as a force for “good” in the world, albeit
not without morally complex anomalies to factor into the equation. Well, tell
that to the people of Ishaqi, a village in Iraq, where US troops recently
conducted a raid:
“Witnesses
in the village of Ishaqi, just south of Tikrit, said Iraqi and American forces
opened fire on civilians and threw grenades early Friday as they conducted the
raid. The villagers said the forces were responding to gunfire from people in
the village and then fired back, killing a 13-year-old boy and an
off-duty police officer.”
The American
authorities are currently stonewalling, denying any responsibility for the
deaths, and claiming it was an Iraqi operation – although they admit US forces
entered the scene when “fighting broke out.” One has to wonder, however, how a
13-year-old boy and a police officer came to be the targets – are these the “terrorists”
we’re supposedly fighting in Iraq, whose presence requires an extended American stay?
It’s an
irony that this latest incident – which has further complicated Washington’s
efforts to persuade the Iraqis they need our continued presence – took place in
Ishaqi, the scene of yet another infamous US atrocity in 2006. As Antiwar.com’s
John Glaser was the first to report earlier this week:
“As revealed
by a
State Department diplomatic cable released by WikiLeaks last week, US forces committed a heinous war
crime during a house raid in Iraq in 2006, wherein one man, four women, two
children, and three infants were summarily executed. The cable excerpts a
letter written by Philip Alston, Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial, Summary,
or Arbitrary Executions, addressed to then Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice. American troops approached the home of Faiz Harrat Al-Majma’ee,
a farmer living in central Iraq, to conduct a house raid in search of
insurgents in March of 2006.
“’It would
appear that when the MNF [Multinational Forces] approached the house,’ Alston
wrote, ‘shots were fired from it and a confrontation ensued’ before the ‘troops
entered the house, handcuffed all residents and executed all of them.’ Mr. Faiz
Hratt Khalaf, (aged 28), his wife Sumay’ya Abdul Razzaq Khuther (aged 24),
their three children Hawra’a (aged 5) Aisha ( aged 3) and Husam (5 months old),
Faiz’s mother Ms. Turkiya Majeed Ali (aged 74), Faiz’s sister (name unknown),
Faiz’s nieces Asma’a Yousif Ma’arouf (aged 5 years old), and Usama Yousif
Ma’arouf (aged 3 years), and a visiting relative Ms. Iqtisad Hameed Mehdi
(aged 23) were killed during the raid. Alston’s letter reveals that a US air
strike was launched on the house presumably to destroy the evidence, but that
“autopsies carried out at the Tikrit Hospital’s morgue revealed that all
corpses were shot in the head and handcuffed.”
A
five-year-old, and a child of five months – shot in the head while
handcuffed?
I wrote about this incident in 2006, shortly after the news
came out, in response to a piece by Peter Beinart, then editor of The New Republic.
Polemicizing against Bill Kristol’s view that the Abu Ghraib inquiry was
unnecessary, Beinart argued the investigation showed that, while war is
necessarily a horrific business, our wars
are different because we hold ourselves to a higher moral standard. As I wrote back then:
“In Ishaqi, 11 villagers were slaughtered after American troops packed them into a small
room, burned three vehicles, killed a herd of livestock, and then ordered an
air strike on the house so as to bury all evidence of their crime. The military
has just announced their ‘exoneration.’ This ‘underscores the liberal vision,’ all right –
but only in the Bizarro World of Beinart and his neocon buddies.
“The big
debate between Beinart and the neocons is over what constitutes the true
‘American exceptionalism.’ What ‘proves it,’ says Beinart, is that we move
quickly to punish evildoers in uniform, and make sure that ‘justice’ is done.
Except when
it isn’t, in Ishaqi,
for instance – and even if the eventual triumph of truth is made possible by
non-American investigators.”
They tried
to cover up their crimes in Ishaqi, first by blowing the crime scene to
smithereens, and then by launching a phony “investigation” that officially exonerated US troops and their commanders.
As it turned
out, the eventual triumph of truth was made possible by Wikileaks, whose founder, Julian Assange, is being harried by the US and its European allies,
and detained on trumped-up charges, while an American grand jury compiles evidence to prosecute him. On the other hand, the child-killing
sadists in the US military roam free.
If “American
exceptionalism” means anything in this context, it is in the telling details:
after all, if you’re going to kill a five year old, why handcuff her?
“This
horrible story,” wrote Beinart in 2006, speaking about another atrocity, this
one in Haditha, “powerfully underscores the liberal vision, which is this:
“We are not
angels: without sufficient moral and legal restrictions, and under conditions
of extreme stress, Americans can be as barbaric as anyone. What’s makes us an
exceptional nation with the capacity to lead and inspire the world is our very
recognition of that fact. We are capable of Hadithas and My Lais, so is
everyone. But few societies are capable of acknowledging what happened,
bringing the killers to justice, and instituting changes that make it less
likely to happen again. That’s how we show we are different from the jihadists.
We don’t just assert it. We prove it. That’s the liberal version of American
exceptionalism, and it’s what we need right now in response to this horror.”
Beinart was
wrong then, and he’s wrong now. Child murder, racist pogroms – what’s next, the liquidation of the kulaks?
The vast
gulf between what America was, and what it has become, can be measured by the
distance between Beinart’s uplifting rhetoric about “American exceptionalism”
and the degraded reality of handcuffed children murdered by US soldiers. What
we were was admired, and even loved, by freedom-seeking people the world over:
what we have become is rightly hated by those same freedom-starved peoples.
The history
of the last decade or so proves, beyond the shadow of a doubt, that the US
government, far from being this great liberating force, the greatest factor for
good in the international equation, is instead a force for naked evil. It isn’t
that “we are not angels,” it’s that we’re devils. It’s as simple as that.
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