As the trial of Bradley Manning begins, the focus is on the
boring and utterly irrelevant detail of his sexual “orientation”: the defense
is, understandably, trying to get the charges dismissed by playing up this
aspect of the case. His lawyers are making the argument that his disorientation
as a gay (or transgender) man in a notoriously anti-gay institution was –
somehow – responsible for his actions, and that his superiors should have taken
note of this and denied him access to sensitive material.
Which is all well and good, but if you look at the government’s charges [.pdf] – well, that’s the interesting part of this case. Because the
big charge, which carries with it a sentence of life imprisonment, is “aiding
the enemy,” which begs the question: who is
the enemy?
If we look at what Manning is accused of doing – revealing the inner workings of US diplomacy over a period
of a decade or so, covering our activities on every continent – it’s clear that
what the US government means by “the enemy” is the rest of the world
outside official Washington.
Did Manning’s actions reveal the corruption of the Tunisian government, which led to the first uprising of the
Arab Spring – the very same Arab Spring the US now hails as a giant
leap forward on the road to “democracy”? Well then, who is “the enemy” in this
instance – the Tunisian people? The Egyptians in the streets fighting the military? The protesters in Syria currently being egged
on by the US
State Department?
The most dramatic consequence of Manning’s “crime” was
the release of a video that showed US pilots mowing down a Reuters journalist, his driver,
and a car full of children, whilst chortling over their grisly deaths. Which
“enemy” did this aid – the journalistic profession? The families of those slain
Iraqis?
The revelations about US operations in Afghanistan were the most
criticized: the anti-Manning/anti-WikiLeaks brigade claimed the Taliban would
soon make use of this information to kill American soldiers. Yet that never happened: to date, not a single American death has been traced to the WikiLeaks
revelations.
No, the real “enemy” here isn’t the Taliban, it isn’t
al-Qaeda (or what’s left of it), nor is it any foreign government or entity: it’s the American people.
That’s who the US government lives in deathly
fear of – the fear that if only Americans knew and understood what was being done all over the world in their name, they’d put a stop to it once and for all.
fear of – the fear that if only Americans knew and understood what was being done all over the world in their name, they’d put a stop to it once and for all.
Secrecy is the
prerequisite for tyranny, and knowledge
is the tyrant’s worst foe: that’s why whistleblowers – from Dan Ellsberg to Bradley Manning – are relentlessly pursued and prosecuted. That’s why anyone who tries to give context
to their revelations – such as this web site – is attacked and spied on by the
government and its shills. That’s also why the sickening
smear campaign launched
against both Manning and Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, has taken on the dual aspects of both a witch
hunt and a crusade. You’ll note, too, that both Manning and Assange are being
assailed as sexual perverts – that’s the peculiar style of our outraged elites,
who combine their own prurient decadence with a vicious and very personal
hatred for anyone who defies them.
The United States government is at war with the
rest of the world – and so
it’s only natural that they would charge someone who has revealed their dark
shenanigans worldwide with “aiding the enemy.”
With the fall of the Soviet Union, US elites were
imbued with a fatal delusion [.pdf] married to a false assumption: that they could fill the vast power vacuum opened up by the Soviet implosion, and that the
Middle East and Eastasia would be low-hanging fruit easily picked. It was, they declared, “the end of history,” and “liberal democracy” would henceforth be the “final” form of human
government. The argument between competing ideologies was over: actually, it
had been over for quite some time, these neoconservative ideologues asserted:
ever since Napoleon’s victory in the
battle of Jena. It had just
taken us a while to recognize it.
That this sort of nonsense reached its climax in the
late nineties and the beginning of the new millennium, just as the economic
bubble was approaching its delusional apex, is surely no accident. The
puffed-up inflated sense of omnipotence and self-importance, which the Greeks
called hubris, that inspired Charles Krauthammer to proclaim “the
unipolar moment” coincided perfectly with the inflationary policies of the
Greenspan years, when the Fed was printing money hand over
fist, without
thought for the consequences – an act of pure
hubris for which
we are today paying dearly. It was the age of inflation in more ways than one.
The bursting of the economic bubble has rendered
Krauthammer’s “unipolar” pretensions rather quaint: it seems the boom-and-bust cycle also rules the marketplace of ideas, as well as Wall Street, and on
the stock exchange of foreign policy views imperialism, as represented by neoconservatism, is today a penny stock.
Yet there are powerful interests that are seeking to
drive its price up by manipulating the market, and most especially the
political market.
The two-party system is the War Party’s built-in security system, which ensures them a political advantage no matter
how agitated the general public becomes. With only two parties to maintain
control over, and draconian
ballot access laws explicitly
designed to effectively ban “third” parties from competing in elections, the
War Party in modern times has usually managed to keep the US on a steady course of empire-building.
This political monopoly has rarely been challenged, in
large part due to public acceptance of and even pride in the ever-expanding
American Empire. Ever since the end of the second World War – the fabled “American
Century” of Henry
Luce’s imagination and Mitt Romney’s nostalgic yearnings – a certain hubristic bravado was expected and admired in American
political leaders. As the Imperial Presidency took root in the fertile soil of
the cold war, such old-fashioned republican (lower-case r) virtues
as modesty, humility, and a sense of limits were seen as not only archaic but
also signs of weakness rather than an admirable restraint.
In domestic affairs, this meant an activist government that sought to assume an important if not central role in American
life: in foreign affairs, this meant an activist policy that sought to extend American influence across the globe.
As the President became the final – and sole –
decision-maker in our relations with the rest of the world, the announced goals
of US foreign policy took on an ever-accelerating grandiosity. From the Truman
Doctrine, which declared
that the US would henceforth consider itself the defender of the “free world,”
it was a natural progression to John F. Kennedy’s vow that we would “pay any price, bear any burden”
in fighting for ‘freedom” overseas, and this culminated in Richard Nixon’s crusade for “freedom” in Southeast Asia. When the Soviet Union collapsed,
this developed into a form of megalomania, climaxing in “the
indispensable nation” of Madeleine
Albright’s imagination, and finally ending in the vulgar posturing of George “Bring
it on!” Bush, who declared half-way through his disastrous presidency::
“So it is the policy of the United States to seek and support the growth of democratic movements and institutions in every nation and culture, with the ultimate goal of ending tyranny in our world.”
As the newly-elected President uttered those fateful
words, the economic bubble had reached its peak: at the end of his presidency
it would burst. Go back and look at that speech: the talk of the “fire in the mind,” a direct reference to the nihilistic revolutionaries of Dostoevsky’s The
Possessed, the contention that History has “direction” and that the US
government is its appointed agent – the inflated rhetoric is a perfect
reflection of the artificially inflated “prosperity” of those years of easy
credit and high times on Wall Street.
The
Federal Reserve [.pdf],
which controls the money supply in this country, is a “private-public”
corporation whose principals are presidential appointees, but whose secretive actions are otherwise entirely outside of the democratic process and the
public purview. They sit in a room and deliberate, in secret, determining how
fast and far the bubble must be blown up to support our delusions of debt-based
“prosperity.” And when the bubble bursts …
That’s when they call
out the troops – in order
to keep the Fed’s printing presses rolling, pumping up the failing system with the “stimulus” of military spending.
This is what corrals conservatives into playing the Keynesian game: while
ostensibly opposed to “big government” and strongly in favor of cutting
government spending, today’s fake conservatives are the first to howl when cuts
in the “defense” budget are proposed. Spending a trillion taxpayer dollars on unnecessary wars is the kind of government
“stimulus package” they can get behind.
The bombastic rantings of Newt Gingrich and radio-shouters like the neocon loudmouth Mark Levin are the last
echoes of an economically exhausted American militarism. As Ron Paul has the
temerity to point out at every one of these interminable Republican debates: we are broke.
Imperialism is a luxury we can no longer afford.
One expects any day now to see in the news that one of
our aircraft carriers has been foreclosed and repossessed by our Chinese creditors.
I say let them tow it away and anchor it off the coast of Los Angeles, near
Disney Land, where it will re-open as a museum filled with relics of the
“American Century.” Perhaps it will serve as a warning to future generations of
the perils of Empire. More likely it will remain largely unvisited, as
Americans facing an uncertain future are less inclined to take an interest in
the past.
Our politicians are still living in that past as they
gad about the world proclaiming this and announcing that, drawing lines in the
sands of lands they have no knowledge of and no right to rule. They haven’t
woken up, as yet, to the new reality. Oh, but don’t worry – they will. And when
they do, it will be too late for repentance, or a turnabout: they’ll keep doing
what they’ve been doing until it kills them – and us.
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