In his famous 1898 essay, “The Conquest of the United States by Spain,” the
great Yale University libertarian scholar William Graham Sumner argued that
America had crossed the Rubicon, so to speak, and had become an imperialistic
empire. It had become the Spanish empire. But Sumner was only half right. The
conquest of Cubawas an imperialistic war, but
so were all other American military adventures since the American Revolution.
Apparently, even a man as brilliant and astute as Sumner was somewhat befogged
by the endless and pervasive drumbeat of war propaganda.
“War is the health of the state,” Randolph Bourne explained in his famous
essay of that title. But to the average citizen war means heavy taxation,
conscription, censorship, dictatorship, and death. War enriches the state like
nothing else can, while impoverishing, enslaving, and ending the lives of many
of its citizens. Hence lies, myths, superstitions, and propaganda have always
been the essential ingredient of the warfare state. Without them, the public
would never acquiesce in the never-ending wars of conquest and imperialism that
have long characterized the American state.
The War of 1812
Barely twenty years after the U.S. Constitution was ratified there arose
quite a few American politicians who believed it was their “manifest destiny”
to invade and conquer Canada. One of the congressional leaders of the early
nineteenth-century war party, Henry Clay, celebrated the declaration of war
against Great Britain on June 4, 1812, by declaring that “Every patriot bosom
must throb with anxious solicitude for the result. Every patriot arm will
assist in making that result conducive to the glory of our beloved country”
(David and Jeane Heidler, Henry Clay: The Essential
American, p. 98).
Among the “official reasons” for the invasion of Canada in 1812 were the
alleged “impressment” of American sailors by the British government, but that
had been going on for decades, as Justin Raimondo has pointed out. The tall
tale was also broadcast that the “evil” British were encouraging Indians to
attack American settlers. The real reason for the War of 1812, however, was an
impulse to grow the state with an imperialistic war of conquest. The result of
the war was a disaster — the British burned down the White House, the Library
of Congress, and much of Washington, D.C. Americans were saddled with a huge
war debt that was used as an excuse to resurrect the corrupt and economically
destabilizing Bank of the United States, a precursor of the Fed.
The Mexican-American War
When James K. Polk became president in 1845 he announced to his cabinet
that one of his chief objectives was to acquire California, which was then a
part of Mexico. As he wrote in his diary, “I stated to the cabinet that up to
this time as they knew, we had herd of no open act of aggression by the Mexican
army, but that the danger was imminent that such acts would be committed. I
said that in my opinion we had ample cause of war.”
Thus, long before the presidency of George W. Bush, James K. Polk advocated
the neocon notion of the “pre-emptive war.” Polk recognized that the Mexican
army had not committed any “act of aggression,” so he set out to provoke one by
sending American troops to the border of Mexico in territory that historians
agree was “disputed territory” at the time because of a very dubious claim by
the U.S. government. None other than Ulysses S. Grant wrote in his memoirs
that, as a young soldier serving under the command of General Zachary Taylor
during the 1846-1848 Mexican-American War, he understood that he had been sent
there to provoke a fight:
The presence of United States troops on the edge of the disputed territory furthest from the Mexican settlements, was not sufficient to provoke hostilities. We were sent to provoke a fight, but it was essential that Mexico should commence it. I was very doubtful whether Congress would declare war; but if Mexico should attack our troops, the Executive [President Polk] could announce, ‘Whereas war exists by the acts of, etc.’ and prosecute the contest with vigor.
Polk’s gambit worked; he did provoke the
Mexican army. In his war message to Congress he then declared that “Mexico has
passed the boundary of the United States, has invaded our territory and shed
American blood upon the American soil. ... As war exists ... by the act of
Mexico herself, we are called upon by every consideration of duty and
patriotism to vindicate with decision the honor, the rights, and the interests
of our country.” This con game of provoking a war by showing up on another
nation’s border, heavily armed with weapons aimed at the hoped-for belligerent,
would be repeated many times in subsequent generations, right up to today’s
provocation of a war in Syria.
The invasion and conquest of Mexico enabled the U.S. government to acquire
California and New Mexico at the cost of some 15,000 American lives and at
least 25,000 Mexican casualties. It was an aggressive war of conquest and
imperialism.
The American “Civil War”
In his first inaugural address on March 4, 1861, Abraham Lincoln threatened
“invasion” and “bloodshed” (his exact words) in any state that refused to
collect the federal tariff tax on imports, which had just been more than
doubled two days earlier. At the time, tariffs accounted for more than 90
percent of all federal tax revenue, so this was a gigantic tax increase. This
is how Lincoln threatened war in his first official oration:
The power confided in me will be used to hold, occupy, and possess the
property and places belonging to the government, and to collect the duties and
imposts; but beyond what may be necessary for these objects, there will be no
invasion, no using of force against or among the people anywhere.
But of course the states of the lower South, having seceded, did not intend
to “collect the duties and imposts” and send the money to Washington, D.C.
Lincoln committed treason (as defined by Article 3, Section 3 of the U.S.
Constitution) by levying war upon the free and independent states, which he
always considered to be a part of the American union. By his own admission (and
his subsequent actions), he invaded his own country over tax collection.
The Republican Party of 1860 was the party of protectionism and high
tariffs. The Confederate Constitution had outlawed protectionist tariffs
altogether. The result would have been a massive diversion of world trade to
the Southern ports which would have forced the U.S. government to reduce its
desired 50 percent average tariff rate to competitive levels (10-15 percent),
depriving Northern manufacturers of this veiled form of corporate welfare, and
depriving the government of the revenue it needed to pursue its manifest
destiny of a mercantilist empire complete with massive subsidies for railroad
corporations (among others).
Lincoln’s dilemma was that he knew he would be condemned worldwide for
waging a bloody war over tax collection. Another excuse for war had to be
invented, so he invented the notion of the “mystical,” permanent, and
non-voluntary union. He did not want to be seen as the aggressor in his war for
tariff revenue, so he hatched a plot to trick Southerners into firing the first
shot by sending American warships to Charleston Harbor while steadfastly
refusing to meet with Confederate peace commissioners or discuss the purchase
of federal property by the Confederate government. He understood that the
Confederates would not tolerate a foreign fort on their property any more than
George Washington would have tolerated a British fort in New York or Boston
Harbors.
Quite a few Northern newspapers recognized
the game Lincoln was playing. On April 16, 1861 theBuffalo Daily Courier editorialized
that “[t]he affair at Fort Sumter ... has been planned as a means by which the
war feeling at the North should be intensified” (Howard Cecil Perkins, Northern Editorials on Secession).
The New York Evening Day Book wrote on April 17, 1861,
that the event at Fort Sumter was “a cunningly devised scheme” contrived “to
arouse, and, if possible, exasperate the northern people against the South.”
“Look at the facts,” the Providence Daily Post wrote
on April 13, 1861. “For three weeks the [Lincoln] administration newspapers
have been assuring us that Ford Sumter would be abandoned,” but “Mr. Lincoln
saw an opportunity to inaugurate civil war without appearing in the character
of an aggressor.” The Jersey City American Standard editorialized
that “there is a madness and ruthlessness” in Lincoln’s behavior, concluding
that Lincolns sending of ships to Charleston Harbor was “a pretext for letting
loose the horrors of war.”
After Fort Sumter, on May 1, 1861, Lincoln wrote to his naval commander,
Captain Gustavus Fox, to say that “You and I both anticipated that the cause of
the country [i.e., a civil war] would be advanced by making the attempt to
provision Fort Sumter, even if it should fail; and it is no small consolation
now to feel that our anticipation is justified by the result.” He was thanking
Captain Fox for his role in duping the Confederates into firing upon Fort
Sumter (where no one was either killed or wounded). Lincoln responded with a
full-scale invasion of all the Southern states and a four-year war that,
according to the latest research, was responsible for as many as 850,000
American deaths with more than double that number maimed for life.
Standardizing for today’s population, that would be the equivalent of roughly 9
million American deaths in four years.
The Spanish-American War
Immediately after the “Civil War” the U.S. government waged a
twenty-five-year war of genocide against the Plains Indians “to make way for
the railroad corporations,” as General Sherman declared. Then by the
late 1880s, American imperialists wanted to kick the Spanish out of Cuba where
American business interests had invested in sugar and tobacco plantations. An
American warship, the U.S.S. Maine, was sent to Havana in January of 1898 to
supposedly protect American business interests from an insurrection. On
February 15, 1898, a mysterious explosion sunk the ship, killing 270 sailors.
The Spanish were blamed for the explosion despite a lack of incriminating
evidence. “You furnish the pictures and I’ll furnish the war,” newspaperman
William Randolph Hearst famously said to the artist Frederic Remington, implying
that, armed with the artist’s illustrations, his newspapers would generate war
propaganda. The U.S. government waged war with Spanish-occupied Cuba for the
next four years, making the world safe for American sugar and tobacco
corporations.
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