Silencing America as It Prepares for War
by John Pilger
Returning to the United States in an election year, I am
struck by the silence. I have covered four presidential campaigns, starting
with 1968; I was with Robert Kennedy when he was shot and I saw his assassin,
preparing to kill him. It was a baptism in the American way, along with the
salivating violence of the Chicago police at the Democratic Party’s rigged
convention. The great counter revolution
had begun.
The first to be assassinated that year, Martin Luther King,
had dared link the suffering of African-Americans and the people of Vietnam.
When Janis Joplin sang, “Freedom’s just another word for nothing left to lose”,
she spoke perhaps unconsciously for millions of America’s victims in faraway
places.
“We lost 58,000 young
soldiers in Vietnam, and they died defending your freedom. Now don’t you forget
it.” So said a National Parks Service
guide as I filmed last week at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington. He was
addressing a school party of young teenagers in bright orange T-shirts. As if
by rote, he inverted the truth about Vietnam into an unchallenged lie.
The millions of Vietnamese who died and were maimed and
poisoned and dispossessed by the American invasion have no historical place in
young minds, not to mention the estimated 60,000 veterans who took their own
lives. A friend of mine, a marine who became a paraplegic in Vietnam, was often
asked, “Which side did you fight on?”
A few years ago, I attended a popular exhibition called “The
Price of Freedom” at the venerable Smithsonian Institution in Washington. The
lines of ordinary people, mostly children shuffling through a Santa’s grotto of
revisionism, were dispensed a variety of lies: the atomic bombing of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki saved “a million lives”; Iraq was “liberated [by] air strikes of unprecedented
precision”. The theme was unerringly heroic: only Americans pay the price of
freedom.
The 2016 election campaign is remarkable not only for the
rise of Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders but also for the resilience of an
enduring silence about a murderous self-bestowed divinity. A third of the
members of the United Nations have felt Washington’s boot, overturning
governments, subverting democracy, imposing blockades and boycotts. Most of the
presidents responsible have been liberal – Truman, Kennedy, Johnson, Carter,
Clinton, Obama.
The breathtaking record of perfidy is so mutated in the
public mind, wrote the late Harold Pinter, that it “never happened …Nothing
ever happened. Even while it was happening it wasn’t happening. It didn’t
matter. It was of no interest. It didn’t matter … “. Pinter expressed a mock
admiration for what he called “a quite clinical manipulation of power worldwide
while masquerading as a force for universal good. It’s a brilliant, even witty,
highly successful act of hypnosis.”
Take Obama. As he prepares to leave office, the fawning has
begun all over again. He is “cool”. One of the more violent presidents, Obama
gave full reign to the Pentagon war-making apparatus of his discredited
predecessor. He prosecuted more whistleblowers – truth-tellers – than any
president. He pronounced Chelsea Manning guilty before she was tried. Today,
Obama runs an unprecedented worldwide campaign of terrorism and murder by
drone.
In 2009, Obama promised to help “rid the world of nuclear
weapons” and was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
No American president has built more nuclear warheads than Obama. He is
“modernising” America’s doomsday arsenal, including a new “mini” nuclear
weapon, whose size and “smart” technology, says a leading general, ensure its
use is “no longer unthinkable”.
James Bradley, the best-selling author of Flags of Our
Fathers and son of one of the US marines who raised the flag on Iwo Jima, said,
“[One] great myth we’re seeing play out is that of Obama as some kind of peaceful
guy who’s trying to get rid of nuclear weapons. He’s the biggest nuclear
warrior there is. He’s committed us to a ruinous course of spending a trillion
dollars on more nuclear weapons. Somehow, people live in this fantasy that
because he gives vague news conferences and speeches and feel-good photo-ops
that somehow that’s attached to actual policy. It isn’t.”
On Obama’s watch, a second cold war is under way. The
Russian president is a pantomime villain; the Chinese are not yet back to their
sinister pig-tailed caricature – when all Chinese were banned from the United
States – but the media warriors are working on it.
Neither Hillary Clinton nor Bernie Sanders has mentioned any
of this. There is no risk and no danger for the United States and all of us.
For them, the greatest military build-up on the borders of Russia since World
War Two has not happened. On May 11, Romania went “live” with a Nato “missile
defence” base that aims its first-strike American missiles at the heart of
Russia, the world’s second nuclear power.
In Asia, the Pentagon is sending ships, planes and special
forces to the Philippines to threaten China. The US already encircles China
with hundreds of military bases that curve in an arc up from Australia, to Asia
and across to Afghanistan. Obama calls this a “pivot”.
As a direct consequence, China reportedly has changed its
nuclear weapons policy from no-first-use to high alert and put to sea
submarines with nuclear weapons. The escalator is quickening.
It was Hillary Clinton who, as Secretary of State in 2010,
elevated the competing territorial claims for rocks and reef in the South China
Sea to an international issue; CNN and BBC hysteria followed; China was
building airstrips on the disputed islands. In its mammoth war game in 2015,
Operation Talisman Sabre, the US practiced “choking” the Straits of Malacca
through which pass most of China’s oil and trade. This was not news.
Clinton declared that America had a “national interest” in
these Asian waters. The Philippines and Vietnam were encouraged and bribed to
pursue their claims and old enmities against China. In America, people are
being primed to see any Chinese defensive position as offensive, and so the
ground is laid for rapid escalation. A similar strategy of provocation and
propaganda is applied to Russia.
Clinton, the “women’s candidate”, leaves a trail of bloody
coups: in Honduras, in Libya (plus the murder of the Libyan president) and
Ukraine. The latter is now a CIA theme park swarming with Nazis and the
frontline of a beckoning war with Russia. It was through Ukraine – literally,
borderland — that Hitler’s Nazis invaded the Soviet Union, which lost 27
million people. This epic catastrophe remains a presence in Russia. Clinton’s
presidential campaign has received money from all but one of the world’s ten biggest
arms companies. No other candidate comes close.
Sanders, the hope of many young Americans, is not very
different from Clinton in his proprietorial view of the world beyond the United
States. He backed Bill Clinton’s illegal bombing of Serbia. He supports Obama’s
terrorism by drone, the provocation of Russia and the return of special forces
(death squads) to Iraq. He has nothing to say on the drumbeat of threats to
China and the accelerating risk of nuclear war. He agrees that Edward Snowden
should stand trial and he calls Hugo Chavez – like him, a social democrat – “a
dead communist dictator”. He promises to support Clinton if she is nominated.
The election of Trump or Clinton is the old illusion of
choice that is no choice: two sides of the same coin. In scapegoating
minorities and promising to “make America great again”, Trump is a far
right-wing domestic populist; yet the danger of Clinton may be more lethal for
the world.
“Only Donald Trump
has said anything meaningful and critical of US foreign policy,” wrote Stephen
Cohen, emeritus professor of Russian History at Princeton and NYU, one of the
few Russia experts in the United States to speak out about the risk of war.
In a radio broadcast, Cohen referred to critical questions
Trump alone had raised. Among them: why is the United States “everywhere on the
globe”? What is NATO’s true mission? Why does the US always pursue regime
change in Iraq, Syria, Libya, Ukraine? Why does Washington treat Russia and
Vladimir Putin as an enemy?
The hysteria in the liberal media over Trump serves an
illusion of “free and open debate” and “democracy at work”. His views on
immigrants and Muslims are grotesque, yet the deporter-in-chief of vulnerable people from America is not
Trump but Obama, whose betrayal of people of colour is his legacy: such as the
warehousing of a mostly black prison population, now more numerous than
Stalin’s gulag.
This presidential campaign may not be about populism but
American liberalism, an ideology that sees itself as modern and therefore
superior and the one true way. Those on its right wing bear a likeness to 19th
century Christian imperialists, with a God-given duty to convert or co-opt or
conquer.
In Britain, this is Blairism. The Christian war criminal
Tony Blair got away with his secret preparation for the invasion of Iraq
largely because the liberal political class and media fell for his “cool
Britannia”. In the Guardian, the applause was deafening; he was called
“mystical”. A distraction known as identity politics, imported from the United
States, rested easily in his care.
History was declared over, class was abolished and gender
promoted as feminism; lots of women became New Labour MPs. They voted on the
first day of Parliament to cut the benefits of single parents, mostly women, as
instructed. A majority voted for an invasion that produced 700,000 Iraqi
widows.
The equivalent in the US are the politically correct
warmongers on the New York Times, the Washington Post and network TV who
dominate political debate. I watched a furious debate on CNN about Trump’s
infidelities. It was clear, they said, a man like that could not be trusted in
the White House. No issues were raised. Nothing on the 80 per cent of Americans
whose income has collapsed to 1970s levels.
Nothing on the drift to war. The received wisdom seems to be “hold your
nose” and vote for Clinton: anyone but Trump. That way, you stop the monster
and preserve a system gagging for another war.
John Pilger can be reached through his website: www.johnpilger.com
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