The United States as Destroyer of Nations
by Daniel Kovalik
In the aftermath of the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003 – an
invasion which many Iraqis believe left their country in the worst condition it
has been since the Mongol invasion of 1258 — there was much discussion in the
media about the Bush Administration’s goal for “nation-building” in that
country. Of course, if there ever were
such a goal, it was quickly abandoned, and one hardly ever hears the term “nation-building”
discussed as a U.S. foreign policy objective anymore.
The stark truth is that the U.S. really has no intentions of
helping to build strong states in the Middle East or elsewhere. Rather, as we
see time and again – e.g., in Yugoslavia, Sudan, Libya, Yemen, Syria, Somalia,
Ukraine – the goal of U.S. foreign policy, whether stated or not, is
increasingly and more aggressively the destruction and balkanization of
independent states. However, it is important to recognize that this goal is not
new.
Indeed, South Korean human rights scholar Dong Choon Kim,
writing of the U.S. war in Korea (1950 – 1953) – a war which he opines was at
least arguably genocidal – explains that even back then, the nation-building of
Third World peoples was viewed as an act of subversion which had to be snuffed out. As he explained, “[t]he American government
interpreted the aspiration for building an independent nation as an exclusive
‘communist conspiracy,’ and thus took responsibility for killing innocent
people, as in the case of [the] My Lai incident in Vietnam.” Thanks to the
U.S. war on Korea, Korea to this day remains a country divided in half, with no
prospects for unification anytime soon. Kim explains that the Korean War “was a
bridge to connect the old type of massacres under colonialism and the new types
of state terrorism and political massacre during the Cold War. . . . And the mass killings committed by US
soldiers in the Korean War marked the inception of military interventions by
the US in the Third World at the cost of enormous civilian deaths.”
Similarly, the U.S. objective in Vietnam was the destruction
of any prospect of an intact, independent state from being created. As
Jean-Paul Sartre wrote as part of the International War Crimes Tribunal that he
and Bertrand Russell chaired after the war, the U.S. gave the Vietnamese a
stark choice: either accept capitulation in which the country would be severed
in half, with one half run by a U.S. client, or be subjected to near total
annihilation. Sartre wrote that, even in the former case, in which there
would be a “cutting in two of a sovereign state . . . [t]he national unit of
‘Vietnam’ would not be physically eliminated, but it would no longer exist
economically, politically or culturally.”
Of course, in the latter case, Vietnam would suffer physical
elimination; bombed “’back to the Stone Age’” as the U.S. threatened. As we
know, the Vietnamese did not capitulate, and therefore suffered near-total
destruction of their country at the hands of the United States. Meanwhile, for
good measure, the U.S. simultaneously bombed both Cambodia and Laos back to the
Stone Age as well.
To understand the purpose behind such violent and
destructive actions, we need look no farther than the U.S.’s own post-WWII
policy statements, as well articulated by George Kennan serving as the State
Department’s Director of Policy Planning in 1948:
We must be very
careful when we speak of exercising “leadership” in Asia. We are deceiving
ourselves and others when we pretend to have answers to the problems, which agitate
many of these Asiatic peoples. Furthermore, we have about 50% of the world’s
wealth but only 6.3 of its population. This disparity is particularly great as
between ourselves and the peoples of Asia. In this situation, we cannot fail to
be the object of envy and resentment. Our real task in the coming period is to
devise a pattern of relationships, which will permit us to maintain this
position of disparity without positive detriment to our national security. To
do so we will have to dispense with all sentimentality and daydreaming; and our
attention will have to be concentrated everywhere on our immediate national
objectives. We need not deceive ourselves that we can afford today the luxury
of altruism and world benefaction…
In the face of
this situation we would be better off to dispense now with a number of the
concepts which have underlined our thinking with regard to the Far East. We
should dispense with the aspiration to ‘be liked’ or to be regarded as the
repository of a high-minded international altruism. We should stop putting
ourselves in the position of being our brothers’ keeper and refrain from
offering moral and ideological advice. We should cease to talk about vague —
and for the Far East — unreal objectives such as human rights, the raising of
the living standards, and democratization. The day is not far off when we are
going to have to deal in straight power concepts. The less we are hampered by
idealistic slogans, the better.
While it would have been impossible for the U.S. to continue
to monopolize a full half of the world’s wealth after Europe, Japan, China and
the USSR inevitably got up upon their feet after WWII, the U.S. has nonetheless
done an amazing job of controlling an unjustifiable and disproportionate amount
of the world’s resources.
Thus, currently, the U.S. has about 5% of the world’s
population, and consumes about 25% of its resources. An article in Scientific
American, citing the Sierra Club’s Dave Tilford, explains that,
“‘[w]ith less than
5 percent of world population, the U.S. uses one-third of the world’s paper, a
quarter of the world’s oil, 23 percent of the coal, 27 percent of the aluminum,
and 19 percent of the copper . . . .
Our per capita use of energy, metals, minerals, forest products, fish,
grains, meat, and even fresh water dwarfs that of people living in the
developing world.’”
The only way the U.S. has been able to achieve this
impressive, though morally reprehensible, feat has been to undermine, many
times fatally, the ability of independent states to exist, defend themselves
and to protect their own resources from foreign plunder. This is why the U.S.
has teamed up with the world’s most deplorable forces in destroying independent
states around the globe.
Just to name a few examples, since 1996, the U.S. has
supported Rwandan and Ugandan forces in invading the Democratic Republic of
Congo, making that country ungovernable and plundering its incredible natural
resources. The fact that around 6
million innocents have been murdered in the process is of no matter, and
certainly not to the main stream press which rarely mentions the DRC. In
Colombia, the U.S. has backed a repressive military and right-wing
paramilitaries for decades in destabilizing whole swaths of the Colombian
countryside, and in assisting multinational corporations, and especially
extractive industries, in displacing around 7 million people from their homes
and land, all in order to exploit Colombia’s vast oil, coal and gold reserves.
Again, this receives barely a word in the mainstream press.
Of course, in the Middle East, Northern Africa and
Afghanistan, the U.S. has been teaming up with Saudi Arabia and radical
Islamist forces – forces the U.S. itself has dubbed “terrorist” – in
undermining and destroying secular states.
As far back as the 1970’s, the U.S. began supporting the
mujahidin in attacking the secular, Marxist state of Afghanistan in order to
destroy that state and also to fatally weaken the Soviet state by, in the words
of Zbigniew Brzezinski, “drawing the Russians into the Afghan trap . . . [and]
giving to the USSR its Vietnam war.” Afghanistan may never recover from the
devastation wrought by that fateful decision of the U.S. and its subsequent
intervention which is now into its 15th year and counting. As we know full well,
the USSR never recovered either, and the U.S. is trying mightily to prevent
post-Soviet Russia from becoming a strong rival state again.
Meanwhile, in Libya, the U.S. again partnered with jihadists
in 2011 in overthrowing and indeed smashing a state which used its oil wealth
to guarantee the best living standards of any country in Africa while assisting
independence struggles around the world. In this way, Libya, which under
Qaddafi also happened to be one of the staunchest enemies of Al-Qaeda in the world,
presented a double threat to U.S. foreign policy aims. Post-intervention Libya
is now a failed state with little prospects of being able to secure its oil
wealth for its own people again, much less for any other peoples in the Third
World. And so, mission accomplished!
In addition, as we learned from Seymour Hersh back in 2007,
the U.S. began at that time to try to weaken Iran and Syria by supporting Sunni
extremist groups to subvert those countries. As Hersh explained:
To undermine Iran,
which is predominantly Shiite, the Bush Administration has decided, in effect,
to reconfigure its priorities in the Middle East. In Lebanon, the
Administration has cooperated with Saudi Arabia’s government, which is Sunni,
in clandestine operations that are intended to weaken Hezbollah, the Shiite
organization that is backed by Iran. The U.S. has also taken part in
clandestine operations aimed at Iran and its ally Syria. A by-product of these
activities has been the bolstering of Sunni extremist groups that espouse a
militant vision of Islam and are hostile to America and sympathetic to Al
Qaeda.
One contradictory
aspect of the new strategy is that, in Iraq, most of the insurgent violence
directed at the American military has come from Sunni forces, and not from
Shiites.
The U.S. continues to intervene in Syria in a way which
prevents the Syrian state from achieving a decisive victory against the various
militant groups it is fighting – some of which the U.S. itself admits are
terrorists – while at the same time targeting some of these same militant
groups themselves, thereby preventing either side of the conflict from coming
out on top. Indeed, as we have learned, the CIA and the Pentagon have even been
backing opposing militant groups that are fighting each other! The result
is a drawn-out war which threatens to leave Syria in chaos and ruins for the
foreseeable future.
This would seem to be an insane course of action for the
U.S. to take, and indeed it is, but there is method to the madness. The U.S.
appears to be intentionally spreading chaos throughout strategic portions of
the world; leaving virtually no independent state standing to protect their
resources, especially oil, from Western exploitation. And, this goal is being
achieved with resounding success, while also achieving the subsidiary goal of
enriching the behemoth industrial-military complex.
Jose Marti once said, “there are two kinds of people in the
world: those who love and create, and those who hate and destroy.” There is no
doubt that the U.S. has proven itself to be of the latter kind; indeed, the
very nature of U.S. foreign policy is destruction. Given this, it is at best
foolish and naïve for people of any political stripe, but particularly
self-defined leftists, to put any stock in the notion that the U.S. is acting
in the defense of human rights, democracy or any such lofty goals in
intervening militarily abroad.
There is only one proper goal, then, of people of good will
– to oppose U.S. military intervention with every fiber of our being.
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