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Q Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-04-04 09:27 PM
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"War on terror" is a political slogan--not a coherent strategy..."
Published in the June 21, 2004 issue of The Nation

Under the Banner of the 'War' on Terror

by William Greider

"...Altogether, the momentous alterations in government and society derive from Bush's unilateral announcement of an uncharted war. One should not assume the President himself fully grasped all of the many consequences in advance, any more than his team understood what they were getting into in Iraq. But no matter. "War on terror" is a political slogan--not a coherent strategy for national defense--and it succeeds brilliantly only as politics. For everything else, it is quite illogical.

An important question remains for Americans to ponder: Why have most people submitted so willingly to a new political order organized around fear? Other nations have confronted terrorism of a more sustained nature without coming thoroughly unhinged. I remember living in London briefly in the 1970s, when IRA bombings were a frequent occurrence. Daily life continued with stiff-upper-lip reserve (police searched ladies' handbags at restaurants, but did not pat down the gentlemen). We can only speculate on answers. Was it the uniquely horrific quality of the 9/11 attacks? Or the fact that, unlike Europe, the continental United States has never been bombed? For modern Americans, war's destruction is a foreign experience, though the United States has participated in many conflicts on foreign soil. Despite the patriotic breast-beating, are we closet wimps? America's exaggerated expressions of fear may look to others like a surprising revelation of weakness.

My own suspicion is that many Americans have enjoyed Bush's "terror war" more than they wish to admit. Feeling scared can be oddly pleasurable, like participating in a real-life action thriller, when one is allied in imagined combat with a united country of brave patriots. The plot line is simple--good guys against satanic forces--and pushes aside doubts and ambiguities, like why exactly these people are out to get us. Does our own behavior in the world have anything to do with it? No, they resent us because we are so virtuous--kind, free, wealthy, democratic. The contest, as framed by Bush, invites Americans to indulge in a luxurious sense of self-pity--poor, powerful America, so innocent and yet so misunderstood. America's exaggerated fear of unknown "others" is perhaps an unconscious inversion of its exaggerated claims of power.

The only way out of this fog of pretension is painful self-examination by Americans--cutting our fears down to more plausible terms and facing the complicated realities of our role in the world. The spirited opposition that arose to Bush's war in Iraq is a good starting place, because citizens raised real questions that were brushed aside. I don't think most Americans are interested in imperial rule, but they were grossly misled by patriotic rhetoric. Now is the time for sober, serious teach-ins that lay out the real history of US power in the world, and that also explain the positive and progressive future that is possible. Once citizens have constructed a clear-eyed, dissenting version of our situation, perhaps politicians can also be liberated from exaggerated fear. The self-imposed destruction that has flowed from Bush's logic cannot be stopped until a new cast of leaders steps forward to guide the country. This transformation begins by changing Presidents.

http://www.commondreams.org/views04/0604-12.htm
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greatauntoftriplets Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-04-04 09:33 PM
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1. That is a great article.
Read it earlier today. Articulates my uneasiness with a war against a concept.
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Q Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-04-04 09:40 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. What troubles me...
...is that both parties are determined to fight a 'war on terror' that was orginally defined by the Fraud in Chief. This type of perpetual war is the stuff of Orwell and Democrats should find a different approach other than using our military to BOMB THE SHIT out of innocent bystanders.
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greatauntoftriplets Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-04-04 09:46 PM
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3. Yep.
Troubles me as well.

I am currently reading Rashid Khalidi's book "Resurrecting Empire", about halfway through. He is the Edward Said chair and director of the Middle East Institute at Columbia, University, and used to be at the University of Chicago, which is why I have known of him for years (Chicago resident). His premise is that Western interference/colonialism in the Middle East has always created a thoroughly bad situation, and that is what we are doing once again.

Sad thing is that this book was complete several months ago. Since its completion, I have heard several NPR interviews with Khalidi recently and he is convinced that it will take generations for Western nations to be welcomed once again in the Middle East. I have heard many interviews with this man going back to the early 1990s, and he has never ever sounded so grim. The situation is totally out of control. He sounds so damn sad.
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mike_c Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-04-04 11:59 PM
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4. it's one of my major disappointments with the dem leadership....
They seem not to have the vison to articulate an alternative "crusade."
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JohnOneillsMemory Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jun-05-04 12:56 AM
Response to Reply #4
5. How about a crusade against lawlessness and the murder of innocents?
Simply a campaign in favor of:
1)the Geneva Conventions
2)the International Criminal Court
3)the US Constitution and Bill of Rights
4)the United Nations
5)the observance of treaties
6)the Freedom of Information Act
7)respect for environmental science and regulations

...and every other thing the neocons have savaged with impunity to reimpose the old slithering might-makes-right paradigm from way back before civilisation walked upright in the rhythm of LAWS and AGREEMENTS.

Just to, ya know, distinguish the Dems from the Repubs.
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