We Had To Destroy [Fill in Country Name] In Order To Save It
The classic Vietnam War statement by a US officer explaining the need to destroy a town in Vietnam in order to “save it” still resonates in left analyses, in part because it captures so well the self-righteous US brazenness in rationalizing its devastation of its victims. But it also resonates because of its continued applicability, as one country after the next is destroyed as the superpower moves from Vietnam to Cambodia to El Salvador and Nicaragua to Iraq to Panama to Colombia to Yugoslavia to Afghanistan and back to Iraq (this list is incomplete, and also doesn’t include destruction by client and “constructively engaged” states like Indonesia, Israel and South Africa).
As Madeleine Albright said to Colin Powell, “What’s the point of having this superb military if we can’t use it?” Albright was just a wee bit impatient with Powell for dragging his feet on immediately attacking Yugoslavia, but of course his qualms were overcome and that superb military was permitted to do its work of devastation.
Certain principles and rules of
destruction-to-save-the-target-population were clarified in the Vietnam
War experience. One was that US military deaths and the return of body
bags was politically costly (although the mistreatment of veterans once
they got home was a matter of no concern). This led to the conclusion
that the United States had to fight short wars and use capital intensive
methods of warfare to minimize US casualties. This meant that it was
best to fight small and virtually defenseless targets, which was helped
along by the fact that the US public never saw beating up Grenada,
Nicaragua or an economically prostrate and effectively disarmed Iraq as
in any way cowardly. A second and related principle was that enemy
casualties, civilian or military, were of no account in the US political
system, especially where the mainstream media kept graphic details of
target victimization at a minimum, as they did readily, helped by
official persuasion. From Vietnam to Iraq today, it is notorious that
the numbers victimized in these US assaults are not recorded by the
victimizers. Chomsky points out in Hegemony or Survival that “the death
toll of the US wars in Indochina is not known within the range of
millions.” This irrelevance of target casualties was also helped along
by racist contempt for the “little yellow dwarves” (Lyndon Johnson),
expressed sometimes as the “mere gook rule.”
A third principle was that officials could claim any
excuse for attacking their victim and the Free Press would allow them to
get away with it. James Reston could claim that we were there to
demonstrate “that no state shall use military force or the threat of
military force to achieve its political objectives,” and the fact that
that is precisely what the United States was doing in the face of an
admitted politically dominant opposition did not cause Reston to be
written off as a clownish apologist for aggression. It was simply taken
for granted by the media during the Vietnam War that international law
was for others, not the United States. Officials and their propagandists
could claim that the US intervention was to stop China, or the Soviet
Union, or “Communism” attempting world conquest, or North Vietnamese
aggression, or even “internal aggression” by South Vietnamese within
South Vietnam, and the Free Press would never challenge these inane
claims and contradictions. Although Eisenhower admitted that Ho Chi Minh
would have won a free unification election, which we blocked, and
although each of our puppets and our serious analysts admitted that our
puppets had no substantial indigenous support, the Free Press never once
said that our invasion to support a puppet of our choice was
“aggression” — it was allowed to be support of “South Vietnam” against
somebody else’s aggression.
Our use of extreme violence, including napalm,
chemical warfare, free fire zones, and B-52 raids on villages was never
seen by the media as incompatible with our “saving” South Vietnam. We
were “saving” it — for control by ourselves through our puppet regimes.
But that was never seen to be an Orwellian use of “save” any more than
the attempt to impose a puppet by military force in a distant place was
considered aggression, when we did it.
Another feature of the Vietnam War was that after the
United States left, it not only did not suffer any penalties for
blatant aggression and historically unique war crimes (as in the massive
use of chemical warfare to destroy food crops), or to pay reparations,
which in justice would have run to hundreds of billions of dollars, it
maintained and enforced an 18-year boycott on its victim. This
established the familiar sequence of destruction alone without any
“nation building,” but in this case, where the United States had failed
to conquer, there was continued post-conflict “nation destruction.”
This Vietnam sequence of destroying to save and then
further post-conflict destruction was surpassed in the case of the 1991
Persian Gulf War and its aftermath. There, after the war’s destruction
of much of the Iraq infrastructure, the United States and Britain
imposed the “sanctions of mass destruction” that pushed that damaged
country further into the abyss of suffering, with an estimated
sanctions-related death toll of a million civilians, including half a
million children. In the case of Nicaragua, after that tiny victim was
crushed in a US proxy war of terror in the 1980s, and a “regime
change”successfully accomplished there, the United States did nothing in
the way of “nation-building” even after its sponsored rightwing
government was installed in 1990. In the case of Serbia and Kosovo,
also, the United States did an outstanding job of destruction,
especially of Serbia, but after it succeeded in regime change it did
little or nothing in the way of “nation-building” in support of the new
allied regimes. The United States had established that its specialty was
destruction, of course in the alleged interest of saving the various
populations from evil, but it was pleased to leave reconciliation and
repair to other countries and to the workings of the free market.
The same was true of Afghanistan, where the work of
destruction involved both extensive bombing and the mobilization of the
old war lords whose rampages and drug business had been contained by the
Taliban. But after the Taliban had been routed and thousands of
civilians killed in “tragic errors,” and a Western puppet installed,
there was little nation-building by the United States and its allies,
only in small part a result of the Bush administration’s quick turn to
its high priority invasion-occupation of Iraq. The administration and
political class find it very easy to spend tens of billions to kill, but
they find it hard to allocate large sums for constructive purposes. In
fact, large sums for nation-building would be a bit inconsistent with
the administration’s devoted effort to scale down federal expenditures
for civilians — that is, for nation-building — at home.
The Iraq invasion-occupation thus fits a familiar
pattern: the standard US disregard for international law, internalized
by members of the Free Press and population; the excuses for the attack
that change over time and that are obvious lies, but allowed to fly
until too late to influence policy, as in the Vietnam case; the
inability of the media to call the attack and invasion “aggression;” the
attack carried out against a virtually disarmed target; the press and
populace once again thrilled at the ability of the United States to
quickly crush a badly over-matched target; the use of civilian-costly
methods of warfare that save US lives at the expense of “mere Iraqis;”
the inability of the UN and “international community” to condemn or
interfere with this aggression and occupation.
In addition to the destruction directly carried out
by the “coalition” in its invasion, the coalition failed to prevent
further massive destruction in the ensuing chaos, arson and looting, in
violation of the legal obligation of the occupying power.
Even after the lies underlying the
invasion-occupation as regards Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction and
“imminent threat” had been exposed, the Free Press and international
community still failed to challenge the right of the United States to
occupy Iraq and to determine its future. We were now there to “liberate”
the Iraqi people, to save them from Saddam’s rule. You may be sure that
the media have not featured the fact that the same crowd now in the
liberation game were appeasing Saddam as members of the Reagan-Bush
administration in the 1980s, supplying him with aid and even weapons of
mass destruction, and protecting him against any threats of sanctions
while he was viewed as serviceable to US aims.
Today the Free Press is refusing to look beneath the
claim of an intention to grant “sovereignty” and to transfer power to
Iraqis on June 30th, to see the ways in which a US military presence and
veto power and constraints on the Iraq constitution and law would give
this country continued domination. And once again, while US deaths in
Iraq are solemnly recorded and read at the close of The NewsHour with
Jim Lehrer, the numbers of Iraqis killed or injured are hard to
determine and their injuries and pain are shown on Al Jazeera but not in
the US mainstream media.
The United States has wielded a heavy hand in Iraq,
shooting people with minimal provocation, engaging in systematic
assassinations of perceived foes, seizing and abusing thousands based on
rumor and little evidence and keeping them incommunicado, trying
crudely to dominate the media and political process, bringing in large
numbers of foreign mercenaries from Chile and elsewhere to help police
Iraq, and doing very poorly in meeting basic Iraqi needs as regards
water, health care, electricity, food, jobs, and security.
By its heavy hand, and growing Iraqi recognition of
its intention to dominate, the United States has stoked an insurgency
that has been growing by leaps and bounds. The only Bush administration
answer to this development is the application of more force. When
applied to a revolt deeply rooted in the civilian population this means
counterinsurgency war, with lavish use of deadly weapons, and therefore
escalating civilian casualties. So, added on to an initial war of
aggression we are now descending into a war of pacification. This will
involve a further destruction of Iraq in order to save it — for Western
ends and to save the Bush election campaign.
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