|
By
Charles Sullivan
The master’s tools will never dismantle the master’s house.
--Andre Lorde
It should surprise no one that the United States invasion and
occupation of Iraq four years ago was based upon lies and
fabricated evidence. Other wars instigated by the U.S. were begun
in the same way, but we never seem to learn the lessons that
history could teach us. The purpose of the U.S. invasion was not
to free the Iraqi people or to spread democracy (when has the
government ever done that?); it was to privatize the natural
wealth of the region and to transfer ownership from the Iraqi
pubic domain to the coffers of U.S. corporations. We have a long
and shameful history of imperial invasions and occupations, and no
experience building democracies.
The United States Middle East policy is also intended to suppress
the enemies of radical Zionism and to extend Zionist control of
the region, as well as to prop up the sagging U.S. dollar against
the strengthening euro. It is the continuation of Manifest
Destiny; the foolish but stubborn believe that Americans are
superior to everyone else; what historian Howard Zinn refers to as
American exceptionalism.
Manifest Destiny and the spread of capitalism go hand in hand. The
growth of the military industrial complex requires imperial
conquests and continuous expansion—an impossibility on a finite
planet. We have yet to learn that wherever reality clashes with
economic myth, reality prevails.
The Pentagon, which is the iron fist of American capitalism,
requires enemies in order to justify its vast expenditures to an
unquestioning public, even if it has to invent them. In the past
those enemies were the spread of communism and socialism, which
were a threat only to Plutocratic rule, not to the American people
themselves. Now the danger is as cryptic and ubiquitous as state
propaganda—the exaggerated threat of Islamic terrorism.
I do not contend that there is no real threat of terrorism against
U.S. citizens. I do, however, assert that those threats remain
small and are a direct response to unjust U.S. foreign policy,
including the Israeli occupation of Palestine.
It is important to understand that the interest of the people and
the government are always in conflict. The will of the people has
never mattered to the ruling clique, as evidenced by the ongoing
occupation of Iraq, despite overwhelming public opposition. What
matters to America’s rulers is the acquisition of private wealth
through war and expansionism. The ruling elite have never
hesitated to sacrifice the lives of our soldiers and workers for
imperial ambitions, or to sanction the deliberate killing of
innocent civilians in unknowable numbers.
It is equally important to understand that imperial wars are a
product of capitalism. A core element of capitalism is the unequal
distribution of wealth and political power in which a small cadre
of owners can literally purchase political power. The very wealthy
are never satiated. They never have enough. They have ambition.
They are driven. They want more. They want it all. Their dream is
to rule the world and privatize its wealth. To aid them in their
quest the language of patriotism and religion are evoked to stir
the public emotions and to inspire hatred and contempt. The people
will be told that we are under siege by the forces of evil, even
as terror emanates from the nation’s capital like spokes
radiating from the center of a wheel.
America’s imperial wars will continue until capitalism is
abolished and replaced by a more just and equitable system—a for
use, rather than for profit economy.
The architects of the invasion of Iraq would have us believe that
U.S. Middle East policy is a complex matter that is best left to
high minded experts. In fact, it is a fantastically simple matter
that can easily be understood by anyone having a conscience, a
sense of justice; a moral compass. What it boils down to is simple
right and wrong. A five year old child can understand that but
imperial presidents and their cohorts in congress and industry
cannot.
A thing is wrong when its purpose is anything other than a desire
for justice. We need not make things more complicated than that. A
nation founded upon injustice will have a history of ethnic
cleansing, genocide, chattel slavery, racism, inequality, class
divisions, sexism, a suppressed work force, murder, and war—a
history very much like our own. Indeed, our history.
Injustice breeds fierce resistance that can never lead to peace,
as we are witnessing throughout the Middle East. The United States
will fail in Iraq because the government’s policies are not
driven by a desire for justice. Its purpose is not honorable or
principled; therefore, it will ultimately fail. It is wrong to
impose our will on other people. It is wrong to murder innocent
civilians. It is wrong to steal their wealth. It is wrong to
subjugate people and to exploit them as cheap labor.
Eventually Israel will be expelled from Palestine for the same
reasons—its cause (ethnic cleansing) is not only unjust—it is
immoral and criminal.
Will governments ever learn that it is not the physically
strongest who prevail, but the just? Were these not the teachings
of Dr. Martin Luther King, Henry Thoreau, and Gandhi?
Justice and morality do not enter into the economic equation of
capitalism. Neither does compassion, the rights of other people to
exist unmolested in their own belief systems, or equality. There
can be no peace without justice; no reckoning without a high
regard for truth. Our past speaks volumes about the probable
future.
We need not look very far into the past to realize what the future
holds. A better future demands that we act justly in the present.
Otherwise, the patterns of history will continue to repeat
themselves in endless cycles of death and violence, disparity and
suffering. We must stop putting our faith in politicians who serve
the plutocracy by exploiting the people, and a system that from
its inception was created to serve the wealthy and privileged.
Our policies are a continuous negative feedback loop that has
always produced consistent results. We cannot continue doing the
same thing over and over and expect to get different outcomes. The
fatal flaw is not in the administration of policy, it is in the
policy itself and the corrupt system that created them; a system
that is at its core unequal and unjust; and therefore, immoral.
A sound moral imperative should inform all that we do, and it must
have at its core a burning desire to see justice done and to help
others fulfill their promise. A strong moral imperative should be
the basis of cooperation between individuals and nations. Without
ethical moorings there can be no trust, no justice, and no peace.
It is as simple as cause and effect. We truly do reap what we sow.
Charles Sullivan is an architectural millwright, photographer, and
free-lance writer living in the Eastern Panhandle of West
Virginia. He welcomes your comments at: csullivan@phreego.com.
Source: ICH
|