blog article: A Self-Defeating War

topic posted Sat, September 30, 2006 - 8:08 PM by  libramoon
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George Soros
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09.29.2006
A Self-Defeating War

The war on terror is a false metaphor that has led to counterproductive and self-defeating policies. Five years after 9/11, a misleading figure of speech applied literally has unleashed a real war fought on several fronts -- Iraq, Gaza, Lebanon, Afghanistan, Somalia -- a war that has killed thousands of innocent civilians and enraged millions around the world.

Yet al Qaeda has not been subdued and, as our intelligence agencies have been telling President Bush, the terrorist threat has actually increased.

Unfortunately, the "war on terror" metaphor was uncritically accepted by the American public as the obvious response to 9/11. It is now widely admitted that the invasion of Iraq was a blunder. Yet the war on terror remains the frame into which American policy has to fit. Most Democratic politicians subscribe to it for fear of being tagged as weak on defense. The "alternative treatment" of terrorist support has just been codified by Congress.

What makes the war on terror self-defeating?

• First, war by its very nature creates innocent victims. A war waged against terrorists is even more likely to claim innocent victims because terrorists tend to keep their whereabouts hidden. The deaths, injuries and humiliation of civilians generate rage and resentment among their families and communities that in turn serves to build support for terrorists.

• Second, terrorism is an abstraction. It lumps together all political movements that use terrorist tactics. Al Qaeda, Hamas, Hezbollah, the Sunni insurrection and the Mahdi army in Iraq are very different forces, but President Bush's global war on terror prevents us from differentiating between them and dealing with them accordingly.

• Third, the war on terror emphasizes military action while most territorial conflicts require political solutions. And, as the British have shown by foiling a plan to blow up to ten airplanes, terrorists are best dealt with by good intelligence. The war on terror increases the terrorist threat and makes the task of the intelligence agencies more difficult. Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri are still at large; we need to focus on finding them, and preventing attacks like the one foiled in England.

• Fourth, the war on terror drives a wedge between "us" and "them." We are innocent victims. They are perpetrators. But we fail to notice that we also become perpetrators in the process; the rest of the world, however, does notice. That is how such a wide gap has arisen between America and much of the world.

Taken together, these four factors ensure that the war on terror cannot be won. An endless war waged against an unseen enemy is doing great damage to our power and prestige abroad and to our open society at home. It has led to a dangerous extension of executive powers; it has tarnished our adherence to universal human rights; it has inhibited the critical process that is at the heart of an open society; and it has cost a lot of money. Most importantly, it has diverted attention from other urgent tasks that require American leadership, such as finishing the job we so correctly began in Afghanistan, addressing the looming global energy crisis, and dealing with nuclear proliferation.

With American influence at low ebb, the world is in danger of sliding into a vicious circle of escalating violence. We can escape it only if we Americans repudiate the war on terror as a false metaphor. If we persevere on the wrong course, the situation will continue to deteriorate. It is not our will that is being tested, but our understanding of reality. It is painful to admit that our current predicaments are brought about by our own misconceptions. However, not admitting it is bound to prove even more painful in the long run. The strength of an open society lies in its ability to recognize and correct its mistakes. That is the test that confronts us.
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  • Re: blog article: A Self-Defeating War

    Mon, October 2, 2006 - 12:33 AM
    The fact is that the same guys tried this same trick in the 80s under Reagan and Bush 41 and it failed then, principly because the Congress wasn't completely controlled by the Republican Party machine like it is right now.

    My feeling is that a substantial minority (I'm really hoping this is true, mind you...it might not be) of Republican Congressmen are cogs caught in a political party system that is more and more run by monied neo-fascists, not by legal principle or a sense of moral obligation beyond where the next deal leading to a campaign contribution is coming from. Of course, Congress has always been corrupt...it's just that in this case, the corruption is present in the executive branch of the Federal Administration, not just Congress, and possibly the judiciary...I mean a defeat was handed to the President on a slim majority when it comes to holding people indefinitely by the US Supreme Court...but that might not always be the case. Basically, the most powerful politician in the land, the US President, is training the people, us citizens, to live in fear and that is having a detrimental effect on who votes for whom and why, how people in law enforcement, in the legal system actually think...they begin to see self-interest and safety, mythical safety, in thuggery. It's brainwashing...and, I daresay, it's being carried out by folks who either directly had a hand in or were handed the techniques from folks that did directly have a hand in fomenting Vietnam, in putting the Shah in power in Iran, in destabilizing Allende in Chile, in the right-wing death squads in Central America. These are people who use power to obfuscate their crimes and criminal, amoral natures, not to better humanity, not to listen and adjust to changing circumstances, but to maintain and promulgate their own unchecked power.

    To do that, they need fear, they need war, they feed off it...and it's becoming stinkingly clear that they will continue to do so unless either 1) the United States electorate takes action, or 2) significant international forces form to oppose them and the thugs cave, 3) they win through smothering all opposition, or 4) ??? Note that only #1 is the only alternative known to be relatively pleasant.
    • Re: blog article: A Self-Defeating War

      Mon, October 2, 2006 - 7:57 AM
      George Washington said it best in his farewell address back in 1796:
      "The alternate domination of one faction over another, sharpened by the spirit of revenge, natural to party dissension, which in different ages and countries has perpetrated the most horrid enormities, is itself a frightful despotism. But this leads at length to a more formal and permanent despotism. The disorders and miseries which result gradually incline the minds of men to seek security and repose in the absolute power of an individual; and sooner or later the chief of some prevailing faction, more able or more fortunate than his competitors, turns this disposition to the purposes of his own elevation, on the ruins of public liberty."

      In short, he had the foresight to recognize that a two party system would most likely destroy this great nation of ours... because he was willing to actually "think about it" and reach his own conclusions. In our current mode, if you can't cram it onto a bumber sticker, nobody wants to read it.

      [Basically, the most powerful politician in the land, the US President, is training the people, us citizens, to live in fear and that is having a detrimental effect on who votes for whom and why, how people in law enforcement, in the legal system actually think...they begin to see self-interest and safety, mythical safety, in thuggery.]

      This is OUR OWN FAULT in nearly every respect. The President is complicit as the puppet master, yes, but the media outlets have been the primary weapon. WE HAVE THE POWER TO LOOK AWAY and yet we refuse. (Probably because that gal with gorgeous tits is on there repeatedly, convincing us to buy shit we cannot afford, and don't need, to impress folks we don't even know or like!) In the co-opting and re-defining of a couple of words, they have manipulated us masterfully. Most Americans hear the word "liberal" and think California pinko-commie faggots... while the word Conservative evokes thoughts of upstanding church folks. This just isn't the way these words aught to be used. A liberal will see a piece of legislation that, for example, might put lots of cash in his pocket or provide some other personal reward, and think no futher - (s)he will simply vote yes. A conservative, on the other hand, will recognize the potential benefit to the self, but also examine how it impacts everyone else... if his neighbor is gonna take it in the ass over the bill, he will vote against it.

      Try an experiement:
      For the remainder of this calendar year, when you hear the word "Liberal", translate it internally into the word "narcissist", while translating the word "Conservative" to the phrase "one who thinks things through". Then, see if the particular demographic being described by the twit reading the teleprompter matches this new meaning. I bet in most cases, the roles are reversed.

      Freedom is not free - and the reality is that we have to be _willing_ to give something up (and not just cold hard cash or a deeping deficit) in order to keep it. Nothin from nothin leaves nothin - so giving up essential liberties in a hope to obtain more liberty leaves, you guessed it, nothin! What are we willing to give up, in order to rectify this mess?
  • Re: blog article: A Self-Defeating War

    Mon, October 2, 2006 - 2:45 PM
    Wow, this is another interesting article - Torture Bill States Non-Allegiance To Bush Is Terrorism

    Buried amongst the untold affronts to the Bill of Rights, the Constitution and the very spirit of America, the torture bill contains a definition of "wrongfully aiding the enemy" which labels all American citizens who breach their "allegiance" to President Bush and the actions of his government as terrorists subject to possible arrest, torture and conviction in front of a military tribunal.

    www.informationliberation.com/index.php
    • Re: blog article: A Self-Defeating War

      Mon, October 2, 2006 - 4:22 PM
      "That renders the entire 9/11 truth movement an aid to terrorist suspects and subject to military tribunal and torture. In addition, Bush's recently cited National Strategy for Combating Terrorism, which is available on the White House website, labels conspiracy theorists as terrorist recruiters."

      Related link:

      www.prisonplanet.com/article...ters.htm
      • Re: blog article: A Self-Defeating War

        Mon, October 2, 2006 - 8:53 PM
        Why does all of this remind me of "Bill Cosby as Himself" back in the 70's?

        You know the bit I'm talking about?

        I asked my friend, "What is it with the Cocaine?" "Hrm... it intensifies your personality."
        I said, "Yes, but what if you're an asshole?"

        Something tells me our current dictator sampled a lot more of this in his day - and his bathing in the blood of hey zeus doesn't appear to have washed it off.

        /me shakes his head, and ponders a life of seclusion in New Zealand.

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