The Global War of Error
No, That’s Not a Typo
By Tom Engelhardt
Yes, our infrastructure stinks, our schools are failing, this country’s a nightmare of inequality,
and there’s a self-promoting madman in the White House, so isn’t it
time to take pride in the rare institutional victories America has had
in this century? Arguably, none has been more striking than the
triumphal success of the American war system.
Oh, you’re going to bring that up immediately? Okay, you're
right. It’s true enough that the U.S. military can’t win a war anymore.
In this century, it’s never come out on top anywhere, not once, not
definitively. And yes, just to get a step ahead of you, everywhere it's
set foot across the Greater Middle East and Africa, it seems to have killed startling numbers of people and uprooted
so many more, sending lots of them into exile and so unsettling other
parts of the world as well. In the process, it’s also had remarkable
success spreading failed states and terror groups far and wide.
Al-Qaeda, whose 19 suicidal hijackers
so devastatingly struck this country on September 11, 2001, was just a
modest outfit then (even if its leader dreamt of drawing the U.S. into
conflicts across the Islamic world that would promote his group big
time). Nineteen years later, its branches have spread from Yemen to West Africa, while the original al-Qaeda still exists.
And don’t forget its horrific progeny, the Islamic State, or ISIS
(originally al-Qaeda in Iraq). Though the U.S. military has declared it
defeated in its “caliphate” (it isn’t, not truly), its branches have multiplied from the Philippines deep into Africa.
And the Afghan War, that original American invasion of this
century, remains hell on Earth more than 18 years later. In December,
the Washington Post broke a story
about interviews on that conflict conducted by the Special Inspector
General for Afghanistan Reconstruction with 400 key insiders, military
and civilian, revealing that it was a war of (well-grasped) error. As
that paper’s reporter, Craig Whitlock, put it: “Senior U.S. officials
failed to tell the truth about the war in Afghanistan throughout the
18-year campaign, making rosy pronouncements they knew to be false and
hiding unmistakable evidence the war had become unwinnable.”
Many of those generals and other officials who had claimed, year after year, that there was “progress” in Afghanistan, that the U.S. had turned yet another “corner,”
admitted to the Inspector General’s interviewers that they had been
lying to the rest of us. In truth, so long after the invasion of 2001,
this wasn’t exactly news (not if you had been paying attention anyway).
And it couldn’t have been more historically familiar. After all, U.S.
military commanders and other key officials had, in a similar fashion,
regularly hailed “progress” in the Vietnam War years, too. As U.S. war
commander General William Westmoreland put it
in an address to the National Press Club in 1967, “We have reached an
important point where the end begins to come into view,” a sentiment
later boiled down by American officialdom to seeing “the light at the end of the tunnel.”
In fact, half a century later, these, too, have proved to be
tunnel years for the U.S. military in its global war on terror, which
might more accurately be called a global war of error. Take Iraq, the
country that, in the spring of 2003, President George W. Bush and crew
so triumphantly invaded, claiming a connection between its autocratic ruler, Saddam Hussein, and al-Qaeda, while citing the dangers of the weapons of mass destruction
he supposedly possessed. Both claims were, of course, fantasies
propagated by officials dreaming of using that invasion to establish a Pax Americana in the oil-rich Middle East forever and a day. (“Mission accomplished!”)
Click here to read more of this dispatch. https://www.tomdispatch.com/post/176648/tomgram%3A_engelhardt%2C_victory_at_last%21/#more
No comments:
Post a Comment