Obama And The Empire
by William Blum
The New Yorker magazine in its July 14 issue ran a cover cartoon that achieved instant fame. It showed Barack Obama wearing Muslim garb in the Oval Office with a portrait of Osama bin Laden on the wall. Obama is delivering a fist bump to his wife, Michelle, who has an Afro hairdo and an assault rifle slung over her shoulder. An American flag lies burning in the fireplace. The magazine says it's all satire, a parody of the crazy right-wing fears, rumors, and scare tactics about Obama's past and ideology.
The cartoon makes fun of the idea that Barack and Michelle Obama are some kind of mixture of Black Panther, Islamist jihadist, and Marxist revolutionary. But how much more educational for the American public and the world it would be to make fun of the idea that Obama is even some kind of progressive.
I'm more concerned here with foreign policy than domestic issues
because it's in this area that the US government can do, and indeed
does do, the most harm to the world, to put it mildly. And in this area
what do we find?
We find Obama threatening, several times, to attack
Iran if they don't do what the United States wants them to do
nuclear-wise; threatening more than once to attack Pakistan if their
anti-terrorist policies are not tough enough or if there would be a
regime change in the nuclear-armed country not to his liking; calling
for a large increase in US troops and tougher policies for Afghanistan;
wholly and unequivocally embracing Israel as if it were the 51st state;
totally ignoring Hamas, an elected ruling party in the occupied
territory; decrying the Berlin Wall in his recent talk in that city,
about the safest thing a politician can do, but with no mention of the
Israeli Wall while in Israel, nor the numerous American-built walls in
Baghdad while in Iraq; referring to the Venezuelan government of Hugo
Chávez as "authoritarian", but never referring similarly to the
government of George W. Bush, certainly more deserving of the label;
talking with the usual disinformation and hostility about Cuba, albeit
with a token reform re: visits and remittances. But would he dare
mention the outrageous case of the imprisoned Cuban Five[1] in his
frequent references to fighting terrorism?
While an Illinois
state senator in January 2004, Obama declared that it was time "to end
the embargo with Cuba" because it had "utterly failed in the effort to
overthrow Castro." But speaking as a presidential candidate to a
Cuban-American audience in Miami in August 2007, he said he would not
"take off the embargo" as president because it is "an important
inducement for change."[2] He thus went from a good policy for the
wrong reason to the wrong policy for the wrong reason. Does Mr. Obama
care any more than Mr. Bush that the United Nations General Assembly
has voted -- virtually unanimously -- 16 years in a row against the
embargo?
In summary, it would be difficult to name a single ODE
(Officially Designated Enemy) that Obama has not been critical of, or
to name one that he has supported. Can this be mere coincidence?
The
fact that Obama says he's willing to "talk" to some of the "enemies"
more than the Bush administration has done sounds good, but one doesn't
have to be too cynical to believe that it will not amount to more than
a public relations gimmick. It's only change of policy that counts. Why
doesn't he simply and clearly state that he would not attack Iran
unless Iran first attacked the US or Israel or anyone else?
As
to Iraq, if you're sick to the core of your being about the horrors US
policy brings down upon the heads of the people of that unhappy land,
then you must support withdrawal –- immediate, total, all troops,
combat and non-combat, all the Blackwater-type killer contractors, not
moved to Kuwait or Qatar to be on call. All bases out. No permanent
bases. No permanent war. No timetables. No approval by the US military
necessary. No reductions in forces. Just OUT. ALL. Just like what the
people of Iraq want. Nothing less will give them the opportunity to try
to put an end to the civil war and violence instigated by the American
invasion and occupation and to recreate their failed state.
George W. Bush, 2006:
- "We're going to stay in Iraq to get the job done as long as the government wants us there."[3]
George W. Bush, 2007:
- "It's their government's choice. If they were to say, leave, we would leave."[4]
Iraqi
National Security Adviser Mowaffak al-Rubaie, 2008:
- "said his
government was 'impatiently waiting' for the complete withdrawal of
U.S. troops."[5]
Barack Obama, 2008:
- [We can] "redeploy combat
brigades from Iraq at a pace of 1 to 2 brigades a month that would
remove them in 16 months."[6]
Obama's terms of withdrawal equals
no withdrawal. Literally. Has he ever said that the war is
categorically illegal and immoral? A war crime? Or that anti-American
terrorism in the world is the direct result of oppressive US policies?
Instead he calls for a troop increase and "the first truly 21st century
military ... We must maintain the strongest, best-equipped military in
the world."[7] Why of course, that's what the people of the United
States and the people of Iraq and Afghanistan and the rest of the
people in this sad world desperately desire and need -- greater
American killing power! Obama is not so much concerned with ending
America's endless warfare as he is with "succeeding" in them, by
whatever perverted definition of that word.
And has he ever
dared to raise the obvious question: Why would Iran, even if nuclear
armed, be a threat to attack the US or Israel? Any more than Iraq was
such a threat. Which was zero. Instead, he has said things like "Iran
continues to be a major threat" and repeats the tiresome lie that the
Iranian president called for the destruction of Israel.[8]
Obama,
one observer has noted, "opposes the present US policy in Iraq not on
the basis of any principled opposition to neo-colonialism or aggressive
war, but rather on the grounds that the Iraq war is a mistaken
deployment of power that fails to advance the global strategic
interests of American imperialism."[9]
He and his supporters
have made much of the speech he delivered in the Illinois state
legislature in 2002 against the upcoming US invasion of Iraq. But two
years later, when he was running for the US Senate, he declared:
- "There's not that much difference between my position and George Bush's
position at this stage."[10]
Since taking office in January 2005, he
has voted to approve every war appropriation the Republicans have put
forward. He also voted to confirm Condoleezza Rice as Secretary of
State despite her complicity in the Bush Administration's false
justifications for going to war in Iraq. In doing so, he lacked the
courage of 12 of his Democratic Party Senate colleagues who voted
against her confirmation.
If you're one of those who would like
to believe that Obama has to present moderate foreign policy views to
be elected, but once he's in the White House we can forget that he lied
to us repeatedly and the true, progressive man of peace and
international law and human rights will emerge ... keep in mind that as
a US Senate candidate in 2004 he threatened missile strikes against
Iran[11], and winning that election apparently did not put him in touch
with his inner peacenik.
When, in 2005, the other Illinois
Senator, Dick Durbin, stuck his neck out and compared American torture
at Guantanamo to:
- "Nazis, Soviets in their gulags, or some mad regime --
Pol Pot or others -- that had no concern for human beings", and was
angrily denounced by the right wing, Obama stood up in the Senate and
... defended him? No, he joined the critics, thrice calling Durbin's
remark a "mistake".[12]
One of Obama's chief foreign policy
advisers is Zbigniew Brzezinski, a man instrumental in provoking Soviet
intervention in Afghanistan in 1979, which was followed by massive US
military supplies to the opposition and widespread war. This gave rise
to a generation of Islamic jihadists, the Taliban, Osama bin Laden, al
Qaeda, and more than two decades of anti-American terrorism. Asked
later if he had any regrets about this policy, Brzezinski replied:
- "Regret what? That secret operation was an excellent idea. It had the
effect of drawing the Russians into the Afghan trap and you want me to
regret it? The day that the Soviets officially crossed the border, I
wrote to President Carter, in substance: We now have the opportunity of
giving to the USSR its Vietnam war."[13]
Another prominent Obama
adviser -- from a list entirely and depressingly establishment-imperial
-- is Madeleine Albright, who should always wear gloves because her
hands are caked with blood from her roles in the bombings of Iraq and
Yugoslavia in the 1990s.
In a primary campaign talk in March,
Obama said that "he would return the country to the more 'traditional'
foreign policy efforts of past presidents, such as George H.W. Bush,
John F. Kennedy and Ronald Reagan."[14] Use your imagination. Bloody
serial interventionists, all.
Why have well-known conservatives
like George Will, David Brooks, Rush Limbaugh, Joe Scarborough, and
others spoken so favorably about Obama's candidacy?[15] Whatever else,
they know he's not a threat to their most cherished views and values.
Given
all this, can we expect a more enlightened, less bloody, more
progressive and humane foreign policy from Mr. Barack Obama? Forget the
alleged eloquence and charm; forget the warm feel-good stuff; forget
the interminable clichés and platitudes about hope, change, unity, and
America's indispensable role as world leader; forget all the
religiobabble; forget John McCain and George W. Bush ... All that
counts is putting an end to the horror -- the bombings, the invasions,
the killings, the destruction, the overthrows, the occupations, the
torture, the American Empire.
Al Gore and John Kerry both took
the progressive vote for granted. Neither had ever been particularly
progressive themself. Each harbored a measure of disdain for the left.
Both paid a heavy price for the neglect. I and millions like me voted
for Ralph Nader, or some other third-party candidate, or stayed home.
Obama is doing the same as Gore and Kerry. Progressives should let him
know that his positions are not acceptable, keeping up the anti-war
pressure on him and the Democratic Party at every opportunity. For
whatever good it just might do.
I'm afraid that if Barack Obama becomes president he's going to break a lot of young hearts. And some older ones as well.
Writer
Norman Solomon has written:
- "These days, an appreciable number of Obama
supporters are starting to use words like "disillusionment." But that's
a consequence of projecting their political outlooks onto the candidate
in the first place. The best way to avoid becoming disillusioned is to
not have illusions in the first place."
William
Blum is the author of: Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions
Since World War 2, Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower,
West-Bloc Dissident: A Cold War Memoir, Freeing the World to Death:
Essays on the American Empire, Portions of the books can be read, and
signed copies purchased, at www.killinghope.org
NOTES
[1] William Blum, "Cuban Political Prisoners ... in the United States" -- http://members.aol.com/bblum6/polpris.htm
[2] Washington Post, February 25, 2008; p.A4
[3] New York Times. December 1, 2006, p.1
[4] White House press conference, May 24, 2007
[5] Washington Post, July 9, 2008
[6] Obama's website: www.barackobama.com/issues/iraq/
[7] Speech to the Chicago Council on Global Affairs, April 23, 2007
[8] Haaretz.com (leading Israeli newspaper), May 16, 2007
[9] Bill Van Auken, Global Research, July 18, 2008 -- http://www.globalresearch.ca/
[10] Chicago Tribune, July 27, 2004
[11] Chicago Tribune, September 25, 2004
[12] Congressional Record, June 21, 2005, p.S6897
[13] For the full Brzezinski interview see http://members.aol.com/bblum6/brz.htm
[14] Associated Press, March 28, 2008
[15] See, for example, Peter Wehner, "Why Republicans Like Obama", Washington Post, February 3, 2008, p.B7
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