With Attack on Yemen, the U.S. Is Shameless
Have you heard the one about the U.S. government wanting a “rules-based
international order”?
It’s grimly laughable, but the nation’s media outlets routinely take such
claims seriously and credulously. Overall, the default assumption is that
top officials in Washington are reluctant to go to war, and do so only as a
last resort.
The framing was typical when the New York Times just
printed
this sentence at the top of the front page: “The United States and a
handful of its allies on Thursday carried out military strikes against more
than a dozen targets in Yemen controlled by the Iranian-backed Houthi
militia, U.S. officials said, in an expansion of the war in the Middle East
that the Biden administration had sought to avoid for three months.”
So, from the outset, the coverage portrayed the U.S.-led attack as a
reluctant action -- taken after exploring all peaceful options had failed
-- rather than an aggressive act in violation of international law.
On Thursday, President Biden issued a
statement
that sounded righteous enough, saying “these strikes are in direct response
to unprecedented Houthi attacks against international maritime vessels in
the Red Sea.” He did not mention that the Houthi attacks have been in
response to Israel’s
murderous siege
of Gaza. In the
words
of CNN, they “could be intended to inflict economic pain on Israel’s allies
in the hope they will pressure it to cease its bombardment of the enclave.”
In fact, as Common Dreams
reported
, Houthi forces “began launching missiles and drones toward Israel and
attacking shipping traffic in the Red Sea in response to Israel’s Gaza
onslaught.” And as Trita Parsi at the Quincy Institute
pointed out
, “the Houthis have declared that they will stop” attacking ships in the
Red Sea “if Israel stops” its mass killing in Gaza.
But that would require genuine diplomacy -- not the kind of solution that
appeals to President Biden or Secretary of State Antony Blinken. The duo
has been enmeshed for decades, with lofty rhetoric masking the tacit
precept that might makes right. (The approach was implicit midway through
2002, when then-Senator Biden chaired the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee’s hearings that promoted support for the U.S. to invade Iraq; at
the time, Blinken was the committee’s chief of staff.)
Now, in charge of the State Department, Blinken is fond of touting the need
for a “rules-based international order.” During a 2022
speech
in Washington, he proclaimed the necessity “to manage relations between
states, to prevent conflict, to uphold the rights of all people.” Two
months ago, he
declared
that G7 nations were united for “a rules-based international order.”
But for more than three months, Blinken has provided a continuous stream of
facile rhetoric to support the ongoing methodical killing of Palestinian
civilians in Gaza. Days ago, behind a podium at the U.S. Embassy in Israel,
he
defended
that country despite
abundant evidence of genocidal warfare
, claiming that “the charge of genocide is meritless.”
The Houthis are avowedly in solidarity with Palestinian people, while the
U.S. government continues to
massively arm
the Israeli military that is massacring civilians and systematically
destroying Gaza. Blinken is so immersed in Orwellian messaging that --
several weeks into the slaughter -- he tweeted that the United States and
its G7 partners “stand united in our condemnation of Russia’s war in
Ukraine, in support of Israel’s right to defend itself in accordance with
international law, and in maintaining a rules-based international order.”
There’s nothing unusual about extreme doublethink being foisted on the
public by the people running U.S. foreign policy. What they perpetrate is a
good fit for the description of
doublethink
in George Orwell’s novel 1984: “To know and not to know, to be
conscious of complete truthfulness while telling carefully constructed
lies, to hold simultaneously two opinions which cancelled out, knowing them
to be contradictory and believing in both of them, to use logic against
logic, to repudiate morality while laying claim to it . . .”
After news broke about the attack on Yemen, a number of Democrats and
Republicans in the House quickly
spoke up
against Biden’s end-run around Congress, flagrantly
violating the Constitution
by going to war on his own say-so. Some of the comments were laudably
clear, but perhaps none more so than a
statement
by candidate Joe Biden on Jan. 6, 2020: “A president should never take this
nation to war without the informed consent of the American people.”
Like that disposable platitude, all the Orwellian nonsense coming from the
top of the U.S. government about seeking a “rules-based international
order” is nothing more than a brazen PR scam.
The vast quantity of official smoke-blowing now underway cannot hide the
reality that the United States government is the most powerful and
dangerous outlaw nation in the world.
_____________________________________
Norman Solomon is the national director of RootsAction.org and executive
director of the Institute for Public Accuracy. He is the author of many
books including War Made Easy. His latest book,
War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its
Military Machine
, was published in 2023 by The New Press.
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