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Now It Can Be Told . . . After All the Harm Has Been Done

by Norman Solomon
All the news that's fit to delay
This week, the New York Times reported that the U.S. government made war in Afghanistan while helping to “recruit, train and pay for lawless bands of militias that pillaged homes and laid waste to entire communities.” Those militias “tortured civilians, kidnapped for ransom, massacred dozens in vendetta killings and razed entire villages, sowing more than a decade of hatred toward the Afghan government and its American allies.” Written by a former Kabul bureau chief for the Times, the article appeared under a headline saying that “U.S.-backed militias” in Afghanistan were “worse than the Taliban.”

Now they tell us.

The new reporting made me think of a chapter in my book War Made Invisible titled “Now It Can Be Told.” Here’s an excerpt:

* * * * *

Timing is crucial in media and politics -- and never more so than when war is at stake. It’s completely unsatisfactory for journalists to toe the war line for years and then finally report, in effect: Now it can be told -- years too late.

Virtually the entire U.S. media establishment gave full-throated support to the U.S. attack on Afghanistan in early October 2001. Twenty years later, many of the same outlets were saying the war was ill-conceived and doomed from the start.

Immediately after the invasion of Iraq began in March 2003, with very few exceptions, even the mainstream news organizations that had been expressing trepidation or opposition swung into line to support the war effort. Two decades later, many of the same media outlets were calling the invasion of Iraq the worst U.S. foreign-policy blunder in history.

But such framing evades the structural mendacity that remains built into the military-industrial complex, with its corporate media and political wings. War is so normalized that its casualties, as if struck by acts of God, are routinely viewed as victims without victimizers, perhaps no more aggrieved than people suffering the consequences of bad weather.

What American policymakers call mistakes and errors are, for others, more aptly described with words like catastrophes and atrocities. Attributing the U.S. wars to faulty judgment -- not premeditated and hugely profitable aggression -- is expedient, setting the policy table for supposed resolve to use better judgment next time rather than challenging the presumed prerogative to attack another country at will.

When the warfare in Afghanistan finally ended, major U.S. media -- after avidly supporting the invasion and then the occupation -- were awash in accounts of how the war had been badly run with ineptitude or deception from the White House and the Pentagon. Some of the media analysis and commentaries might have seemed a bit sheepish, but news outlets preferred not to recall their prior support for the same war in Afghanistan that they were now calling folly.

A pattern of regret (not to say repentance or remorse) emerged from massive U.S. outlays for venture militarism that failed to triumph in Afghanistan and Iraq, but there is little evidence that the underlying repetition compulsion disorder has been exorcized from America’s foreign-policy leadership or major news media, let alone its political economy. On the contrary: the forces that have dragged the United States into an array of wars in numerous countries still retain enormous sway over foreign and military affairs. For those forces, over time, shape-shifting is essential, while the warfare state continues to rule.

The fact that strategies and forms of intervention are evolving, most conspicuously in the direction of further reliance on airpower rather than ground troops, makes the victims of the USA’s firepower even less visible to American eyes. This presents a challenge to take a fresh look at ongoing militarism and insist that the actual consequences for people at the other end of U.S. weaponry be exposed to the light of day -- and taken seriously in human terms.

Despite all that has happened since President George W. Bush vowed in mid-September 2001 to “rid the world of the evil-doers,” pivotal issues have been largely dodged by dominant U.S. media and political leaders. The toll that red-white-and-blue militarism takes on other countries is not only a matter of moral principles. The United States is also in jeopardy.

That we live in one interdependent world is no longer debatable. Illusions about American exceptionalism have been conclusively refuted by the global climate emergency and the Covid-19 pandemic, along with the ever-present and worsening dangers of thermonuclear war. On a planet so circular in so many ways, what goes around comes around.

____________________________

Norman Solomon is the national director of RootsAction.org and executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy. His latest book, War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine , was published in paperback this fall with a new afterword about the Gaza war.
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by Leon Kunstenaar
Let us not forget that there is a purpose for the massive US military establishment and endless wars against weaker countries.

The establishment works in order to the keep the population in a permanent state of anxiety about external "threats." To make the population accept the ongoing plundering of the nation's wealth by an all encompassing arms industry, "we" must be continually at or prepared for war.

As explained in Orwell's "1984", these wars and menaces must not necessarily be won or defeated, they just need to keep going. Even while loosing in Iraq, Viet Nam, and Afghanistan, the results still furthered US aims. While those countries were devastated and many tens of thousands slaughtered, they paid the heavy price for daring to attempt going outside the world's economic order as defined by the United States. They are now back in the fold. Iraq is an unstable failed state and Viet Nam has sweat shops making cheap clothing for Costco.

Note that when the Soviet Union collapsed it became difficult to keep framing Russia as a menace. However, now Russia is once against a threat, having conveniently invaded Ukraine. This was brilliantly brought about by pushing a hostile nuclear armed military alliance, NATO, up to Russia's borders. As usual, the consequent horrors inflicted on the local population, while useful to demonize Russia, are really of no consequence.

Chinese hostility over Taiwan provides another useful "threat". This, however is a more difficult nut to crack. It might not be that easy to keep most Americans up at night worrying about what happens on China's borders. Also, China's wealth is similar to that of the US and its military strength is in the same league. Washington's warmongers will need to be careful.

The Middle East genocide is working out just fine. Israel remains a top notch and expanding market for US weaponry, courtesy of the US taxpayer. It's successful rampage through Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon and now Syria will need to be maintained by US arms for a long time. Iran, the only potential source of meaningful help to Palestine has been weakened and Russia is fully occupied in Ukraine.

Interestingly, as calamitous as Trump is for the little that is left of democracy in the US, his childlike ignorance of how the US works, combined with his single minded goal of personal enrichment, will accommodate Russia as he sells out both the American and Ukrainian people.

The rising power of the BRICS nations. which include both Russia and Iran, might finally constrain our military industrial political complex. If we all don't blow up the world or destroy the climate first.
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