UNITED STATES: The world's leading rogue state
BY JOHN PILGER
LONDON — For 101 days, British Royal Marines
have been engaged in a farcical operation as mercenaries of the United States,
whose lawlessness now qualifies it as the world's leading rogue state.
Shooting at shadows, and the occasional tribespeople,
blowing up mounds of dirt and displaying “captured” arms for the media, all
have been part of the marines' humiliating role in Afghanistan — a role foisted
upon them by the British Labour government of Prime Minister Tony Blair, whose
deference to and collusion with the Bush gang has become a parody of the
imperial courtier.
Gang is not an exaggeration. The word, in my dictionary, means “a group of
people working together for criminal, disreputable ends”. That accurately
describes US President George Bush and those who write his speeches and make
his decisions and who, since their rise to power, have undermined the very
basis of international law.
In Afghanistan,
their record is beyond question. The killing on July 1 of more than 40 guests
at a wedding was not a “blunder” but the direct result of a policy of shoot and
bomb first and find out later, as announced by Bush in the weeks following
September 11.
The capacity of the US
military machine to smash impoverished countries was never in dispute —
conditional, that is, on the absence of US ground troops and their substitution
by “allied” forces, like the Royal Marines. (During the heyday of the British
Empire, Indian and other colonial troops were used in a similar
role, although the British, unlike the Americans, were also prepared to
sacrifice their own soldiers).
Since last October, Afghan leaders have reported US aircraft destroying
villages “too small to be marked on any map” with “more than 300 people killed”
in one night. In a family of 40, only a small boy and his grandmother survived,
reported Richard Lloyd Parry of the Independent.
Out of sight of the television cameras “at least 3767 civilians were killed
by US bombs between October 7 and December 10 ... an average of 62 innocent
deaths a day”, according to a study carried out at the University
of New Hampshire in the US.
This is now estimated to have passed 5000 civilian deaths — almost double the
number killed on September 11.
There is no evidence that a single leader of al Qaeda
has been captured or, to anyone's knowledge, killed. Neither has the leader of
the Taliban. The change in Afghanistan
is minimal compared with the murderous feudalism that ruled during the 1990s,
and before the Taliban came to power.
For all the cosmetic changes in Kabul,
the capital, women still dare not go unveiled. “The Taliban used to hang the
victim's body in public for four days”, quipped the new US-installed regime's
minister of justice. “We will only hang the body for a short time, say fifteen
minutes, after a public execution.”
Describing this as a “triumph of good over evil”, as Bush has said, with an
echo from Blair, is like lauding the superiority of the German war machine in
1940 as a vindication of Nazism.
Duped
Not only the marines but the British public ought to feel
duped. Both Washington and Whitehall
knew long ago al Qaeda was finished in Afghanistan.
Apart from the element of revenge, for home gratification, the Americans have
set out to reassert the control of their favourite warlords — people
responsible for thousands of deaths in their stricken country.
In October, the US
planned to install a regime dominated by members of the Pashtun
tribes, who, they predicted, would desert the Taliban. But the split in the
Taliban never happened and the Americans have since changed tack and tried to
put together a “coalition” of Tajik and Uzbek warlords. The current “interim
president”, Hamid Karzai,
although a Pashtun, has neither a tribal nor military
power base. He is simply America's
man.
The presence of the Royal Marines, leading the so-called International Security
Assistance Force, is for reasons straight out of the 19th century. At the
Americans' bidding, the marines were meant to keep the favoured warlords from
each other's throats until the region could be “stabilised” for US
oil and other strategic interests.
Potential vast energy sources in Central Asia have
become critical for the deeply troubled US
economy, and for the Bush administration, which is dominated by oil industry
interests, notably the Bush family itself. An investigation by the Hong
Kong-based Asia Times in January found that the US
was frantically developing “a network of multiple Caspian pipelines”.
The disgraced Enron Corporation, one of Bush's biggest campaign backers,
conducted a feasibility study for a US$2.5 billion oil pipeline being built
across the Caspian Sea. Top current and former US
officials, including vice-president Dick Cheney, “have
all closed major deals directly and indirectly on behalf of the oil companies”,
says the Asia Times.
If there was a map of US
military bases established in the region to fight “the war on terrorism” what
would be immediately striking is that it would follow almost exactly the route
of the projected oil pipeline to the Indian Ocean. Blair
and the voluble British defence secretary Geoffrey Hoon have, of course,
offered none of this vital information to the British people, let alone to the
British soldiers sent to play America's
imperial game. Fortunately, the troops suffered only gastric flu. The Afghan
people have not been as lucky.
Any doubt about the systematic murderous way the US military has operated in
Afghanistan is dispelled by a report in the US press in May of children gunned
down in wheat fields and as they slept. For four hours, US
helicopter gunships saturated the fields and a
village with bullets and rockets before landing to disgorge US troops who shot
survivors and detained other “suspects”.
In fact, the area was renowned for its opposition to the Taliban and the
governor of Oruzgan province confirmed that those
murdered “were ordinary people. There were no al-Qaeda or Taliban here”.
In recent months, the US
rogue state has torn up the Kyoto
treaty, which would decrease global warming and the probability of
environmental disaster. It has threatened to use nuclear weapons in “pre-emptive
strikes” (a threat echoed by Hoon). It has tried to sabotage the setting up of
an international criminal court, understandably, because its generals and
leading politicians might be summoned as defendants.
It has further undermined the authority of the United Nations by allowing Israel
to block a UN committee's investigation of the Israeli assault on the
Palestinian refugee camp at Jenin; and it has ordered
the Palestinians to get rid of their elected leader in favour of an American
stooge.
Desperate edge
It ignored the World Food Summit in Italy;
and at summit conferences in Canada
and Indonesia
it has blocked genuine aid, such as clean water and electricity, to the most
deprived people on earth. Proposals to increase US food subsidies by 80% are
designed to secure US
domination of the world food grains market. (“When we get up from the breakfast
table every morning”, said the chief executive of the Cargill corporation, the
world's biggest food company, “much of what we have eaten — cereals, bread, coffee,
sugar and so on — has passed through the lands of my company”. Cargill's goal
is to double in size every five to seven years.)
There is a desperate edge to most of America's
rogue actions. The Christian “free market” fundamentalists running Washington
are worried. The US
current account deficit is running at a record US$34 billion. Foreign purchases
of the huge US
debt are falling rapidly. The US
stock market is heavily over-valued, and the dollar is uncertain.
As one commentator has put it, the “Bush doctrine” looks like “one last
attempt to order the world entirely around the requirements of US
monopoly capital, before it can long hope to do so”.
In other words, this may well be the last throw of the dice before the US
economy goes into serious decline. This means controlling the oil and fossil
fuel riches in Central Asia. It means attacking Iraq,
installing a replacement Saddam Hussein and taking over the world's
second-largest source of oil.
It means surrounding a new economic challenger, China,
with bases, and intimidating the leaders of its principal economic rival, Europe,
by undermining NATO, and setting off a trade war.
I have just visited the US,
and it is clear many people there are worried. And many dare not say so. Their
views are seldom reported in the American mainstream media, which is
self-censored and controlled, perhaps as never before.
Instead, the air is thick with the views of the likes of Charles Krauthammer
of the Washington Post. “Unilateralism is the key to our success”, he
wrote, in describing the world of the next 50 years — a world without
protection from nuclear attack or environmental damage for the citizens of any
country except the United States; a world where “democracy” means nothing if
its benefits are at odds with US “interests”; a world in which to express
dissent against these “interests” brands one a terrorist and justifies
surveillance and repression.
There is only one way such rogue power can be resisted. It is by speaking
out and urgently. If our governments won't, we must.
[From <http://www.johnpilger.com>.]
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