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Alexander Cockburn
Alexander Cockburn
17 Feb 2012
Hypocrisy and Assad

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10 Feb 2012
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Fifty years ago, a group of students in the American Midwest issued a document rather portentously titled … Read More.

From Twin Towers to Twin Camelots

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The world falls in love with a charismatic young president, his stylish wife, and their charming young children. In the campaign for the presidency, he defeated his opponent in part by charging Republican failure in the war against America's enemies. In the dawn of his administration, this Harvard man musters strategic buttress from intellectuals bunkered in think tanks and academe, for a decisive escalation by which the foe will be routed. Counterinsurgency will go hand in hand with nation building. Corruption will be banished and local troops trained to shoulder the burden of the war.

To be sure, there are differences between Jack Kennedy's America in 1961 and Barack Obama's in 2009. At the start of the '60s, the U.S. economy in its productive phase hadn't crested. It was still on the way up to its peak in about 1969. The mantra was "guns and butter." In 1961, the best and the brightest, defeating Vietnamese guerillas in their Top Secret memos to Kennedy and his commanders, invoked Britain's defeat of the Communist insurgency in Malaya, courtesy of Frank Kitson's supposed counterinsurgency tactics and America's victory over the Huks in the Philippines, with Edward Lansdale claiming the achievement. In 2009, veterans' hospitals here offer bleak testimony that in Iraq, 150,000 U.S. troops, lavishly equipped with advanced weaponry, were held down for years in Iraq by the guerillas' rudimentary curbside explosives.

Woe betide a president who believes his own stump speeches. In his campaign, Obama outflanked charges initially from Hillary Clinton and then from John McCain that he was a peacenik and a wimp by declaring week after week that Iraq was the wrong battlefield, that the enemy was al-Qaida and their sanctuary Afghanistan. An excited vibrancy colored the community organizer's rhetoric as he spoke of his determination to "kill bin Laden."

Most people thought this pledge would get lobbed into the trashcan the moment McCain conceded. But no. On April 3, I drove down Interstate 5 through the early spring blossom in Oregon's Willamette Valley, listening to Obama on the radio marching through his schedule for escalation and victory in Afghanistan. He was born in the year JFK became president, but has this supposedly smart fellow not read a single decent history of the Vietnam War and of America's defeat? Apparently not. Otherwise, how could he blithely announce that "We will accelerate our efforts to build an Afghan Army of 134,000 and a police force of 82,000 so that we can meet these goals by 2011 ... Going forward, we will not blindly stay the course. Instead, we will set clear metrics to measure progress and hold ourselves accountable." Nothing perishes quicker in war than "clear metrics."

Significantly, Obama did not order a National Intelligence Estimate as he evolved his plan, doubtless because he and his national security adviser feared such an NIE might arrive at the same sort of depressing assessment as the April 2006 NIE on global terrorism, which concluded invasions and occupations do not make America safer, but lead instead to an upsurge in terrorism.

It seems that in the White House sessions formulating Obama's Afghan policy, Vice President Joe Biden and Deputy Secretary of State James B.

Steinberg argued for a minimal strategy of "stabilizing" Afghanistan. Against them, Richard C. Holbrooke, Obama's special envoy for the region, U.S. Central Command leader Gen. David H. Petraeus and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton successfully sold Obama on a major nation-building program, bringing Afghanistan out of feudal poverty and backwardness into the healthful air of a stable and prosperous economy, respectful of women and the polling booth.

Maybe Biden forgot to point out to his boss that this was the Afghanistan model espoused by the leftist Noor Taraki in the late 1970s, setting off U.S. alarm bells that duly led to Taraki's murder and the CIA's huge covert and successful intervention in support of the drug barons and warlords, whose feudal offspring are now America's actual or prospective allies in the war on the Taliban.

As Obama proudly flourished his alliterative triad ("to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat al-Qaida in Pakistan and Afghanistan"), I listened with the same dismayed frisson as I did more than four decades ago to Kennedy's similarly childish rhetoric of intervention, whose dark underbelly was the murder of the Diem brothers, and the birth of the Phoenix assassination program of "Viet Cong infrastructure."

Obama's brisk sentences commit thousands of fresh U.S. troops to overwhelm the Taliban, oblivious of the judgment of sensible observers that it's precisely the presence of foreign troops that prompts Pashtuns to support the Taliban and join their ranks. More brisk sentences summoned Pakistan to the crusade against terror, as if Pakistan's intelligence establishment does not work hand in glove with the Taliban and protects al-Qaida leaders.

The march of folly is under way. Bush and Cheney's "war on terror" is now married to Clintonian blueprints for nation building and social engineering, a wedding officiated over by Petraeus, whose mythical surge in Iraq was hailed last year by Obama as having "succeeded beyond our wildest dreams." The fantasy of America's healing kiss smolders and flares in Obama's heart just as it did in Kennedy's. Ray McGovern quotes Gen. Douglas MacArthur as telling Kennedy in 1961: "Anyone wanting to commit American ground forces to the mainland of Asia should have his head examined." True then, true now.

Alexander Cockburn is coeditor with Jeffrey St. Clair of the muckraking newsletter CounterPunch. He is also co-author of the new book "Dime's Worth of Difference: Beyond the Lesser of Two Evils," available through www.counterpunch.com. To find out more about Alexander Cockburn and read features by other columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


Comments

2 Comments | Post Comment
As a people, we are enamored with war as it seems to give us a more noble vision of ourselves, trapped as we are in an endless cycle of paychecks(though diminishing), going shopping and breaking out the old credit card when material aspirations outstride income as they are wont to do. Also, the not unimportant fact that someone else, damn sure not ourselves, will be laying their life on the line. This, all the more so, when our leader is a clearly intelligent and charasmatic individual. Perhaps, we seem to think, this time it will all come together, where bravery, technology and good old patriotism will blend into a wonderful shining moment and make us feel some purpose in our lives where once again, America acheives greatness on some far off battlefield, when in reality, battlefields are nothing but places where blood, organs, feces and flies provide the ambience. Once again, America, into the breach!
Comment: #1
Posted by: michael nola
Fri Apr 10, 2009 7:01 PM
I don't think so, Senor Cockburn, but I must admit the stuff you write occupies nightmares many of us confront from time to time these days. Isn't it nice that you have a president who can actually understand what you are writing?
Comment: #2
Posted by: Masako
Mon Apr 13, 2009 9:03 PM
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