Archive for category War

Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God. -Thomas Jefferson

None Dare Call It Tyranny
by Sheldon Richman, August 16, 2010

If you want to know what tyranny is like, look around.

The national government — specifically the executive branch — can do pretty much what it wants. It could bomb Iran tomorrow without a declaration of war from Congress. It can — and does — conduct secret wars and covert operations against countries that have done nothing to us. Of course, they are secret only to the ignorant taxpayers who must finance them and perhaps suffer when the provoked retaliation occurs. It can have men behind PlayStation consoles in Nevada fire Hellfire missiles from aerial drones on people in Pakistan, Yemen, and elsewhere.

This tyrannical government can send any foreigner picked up anywhere in the world to third countries known for torturing prisoners. It can hold people accused of nothing indefinitely in prisons in Cuba and Afghanistan and torture them into making false confessions. It can conduct a war crimes trial in a military kangaroo court for a man, Omar Khadr, held captive for eight years after he was picked up at the age of 15 during a U.S. assault on villagers near Kabul. His torture-induced “confessions” will be admissible. All this is in violation of commitments under the Optional Protocol on the Involvement of Children in Armed Conflict not to treat children in war as though they were adults.

It can assassinate even American citizens abroad without a scent of due process.

It is a government that can write its own warrants without judicial review — and call them national security letters — in order to conduct fishing expeditions in anyone’s electronic records. But that isn’t enough power for the present Progressive administration, which wants the freedom to examine our browser histories and email correspondents’ names. The Bill of Rights, like the Geneva Convention, has become “quaint” and obsolete.

Like any self-respecting tyranny, it tries to keep the truth from its subjects. Comforting words camouflage the 50,000 armed and combat-ready troops that will remain in Iraq after “withdrawal.” Their “primary” mission is to train an army whose own general says won’t be ready for years. This gross deception follows on the heralded “surge,” which supposedly turned things around in Iraq. What “worked,” however, was not U.S. military prowess or Gen. David Petraeus’s brilliance, but the spreading of American taxpayers’ cash to buy off Sunni insurgents and the denouement of ethnic cleansing in Baghdad.

And, again, like any self-respecting tyranny, it bridles at leaks of classified documents that tell the people the truth. Solemn administration officials condemn Wikileaks and its sources for supposedly jeopardizing U.S. troops and Afghan collaborators, while adding that nothing new had been revealed. With no sense of irony, the same officials find blood on the hands of Wikileaks’ Julian Assange, ignoring the rivers of blood their policies and weapons have produced in the Middle East and South Central Asia. Without those policies, there would be nothing to leak. Some call for the assassination of Assange, and for all we know he is on President Obama’s kill list. Meanwhile a courageous young soldier, Bradley Manning, who apparently leaked video of American troops committing cold-blooded murder in Baghdad, faces 52 years in prison.

Now we are being softened up for the next war, against Iran. As in 2002 with Iraq’s phantom WMDs, the empire advance men tell us Iran is building nuclear weapons, and Obama and Secretary of State Clinton say “all options are on the table,” which phrase includes hydrogen bombs. Once again a Big Lie is repeated without proof. The reason is simple: all evidence runs the other way. The government’s own intelligence agencies say Iran has no nuclear-weapons program, and the International Atomic Energy Agency is on the scene. But no matter. If it suits the tyrannical administration or its partner in empire, Israel, bombs of some kind will fall. The consequences all around will be horrible.

Can it really be tyranny if we get to vote? Yes. Thomas Jefferson warned of “elective despotism.” How valuable is your one vote when the government manipulates and distorts the flow of information, when Congress capitulates, and when the “adversarial” mainstream media act like government press agents, if not adoring lapdogs. The ugly truth is out there, but you have to want to know it.

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A state of war only serves as an excuse for domestic tyranny. -Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

A Tea Party Foreign Policy
by Ron Paul

As one who is opposed to centralization, I am wary of attempts to turn a grassroots movement against big government like the Tea Party into an adjunct of the Republican Party. I find it even more worrisome when I see those who willingly participated in the most egregious excesses of the most recent Republican Congress push their way into leadership roles of this movement without batting an eye — or changing their policies!

As many frustrated Americans who have joined the Tea Party realize, we cannot stand against big government at home while supporting it abroad. We cannot talk about fiscal responsibility while spending trillions on occupying and bullying the rest of the world. We cannot talk about the budget deficit and spiraling domestic spending without looking at the costs of maintaining an American empire of more than 700 military bases in more than 120 foreign countries. We cannot pat ourselves on the back for cutting a few thousand dollars from a nature preserve or an inner-city swimming pool at home while turning a blind eye to a Pentagon budget that nearly equals those of the rest of the world combined.

Our foreign policy is based on an illusion: that we are actually paying for it. What we are doing is borrowing and printing money to maintain our presence overseas. Americans are seeing the cost of this irresponsible approach as their own communities crumble and our economic decline continues.

I see tremendous opportunities for movements like the Tea Party to prosper by capitalizing on the Democrats’ broken promises to overturn the George W. Bush administration’s civil liberties abuses and end the disastrous wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. A return to the traditional U.S. foreign policy of active private engagement but government noninterventionism is the only alternative that can restore our moral and fiscal health. I am optimistic, and our numbers are increasing!

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The true danger is when Liberty is nibbled away, for expedients. – Edmund Burke

The true danger is when Liberty is nibbled away, for expedients. – Edmund Burke

What Must the Afghans Think?
by Karen Kwiatkowski

We have been given few opportunities to see and understand how Afghanis view Americans and the U.S. government’s foreign policy toward their country. Malalai Joya offers her views, to a filtered American media that attempts to drown out her criticisms. We may watch a variety of documentaries, including the current Rethink Afghanistan series by Robert Greenwald. But we really do not know, and perhaps cannot know, how it feels to be on the receiving end of a grasping military empire that seeks control without authority, ownership without purchase, and righteousness through arrogance.

If we were to put on a pair of Afghan moccasins and begin to walk that mile, in these weeks before Kabul celebrates the 52nd birthday of the American satrap, in these days before a winter bloom of 30,000 more soldiers and Marines from a far-off and dangerously unstable country, a country that will soon have a national debt equal to 97.5% of its GDP, a great fallen country gone to seed, if we were to walk in those shoes we may begin to understand.

We may think that the rest of the world has lost its way acclaiming an American president for the color of his skin but not the content of his character.

We may begin to believe that occupation and conflict is a way of life, and that we are a cursed people.

We may marvel at hypocrisy, sanctimoniousness, insincerity, the blatant fraud of raw force clothed in words of liberation mouthed hotly by the soft-handed denizens of a far off capital.

We may wonder at the hypocrisy, sanctimoniousness, insincerity, the blatant fraud of raw force as delivered by an army of robot soldiers who put fresh paint on the walls of schools each morning even as they maim children and murder mothers each afternoon.

We may become tired of being lectured by foreigners about what it means to be us, and how we might become a more supplicating us.

We are intrigued that the satrap demands American troops stay on for the slaughter until his 67th birthday, whereupon we wonder where he will flee, or how his life will be ended.

As we walk along, we may begin to see the positive side of our situation.

We may consider our history, our geography, our culture and our tradition as assets, golden.

We may practice our rage, build upon it, feel comfort in our collective anger, that empowering antidote to helplessness and fear, that key to a different future.

As we recognize the eventual leaving of the occupiers, belied by the lies of D.C. can-kickers, we may think on how to accelerate this certain end.

We may determine that the arrival of more ill-trained and unmotivated Americans in country can be used to our advantage.

We may determine that the return of angry veterans from the bankrupt country, those wise to the sanctimony of their own leaders, the faithlessness of their blood-eating generals, some even awakened to the joys of graft and murder and torture – all these may be used to our advantage.

As we walk, we may plan to live rather than to die. We may decide to die so that our children can live. We may decide to persist rather than to submit.

We may consider the numbers: 26 million of us, millions in even the smallest groups of us, to 200,000 foreigners and not all of them armed.

We may muse at how cheaply and creatively we may kill an American, and how expensively and unimaginatively they kill us.

If we are young, we may consider the feats of our grandparents and parents against the Soviets, and wonder if we have become yet the men and women they were. We may wish to prove something, if we are young.

And we may be drawn to the fight knowing it is winnable and will only ever be won by us. We know that the tender underbelly of a globally despised, morally decrepit and monetarily collapsing empire is exposed, showcased and spotlighted in our own backyard. A great sacrificial lamb awaiting our knives, on a table watched by the entire world, salivating and greedy for what comes next.

We may feel the irresistible urge to make a spectacle of the American empire, and we may entertain ourselves, as we walk, with thoughts of the myriad of ways we will do that.

December 9, 2009

LRC columnist Karen Kwiatkowski, Ph.D., a retired USAF lieutenant colonel, has written on defense issues with a libertarian perspective for MilitaryWeek.com, hosts the call-in radio show American Forum, and blogs occasionally for Huffingtonpost.com and Liberty and Power. To receive automatic announcements of new articles, click here.

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