woensdag 16 januari 2013

'Deskundigen' 83



Amerika – dat komt vaker voor – is een grootmacht die zich moet consolideren. Die had een hele sterke plek in de wereld en dat wordt minder. Het is helemaal niet verval, maar het komt op zijn eigen plek terecht. Een beetje zoals het rond 1940 was, nog steeds een grootmacht. Onder Obama kunnen Amerikanen daar meer aan gaan wennen dan onder Romney.
Geert Mak, op de EO-Radio, 6 november 2012

Internationally, the world is going through huge changes, but we are perfectly poised to make the 21st century again the American Century.
Barack Obama, March 11, 2011

Deze voorspellingen klinkten categorisch, hoopvol en geruststellend. Haaks hierop staan de analyses van kritische Amerikaanse intellectuelen zoals bijvoorbeeld de Andrew J. Bacevich, professor of international relations at Boston University and a retired career officer in the United States Army.’ Als samensteller van de bundel The Short American Century. A Postmortem stelt hij het volgende:

To doubt the feasibility of America’s remdemptive mission – to allow that the American Century has never quite lived up to expectations (or worse still, that it never existed in the first place) – would be, in effect, to concede that American Exceptionalism is an illusion or an outright fraud. To declare the American Century defunct would be tantamount to lumping the United States among all of the other powers that have paraded across history’s pages purporting to erect a new order for the ages before falling short of that goal.

Daarom getuigt Mak’s advies dat de VS ‘van een dominante wereldmacht weer het ‘gewone’ land moeten worden dat het tot 1940 was’ van een gebrek aan inzicht. De mainstream beseft niet wat achter de façade schuilgaat, wat de VS altijd gemotiveerd heeft, wat de functie van het exceptionalisme al die eeuwen is geweest. Laat ik het concreet maken.  Als het geloof in het ‘exceptionalisme,de woorden zijn van Mak, ‘de diepe overtuiging dat Amerika een speciaal door God uitverkoren en gezegend land is’ wegvalt, dan bestaat er geen rechtvaardiging meer voor de genocide van de indianen, het vermoorden van miljoenen Zuidoost-Aziaten, het ten val brengen van democratische regeringen in bijvoorbeeld Guatemala, Congo en Iran, het grootscheepse geweld tegen bijvoorbeeld Irak en Aghanistan en de Amerikaanse steun aan doodseskaders overal ter wereld. Als de Amerikaanse elite zou toegeven dat ‘de Amerikaanse normen en waarden' geenszins 'universeel zijn, en dat ieder mens volgens die waarden hoort te denken,’ maar al die tijd verzinsels waren om de hegemonie in de wereld te rechtvaardigen, dan zouden de beleidsbepalers in Washington onderstrepen dat ze met geen haar verschillen van de nazi’s. Dat begrijpt de mainstream niet, deze realiteit past niet in zijn simplistische voorstelling van zaken.  Wanneer de legitimering van het Amerikaans geweld, de grootscheepse terreur tegen burgerbevolkingen, wegvalt, hoe rechtvaardigt het imperium zich dan nog in de toekomst om andere landen te dwingen de belangen van de Amerikaanse elite te gehoorzamen? Dan zou ook niet meer te ontkennen zijn dat de NAVO als een terroristische organisatie opereert, zoals een career officer’ als Bacevich maar al te goed beseft. Zonder het bloedvergieten van ook burgers had de VS veel meer moeite gehad de Tweede Wereldoorlog te winnen. Bacevich:

in its aerial bombing campaign directed against German and Japanese cities, the United States engaged in the conscious, intentional, wholesale slaughter of noncombatants. In the aftermath of the European war, the victorious allies collaborated in enforcing a massive involuntary transfer of populations, that is, a policy of ethnic cleansing. When they found it expedient to do so, U.S. officials allowed Nazi war criminals – rocket scientists, for example, and intelligence officials – to escape justice and to enter the service of the United States. Then there is this: at no time prior to or during the war did the United States any substantive effort to prevent or even disrupt the Nazi persecution of Jews that culminated in the ‘final solution.’ In Washington the fate of European Jewry never figured as more than an afterthought. As much or more than the promotion of American ideals – that ‘sharing with all peoples of our Bill of Rights, our Declaration of Independence, [and] our Constitution’ that Luce (uitgever van Time en Life. svh) dearly hoped to see – these choices and decisions, along with the priorities they reflect, laid the basis for the interval of American primacy that followed.

Het is dus een farce te spreken van ‘de diepe overtuiging’ onder de politieke elite in Washington ‘dat de Amerikaanse normen en waarden universeel zijn.’ In de praktijk handelt de VS als elk ander imperium in de geschiedenis: meedogenloos, in dit geval door samen te werken met nazi’s en door het plegen van oorlogsmisdaden als het massaal bombarderen van wat officieel heet ‘non-combattanten.’ Intussen wordt de ‘Disneyfication’ van de Tweede Wereldoorlog, gevolgd door

the Disneyfication of the Cold War, reduced in popular imagination and the halls of Congress to Ronald Reagan demanding ‘Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!’ […] Facts that complicate this story – assassination plots, dirty tricks gone awry, cozy relations with corrupt dictators – provide endless fodder for scholarly articles and books but ultimately get filed under the heading of things that don’t really matter.

Professor Bacevich wijst er tevens op dat de mainstream versie niet alleen contraproductief is, maar ook levensgevaarlijk.

The problem for the United States today is that sanitizing history no longer serves U.S. interests. Instead, it blinds Americans to the challenges that they confront. Self-serving mendacities – that the attacks of Sptember 11, 2001, rising those of December 7, 1941 ‘came out of nowhere’ to strike an innocent nation --  don’t enhance the safety and well-being of the Amedrican people. If anything, the reverse is true. […] Abu Ghraib, Guantánamo, the revival of waterboarding and other forms of torture, and the policy of so-called extraordinary rendition have left the ‘incandescent moral clarity'; that some observers attributed to U.S. policy after 9/11 more than a little worse for wear.

Er vanuit gaan dat ‘het helemaal niet verval is,’ maar dat de VS ‘op zijn eigen plek terecht [komt]’ als het maar terugkeert naar de imperialistische ‘grootmacht’ zoals ‘het [een beetje] rond 1940 was,’ is een vorm van blindheid dat niet zal helpen, zo stelt ook Bacevich in zijn essay Not So Different After All:

To further indulge old illusions of the United States of the United States presiding over and directing the course of history will not impede the ability of Americans to understand the world and themselves but may well pose a positive danger to both. Faced with a reality that includes, within the last decade alone,
. an inability to anticipate, whether the events of 9/11, the consequences of invading Iraq, or revolutionary upheaval in Egypt and elsewhere in the Arab world;
. an inability to control, with wars begun in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan, along with various and sundry financial scandals, economic crises, and natural disasters, exposing the limits of American influence, power, and perspicacity;
. an inability to afford, as manifested by a badly overstretched military, trillion dollar annual deficits, increasingly unaffordable entitlement programs, and rapidly escalating foreign debt;
. an inability to respond, demonstrated by the disfunction pervading the American political system, especially at the national level, whether in Congress, at senior levels of the executive branch, or in the bureaucracy; and
. an inability to comprehend what God intends or the human heart desires, with litlle to indicate that the wonders of the information age, however dazzling, the impact of globalization, however far reaching, or the forces of corporate capitalism, however relentless, will provide answers to such elusive questions…

We hebben dus wel degelijk te maken met een imperium in verval. Zowel het buitenlandse als binnenlandse beleid is failliet. Bernie Sanders, de onafhankelijke senator van Vermont verklaarde op 9 januari 2013 dat wat betreft de situatie in de VS zelf the rich are becoming much richer while the middle class collapses’ en ‘the number of Americans living in poverty is at an all-time high…’ Sanders:

In America today, we have the most unequal distribution of wealth and income of any major country on earth, and more inequality than at any time period since 1928. The top 1 percent owns 42 percent of the financial wealth of the nation, while, incredibly, the bottom 60 percent own only 2.3 percent. One family, the Walton family of Wal-Mart, owns more wealth than the bottom 40 percent of Americans. In terms of income distribution in 2010, the last study done on this issue, the top 1 percent earned 93 percent of all new income while the bottom 99 percent shared the remaining 7 percent. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rep-bernie-sanders/the-soul-of-america_b_2439576.html  

Vanuit dit perspectief gezien is de vraag gerechtvaardigd wat we nu precies in Europa van ze kunnen leren,’ vooral ook als we weten dat

many researchers have reached a conclusion that turns conventional wisdom on its head: Americans enjoy less economic mobility than their peers in Canada and much of Western Europe. The mobility gap has been widely discussed in academic circles, but a sour season of mass unemployment and street protests has moved the discussion toward center stage.

Met het oog op de fundamentele problemen waarmee het imperium kampt getuigen de opmerkingen van Obama en onze opiniemakers geenszins van enige inzicht:

Internationally, the world is going through huge changes, but we are perfectly poised to make the 21st century again the American Century.
Barack Obama, March 11, 2011

Het is beter voor Nederland en de internationale gemeenschap dat Obama de verkiezingen wint.
Geert Mak. EO Radio, 6 november 2012.

In tegenstelling tot wat de Nederlandse mainstream denkt, is ook Obama uit op de bestendiging van de Amerikaanse hegemonie, dat wil zeggen, zo nodig met geweld, vandaar dat de militaire uitgaven ook onder de huidige Amerikaanse president bleven stijgen. Daarom laat ik opnieuw kritische Amerikaanse onderzoekers aan het woord. Allereerst de gezaghebbende hoogleraar, Michael Klare.

Is Barack Obama Morphing Into Dick Cheney? 
Four Ways the President Is Pursuing Cheney’s Geopolitics of Global Energy. 
As details of his administration’s global war against terrorists, insurgents, and hostile warlords have become more widely known -- a war that involves a mélange of drone attacks, covert operations, and presidentially selected assassinations -- President Obama has been compared to President George W. Bush in his appetite for military action.  “As shown through his stepped-up drone campaign,” Aaron David Miller, an advisor to six secretaries of state,wrote at Foreign Policy, “Barack Obama has become George W. Bush on steroids.”
When it comes to international energy politics, however, it is not Bush but his vice president, Dick Cheney, who has been providing the role model for the president.  As recent events have demonstrated, Obama’s energy policies globally bear an eerie likeness to Cheney’s, especially in the way he has engaged in the geopolitics of oil as part of an American global struggle for future dominance among the major powers.

Michael T. Klare is a professor of peace and world security studies at Hampshire College, a TomDispatch regular, and the author most recently ofThe Race for What’s Left: The Global Scramble for the World’s Last Resources (Metropolitan Books). To listen to Timothy MacBain's latest Tomcast audio interview in which Klare discusses imperial geopolitics as the default mode for Washington since 1945, click here or download it to your iPod here.


Een andere, goed geinformeerde bron is de Amerikaanse journalist Nick Turse. Hij schreef het volgende:

Under President Obama, the U.S. has expanded or launched numerous military campaigns -- most of them utilizing a mix of the six elements of twenty-first-century American war.  Take the American war in Pakistan -- a poster-child for what might now be called the Obama formula, if not doctrine.  Beginning as a highly-circumscribed drone assassination campaign backed by limited cross-border commando raids under the Bush administration, U.S. operations in Pakistan have expanded into something close to a full-scale robotic air war, complemented by cross-border helicopter attacks, CIA-funded “kill teams” of Afghan proxy forces, as well as boots-on-the-ground missions by elite special operations forces, including the SEAL raid that killed Osama bin Laden. 
The CIA has conducted clandestine intelligence and surveillance missions in Pakistan, too, though its role may, in the future, be less important, thanks to Pentagon mission creep.  In April, in fact, Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta announced the creation of a new CIA-like espionage agency within the Pentagon called the Defense Clandestine Service. According to the Washington Post, its aim is to expand “the military’s espionage efforts beyond war zones.” 
Over the last decade, the very notion of war zones has become remarkably muddled, mirroring the blurring of the missions and activities of the CIA and Pentagon.  Analyzing the new agency and the “broader convergence trend” between Department of Defense and CIA missions, the Post noted that the “blurring is also evident in the organizations’ upper ranks. Panetta previously served as CIA director, and that post is currently held by retired four-star Army Gen. David H. Petraeus.” 
Not to be outdone, last year the State Department, once the seat of diplomacy, continued on its long march to militarization (and marginalization) when it agreed to pool some of its resources with the Pentagon to create the Global Security Contingency Fund.  That program will allow the Defense Department even greater say in how aid from Washington will flow to proxy forces in places like Yemen and the Horn of Africa.  
One thing is certain: American war-making (along with its spies and its diplomats) is heading ever deeper into “the shadows.”  Expect yet more clandestine operations in ever more places with, of course, ever more potential for blowback in the years ahead.
Shedding Light on 'the Dark Continent'
One locale likely to see an influx of Pentagon spies in the coming years is Africa.  Under President Obama, operations on the continent have accelerated far beyond the more limited interventions of the Bush years.  Last year’s war in Libya; a regional drone campaign with missions run out of airports and bases in Djibouti, Ethiopia, and the Indian Ocean archipelago nation of Seychelles; a flotilla of 30 ships in that ocean supporting regional operations; a multi-pronged military and CIA campaign against militants in Somalia, including intelligence operations, training for Somali agents, secret prisons, helicopter attacks, and U.S. commando raids; a massive influx of cash for counterterrorism operations across East Africa; a possible old-fashioned air war, carried out on the sly in the region using manned aircraft; tens of millions of dollars in arms for allied mercenaries and African troops; and a special ops expeditionary force (bolstered by State Department experts) dispatched to help capture or kill Lord’s Resistance Army leader Joseph Kony and his senior commanders, operating in Uganda, South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and the Central African Republic (where U.S. Special Forces now have a new base) only begins to scratch the surface of Washington’s fast-expanding plans and activities in the region.
Even less well known are other U.S. military efforts designed to train African forces for operations now considered integral to American interests on the continent.  These include, for example, a mission by elite Force Recon Marines from the Special Purpose Marine Air Ground Task Force 12 (SPMAGTF-12) to train soldiers from the Uganda People's Defense Force, which supplies the majority of troops to the African Union Mission in Somalia.
Earlier this year, Marines from SPMAGTF-12 also trained soldiers from the Burundi National Defense Force, the second-largest contingent in Somalia; sent trainers into Djibouti (where the U.S. already maintains a major Horn of Africa base at Camp Lemonier); and traveled to Liberia where they focused on teaching riot-control techniques to Liberia’s military as part of an otherwise State Department spearheaded effort to rebuild that force.
The U.S. is also conducting counterterrorism training and equipping militaries in Algeria, Burkina Faso, Chad, Mauritania, Niger, and Tunisia.  In addition, U.S. Africa Command (Africom) has 14 major joint-training exercises planned for 2012, including operations in Morocco, Cameroon, Gabon, Botswana, South Africa, Lesotho, Senegal, and what may become the Pakistan of Africa, Nigeria. 
Even this, however, doesn’t encompass the full breadth of U.S. training and advising missions in Africa.  To take an example not on Africom’s list, this spring the U.S. brought together 11 nations, including Cote d’Ivoire, The Gambia, Liberia, Mauritania, and Sierra Leone to take part in a maritime training exercise code-named Saharan Express 2012.

Nick Turse is the associate editor of TomDispatch.com.  An award-winning journalist, his work has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, the Nation, and regularly at TomDispatch. He is the author/editor of several books, including the just published Terminator Planet: The First History of Drone Warfare, 2001-2050 (with Tom Engelhardt).  This piece is the latest article in his new series on the changing face of American empire, which is being underwritten by Lannan Foundation.  You can follow him on Twitter @NickTurse, on Tumblr, and on Facebook.

Het is beter voor Nederland en de internationale gemeenschap dat Obama de verkiezingen wint.
Geert Mak. EO Radio, 6 november 2012.

Morgen meer daarover.

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