New York, New York: As a journalist, I became something of a body count expert. It started with the Vietnam War, where I soon learned to distrust the exaggerated counts of enemy dead made by our self-styled āintelligenceā agencies.
That didnāt mean that people, alas, werenāt dying in droves, but not quite the people they were claiming to have killed, even if the sheer number was desensitizing and hard to relate to.
Itās still like that, what with the daily drone victims, collateral damage estimates and killings on battlefields and villages from Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria and Iraq.
Now we can add Nigeria to the countries in pain with massacres by the Boko Harum, and their own military goons, and with the collapse of a mega church in Lagos that looked like the āplanned demolitionā fall of Building 7, claiming the lives of 67 visiting South Africans and we still donāt know how many Nigerians. That House of God, known as a Synagogue Church, could not protect praying parishioners from the slaughter.
All of this is grisly, and a sad advertisement for what we used to call ācivilization,ā but, it is still abstract, when itās happening over there, to them, people you donāt know by name.
It soon becomes a bit surreal, even a form of war pornography. Thereās plenty of blame to go around, and the bloody trail often takes you directly back into the heart of āthe homeland.ā
I just saw a James Bond wannabe movie called November Man about a CIA killer, that, in addition to its non-stop car chases and shoot-em ups, suggested that the US worked with Russia to stage the atrocity that started the bloody second Chechen War. Possible? Who knows?
If you are looking for bad guys these days, you donāt have to look too far. Trying moving your focus inside the beltway where a long captured president scrambles to reassert his own power with a more muscular strategy of intervention designed to show heās doing āsomething.ā
The problem heās having is not just personal, although his own indecisiveness and slavish fidelity to the āuniformsā has got him into (we used to sing about in an earlier war) a āhometown jam.ā
So far, in addition to the political problems of convincing the right and the left, the tactics so far, according to Jason Ditz of Anti-war.com are backfiring: āUS airstrikes against ISIS in Iraq, far from ādegradingā the organization, are actually giving ISIS a huge shot in the arm, according to FBI Director James Comey, who testified before Congress.
ISISā āgrowing online support intensified following the commencement of US airstrikes in Iraq,ā Comey confirmed, saying the group was likely to try to pick up its efforts to take more US hostages going forward to get more publicity.
It seems like the people who are supposed to know what to do, donāt. Immanuel Wallerstein, the brilliant world systems scholar, says āthey are stuck because of deeper systemic problems that most of the media misses.ā
He writes, āThe explanation is simple. The United States is in serious decline. Everything is going wrong. And in the panic, they are like a driver of a powerful automobile who has lost control of it, and doesnāt know how to slow it down. So instead it is speeding it up and heading towards a major crash. The car is turning in all directions and skidding. It is self-destructive for the driver but the crash can bring disaster to the rest of the world as well.ā
A lot of attention is focused on what Obama has and hasnāt done. Even his closest defenders seem to doubt him. An Australian commentator, writing in the Financial Times, summed it up in one sentence: āIn 2014 the world has grown suddenly weary of Barack Obama.ā I wonder if Obama has not grown weary of Obama. But itās a mistake to pin the blame just on him. Virtually no one among U.S. leaders has been making alternative proposals that are more sensible. Quite the contrary. There are the warmongers who want him to bomb everybody and right away. There are the politicians who really think it will make a lot of difference who will win the next elections in the United States.
Is this a case of an empire in decline? Another scholar, James Petras, thinks so. Hereās his take: āthe results of contemporary US military interventions and invasions stand in stark contrast with those of past imperial powers. The targets of military aggression are selected on the basis of ideological and political criteria. ā¦Contemporary US intervention does not seek to secure and take over the existing military and civilian state apparatus; instead the invaders fragment the conquered state, decimate its cadres, professionals and experts at all levels, thus providing an entry for the most retrograde ethno-religious, regional, tribal and clan leaders to engage in intra-ethnic, sectarian wars against each other, in other words ā chaosā¦..
āThe US claims to āworld leadershipā is based exclusively on failed-state empire building. Nevertheless, the dynamic for continuing to expand into new regions, to militarily and politically intervene and establish new client entities continues. And, most importantly, this expansionist dynamic further undermines domestic economic interests, which, theoretically and historically, form the basis for empire. We, therefore, have imperialism without empire, a vampire state preying on the vulnerable and devouring its own in the process.ā
Hmm, thatās a lot to digest, but assume for a moment, heās on to something, on to recognizing that US military intervention cannot work, and that the only solution is political even if that flies in thef face of the convictions and investments by the Saudis and Qataris and Islamomaniacs who only want Assadās head on a stick, and do not want a settlement that strengthens Syria in any way.
My third favorite scholar who knows the region well, Vijay Prashad, told The Real News Network: āThey’re unwilling to recognize that a political solution is necessary. This political solution has been on the table for over a year. The previous UN and Arab League envoy, Mr. Lakhdar Brahimi, at several points said that there is sufficient ground to start working toward some kind of settlement. We cannot have a settlement, on the other hand, as long as the Saudis, the Qataris, and others continue to finance the militias inside Syria and you continue to see atrocities on both sides. So a political process is necessary. If the West is serious about tackling the Islamic State, it has to lessen the chaos in Syria.ā
That is exactly what US policy is NOT doing. And, that is why the body counts will continue to climb even as we keep hearing terms like āsurgical strikes,ā and war on āevil.ā It’s almost as if the US strategists have beheaded themselves when it comes to fashioning a sensible strategy that could work instead of the current one that is guaranteed not to.
News Dissector Danny Schechter blogs at Newsdissector.net and edits Mediachannel.org. Comments to [email protected]
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