Long before Americans were introduced to the new 9/11 era super-villains called ISIS and Khorasan, senior Obama officialsĀ were openly and explicitly statingĀ that Americaās āwar on terror,ā already 12 years old, would lastĀ at leastĀ another decade. At first, they injected these decrees only anonymously; in late 2012,Ā The Washington Post –Ā disclosing the administrationās secret creation of a ādisposition matrixā to decide who should be killed, imprisoned without charges, or otherwise ādisposedā of –Ā reported these remarkable facts:
Among senior Obama administration officials, there is a broad consensus that such operations are likelyĀ to be extended at least another decade. Given the way al-Qaida continues to metastasize, some officials saidĀ no clear end is in sight. . . . That timeline suggests that the United StatesĀ has reached only the midpoint of what was once known as the global war on terrorism.ā
In May, 2013, the Senate Armed Services Committee held a hearing on whether it should revise the 2001 Authorization to Use Military Force (AUMF). A committee member asked a senior Pentagon official, Assistant Secretary Michael Sheehan, how long the war on terror would last;Ā his reply: āAt least 10 to 20 years.āĀ At least.Ā A Pentagon spokesperson confirmed afterward āthat Sheehan meant the conflict is likely to last 10 to 20 more years fromĀ todayĀ ā atop the 12 years that the conflict has already lasted.ā As Spencer Ackerman put it: āWelcome to Americaās Thirty Years War,ā one which ā by theĀ Obama administrationās own reasoningĀ ā has āno geographic limit.ā
Listening to all this, Maineās independent Sen. Angus King said: āThis is the most astounding and most astoundingly disturbing hearing that Iāve been to since Iāve been here. You guys have essentially rewritten the Constitution today.ā Former Bush DOJ lawyer Jack Goldsmith ā himself an ardent advocate of broad presidential powers ā was at the hearingĀ and notedĀ that nobody even knows against whom this endless war is being waged: āAmazingly, there is a very large question even in the Armed Services Committee about who the United States is at war against and where, and how those determinations are made.ā
All of that received remarkably little attention given its obvious significance. But any doubts about whether Endless War āĀ literallyĀ ā is official American doctrine should be permanently erased by this weekās comments from two leading Democrats, both former top national security officials in the Obama administration, one of whom is likely to be the next American president.
Leon Panetta, the long-time Democratic Party operative who served as Obamaās Defense Secretary and CIA Director,Ā said this weekĀ of Obamaās new bombing campaign: āI think weāre looking at kind of a 30-year war.ā Only in America are new 30-year wars spoken of so casually, the way other countries speak of weather changes. He added that the war āwill have to extend beyond Islamic State to include emerging threats in Nigeria, Somalia, Yemen, Libya and elsewhere.āĀ And elsewhere: not just a new decades-long war with no temporal limits, but no geographic ones either. He criticized Obama ā who hasĀ bombed 7 predominantly Muslim countriesĀ plusĀ the Muslim minority in the PhillipinesĀ (almost double the number of countries Bush bombed) ā for being insufficiently militaristic, despite the fact that Obama officials themselves haveĀ already instructed the publicĀ to think of The New War āin terms of years.ā
Then we have Hillary Clinton (whom Panetta gushed would make a āgreatā president). At an event in Ottawa yesterday,Ā she proclaimedĀ that the fight against these āmilitantsā will ābe a long-term struggleā that should entail an āinformation warā as āwell as an air war.ā The new war, she said, is āessentialā and the U.S. shies away from fighting it āat our peril.ā Like Panetta (andĀ most establishment Republicans), ClintonĀ made clear in her bookĀ that virtually all of her disagreements with Obamaās foreign policy were the by-product of her view of Obama as insufficiently hawkish, militaristic and confrontational.
At this point, it is literally inconceivable to imagine the U.S. not at war. It would be shocking if that happened in our lifetime. U.S. officials are now all but openly saying this. āEndless Warā is not dramatic rhetorical license but a precise description of Americaās foreign policy.
Itās not hard to see why. A state of endless war justifies ever-increasing state power and secrecy and a further erosion of rights. It also entails aĀ massive transfer of public wealthĀ to the āhomeland securityā and weapons industry (which the US media deceptively calls the ādefense sectorā).
Just yesterday,Ā BloombergĀ reported: āLed by Lockheed Martin Group (LTM),Ā the biggest U.S. defense companies are trading at recordĀ prices as shareholders reap rewards from escalating military conflicts around the world.ā Particularly exciting is that āinvestors see rising sales for makers of missiles, drones and other weapons as the U.S. hits Islamic State fighters in SyriaĀ and Iraqā; moreover, āthe U.S. also is the biggest foreign military supplier to Israel, which waged a 50-day offensive against the Hamas Islamic movement in the Gaza Strip.ā ISIS isĀ using U.S.-made ammunition and weapons, which means U.S. weapons companies get to supply all sides of The New Endless War; can you blame investors for being so giddy?
I vividly recall how, in the wake of Osama bin Ladenās killing,Ā Obama partisans triumphantly declaredĀ that this would finally usher in the winding down of the War on Terror. On one superficial level, that view was understandable: it made sense if one assumes that the U.S. has been waging this war for its stated reasons and that it hopes to vanquish The Enemy and end the war.
But that is not, and never was, the purpose of the War on Terror. It was designed from the start to be endless. Both Bush and Obama officials have explicitly said that the war will last at least a generation. The nature of the āwar,ā and the theories that have accompanied it, is that it has no discernible enemy and no identifiable limits. More significantly, this āwarā fuels itself, provides its own inexhaustible purpose, as it is precisely the policies justified in the name of Stopping TerrorismĀ that actually ensure its spreadĀ (note how Panetta said the new U.S. war would have to include Libya, presumably to fight against those empowered by the last U.S. war there just 3 years ago).
This war ā in all its ever-changing permutations ā thus enables an endless supply of power and profit to flow to those political and economic factions that control the government regardless of election outcomes. And thatās all independent of the vicarious sense of joy, purpose and fulfillment which the sociopathic Washington class derives from waging risk-free wars, as Adam SmithĀ so perfectly describedĀ inĀ Wealth of NationsĀ 235 years ago:
In great empires the people who live in the capital, and in the provinces remote from the scene of action, feel, many of them, scarce any inconveniency from the war; but enjoy, at their ease, the amusement of reading in the newspapers the exploits of their own fleets and armies. To them this amusement compensates the small difference between the taxes which they pay on account of the war, and those which they had been accustomed to pay in time of peace.Ā They are commonly dissatisfied with the return of peace, which puts an end to their amusement, and to a thousand visionary hopes of conquest and national glory from a longer continuance of the war.Ā
The last thing the Washington political class and the economic elites who control it want is for this war to end. Anyone who doubts that should just look at the express statements from these leading Democrats, who wasted no time at all seizing on theĀ latest Bad GuysĀ to justify literallydecadesĀ more of this profiteering and war-making.
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