Western militarism constitutes, next to climate change and poverty, the worldās greatest scourge. As internationally acclaimed Canadian academic Michel Chossudovsky has pointed out, NATOās aggressive expansion into Eurasia and the Middle East has brought about the possibility of a āWorld War Three scenario.ā
Since the Second World War, the USA and UK have deployed troops nearly every year: Between 1950 and 1991 the USA used or threatened to use force about 500 times. The 1982 Falklands War constituted the 88th deployment of British troops since 1945, in a total of 51 countries.
Most of these interventions have occurred in secret. Traditional militarism of the type seen during World War II and the Vietnam War posed various problems for Western elites. During World War II, the centralisation of the economy and mass conscript participation helped to advance the power of organised labour. As a consequence, the āfree-enterpriseā economic model preferred by corporate business elites came under challenge from progressive working class activism. During the Vietnam War, broad mass movements exposed the aims and effects of Western militarism and challenged the foundations of the social order. The āNew Leftā exposed the USA as a rogue aggressor state. For Western elites, this became to be known as the āVietnam Syndrome.ā As a counter measure, new militarist strategies were implemented in order to avoid extensive military adventures and their socio-political repercussions.
At the heart of what scholar Richard Keeble, in his book Secret State, Silent Press, terms ānew militarismā has been the Low Intensity Conflict (LIC) strategy. LIC involves the use of special-forces, secret services, proxy armies, air raids and modernised war technology together with diplomatic, economic, trade, social and cultural forms of warfare which are largely applied in secrecy. According to Keeble, LIC was ādeveloped in response to the perceived threats to vulnerable US strategic interests,ā to avoid unpopular āmass participatory warfareā and act without declaring war in order to keep political aspects and gruesome details about conflicts off the public agenda.
As John Stockwell has argued in his book The Praetorian Guard, the CIA had already by 1990 been secretly involved in 3,000 major and 10,000 minor operations, which were āall illegal, and all designed to disrupt, destabilize, or modify the activities of other countries.ā
Examples of post-Cold War LIC policies include the 1990s sanction regime imposed on Iraq as well as US/Coalition ācounter-insurgencyā policies during the occupation that fuelled a Sunni/Shia civil war and the rise of ISIS. Another more recent case of LIC constitutes Western support for ārebelsā in Syria and Libya which also strengthened ISIS and further led to the fragmentation and destruction of the region. Remote controlled warfare, such as US President Barack Obamaās Drone programme, is also an essential part of LIC.
Next to secret warfare, new militarism has involved a selected range of major and overt āquickieā interventions against Iraq, Somalia, the Former Republic of Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, and Libya among other countries. These constituted manufactured, media-hyped āoperationsā against vulnerable enemy states or movements who were depicted as existential threats. According to Keeble āthese āoperationsā are then spectacular, essentially PR, events providing the theatre in which the US and its allies can claim their so-called āvictoriesāā ā despite the devastating consequences for the target countries which have largely been ignored by the mainstream news media.
In 2012, annual military spending in the USA had increased to about $1 Trillion (see Robert W. McChesney, Digital Disconnect). Western militarism has been driven by this war economy. The funds invested in the military-industrial complex must be redistributed. The vast military machine needs to be dismantled. This can only be achieved by the concerted and peaceful efforts of an international grass roots movement.
ZNetwork is funded solely through the generosity of its readers.
Donate