As Greenwald observes:
Obama-style facelift"Obama's most important value was in prettifying, marketing and prolonging wars, not ending them. They saw him for what U.S. Presidents really are: instruments to create a brand and image about the U.S. role in the world that can be effectively peddled to both the domestic population in the U.S. and then on the global stage, and specifically to pretend that endless barbaric U.S. wars are really humanitarian projects benevolently designed to help people -- the pretext used to justify every war by every country in history."
Once the state is understood as a vehicle for entrenching elite power -- and war its most trusted tool for concentrating power -- the world becomes far more intelligible. Western economies never stopped being colonial economies, but they were given an Obama-style facelift. War and plunder -- even when they masquerade as "defense," or peace -- are still the core western mission.
That is why Britons, believing days of empire are long behind them, might have been shocked to learn this week that the UK still operates 145 military bases in 42 countries around the globe, meaning it runs the second largest network of such bases after the US.
Such information is not made available in the UK "mainstream" media, of course. It has to be provided by an "alternative" investigative site, Declassified UK. In that way the vast majority of the British public are left clueless about how their taxes are being used at a time when they are told further belt-tightening is essential.
The UK's network of bases, many of them in the Middle East, close to the world's largest oil reserves, are what the much-vaunted "special relationship" with the US amounts to. Those bases are the reason the UK -- whoever is prime minister -- is never going to say "no" to a demand that Britain join Washington in waging war, as it did in attacking Iraq in 2003, or in aiding attacks on Libya, Syria and Yemen. The UK is not only a satellite of the US empire, it is a lynchpin of the western imperial war economy.
Ideological alchemyOnce that point is appreciated, the need for external enemies -- for our own Eurasias and Eastasias -- becomes clearer.
Some of those enemies, the minor ones, come and go, as demand dictates. Iraq dominated western attention for two decades. Now it has served its purpose, its killing fields and "terrorist" recruiting grounds have reverted to a mere footnote in the daily news. Likewise, the Libyan bogeyman Muammar Gaddafi was constantly paraded across news pages until he was bayonetted to death. Now the horror story that is today's chaotic Libya, a corridor for arms-running and people-trafficking, can be safely ignored. For a decade, the entirely unexceptional Arab dictator Bashar Assad, of Syria, has been elevated to the status of a new Hitler, and he will continue to serve in that role for as long as it suits the needs of the western war economy.
Notably, Israel, another lynchpin of the US empire and one that serves as a kind of offshored weapons testing laboratory for the military-industrial complex, has played a vital role in rationalizing these wars. Just as saving Afghan women from Middle Eastern patriarchy makes killing Afghans -- men, women and children -- more palatable to Europeans, so destroying Arab states can be presented as a humanitarian gesture if at the same time it crushes Israel's enemies, and by extension, through a strange, implied ideological alchemy, the enemies of all Jews.
Quite how opportunistic -- and divorced from reality -- the western discourse about Israel and the Middle East has become is obvious the moment the relentless concerns about Syria's Assad are weighed against the casual indifference towards the head-chopping rulers of Saudi Arabia, who for decades have been financing terror groups across the Middle East, including the jihadists in Syria.
During that time, Israel has covertly allied with oil-rich Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states, because all of them are safely ensconced within the US war machine. Now, with the Palestinians completely sidelined diplomatically, and with all international solidarity with Palestinians browbeaten into silence by anti-semitism smears, Israel and the Saudis are gradually going public with their alliance, like a pair of shy lovers. That included the convenient leak this week of a secret meeting between Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Saudi ruler Mohammed bin Salman in Saudi Arabia.
Israel's likely reward is contained in a new bill in Congress for even more military aid than the record $3.8 billion Israel currently receives annually from the US -- at a time when the US economy, like the UK one, is in dire straits.
Next Page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6
(Note: You can view every article as one long page if you sign up as an Advocate Member, or higher).