In recent days we have all witnessed two
vomitous eruptions of moral nullity that would tax the powers of a
Voltaire or a Vidal to do them proper justice; they quite o'er-crow the
meager gifts of a hack like me. But I will sketch a few observations
here nonetheless, if only to add one more small voice to those few who
bear witness to the evils perpetrated by our unaccountable leaders.
We speak of course of Barack Obama's Nobel speech and Tony Blair's recent comments on the Iraq War. Let's take the lesser figure first.
Since leaving office, Tony Blair has dipped his blood-smeared snout
into various corporate troughs, amassing millions, while simultaneously
becoming one of the great whited sepulchres of our day, making a great
show of his conversion to Catholicism, his "faith foundation," and so
on. He has even lectured at Yale Divinity School. But this holy
huckster looks more haunted every day. The glaring, bulging eyes, the
frantic rictus of his grin – indistinguishable from the grimace of a
man in gut-clenching pain --- and the ever-more strident, maniacal
defense of his war crimes give compelling testimony to the hellish
fires consuming his psyche.
Next month, Blair will go before the Chilcot Inquiry, a panel of UK
Establishment worthies charged with investigating the origins of
Britain's role in the invasion of Iraq. Although the worthies have
been remarkably toothless in their questioning of the great and good so
far – the smell of whitewash is definitely in the air – the inquiry has
at least performed the useful function of bringing the forgotten
subject of Iraq back into the public eye, while collating and
confirming, with sworn testimony, much of what we have learned in dribs
and drabs over the years about the rank, deliberate deceit behind this
murderous catastrophe. One choice bit that has emerged from the inquiry
is the revelation that the centerpiece of Blair's case for immediate
war – the claim that Saddam Hussein could hit Europe with WMD-loaded
missiles on just 45 minutes' notice – came from unconfirmed, third-hand
gossip passed along by an Iraqi taxi driver.
Thus it is now Blair's contention that there is no charge to answer
concerning the origins of the war; all this WMD guff is meaningless. He
would have found "other arguments" to persuade Britons to follow George
W. Bush into the war that American militarists had long been planning.
Blair's admission has drawn a remarkable response from another
Establishment mandarin, Sir Ken Macdonald, who served for five years as
Director of Public Prosecutions under Blair's government – and now
works in private practice at a major law firm…alongside Tony Blair's
wife, Cherie. The headline in The Times puts it plainly: "Intoxicated by power, Blair tricked us into war." In his column, Macdonald writes:
The degree of deceit involved in our decision to go to war on Iraq becomes steadily clearer. This was a foreign policy disgrace of epic proportions and playing footsie on Sunday morning television does nothing to repair the damage. It is now very difficult to avoid the conclusion that Tony Blair engaged in an alarming subterfuge with his partner George Bush and went on to mislead and cajole the British people into a deadly war they had made perfectly clear they didn’t want, and on a basis that it’s increasingly hard to believe even he found truly credible.
...Mr Blair’s fundamental flaw was his sycophancy towards power. Perhaps this seems odd in a man who drank so much of that mind-altering brew at home. But Washington turned his head and he couldn’t resist the stage or the glamour that it gave him. In this sense he was weak and, as we can see, he remains so. Since those sorry days we have frequently heard him repeating the self-regarding mantra that “hand on heart, I only did what I thought was right”. But this is a narcissist’s defence and self-belief is no answer to misjudgment: it is certainly no answer to death. “Yo, Blair”, perhaps, was his truest measure.
Macdonald also gives us a sneak peek inside the
workings of the elite, with observations that doubtless apply equally
well across the ocean:
In British public life, loyalty and service to power can sometimes count for more to insiders than any tricky questions of wider reputation. It’s the regard you are held in by your peers that really counts, so that steadfastness in the face of attack and threatened exposure brings its own rich hierarchy of honour and reward. Disloyalty, on the other hand, means a terrible casting out, a rocky and barren Roman exile that few have the courage to endure. So which way will our heroes jump?
We must hope in the right direction — for it is precisely this privately arranged nature of British Establishment power, stubborn beyond sympathy for years in the face of the modern world, that has brought our politics so low. If Chilcot fails to reveal the truth without fear in this Middle Eastern story of violence and destruction, the inquiry will be held in deserved and withering contempt.
It is almost certain that the Chilcot inquiry will produce little more
than the usual blood-flecked whitewash. Certainly, Tony Blair will face
no official action for his crimes; he will not even lose any of his
corporate sponsors, unlike the heinous Tiger Woods, whose sexual
intimacy with consenting adults is obviously far worse than the murder
of more than one million innocent people. (We'll never see Woods
lecturing at Yale Divinity School now!)
But keep looking at Blair's face; watch, year by year, as it brings
forth the hideous fruits of the inferno within. For as one of his
illustrious countrymen once put it: "Murder, though it have no tongue,
will speak with most miraculous organ."
"A narcissist's defense." As a description of Obama's Peace Prize
speech, Macdonald's phrase could hardly be bettered. But the intense,
near-pathological self-regard in the speech was not Obama's alone, of
course; we must do him the credit of acknowledging that in this regard,
at least, he was what we so often proclaim our leaders to be: the
embodiment of the nation. His soaring proclamation of American
exceptionalism, in a setting supposedly devoted to universal principles
of peace, was breathtaking in its chutzpah – but entirely in keeping
with the feelings of the vast majority of his countrymen, and the
ruling elite above all.
Many have already remarked on Obama's adoption in the speech of
Bush's principle of unilateral, "pre-emptive" military action, anytime,
anywhere, whenever a leader declares his nation is under threat. This
approach -- which Bush called "the path of action" -- was roundly
scorned by critics of the former regime, many of whom now scramble to
praise Obama's "nuanced" embrace of aggression. But again, let us give
credit where it is due; in this aspect of the speech, Obama did in fact
go beyond Bush's more narrowly nationalist conception, saying: "I —
like any head of state — reserve the right to act unilaterally if
necessary to defend my nation."
Thus Obama would, apparently, extend the right of unilateral military action to "any head
of state" that feels the necessity of defending his or her nation. But
of course this is just empty verbiage, a pointless, bald-faced lie that
not even Bush would have tried to get away with. Would Obama accept a
unilateral, pre-emptive strike by Tehran against Israel, where
legislators and government officials routinely talk of attacking Iran?
Would Obama cheer the "right" of Russia to strike unilaterally at
Poland if the U.S. "missile shield" deal, now on hold, was suddenly
consummated? Would Obama support a unilateral strike by India at
Pakistan -- or vice versa -- in the still-seething cauldron of tensions
on the subcontinent, where both nations legitimately feel threatened by
the other? Would he support the right of Kim Jong-il to "defend his
nation" by attacking South Korea the next time there is a threatening
border incident there?
No, it is clear that only the United States -- and its allies, like
Israel -- are to be allowed the supreme privilege of unilateral war.
The line was inserted in the speech simply because it would sound good
in the moment, and create a temporary emotional reaction that might
carry listeners past the macabre incongruity underlying the entire
event: giving a peace award to the bloodstained leader of a military
machine hip-deep in the coagulate gore of two, vast,
civilian-slaughtering wars.
Obama staked his boldest claim to American exceptionalism with a
passage that he lifted, almost verbatim, from his West Point speech
just a few days before (see here and especially here), when he announced his second massive escalation of the war in Afghanistan:
Whatever mistakes we have made, the plain fact is this: The United States of America has helped underwrite global security for more than six decades with the blood of our citizens and the strength of our arms. The service and sacrifice of our men and women in uniform has promoted peace and prosperity from Germany to Korea, and enabled democracy to take hold in places like the Balkans. We have borne this burden not because we seek to impose our will. We have done so out of enlightened self-interest — because we seek a better future for our children and grandchildren, and we believe that their lives will be better if other people's children and grandchildren can live in freedom and prosperity.
Here is chutzpah -- and hubris -- raised to the level of the sublime.
Obama has taken the words he used to instigate the certain death of
thousands of human beings and the acceleration of hatred, extremism,
chaos and brutal corruption around the world -- and offered them as
justification for the hideous, unabashedly Orwellian doctrine at the
core of his speech: War is Peace. In this perverse inversion of values,
Obama, as a warmaker, is actually a peacemaker, you see -- and thus a
legitimate heir to the legacy of Martin Luther King Jr., who was evoked
at several points in the speech.
And here we come to what was for me the most revolting part of the
speech. And perhaps the most significant too. All the cant about
America's altruism and "enlightened self-interest" in killing millions
of people -- Indochina was one of many convenient blank spots in
Obama's historical survey-- for the sake of all the children of the
world (red and yellow, black and white, they are precious in our sight)
was just par for the rhetorical course. It was nothing that had not
been said many times before, including the references -- so lauded by
Obama's liberal apologists -- to those inadvertent "mistakes" America
seems to keep making; out of a surfeit of good intentions, no doubt.
But I don't think an American president has so openly and directly
traduced the work of Martin Luther King Jr. and Mohandas Gandhi before.
(And to do it while accepting the Nobel Peace Prize, no less! Oh, that
sublime brass....)
Although larded with usual hyper-yet-flaccid, florid-yet-false
oratorical stylings that have become Obama's trademark, his words about
King and Gandhi drip with scorn and condescension. I was actually taken
aback when I read these passages:
I make this statement [about the moral justification for war] mindful of what Martin Luther King said in this same ceremony years ago: "Violence never brings permanent peace. It solves no social problem: It merely creates new and more complicated ones." As someone who stands here as a direct consequence of Dr. King's life's work, I am living testimony to the moral force of non-violence. I know there is nothing weak, nothing passive, nothing naive in the creed and lives of Gandhi and King.
But as a head of state sworn to protect and defend my nation, I cannot be guided by their examples alone. I face the world as it is, and cannot stand idle in the face of threats to the American people. For make no mistake: Evil does exist in the world. A nonviolent movement could not have halted Hitler's armies. Negotiations cannot convince al-Qaeda's leaders to lay down their arms.
The intellectual incoherence and arrogant sneering behind this supposedly laudatory passage is staggering. After claiming to be the personal embodiment of King and Gandhi's philosophy of non-violent action, Obama gives the game away with this line: "I face the world as it is." Those other two guys, they were just dreamers, they were unrealistic, they were unserious; they didn't "face the world as it is," they weren't savvy and pragmatic, like me. I have to go to war because I'm a head of state "sworn to protect and defend my nation."
[Here, Obama indulges in a trope that is pandemic among his apologists: the idea that he was somehow forced to become the head of a militarist state waging endless war around the world, that he has somehow woken up and found himself "the Commander-in-Chief of a nation in the midst of two wars." But of course he chose to pursue this kind of power in this kind of system -- chose it, pursued it, fought like hell to win it. It's what he wanted. Yet still this notion of Obama as a helpless victim of fate -- lost in a world he never made -- persists.]
He then goes on to give the lie to his previously stated admiration for Gandhi and King: "A nonviolent movement could not have halted Hitler's armies. Negotiations cannot convince al-Qaeda's leaders to lay down their arms." Thus, King, Gandhi and any practitioner of non-violent resistance to evil are, ultimately, naive, ineffectual -- weak.
Notice the incoherence – or perhaps deliberate elision – at work here. Obama says he must face down "threats to the American people" -- and then talks about Hitler's armies, immediately coupling, and rhetorically equating them, with al-Qaeda's scattered handful of hidden fugitives. Are the American people now threatened by Hitler's armies? Are al-Qaeda's paltry forces -- less than 100 of them in Afghanistan, according to Obama's own war-wagers -- the equal of Hitler's armies of millions of men?
But there is a deeper untruth beyond these cheap rhetorical tricks. For it is blatantly untrue to say that "a nonviolent movement could not have halted Hitler's armies." First of all, one cannot make that statement because this approach was never tried. Therefore you cannot say categorically that it would not have worked. Doubtless it would have cost millions of lives; but as Gandhi himself pointed out, the violent resistance to Hitler's armies also cost tens of millions of lives. But Obama's formulation -- which is a hackneyed one indeed -- only deals with one view of non-violent resistance to Hitler: i.e., from the outside, resisting his armies as they poured across the borders. There is another way in which a non-violent resistance movement without any doubt could have "halted Hitler's armies": if it had taken root and spread throughout Germany itself, including among the armed forces and its supporting industries.
In the event, this did not happen. But it was not, and is not, an impossibility for humankind to pursue such an approach. Therefore it is fatuous and false to state what cannot possibly be known: whether non-violent resistance would have thwarted Nazism, and whether this would have been more or less costly than the way of violence.
Similarly, it is false to say that "negotiations cannot convince al-Qaeda's leaders to lay down their arms." The only response to this bald statement is: How do you know? Has anybody tried it? No. Therefore you cannot call it an impossibility -- and then use this supposed, untested "impossibility" as your justification for laying waste to whole nations. You may say that it would be unjust to negotiate with al-Qaeda, that those who use murderous violence to achieve their ends should simply be killed or prosecuted. (Although where would that leave the leaders of the exalted, exceptional, unilateral United States?) But of course this is precisely what Gandhi did: he sat down and negotiated with the representatives of an empire that had caused the deaths of millions of his own people. He negotiated with them in good faith, with good will, despite what they had done and were doing to his people -- and despite the fact that many of his interlocutors, such as Winston Churchill, hated him with a blind, racist fury. And he was successful -- although again, not without cost, both before and after the liberation. But Gandhi, and King, knew the costs of non-violence – because they were genuinely savvy, and genuinely realistic about the nature of evil.
In any case, aside from the particulars of any real situation or hypothetical scenario, the speech is a glaring example of Obama's deep-seated (and perhaps unconscious) contempt for the path of peace, and its practitioners. It is also a manifestation of his own inferno, of his desperate need to justify -- to himself and to the world -- his free, deliberate choice to follow the blood-choked "path of action" as the commander-in-chief of a bloated, brutal war machine.
No one forced any of these decisions – or these specious, obscene justifications – on Obama or Blair. It is their own narcissism -- their own lust for power, and their love for the system that gave them that power – that has covered them with the blood and shame that now taint their every word and deed.
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Tatarewicz
said:
|
... "No one forced any of these decisions...on Obama or Blair." This is not entirely correct. The Afghan and Iraq wars are of vital importance to Israel's security and it is Organized Jewry in Britain and America that determines the outcomes of national elections as a result of the manpower, money and media support it provides. Thus if the two leaders ignored Israel's interests neither would have been elected or even chosen to run. So there's plenty of pressure on leaders to do Israel's bidding as long as the agents and lobbies of that illegal state control politics in a country. |
|
Brendan
said:
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... Great post. I can't believe that more people aren't writing about Tony Blair's remarks. |
|






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