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Don't Mess With Texas
(4/03)
Teach them a lesson they'll never forget. So
goes the thinking in Texas-on-the-Potomac. And what a lesson
it has been! They'll never mess with us again, nosirree Bob!
As this childish thinking worms its way around the neocon
braintrust, now giddy with "success" of their own
definition (like toppling the Taliban?), it is instructive
what lessons might be drawn by more rational--albeit scared to
death--observers around the world.
These are some of the conclusions I've drawn, doing my humble
little part to follow Bush's sage advice. First, if you don't
already have nukes, you'd better get some--and that right
soon. Uncle Sam don't play. While you're in the catalog, get a
whole bunch of night goggles, and tons more air support. Spend
more on the military, and less on feeding, housing and
educating your people, if you care about your own sovereignty.
The picture of the American GI lounging in Hussein's chair,
plastered on front pages everywhere, sent the disturbing
signal: it's ours....it's ALL ours. I can't imagine that image
spun quite the way it was intended around the globe--or maybe
that's just the point: we're comin' to getcha! And another
thing--don't bother trying to meet the Americans head on.
Lesson number two is that, in asymmetrical warfare, guerrilla
campaign is the only way to go--do anything, and I mean
anything (see Lesson #1: Get Nukes) to keep the mighty
invading army at bay.
Lessons 3 through umpteen were learned before the war started,
actually: international law doesn't apply to the U.S., The UN,
EU, as well as various global aid organizations, conventions,
and agreements are quaint relics of a bygone era. Oh,
right--there is a caveat here: we can bring them back to life
on call when it suits our purpose and we want to complain
about other people's behavior.
Although it may seem incongruous, I'll allow myself a Seinfeld
moment here. What the hell, Americans watch 25 hours of TV a
day anyway. I couldn't help thinking of the time Kramer was
boasting about his karate prowess until he was forced to
reveal that he was just beating up children. In an ominous
twist, the kids ganged up and waited for him in the alley,
where they beat the crap out of him.
And what is all this focus on civilian dead? I mean it's
horrific, of course--it's the whole ball of wax, really. But
soldiers aren't people? When the tables are turned, the U.S.
screams bloody murder if one of our boys is killed, TV up
close and personals, etc. Enemy soldiers don't have mothers?
They can be blithely incinerated from 40,000 feet by fuel-air
bombs and other weapons more horrific than anything currently
banned--international law, thankfully for the Americans,
hasn't had time to catch up to the technology. I guess that
undermining, bribing, and threatening pays off. Bush and
Rumsfeld (dubbed Chemical Donald by a British columnist) even
insist that we have the right to use nuclear weapons, or other
gases only allowed for domestic crowd control.
Only the Americans have the sovereign right, drunk with power
and arrogance, to threaten to try the invaded in US courts for
"war crimes." Bush and his corporate cronies are so
busy trying to teach the world a lesson that they forgot the
lessons they should have learned from history. For all the
distorted comparisons to Hitler, they seem to have missed this
gem from the Nuremberg International Military Tribunal:
"War is essentially an evil thing... To initiate a war of
aggression, therefore, is not only an international crime, it
is the supreme international crime, differing only from other
war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated
evil of the whole."
There are other lessons, both foreign and domestic. Before the
war came the bugging of UN personnel, some in their own
houses. A sort of Watergate gone global--get the message yet?
For icing, Americans exploited the fog of war to shoot up
convoys of diplomats with whom they just happened to have
beef, and killed a few journalists who gave them bad
press--one of them on air! Now THAT sends a message! Coupled
with the unabashed prostitution of embedded (or
"in-bed-with") journalism, and we have a pretty good
idea of which way we are supposed to go.
But let's not forget the domestic lessons. The Bush Cartel is
an equal opportunity terrorist. Cops in Oakland opened fire on
protesters with "non-lethal" weapons (kind of like
pushing someone gently down the stairs) in an incident oddly
reminiscent of the San Francisco 1934 general strike--which
also started on the docks. Radio hosts encourage violence
against protesters, and some have obliged, plowing into one
demonstration in a truck, calling in bomb or sniper threats. A
high school principal pulled the plug on movies like
"Bowling for Columbine" by that dangerous radical,
Michael Moore.
John Kerry was attacked for speaking out against Bush. One GOP
hatchet man went so far as to suggest that Kerry had no right
to call for "regime change" during wartime.
Hmmmm..in civics class I was led to believe we had
(technically) regime change every four years. And the
Democrats, for crying out loud, who have enough trouble
defining the word "opposition!" Forget Syria and
Iran: if the milquetoast Kerry, who voted for the war, is fair
game, who's next?
But I suppose ol' George and his puppet masters might be
touchy on the subject. Imagine if people learned the wrong
lessons, and enforced regime change the way they do--or even
ascended to power the way Bush did? Yikes! Iraqis, of course,
don't speak out because they are afraid of the regime, and our
freedom, by contrast, is the reason we should all just shut up
(or else). Beam me up, Scottie! The whole project has the air
of what Robert Parry has called Bush's Alderan, recalling the
Star Wars plot line where a small rebel planet destroyed by
the infamous Death Star to keep everyone else in line.
Don't worry, we are told--it will all come into focus soon.
Yeah, we know. But no matter how many staged footage of
toppling statues, Iraqis are a proud people. And a gun-toting
one. When the US military tries to disarm Iraqi civilians,
we'll see...
What is also waiting to come out is that this episode of
Gilligan's Travels to Liliput hasn't been quite the romp we've
been told, even in the last week Then again, it is a fiction
to think that the access will be freer under the watchful eye
of the US military occupation. Government minders are no match
for tanks shelling your hotel.
And as far as lies go, you ain't seen nothin yet. Suicide
bombers--the term itself a manipulative attempt at a subtle
link with the events of Sept. 11--will be branded terrorists
(or, even more incomprehensibly, 'cowards') by an occupation
force and a press corps which refuses to admit it is there
illegally. What a world turned on its head: how could there
possibly be any illegitimate American targets where there is
an occupying army? But of course, the invaded squirming under
the tread of an Abrams tank don't have the right to resist.
Further resistance will be dismissed as "getting in the
way of rebuilding Iraq." They will not be heroic
defenders of their country, but always foreign fighters, just
as they were "outside agitators" according to
COINTELPRO, and "agents provocateurs" at the
Haymarket. Of course. In what conceivable universe could
people actually want to repel foreign invaders?
We will be treated to many more planted stories of 'potential'
WMD's, the horrors of Saddam's regime, the noble cause of
"Freeing" Iraq. And the horrific cost of this war
and the sanctions which preceded it will be laid at Iraq's own
door--with a docile press corps, the victor writes the
history.
This all relies, by the way, on keeping the American bubble
inflated. The Stupidity Factor doesn't appear to be
evaporating any time soon. Many Americans are perfectly happy
to have a "president" who is no smarter than they
are--it's not threatening unless you get on his bad side. Kind
of like the old drunk on the corner stool in the bar. He tells
some good jokes, but watch out when he's in a mood. Remember
that egghead Carter? Yuck. I used to think that the monopoly
corporations who funded Bush's rise to power had picked
wrong--and it may still be shown that they overplayed their
hand. But my cynicism and despair have deepened in the past
few months. What a coup (pun intended) to have picked a true
idiot, a mean, drunken frat boy who does what he's told and
then some, sticking to it like a rabid pit bull.
I can't help thinking that Randy Newman had the dark side of
the American character pegged, and I keep running this old
lyric through my head:
Americans dream of Gypsies I have found/
and Gypsy knives and
Gypsy thighs that pound and pound and pound and pound/
And
African appendages that almost reach the ground/
And little
boys playing baseball in the rain/
America, American, may God
shed his grace on thee/
You have whipped the Filipino, now you
rule the Western Sea/
America, America, step out into the light/
You are the best dream that man has ever dreamed/
and may
all your Christmases be white.
So, many of the people will eat it up. But the economy is in
deep trouble and getting worse--the "what now" burp
is already hitting the markets. And using the Conquering Hero
spike to float their crazy economic agenda just won't work
like they want it to. Even Democrats will put up some kind of
a fight.
Don't forget the Afghan "model," where Special
Forces casualties are said to be "staggering." Sorry
for all the quotes and parentheses, but the bogus language of
this war makes it almost impossible to talk without footnotes.
Let's not kid ourselves, no matter how many times we watch the
bogus, staged, rehashed footage of statues toppling: this
"war" (slaughter) isn't "over" (left the
front page) any more than its Afghan counterpart, where 11
civilians were recently killed by "mistake"
(murder-from-above by an arrogant superpower that would rather
kill and ask questions later, earning it the enmity of all and
the certain retaliation by virtually anybody).
And I was only kidding before when I mentioned John Kerry. Of
course we can't forget Syria and Iran, now in the sights of
the voracious Democracy Installing Cabal (you do the letters).
And then there's Colombia, Venezuela, Philippines, Syria,
Iran, North Korea, Montezuma, the Shores of Tripoli.... But
let's not forget the biggest lesson, looming in the shadows:
the Kramer lesson (apologies to Michael Richards). The kids
are waiting in the alley, George They are learning different
lessons from this war--and their numbers are growing.
© 2003 Daniel Patrick Welch. Reprint permission granted.
^ Top ^
Welch lives and writes in Salem, Massachusetts, USA,
with his wife, Julia Nambalirwa-Lugudde. Together they run The
Greenhouse School. His columns have also been aired
on radio. Others interested in airing the audio version
(electronic recording available) please contact the author.
Welch speaks several languages and is available for recordings
in French, German, Russian and Spanish pending a reliable
translation, or, alternatively, telephone interviews in the
target language.
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