nettime's_decider on Fri, 19 Jan 2007 06:27:21 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Iraq: The Ways Forward: Digest [Geer, Goldhaber, Geer, Guibert] |
Re: <nettime> Iraq: The Way Forward "Benjamin Geer" <benjamin.geer@gmail.com> Michael H Goldhaber <mgoldh@well.com> "Benjamin Geer" <benjamin.geer@gmail.com> "A. G-C" <guibertc@criticalsecret.com> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Thu, 18 Jan 2007 18:01:47 +0200 From: "Benjamin Geer" <benjamin.geer@gmail.com> Subject: Re: <nettime> Iraq: The Way Forward On 18/01/07, Michael H Goldhaber <mgoldh@well.com> wrote: > In my original piece on Iraq, I tried to make the point that the main > reason for US militarism is itself, it's ecnomic benefits(?) at > home, and its effect in solidfying the country behind leaders and > policies that otherwise would be more suspect. Justifications or > rationalizations in terms of defending something or other have to be > produced from time to time, but it is folly to take those at face value. In your original piece, it sounded as if you thought those economic benefits were limited to justifying military spending. Even if governments use military operations in part for that reason and to shore up their popularity at home, as they undoubtedly do, enemies are not chosen at random, nor are the locations of military bases. Surely it makes sense for governments to focus military power on targets or regions where they believe it will bring other benefits as well. Why were the opponents in the Cold War the US and the USSR, rather than, say, the US and Western Europe? I think it must be because the US wanted to ensure that the world remained hospitable to its companies, and communism threatened that objective. For example, in 1954, after the elected government of Guatemala passed a land reform law allowing it to expropriate land owned by the United Fruit Company,[1] United Fruit lobbyists persuaded US president Eisenhower that Guatemala's president Arbenz intended to align his country with the USSR, and Eisenhower authorised a $2.7 million budget for a covert military operation to overthrow Arbenz.[2] A covert operation couldn't possibly bring Eisenhower any greater popularity in the US, and the economic interests it was meant to serve were not limited to those of the US military itself. The overthrow of Iranian prime minister Mossadegh in 1953 was a similar covert operation, carried out for similar reasons.[3] Ben [1] http://www.writing.upenn.edu/~afilreis/50s/zinn-chap16.html [2] http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB4/index.html [3] http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB126/index.htm - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: Michael H Goldhaber <mgoldh@well.com> Subject: Re: <nettime> Iraq: The Way Forward Date: Thu, 18 Jan 2007 10:46:16 -0800 Ben, Let me take your comments in the opposite order. I may have the advantage (dis?) on you in being old enough to remember the overthrow of Arbenz and Mossadegh. Some of the details indeed were secret, but there was enough news coverage so that a US pre-teen knew all about them. They were both treated quite openly as US victories. Naively, at the time, I was pleased at both. Enemies do have to be plausible, and of course Communism was painted as a huge and tyrannical threat. Domestic anti-communism from the ADA to Joe McCarthy was certainly part of the picture. As I emphasized, most domestic politicians in this country know little about the rest of the world. Thus they easily buy into exaggerated fears that are out there. At the same time of course, Stalinism was pretty awful; it just wasn't much of a danger to the US, nor even to most of Europe, especially after the Marshall plan. (Marshall offered to include the USSR--which rejected the offer--so the focus on communism as a threat was not originally so coherent.) As for aiding US business as a whole, a high rate of development in the rest of the world, including in the USSR would probably have benefited more companies than the kind of imperialist adventures you point to, which only aided the profits of a particular few. Many in fact chafed --and still do -- at export control laws designed on the basis of what I think was an exaggerated threat. (Right now, US business as a whole would probably benefit from high-quality, single- payer national health insurance, but that doesn't mean we can expect it any time soon. One reason is we keep hearing that the US health- care system is the best in the world -- another stance that only survives because of great ignorance. ) As for Iraq and the generalized over-emphasis on global jihad today, that (a) raises the price of oil, which hurts most US businesses (though inadvertently being a possible boon in fighting global warming); and (b) by hurting the international image of the US, removes many business opportunities and damages our cultural status. (I do not intend this as an apologia for business in general, which certainly has many anti-human practices quite separate from militarism -- for instance the anti-union stance of American investors in countries like China.) Best, Michael On Jan 18, 2007, at 8:01 AM, Benjamin Geer wrote: > On 18/01/07, Michael H Goldhaber <mgoldh@well.com> wrote: <...> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Thu, 18 Jan 2007 23:55:53 +0200 From: "Benjamin Geer" <benjamin.geer@gmail.com> Subject: Re: <nettime> Iraq: The Way Forward On 18/01/07, Michael H Goldhaber <mgoldh@well.com> wrote: > They were both treated quite openly as US victories. OK, fair enough. :) But surely you accept that there have been truly covert US military operations, which not even Congress is informed about. How about Reagan's support for the Contras in El Salvador? If the purpose of war is to justify military spending in the public's eyes, why fight a secret war? It just makes people wonder what the money is being spent on, hence the resulting scandals. > As for aiding US business as a whole, a high rate of development in the > rest of the world, including in the USSR would probably have benefited > more companies than the kind of imperialist adventures you point to, > which only aided the profits of a particular few. Would those particular few happen to be the ones who have the most influence over US foreign policy? Moreover, I'm arguing that US militarism is partly intended to bring economic benefits, but not that it always succeeds in doing so. On the contrary, governments often make huge mistakes, including fighting wars they can't win. I think the US government really expected Iraq to be pacified easily, and was genuinely surprised by the turn the occupation has taken. > As for Iraq and the generalized over-emphasis on global jihad today, that > (a) raises the price of oil, which hurts most US businesses I think it misses the point just to consider prices and profits. Oil is a structural necessity in the current US economy. Expensive oil is better than no oil, or not enough oil. US military bases in Saudi Arabia are not there to protect the price of oil, but to make sure that the supply will never be cut off again as it was in 1973. Ben - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Fri, 19 Jan 2007 00:56:53 +0100 Subject: Re: <nettime> Iraq: The Way Forward From: "A. G-C" <guibertc@criticalsecret.com> Dear Michael, dear all, Again I apologize for my language plenty of strange syntax and of twisted words. On 18/01/07 1:51, "Michael H Goldhaber" <mgoldh@well.com> probably wrote: > In my original piece on Iraq, I tried to make the point that the main > reason for US militarism is itself, it's ecnomic benefits(?) at > home, and its effect in solidfying the country behind leaders and > policies that otherwise would be more suspect. Justifications or > rationalizations in terms of defending something or other have to be > produced from time to time, but it is folly to take those at face value. Please, let us see what aspects can takes the folly and from which part of representative and progressive philosophy.. When mostly democrats have win the chambers without hindrance to the presidential lobby and power for send more and more soldiers in the Middle East this new year: I do not thin= k that the situation cannot be folly whatever the appearance of the elected democracy. There is a big problem in the democratic machine that does not assure the best alternative from the changing presidency can he be a democrat.=20 We have known a microcosmic version of it during the war of Algeria from th= e part of socialist themselves at the power (under the tendency of the parliament). The one who legitimated the torture and the mass death sentences to the Algerian clandestine soldiers and more on a missing attack made condemning a French communist to whom Mitterrand himself being the minister of the Justice has refused the discharge of the punishment (guillotine); even the president asked for the grace. More FR communist activists having disappeared after their arestation, and others thrown in jail (a lot) in proper FR. Do you think really that Guentanamo more having agreements in all the UE is not folly as tribute to the security of a country self represented as the world while claiming the security of the totality of the world? Where there is not otherness there is rationalist folly (the well-known modern rationalist folly by this way being Nazi Germany). Imagine nowadays the increasing folly to the largest territories that are considered having to be subjected, secured or exploited-even can being both destroyed/ exploited (oil sanctuaries) in the name of military practice of power from the old western democracies. Not to speak of the abuses into the Federate Russia and the otherworld China. But the powerful destruction of the world as nation self considered representative of the entirety of the world being of course the US side: able to supervise the global organizations on earth (see who is at the head of the World Bank and who can have the biggest debt without reform its mone= y but win a strategic position and so on -remember the positive effect inside and outside of the devaluate the dollar (twice times) in the nineties, at the very credit of the USA). From a hand I think that what happened in Iraq as well Abu Gra=EFb as wel= l Falloudja were not accidents but deliberate political decisions of demonstrative massive repression and experimental extermination. May be worst Falloudja than Abu Gra=EFb of which obscenity (the humiliation more the suffering more the murder of the incarcerated Iraqis) was so much communicated as lesson of a changing situation since the second international war. Personally I think that after Guernica, Hiroshima, Viet Nam, mostly of us shall never forget what they felt all around the world as connected citizen= s during the destruction of Falloudja. I shall never forget what the western allies more their local alliances have made to the resistant Falloudja whil= e the information (as well during the siege as well after it), was forbidden. Experiment a collective extermination as a demonstrative fact front of the world of the UN. Which weapons burning whatever the matters the walls and the bodies reducing, as if they would have best disappear, may be, instead of being discovered? And what the future war? You know what, but you will not collectively express it because you are afraid. We are afraid of the next step of the global war, that one which never stop because it is an alternative solution from the lost industry of the western countries... The clean war, where places are destroyed and cleaned by the same weapon? O= f any manners the result was not exactly this one, there is still progress to be made... Toward the perfect collective murder as mode of war, as we say a perfect murder - no victim no criminal - on the road. All the western countries of the world have wait without get up for stop th= e end of the extermination. From another hand it is notorious that prospective research for prevent the worst in matter of geo strategy as well economy as well defense cannot avoid the worst logical predictable arrangement of the environmental conditions and can imagine uncomfortable events but otherwise not being a relevant research. The concept of the global containing its proper entropy as totality is wron= g as well the economy. The collective western mistake and responsibility sinc= e the eighties of the last century is unlimited. If you are afraid of the logical reality of your proper camp you cannot accept that any power may be completely out of ethic whatever the democrati= c reason so what you cannot prevent it. More the ethic not being in the western landscape of western NATO when even the partners who refused the fight have accepted the flight to transport th= e troops crossing over the 'peaceful UE countries (for example Fr not to name it). All that I say is a simple predictable situation from a pragmatic observation comforted by any expert friendship on a field since the two former decades.=20 May be that we have to awake and largely open our inside eyes to influence otherwise the next coming, Best. <...> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net