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Engelhardt writes: "Washington may be mobilized for permanent war. Special operations forces may be operating in up to 120 countries. Drone bases may be proliferating across the planet. We may be building up forces in the Persian Gulf and 'pivoting' to Asia, no one here notices; no one here cares."

200 US Marines have been deployed to Guatemala. (photo: Getty Images)
200 US Marines have been deployed to Guatemala. (photo: Getty Images)


US Troops to Guatemala?

By Tom Engelhardt, TomDispatch

15 September 12

 

t's pop-quiz time when it comes to the American way of war: three questions, torn from the latest news, just for you. Here's the first of them, and good luck!

Two weeks ago, 200 U.S. Marines began armed operations in…?:

  1. Afghanistan

  2. Pakistan

  3. Iran

  4. Somalia

  5. Yemen

  6. Central Africa

  7. Northern Mali

  8. The Philippines

  9. Guatemala

If you opted for any answer, "a" through "h," you took a reasonable shot at it. After all, there's an ongoing American war in Afghanistan and somewhere in the southern part of that country, 200 armed U.S. Marines could well have been involved in an operation. In Pakistan, an undeclared, CIA-run air war has long been underway, and in the past there have been armed border crossings by U.S. special operations forces as well as U.S. piloted cross-border air strikes, but no Marines.

When it comes to Iran, Washington's regional preparations for war are staggering. The continual build-up of U.S. naval power in the Persian Gulf, of land forces on bases around that country, of air power (and anti-missile defenses) in the region should leave any observer breathless. There are U.S. special operations forces near the Iranian border and CIA drones regularly over that country. In conjunction with the Israelis, Washington has launched a cyberwar against Iran's nuclear program and computer systems. It has also established fierce oil and banking sanctions, and there seem to have been at least some U.S. cross-border operations into Iran going back to at least 2007. In addition, a recent front-page New York Times story on Obama administration attempts to mollify Israel over its Iran policy included this ominous line: "The administration is also considering... covert activities that have been previously considered and rejected." So 200 armed Marines in action in Iran -- not yet, but don't get down on yourself, it was a good guess.

In Somalia, according to Wired magazine's Danger Room blog, there have been far more U.S. drone flights and strikes against the Islamic extremist al-Shabaab movement and al-Qaeda elements than anyone previously knew. In addition, the U.S. has at least partially funded, supported, equipped, advised, and promoted proxy wars there, involving Ethiopian troops back in 2007 and more recently Ugandan and Burundi troops (as well as an invading Kenyan army). In addition, CIA operatives and possibly other irregulars and hired guns are well established in Mogadishu, the capital.

In Yemen, as in Somalia, the combination has been proxy war and strikes by drones (as well as piloted planes), with some U.S. special forces advisors on the ground, and civilian casualties (and anger at the U.S.) rising in the southern part of the country -- but also, as in Somalia, no Marines. Central Africa? Now, there's a thought. After all, at least 100 Green Berets were sent in there this year as part of a campaign against Joseph Kony's Ugandan-based Lord's Resistance Army. As for Northern Mali, taken over by Islamic extremists (including an al-Qaeda-affiliated group), it certainly presents a target for future U.S. intervention -- and we still don't know what those three U.S. Army commandos who skidded off a bridge to their deaths in their Toyota Land Rover with three "Moroccan prostitutes" were doing in a country with which the U.S. military had officially cut its ties after a democratically elected government was overthrown. But 200 Marines operating in war-torn areas of Africa? Not yet. When it comes to the Philippines, again no Marines, even though U.S. special forces and drones have been aiding the government in a low-level conflict with Islamic militants in Mindanao.

As it happens, the correct, if surprising, answer is "i." And if you chose it, congratulations!

On August 29th, the Associated Press reported that a "team of 200 U.S. Marines began patrolling Guatemala's western coast this week in an unprecedented operation to beat drug traffickers in the Central America region, a U.S. military spokesman said Wednesday." This could have been big news. It's a sizeable enough intervention: 200 Marines sent into action in a country where we last had a military presence in 1978. If this wasn't the beginning of something bigger and wider, it would be surprising, given that commando-style operatives from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration have been firing weapons and killing locals in a similar effort in Honduras, and that, along with U.S. drones, the CIA is evidently moving ever deeper into the drug war in Mexico.

In addition, there's a history here. After all, in the early part of the previous century, sending in the Marines -- in Nicaragua, Haiti, the Dominican Repubic, and elsewhere -- was the way Washington demonstrated its power in its own "backyard." And yet other than a few straightforward news reports on the Guatemalan intervention, there has been no significant media discussion, no storm of criticism or commentary, no mention at either political convention, and no debate or discussion about the wisdom of such a step in this country. Odds are that you didn't even notice that it had happened.

Think of it another way: in the post-2001 era, along with two disastrous wars on the Eurasian mainland, we've been regularly sending in the Marines or special operations forces, as well as naval, air, and robotic power. Such acts are, by now, so ordinary that they are seldom considered worthy of much discussion here, even though no other country acts (or even has the capacity to act) this way. This is simply what Washington's National Security Complex does for a living.

At the moment, it seems, a historical circle is being closed with the Marines once again heading back into Latin America as the "drug war" Washington proclaimed years ago becomes an actual drug war. It's a demonstration that, these days, when Washington sees a problem anywhere on the planet, its version of a "foreign policy" is most likely to call on the U.S. military. Force is increasingly not our option of last resort, but our first choice.

Now, consider question two in our little snap quiz of recent war news:

In 2011, what percentage of the global arms market did the U.S. control?

(Keep in mind that, as everyone knows, the world is an arms bazaar filled with haggling merchants. Though the Cold War and the superpower arms rivalry is long over, there are obviously plenty of countries eager to peddle their weaponry, no matter what conflicts may be stoked as a result.)

  1. 37% ($12.1 billion), followed closely by Russia ($10.7 billion), France, China, and the United Kingdom.

  2. 52.7% ($21.3 billion), followed by Russia at 19.3% ($12.8 billion), France, Britain, China, Germany, and Italy.

  3. 68% ($37.8 billion), followed by Italy at 9% ($3.7 billion) and Russia at 8% ($3.5 billion).

  4. 78% ($66.3 billion), followed by Russia at 5.6% ($4.8 billion).

Naturally, you naturally eliminated "d" first. Who wouldn't? After all, cornering close to 80% of the arms market would mean that the global weapons bazaar had essentially been converted into a monopoly operation. Of course, it's common knowledge that the U.S. arms giants, given a massive helping hand in their marketing by the Pentagon, remain the collective 800-pound gorilla in any room. But 37% of that market is nothing to sniff at. (At least, it wasn't in 1990, the final days of the Cold War when the Russians were still a major competitor worldwide.) As for 52.7%, what national industry wouldn't bask in the glory of such a figure -- a majority share of arms sold worldwide? (And, in fact, that was an impressive percentage back in the dismal sales year of 2010, when arms budgets worldwide were still feeling the pain of the lingering global economic recession.) Okay, so what about that hefty 68%? It couldn't have been a more striking achievement for U.S. arms makers back in 2008 in what was otherwise distinctly a lagging market.

The correct answer for 2011, however, is the singularly unbelievable one: the U.S. actually tripled its arms sales last year, hitting a record high, and cornering almost 78% of the global arms trade. This was reported in late August but, like those 200 Marines in Guatemala, never made onto front pages or into the top TV news stories. And yet, if arms were drugs (and it's possible that, in some sense, they are, and that we humans can indeed get addicted to them), then the U.S. has become something close enough to the world's sole dealer. That should be front-page news, shouldn't it?

Okay, so here's the third question in today's quiz:

From a local base in which country did U.S. Global Hawk drones fly long-range surveillance missions between late 2001 and at least 2006?

  1. The Seychelles Islands

  2. Ethiopia

  3. An unnamed Middle Eastern country

  4. Australia

Actually, the drone base the U.S. has indeed operated in the Seychelles Islands in the Indian Ocean was first used only in 2009 and the drone base Washington has developed in Ethiopia by upgrading a civilian airport only became operational in 2011. As for that "unnamed Middle Eastern country," perhaps Saudi Arabia, the new airstrip being built there, assumedly for the CIA's drones, may now be operational. Once again, the right answer turns out to be the unlikely one. Recently, the Australian media reported that the U.S. had flown early, secretive Global Hawk missions out of a Royal Australian Base at Edinburg. These were detected by a "group of Adelaide aviation historians." The Global Hawk, an enormous drone, can stay in the air a long time. What those flights were surveilling back then is unknown, though North Korea might be one guess. Whether they continued beyond 2006 is also unknown.

Unlike the previous two stories, this one never made it into the U.S. media and if it had, would have gone unnoticed anyway. After all, who in Washington or among U.S. reporters and pundits would have found it odd that, long before its recent, much-ballyhooed "pivot" to Asia, the U.S. was flying some of its earliest drone missions over vast areas of the Pacific? Who even finds it strange that, in the years since 2001, the U.S. has been putting together an ever more elaborate network of its own drone bases on foreign soil, or that the U.S. has an estimated 1,000-1,200 military bases scattered across the planet, some the size of small American towns (not to speak of scads of bases in the United States)?

Like those Marines in Guatemala, like the near-monopoly on the arms trade, this sort of thing is hardly considered significant news in the U.S., though in its size and scope it is surely historically unprecedented. Nor does it seem strange to us that no other country on the planet has more than a tiny number of bases outside its own territory: the Russians have a scattered few in the former SSRs of the Soviet Union and a single old naval base in Syria that has been in the news of late; the French still have some in Francophone Africa; the British have a few leftovers from their own imperial era, including the island of Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean, which has essentially been transformed into an American base; and the Chinese may be in the process of setting up a couple of modest bases as well. Add up every non-American base on foreign soil, however, and the total is probably less than 2% of the American empire of bases.

Investing in War

It would, by the way, be a snap to construct a little quiz like this every couple of weeks from U.S. military news that's reported but not attended to here, and each quiz would make the same essential point: from Washington's perspective, the world is primarily a landscape for arming for, garrisoning for, training for, planning for, and making war. War is what we invest our time, energy, and treasure in on a scale that is, in its own way, remarkable, even if it seldom registers in this country.

In a sense (leaving aside the obvious inability of the U.S. military to actually win wars), it may, at this point, be what we do best. After all, whatever the results, it's an accomplishment to send 200 Marines to Guatemala for a month of drug interdiction work, to get those Global Hawks secretly to Australia to monitor the Pacific, and to corner the market on things that go boom in the night.

Think of it this way: the United States is alone on the planet, not just in its ability, but in its willingness to use military force in drug wars, religious wars, political wars, conflicts of almost any sort, constantly and on a global scale. No other group of powers collectively even comes close. It also stands alone as a purveyor of major weapons systems and so as a generator of war. It is, in a sense, a massive machine for the promotion of war on a global scale.

We have, in other words, what increasingly looks like a monopoly on war. There have, of course, been warrior societies in the past that committed themselves to a mobilized life of war-making above all else. What's unique about the United States is that it isn't a warrior society. Quite the opposite.

Washington may be mobilized for permanent war. Special operations forces may be operating in up to 120 countries. Drone bases may be proliferating across the planet. We may be building up forces in the Persian Gulf and "pivoting" to Asia. Warrior corporations and rent-a-gun mercenary outfits have mobilized on the country's disparate battlefronts to profit from the increasingly privatized twenty-first-century American version of war. The American people, however, are demobilized and detached from the wars, interventions, operations, and other military activities done in their name. As a result, 200 Marines in Guatemala, almost 78% of global weapons sales, drones flying surveillance from Australia -- no one here notices; no one here cares.

War: it's what we do the most and attend to the least. It's a nasty combination.



Tom Engelhardt, co-founder of the American Empire Project and author of "The United States of Fear" as well as "The End of Victory Culture," runs the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com. His latest book, co-authored with Nick Turse, is "Terminator Planet: The First History of Drone Warfare, 2001-2050." To listen to Timothy MacBain's latest Tomcast audio interview in which Engelhardt discusses drone warfare and the Obama administration, click here or download it to your iPod here.

 

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+22 # Activista 2012-09-15 14:31
"Victims and human rights activists cheered when, on January 26, (20120 a Guatemalan court charged Gen. Efraín Ríos Montt with genocide and crimes against humanity. The decision to bring the 85-year-old former dictator to trial is the latest stage in a long odyssey, stretching back to the early 1980s, when Guatemala experienced the bloodiest repression of its thirty-six-year civil war. During Ríos Montt’s rule (1982–83), soldiers under his command—many of them US-trained
and -equipped—appli ed a scorched-earth policy to annihilate indigenous villages in the Mayan highlands where guerrilla insurgents were based."
www.thenation.com/article/166526/genocide-trial-guatemala#
Central and South America is waking up - and many in CIA, Pentagon, and Government are NOT very comfortable when (not if) their role in the genocide is known. War on drug is the cover - we need to silence the truth and protect war criminals.
 
 
+49 # phrixus 2012-09-15 16:18
America, in the form of it's corporate-owned government, is addicted to war. It's good business for a select few whom don't have to fight or become disabled i.e. CEO's etc. America needs a massive PR campaign directed at convincing young men and women not to join military service and become sacrificial lambs for Exxon et al. Our troops don't defend the US anymore, they are disposable tools used to advance corporate interests. It's past time for them to lay down their arms and refuse to participate in the massive deceptions of the US Government (aka lap dogs of US defense contractors, etc). ~ An honorably retired US veteran.
 
 
+9 # wantrealdemocracy 2012-09-16 09:02
We don't need a "massive PR campaign" on anything. Our nation is at the point of collapse. If people are so dumb that they don't realize that no "massive PR campaign" will inform them that all they think due to a massive PR campaign of the 1% there is not way to educate these sheeple about anything. They have been brainwashed to the point of resisting any truth. What we have to do, those of us who are able to see the truth, is RESIST! GET OUT ON THE STREETS AND PROTEST! The most important thing we MUST DO is don't vote for either of the two corrupt corporately funded polical parties. NO OBAMA, NO ROMNEY, and NO RE ELECTION of anyone in Congress now.
 
 
+4 # 666 2012-09-17 04:00
finally -wantreademocra cy- a voice of reason! soon you'll probably be shouted down by the obama troll brigade who have made so many blogs unreadable and neutered so much discussion on this site... so by way of vicarious resistance, I'm throwing my moniker in to support your position and help collect the pollice verso too.

more than ever before in my lifetime, this campaign season is one just total fantasy, fear, & BS. got to keep the slaves fighting with one another or they might rise up against their masters...

slaves of the world, unite!
 
 
+23 # Activista 2012-09-15 17:23
78% ($66.3 billion), followed by Russia at 5.6% ($4.8 billion)?
is global arms market the U.S. controls
..Israeli industries noted a record on Wednesday in defense exports, reaching an unprecedented $7.2 billion (2010)!
It could be that USA exports to Israel ($3 billion foreign = military aid) are re-exported with profits.
USA is bankrupted/addi cted by/to wars/militarism .
 
 
+18 # madams12 2012-09-15 20:49
Quite an accounting...it reminded me of some of the work that Chalmers Johnson wrote about in NEMESIS.....and of the billions expended...all whilst the Congress is planning on cutting what remains of the social network...healt h care for elderly, disabled children and the working poor...cut the peoples support but for GAWD sakes...never ever cut the metastatic ever expanding military budges...hey Romney even talked about rebuildingthe US NAVY.!! which reminds me....I just learned tonight that New Mexico's National Guard unit has been stationed since January 2011 and end Jan 2013 in.....the Egyptian Sinai as part of an international 'peacekeeping mission".. called MOF or multi operational force miltiary here;s a link: http://www.mfo.org/ THere's an interactive map that shows the two large bases 1 immediately next to Gaza and Israel...and the southern base next to Red Sea and Saudia Arabia. Who knew we had National Guardsmen in Egypt....
 
 
+16 # grouchy 2012-09-15 22:18
Well, it does supply job security for some folk over in our country--and some good bucks for our corporations--t hus I think everything is fine, right?

Greed is indeed the American way!
 
 
+16 # Milarepa 2012-09-15 23:00
The US is bent on destruction abroad. Historically, big wars usually come home. So that's ahead for all of us. As for the American public, for some time it's been bought off by panem et circenses. Bread and Games. Now, however, it's starting to look more like Crumbs and Games. A hungry man is an angry man. So when the American public runs out of crumbs it's going to start looking for real food. That usually starts with bloodletting. Of course there are exceptions. Look at the USSR. Morphed into Putin Russia with nobody killed. Could happen in the US too though I doubt it. Thanks Tom for keeping us up to date.
 
 
+11 # cordleycoit 2012-09-16 02:31
When ever the Americans arrive airstrikes follow destroying hospitals schools churches. There is a certain amount of rape and thieving attached to the American presence but murder and destruction is the path of the modern warrior. Loved ones buried a new generation to finish growing up in fear or worse growing into tools for the American war machine.
 
 
+24 # RMDC 2012-09-16 03:29
Good article. The US has special operations soldiers making war in about 90 nations. The list is secret because the things they do (i.e., terrorism and criminal acts) can't be written about.

I have to argue with certain uses of language. For example, Englehart uses "the Islamic extremist al-Shabaab movement." What is "extremist" about them. They are trying to form a government in Somalia.

The true extremists are the US marines, special forces, and political and pentagon leaders in the US who plan and murder people every day. Al Shabaab is not bombing people all over the world. The US and its terrorist and extremist groups like the CIA, marines, special forces are bombing and killing people.

Language matters. Most americans are just in the habit of thinking that anyone the US tries to kill is an "extremist" and so the killing is in their minds justtified. But it is not. The US and Israel are much more extreme in their use of violence than any other group of people on earth. Let's always be careful about who we call extreme.
 
 
+19 # Akeel1701 2012-09-16 03:48
it's a very Orwellian situation where the government needs war going on all the time, to control its populace
 
 
+8 # Glen 2012-09-16 04:15
Another exercise in revealing the intent of the U.S. Obama is in the middle of it and that cannot be denied. When attempting to defend Obama, do keep these military programs in mind. He hasn't even attempted to put a stop to any of it. He has continued an agenda that began decades ago. Arms sales and financial assistance has not ended.
 
 
+13 # walt 2012-09-16 04:59
Eisenhower predicted the "military-indus trial complex," but even he never dreamed of what we are funding now with huge, out-of-control, profiteering weapons makers running the country.

Obama promised us change and ending war was on all of our minds. Sorry, but he has proved to be more hawkish than Bush was. Of course, he has been trying to prove to his neocon critics that he is not "weak on defense" and that he can kill Muslim terrorists.

It's all very sad. All people want to be safe, but more war brings only more hatred, violence, and yes, more war. Unless Americans stand up and demand a stop to it, it appears we will continue on what Andrew Bacevich described as "a path to permanent war."
 
 
+6 # hbheinze 2012-09-16 16:25
My favorite line from Obama's campaign was, "Let's end the mindset that leads to war." If only we could do that!
 
 
+7 # in deo veritas 2012-09-16 05:47
If these damned fools are not stopped, one fine day there will be a pushback by Russia or China and we will face a thermonuclear war. The neocons pushing for war do not care as long as it suits their oligarch masters. The rest of the world simply wants to be left alone and not involved in our puerile incursions. Too bad for us that we did not adopt Ben Franklin's suggested national motto "mind your own business". Dempsey and the Joint Chiefs seem to be the only ones in DC with their heads in the "fresh air" and need to be listened to before it is too late. Neither pres. candidate has any intent of defusing this perilous situation-quite the contrary.
 
 
+13 # in deo veritas 2012-09-16 05:56
I thank God that I was able to complete 25 years of military service without having to be involved in killing anyone. I would not sell my soul to serve the nefarious schemes of this now ungodly oligarchy. This is no longer the country I helped defend. How do we expect God to bless such a hypocrisy?
 
 
+4 # panhead49 2012-09-16 06:26
Mr. Englehardt - you should attend the Gail Collins School For The Art Of The Pop Quiz if you wish to continue to offer them up.

And if you have a spare moment - bite me. Our youngest has been active duty the last 8 years so to state "...no one here notices; no one here cares." is bullshit. We notice. We care. And we've probably aged 25 years in the last 8.
 
 
+10 # phantomww 2012-09-16 07:06
How can this be? Don't we have the Nobel Peace Prize winner as our President? Didn't Obama say when he won that today is the day the world starts to heal, or something close to that?
Is the article trying to say that the peace maker is really a war maker or that he is controlled by the war making corporations? Either way doesn't sound good for Obama.
 
 
+12 # Don Thomann 2012-09-16 07:11
Washington is nothing more than a diversionary show meant to keep people believing they live in a democracy with choice (limited of course, between 2 parties) The powers that rule "behind the throne" care not a whiff which party we elect, since both are nothing but hand-puppets offering a minute difference in the options they propose. The "government" has long ago ceased to be "of the people,by the people" now it's just a show FOR the purpose of stultifying the people. What can one expect from a corporatocratic empire?
 
 
+7 # Ezeev 2012-09-16 07:56
What about jobs that pay a living wage for our young people? The biggest carrot for enlisting is a job with benefits. That is why my son, a college graduate enlisted. Video games that glamorize war do not help, easier to manipulate reality, so our youth can be ground up as cannon fodder, spit out, and neglected. The human cost is prohibitive.
That is only our youths, not counting the innocent victims of our war machine around the world. Maybe we need a military draft with no exemptions, so the perpetrators children are victims also.
 
 
+8 # Activista 2012-09-16 08:23
It seems that US military is ONLY US job left with decent benefits. Where else poor youth can go? College cost makes it inaccessible ..
 
 
+3 # 666 2012-09-17 04:05
i believe the govt has been after that as well. cutting combat pay, vet care, etc etc
 
 
+1 # phantomww 2012-09-17 13:57
when did they cut combat pay?
 
 
+15 # reiverpacific 2012-09-16 08:48
To me, the statement at the end of this article sums it up nicely, "No one here notices; no one here cares".
Ask a cross-section of "educated" Americans if they even know where on a map of the globe, -or even on what continent- the listed countries are and you'd get your answer.
Ask what value the biggest military in the world is -more than all other nations combined-, and you'd get the ever-stupider answer "to keep us safe from the bad guys" or ditto "Our Democracy".
As long as the power-elite can keep enough people dumb enough and limited to the owner-media, especially "Fixed" news, to swallow that nonsense, they'll get away with it without question, even with a ridiculously high level of approval. Saves the populace thinking about what militarism really represents.
Gawd knows these countries have suffered enough under colonialism and post-colonial occupation and resource extraction, corruption of their put in place puppet governments. Same greed-driven motives, same brutality, same winner-take-all , same indigenous and environmental destruction, different time.
Stupid is a stupid does and screw the consequences and eventual and inevitable blow-back!
And of course these human cannon fodder from the streets are easy to recruit, especially if you remove all alternative opportunities, and most dispensable, right!
 
 
-4 # phantomww 2012-09-17 14:01
I agree that most Americans could not find the places listed on a map but that is because libs have been running the public schools for decades now through the teachers unions. Just look at the "success" rate in Chicago. why do so many public school teachers send their kids to private/charter schools? Why to the libs in DC send their kids to exclusive/expen sive private schools and not the public schools? Why did Obama take away the voucher program in DC for the poor people?
Yes, out education system is bad now but it is libs who want to spend time on conflict resolution and building esteem instead of TEACHING basic skills like math, english, reading, writing etc.
 
 
0 # reiverpacific 2012-09-20 17:41
Quoting phantomww:
I agree that most Americans could not find the places listed on a map but that is because libs have been running the public schools for decades now through the teachers unions. Just look at the "success" rate in Chicago. why do so many public school teachers send their kids to private/charter schools? Why to the libs in DC send their kids to exclusive/expensive private schools and not the public schools? Why did Obama take away the voucher program in DC for the poor people?
Yes, out education system is bad now but it is libs who want to spend time on conflict resolution and building esteem instead of TEACHING basic skills like math, english, reading, writing etc.

So leave it in Twit's hands and see it disappear completely!
 
 
+10 # James Smith 2012-09-16 08:52
"War is good business. Invest your son."

When the USA finally disintegrates into several mutually antagonistic countries, it will be a relief for the rest of the world. Nations that are still free will be able to conduct their affairs without the intervention of American business, sorry, government in every obtrusive way possible.
 
 
+11 # David Starr 2012-09-16 09:59
Quoting: "[T]he United States is alone on the planet, not just in its ability, but in its willingness to use military force in drug wars, religious wars, political wars, conflicts of almost any sort, constantly and on a global scale. No other group of powers collectively even comes close. It also stands alone as a purveyor of major weapons systems and so as a generator of war. It is, in a sense, a massive machine for the promotion of war on a global scale."

Actually this is nothing new if one knows that this is a part of an obvious historical pattern characteristic of the U.S.'s imperial foreign policy. In fact, it's been a kind of tradition going back to the U.S. founders, among them favoring the idea of empire. And they weren't exactly keen on democracy. I initially thought that the British started the War of 1812 in an obvious attempt to take back the colonies. To my surprise, it was the U.S. who declared war on Britain, under U.S. president James Madison. The main objective was to try and take over Canada. The British repulsed the attempted invasion.

Quoting: "Washington may be mobilized for permanent war. Special operations forces may be operating in up to 120 countries." If that's the case, then it's quite possible, or probable, that the U.S. empire may make a grave mistake more or less typical of past empires: Overreach. And that could be very well be an obvious, important factor for further decline, than the fall, of the U.S., as an empire.
 
 
+2 # Mannstein 2012-09-16 12:49
And I was taught Germany was out to conquer the world.
 
 
-3 # phantomww 2012-09-17 14:02
They were and the US stopped them. With help from out allies primarily UK and USSR.
 
 
0 # Shanti 2012-11-11 13:39
With help? Please familiarize yourself with the money spent and lives lost by the three countries before you say the US "stopped them" with help.
Shanti
 
 
+5 # noitall 2012-09-16 16:39
As long as we have the one-size-fits-a ll wars going: "the war on terrorism" and "the war on drugs", we don't need any other reason, these can be used to appease sleepy Americans and set them into tying yellow ribbons around shit, gluing "support the troops" stickers on their cars, flying flags on everything, 'honoring' everyone at half time, and glaring at anyone who questions the madness. They'll all be super sad when someone they know gets killed but other than that its business as usual. Not for those though who pissed off our corporate ambassadors in whatever country du jour. They get to feel the "shock and awe" until we prop up one of theirs that is willing to sell his people down the tube. You all do still remember the Shah don't you? We're a sad country as we have allowed ourselves to stoop to. The world knows it, maybe when we decide to stand up to where we can see reality and stop stooping, a critical mass of Americans will know it too and stop the madness.
 
 
+2 # Glen 2012-09-17 04:05
Everyone needs the reminder concerning the maudlin reaction, and as you say, madness that stirs Americans to join one team or another. I agree with you and dread seeing any more ribbons, memorials and flags, conveniently forgetting the thousands of citizens who have died as well. Recruiting kids to die for endless war will become more difficult unless they are desperate to make a living.
 
 
+2 # MidwestTom 2012-09-17 06:53
What if the government is purposely weakening the economy to increase the supply of troops to support our bankers attempt to rule the world. Seventy percent of American citizens do not want another war, but our government appears anxious to get into one. If we do don't there will be real grass roots pressure to cut the military budget.
 
 
0 # Shanti 2012-11-11 13:40
And what if they didn't do it purposely? The outcome was the same.
Shanti
 
 
0 # panhead49 2012-09-17 12:10
MidwestTom - don't know where you got that info about '...increase the supply of troops...." They are actually cutting some lose early because they are able to mechanize many of their duties (drones come to mind, I'm sure there are more). We live in a very rural county that finally got a Marine Recruiting Office and an Army Recruiting Office and their goals have been reduced to 1 recruit. They aren't even getting that - most newly enlisted around here are 18 year old gamers that are sure they will get to pilot drones in the Air Force.

Until we bring back the draft (no college or family deferments this time around), our escapades about the globe will continue. Fire up the draft for everyone, especially the well heeled, and that will turn on a dime.
 
 
0 # SundownLF 2012-09-17 13:17
Which is why the current congress (gag!) will never let the draft come back. It would affect them and theirs directly, and why would they let that happen?
 
 
0 # Shanti 2012-11-11 13:41
So true! Constant military action since the draft ended.
Shanti
 
 
+1 # Andrew Hansen 2012-09-18 03:48
Chalmers would be pleased, at least a bit, to know that some small hem of his Cassandra mantle might be lifted. Thank you for keeping our attention on this.
 

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