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FOCUS: Harvard Surrenders to the Trolls Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>   
Monday, 18 September 2017 11:01

Pierce writes: "It's been a great week for important institutions to get their chickenshit on. Harvard pulled a fellowship from Chelsea Manning because people in the CIA, and their fans in the media, were terribly wounded by the possibility that Manning might harsh the mellows of Jason Chaffetz or Sean Spicer."

Chelsea Manning (center) is interviewed by filmmaker 
Eugene Jarecki (left) on Sunday, during a forum, in Nantucket, Mass. (photo: Steven Senne/AP)
Chelsea Manning (center) is interviewed by filmmaker Eugene Jarecki (left) on Sunday, during a forum, in Nantucket, Mass. (photo: Steven Senne/AP)


Harvard Surrenders to the Trolls

By Charles Pierce, Esquire

18 September 17

 

emember Houston? The major hurricane before the last major hurricane? It’s still pretty bad there and it’s going to get worse before it ever gets better, assuming it ever does get better. There are thousands of little tragedies that are going to go unnoticed because of what’s happening in Florida, where thousands of little tragedies are also going to go unnoticed because of whatever comes next.

The country’s shredded attention span is one of its really great flaws. It has led directly to our current detachment from all of our history, which now includes stuff that happened two weeks ago. From The Houston Chronicle:

The EPA records request to Valero - a response is legally required - comes as the EPA said San Antonio-based Valero Energy "significantly underestimated" the amount of benzene and other compounds leaked during Harvey's torrential rains. The letter shows the EPA is choosing to further investigate the accident near East Houston's Manchester neighborhood.

You may find this hard to believe, but Manchester is a poor, largely minority neighborhood.

Manchester, an east side neighborhood where nearly 90 percent of the population is Hispanic, set a record on Sunday with nearly 9 feet of water. Many of the residents there are now among the estimated 30,000 in need of shelters. Renters and low-income people in such neighborhoods couldn’t afford the luxury of telling Exxon Mobil Corp. to keep its heavily polluting operations away from their homes and schools. That created what Texas Southern University sociologist Robert Bullard calls “sacrifice zones.” “It’s very predictable as to which areas are going to get hit the hardest, because of how money gets allocated in terms of flood protection and flood control,” Bullard, often called the father of environmental justice, told HuffPost by phone on Sunday. “East side neighborhoods are the least protected.”

These are painful stories to cover, but they’re not particularly hard stories to cover. You just have to believe that news doesn’t leave town when the storm does. And you have to finance local news. And you have to care about actual people trying to put actual lives together again.

***

It’s been a great week for important institutions to get their chickenshit on. Harvard pulled a fellowship from Chelsea Manning because people in the CIA, and their fans in the media, were terribly wounded by the possibility that Manning might harsh the mellows of Jason Chaffetz or Sean Spicer. And it also bailed on a woman who’d done prison time for murder and, while incarcerated, became a brilliant historian. This got them some bad press anyway, too.

Harvard, which is still Harvard, has an endowment of $37.6 billion, which is the largest academic endowment in the whole damn world.

What in the fck are these people afraid of? Clay Travis? Tucker Carlson? Three Dolts on a Divan? Why is Big Money so horribly timid? It’s un-American, dammit.

***

Pop culture is being very, very good to me these days. As I said before, I was dreading the fact that the Vietnam War was going to get the Ken Burns treatment. However, my concerns largely have been allayed by the fact that my old statehouse pal Tom Vallely was involved in the production, and by the glowing reviews that already have been published by people I trust who have seen all or some of it. I think James Poniewozik is a damn fine critic and his review convinced me to open the rest of my mind and actually has me looking forward to it a bit. I hear Trent Reznor’s soundtrack is terrific, too.

There is also a new television show produced by David Simon and starring Maggie Gyllenhaal, two people whose work always should occasion parades, and the great Richard Schiff returns to network TV. More huzzahs.

And then there’s this. Pairing Frances McDormand with Martin McDonagh is something that should have been done in a lab at Oak Ridge before they loosed it on the unsuspecting public, McDonagh being the greatest artist working in saturation F-bombing since the death of Richard Pryor, as well as being the greatest writer of black comedy in recent memory.

Which reminds me. The Sunday Game reaches its climax at Croker this weekend. The Dubs being the Dubs is reason enough to root for Mayo in the All Ireland Final, but Mayo also hasn’t won the thing since 1952, which should inspire the latent curiosity of all recently sated Red Sox and Cubs fans, there being more than a few Irish-Americans in Boston and Chicago, as I recall. (And, yes, there’s a legendary curse. Something to do with the 1952 champions interrupting a funeral procession.) So here’s to the Mayomen. The West’s Awake!

Weekly WWOZ Pick To Click: “Valsa Luisiana” (Charlie Dennard): Yeah, I still pretty much love New Orleans.

Weekly Visit To The Pathe Archives: Here, from 1955, the One Millionth Immigrant to Australia. This used to be something to celebrate. History is so cool.

***

It should be noted that the Republicans in the Senate are closing in on the Affordable Care Act again. The latest war wagon was constructed by Senator Bill Cassidy of Louisiana with help from our old friend, Lindsey Graham. Is it miserable and miserly, and is it completely insensitive to the lives of the chronically ill, the poor, and the struggling middle class? Of course it is. Does it “hand things back to states” so people like Scott Walker and Sam Brownback can run things? But, of course. This has brought John McCain aboard.

Is it a mess? Here’s Sarah Kliff from Vox:

The senators are selling this idea as a compromise plan and say it is a way to return power to states, giving local governments more control over how they spend federal dollars. “Instead of a Washington-knows-best approach like Obamacare, our legislation empowers those closest to the health care needs of their communities to provide solutions,” Graham said in a statement. “Our bill takes money and power out of Washington and gives it back to patients and states. But the plan does much more than that. The proposal would eliminate the health care law’s subsidies for private insurance and end the Medicaid expansion. States could allow for waivers that let insurers charge sick patients higher premiums and stop covering certain benefits required under the Affordable Care Act, like maternity care or prescription drugs. The health insurance marketplaces would no longer exist as they are envisioned to continue under other Republican proposals.

Also, curiously, the cuts will hit blue states harder than it will hit red states. From the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities:

In general, the plan would effectively punish states that have been especially successful at enrolling low- and moderate-income people in the Medicaid expansion or in marketplace coverage under the ACA, while imposing less damaging cuts, or even initially increasing funding, for states that have rejected the Medicaid expansion, enrolled fewer people in marketplace coverage, and have lower population density and lower per-capita income. The cuts would be especially severe in nine states — California, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, and Virginia, plus the District of Columbia. By 2026, block grant funding amounts in these states would be 50 percent or less of the federal Medicaid expansion and/or marketplace subsidy funding these states would otherwise receive.

They simply never will stop. It is a crusade to prove that all the wrong things they believe are right. It is an effort to immiserate millions of Americans for the purpose of proving a point that can’t be proven without that immiseration. Ni shagu nazad. Never forget that. They love them some Stalin, or at least his attitude toward simply giving up on things you want. This already is too close for comfort, and the whole country is paying attention to other big stories. To hell, in this case, with bipartisanship. It’s a plague and it will kill people.

***

Is it a good week for dinosaur news, Fox News? It’s always a good day for dinosaur news!

Dubbed the Deltasuchus motherali, the ancient beast was discovered by a local teenager, Austin Motheral. Motheral worked with paleontologists from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, who spent a decade excavating the bones. The creature existed approximately 95 million years ago, at the same time as Tyrannosaurus Rex. During that era, modern-day Texas was largely covered by a shallow sea. In addition to T. rex, the area was home to other dinosaurs, turtles, crocodiles, mammals and fish. Fossils from the Arlington Archosaur Site are helping fill in this gap, and Deltasuchus is only the first of several new species to be reported from the locality.”

Dinosaur-eating crocodiles are about as apex a predator as can be imagined, even by apex predators like us. But, as a concept, they’re amazing to think about. Dinosaurs lived then to make us happy now.

It was a busy week for The Committee, which was very tempted to award Top Commenter of the Week to Top Commenter Pat Healy for sending us the video to “Memo From Turner,” one of the most underrated cuts ever from the Rolling Stones. But instead, Top Commenter Craig Rode came rolling in with the best and most succinct analysis of the current president*.

Trump fires an arrow into the side of a barn, then draws a target around it. He's the world's greatest archer.

There’s an argument to be made that, maybe, he can’t hit the barn, either, but we give T.C. Rode the benefit of the doubt, and 71.01 Beckhams on top of it.

I’ll be back on Monday with what I am sure will be some hurricane leftover gobshitery. Be well and play nice, ya bastids. Stay above the snake-line, because crocodiles can eat dinosaurs. That’s just science.


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FOCUS: What Is Hate Speech? Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=40905"><span class="small">George Lakoff, George Lakoff's Website</span></a>   
Monday, 18 September 2017 10:35

Lakoff writes: "Hate speech defames, belittles, or dehumanizes a class of people on the basis of certain inherent properties - typically race, ethnicity, gender, or religion."

George Lakoff, 2012. (photo: Wikimedia Commons)
George Lakoff, 2012. (photo: Wikimedia Commons)


What Is Hate Speech?

By George Lakoff, George Lakoff's Website

18 September 17

 

have been asked what hate speech is. It is not exactly hard to detect.

Hate speech defames, belittles, or dehumanizes a class of people on the basis of certain inherent properties — typically race, ethnicity, gender, or religion.

Hate speech attributes to that class of people certain highly negative qualities taken to be inherent in members of the class. Typical examples are immorality, intellectual inferiority, criminality, lack of patriotism, laziness, untrustworthiness, greed, and attempts or threats to dominate their “natural superiors.”

The method of defamation typically includes:

  • Salient exemplars — that is, using highly rare and very ugly individual examples that have been sensationalized by the media and taking them as applying to the whole class. Examples: Trump’s racist attacks on Latinos and Muslims, attempting to stereotype all of them and smear entire classes of people on the basis of a handful of individual cases.

  • Extolling the false virtues of the opposite class, suggesting that the defamed class lacks those virtues. Example: The racist right falsely claims that whites are responsible for all advances in civilization. This deliberately covers up the enormous contributions and advances made by nonwhites in order to undermine their status as human beings.

  • Metaphor based on fallacious understanding: “Whites are more evolved” — from a survey of racist right-wing members. Note the mistaken understanding of evolution. The statement suggests that non-whites are lower than whites on an evolutionary scale, as if they were animals.

  • Perhaps the most dangerous form of hate speech comes from the government itself when the President excuses racist violence and supports the oppressive use of governmental force — large, organized crowds of armed demonstrators, police who target minorities, ICE trapping undocumented immigrants for deportation, discriminatory laws that intimidate minorities from voting, etc.

Hate speech these days is not just speech by an individual. It has become an industry for the racist right — organized, purposely provocative, a recruiting tool, and a show of power aiming at greater power.

Mass marketed hate speech is not “mere speech” by an individual. It is actually physical in nature because all ideas are physically constituted by neural circuitry in our brains. When you are repeatedly told by those protected by the President and his government that you are a lesser being and are hated, it can have a crippling effect, physically, on your brain, mind, and heart.

Freedom in a free society is freedom for all. We are not free to prevent others from being free. Hate speech can affect those who are repeated objects of hate with a crippling toxic stress and a sense of distrust and fear that can keep those hated from living full and free lives. Mass-market hate stands resolutely in the path of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness for all Americans.

Institutions whose role is to promote freedom of speech, thought, and action need to rebut hate speech, rather than give the honor of official invitations to purveyors of mass market hate who bring with them a mass of violence-prone supporters to exploit and dishonor widely publicized “free speech” events.


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Gerrymandering Is Voter Suppression Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=36361"><span class="small">Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Facebook Page</span></a>   
Monday, 18 September 2017 08:40

Reich writes: "Gerrymandering is a form of voter suppression. The new extreme form of it, such as in Wisconsin, makes a mockery of democracy. The Supreme Court must reject it."

Former Clinton labor secretary Robert Reich. (photo: Steve Russell/Toronto Star)
Former Clinton labor secretary Robert Reich. (photo: Steve Russell/Toronto Star)


Gerrymandering Is Voter Suppression

By Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Facebook Page

18 September 17

 

n October 3, the Supreme Court will hear arguments in "Gill v. Whitford," which challenges the constitutionality of gerrymandering. The specific case involves Wisconsin, where the Republican State Assembly redrew voting districts after Republicans gained control of the state government for the first time in more than 40 years -- allowing them to entrench themselves. In 2012, Republicans won 48.6 percent of the statewide vote for Assembly candidates but captured 60 of the Assembly’s 99 seats.

Kudos to several current and former Republican officials who have filed a friend-of-the-court brief against gerrymandering: Senator John McCain of Arizona; Gov. John R. Kasich of Ohio; Bob Dole, the former Republican Senate leader from Kansas and the Republican's 1996 presidential nominee; former Republican senators John C. Danforth of Missouri, Richard G. Lugar of Indiana and Alan K. Simpson of Wyoming; and Arnold Schwarzenegger, former governor of California.

These Republicans have placed the nation over party. They deserve our thanks. I wish more current and former republican politicians would follow their example.

Gerrymandering is a form of voter suppression. The new extreme form of it, such as in Wisconsin, makes a mockery of democracy. The Supreme Court must reject it.

What do you think?


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The American Military Uncontained Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=13111"><span class="small">William J. Astore, TomDispatch</span></a>   
Sunday, 17 September 2017 13:40

Astore writes: "When it comes to the 'world's greatest military,' the news has been shocking."

An unmanned U.S. Predator drone flies over Kandahar Air Field, southern Afghanistan, on a moon-lit night. (photo: Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP)
An unmanned U.S. Predator drone flies over Kandahar Air Field, southern Afghanistan, on a moon-lit night. (photo: Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP)


The American Military Uncontained

By William J. Astore, TomDispatch

17 September 17

 


[Note for TomDispatch Readers: Don’t forget our special offers on historian Alfred McCoy’s just-published Dispatch Book (already in its second printing!): In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power. Of it, Andrew Bacevich said, “This is history with profound relevance to events that are unfolding before our eyes.” For a donation of $100 or more ($125 if you live outside the U.S.A.), you can get a signed, personalized copy of the book. For further details, go to our donation page.  (Many, many thanks to those of you who have already done this and so lent us a hand in tough times.) In addition, Haymarket Books, which produces and distributes our expanding line of volumes, will give any TD reader an exclusive 40% discount on the purchase of McCoy’s book. Simply click here to take advantage of this special offer. It’s a great way to support our efforts. Tom]

After 19 al-Qaeda militants armed only with box-cutters and knives hijacked four American commercial airliners, the U.S. military moved with remarkable efficiency to rectify the problem. In the years since, in its global war on terror, the Pentagon has ensured that America’s enemies in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, and elsewhere have regularly been able to arm themselves with... well, not to beat around the bush, a remarkable range of U.S. weaponry.  The latest such story: a report that in recent fighting around the city of Tal Afar, the Iraqi military recovered a U.S.-produced FGM-148 Javelin anti-tank missile and launcher from an Islamic State weapons cache. That’s a weapon capable of taking out an M1 Abrams tank. And this is hardly the first time U.S. anti-tank missiles meant either for the Iraqi military or Syrian rebels backed by the CIA have turned up in the hands of ISIS militants. In 2015, that group released photos of its fighters using U.S.-made BGM-71 TOW anti-tank missiles. 

Of course, when the American-trained, funded, and armed Iraqi army collapsed in the summer of 2014 in the face of relatively small numbers of ISIS fighters, that group took vast stores of U.S. weaponry and vehicles that they’ve used ever since. But that was hardly the end of it.  The U.S. soon began retraining and rearming its Iraqi allies to the tune of $1.6 billion for “tens of thousands of assault rifles, hundreds of armored vehicles, hundreds of mortar rounds, nearly 200 sniper rifles, and other gear,” much of which, a government audit found, the Pentagon simply lost track of. The weaponry, you might say, went missing in action. No one knew whose hands much of it ended up in and this wasn’t a new story, either.  For example, in 2007 the Government Accountability Office found that “the United States could not account for nearly 30% of the weapons it had distributed in Iraq since 2004 -- about 200,000 guns.”

Similar stories could be told about Afghanistan, another country where U.S. weaponry has disappeared in remarkable quantities. (The Taliban, for instance, recently released a video of their fighters sporting weaponry normally used only by U.S. Special Operations personnel.) In short, the Pentagon has been arming itself, its allies, and its enemies in a profligate fashion for years now in its never-ending conflicts across the Greater Middle East and Africa. As TomDispatch regular and retired Air Force Lieutenant Colonel William Astore suggests today, since 9/11 the U.S. military has in some sense been fighting itself -- and losing. Someday, when historians look back on this bizarre tale, they will have to explain one thing above all: Why, year after year, in the face of obvious and repetitive failure in such conflicts, was no one in Washington capable of imagining another course of action?

-Tom Engelhardt, TomDispatch


The American Military Uncontained
Out Everywhere and Winning Nowhere

hen it comes to the “world’s greatest military,” the news has been shocking. Two fast U.S. Navy ships colliding with slow-moving commercial vessels with tragic loss of life.  An Air Force that has been in the air continuously for years and yet doesn’t have enough pilots to fly its combat jets.  Ground troops who find themselves fighting “rebels” in Syria previously armed and trained by the CIA.  Already overstretched Special Operations forces facing growing demands as their rates of mental distress and suicide rise.  Proxy armies in Iraq and Afghanistan that are unreliable, often delivering American-provided weaponry to black markets and into the hands of various enemies.  All of this and more coming at a time when defense spending is once again soaring and the national security state is awash in funds to the tune of nearly a trillion dollars a year.

What gives?  Why are highly maneuverable and sophisticated naval ships colliding with lumbering cargo vessels?  Why is an Air Force that exists to fly and fight short 1,200 pilots?  Why are U.S. Special Operations forces deployed everywhere and winning nowhere?  Why, in short, is the U.S. military fighting itself -- and losing?

It’s the Ops Tempo, Stupid

After 16 years of a never-ending, ever-spreading global war on terror, alarms are going off in Asia from the Koreas and Afghanistan to the Philippines, while across the Greater Middle East and Africa the globe’s “last superpower” is in a never-ending set of conflicts with a range of minor enemies few can even keep straight.  As a result, America’s can-do military, committed piecemeal to a bewildering array of missions, has increasingly become a can’t-do one. 

Too few ships are being deployed for too long.  Too few pilots are being worn out by incessant patrols and mushrooming drone and bombing missions.  Special Operations forces (the “commandos of everywhere,” as Nick Turse calls them) are being deployed to far too many countries -- more than two-thirds of the nations on the planet already this year -- and are involved in conflicts that hold little promise of ending on terms favorable to Washington.  Meanwhile, insiders like retired General David Petraeus speak calmly about “generational struggles” that will essentially never end.  To paraphrase an old slogan from ABC’s “Wide World of Sports,” as the U.S. military spans the globe, it’s regularly experiencing the agony of defeat rather than the thrill of victory.

To President Donald Trump (and so many other politicians in Washington), this unsavory reality suggests an obvious solution: boost military funding; build more navy ships; train more pilots and give them more incentive pay to stay in the military; rely more on drones and other technological “force multipliers” to compensate for tired troops; cajole allies like the Germans and Japanese to spend more on their militaries; and pressure proxy armies like the Iraqi and Afghan security forces to cut corruption and improve combat performance.

One option -- the most logical -- is never seriously considered in Washington: to make deep cuts in the military’s operational tempo by decreasing defense spending and downsizing the global mission, by bringing troops home and keeping them there.  This is not an isolationist plea.  The United States certainly faces challenges, notably from Russia (still a major nuclear power) and China (a global economic power bolstering its regional militarily strength).  North Korea is, as ever, posturing with missile and nuclear tests in provocative ways.  Terrorist organizations strive to destabilize American allies and cause trouble even in “the homeland.” 

Such challenges require vigilance.  What they don’t require is more ships in the sea-lanes, pilots in the air, and boots on the ground.  Indeed, 16 years after the 9/11 attacks it should be obvious that more of the same is likely to produce yet more of what we’ve grown all too accustomed to: increasing instability across significant swaths of the planet, as well as the rise of new terror groups or new iterations of older ones, which means yet more opportunities for failed U.S. military interventions.

Once upon a time, when there were still two superpowers on Planet Earth, Washington’s worldwide military posture had a clear rationale: the containment of communism.  Soon after the Soviet Union imploded in 1991 to much triumphalist self-congratulation in Washington, the scholar and former CIA consultant Chalmers Johnson had an epiphany.  What he would come to call “the American Raj,” a global imperial structure ostensibly built to corral the menace of communism, wasn’t going away just because that menace had evaporated, leaving not a superpower nor even a major power as an opponent anywhere on the horizon.  Quite the opposite, Washington -- and its globe-spanning “empire” of military bases -- was only digging in deeper and for the long haul.  At that moment, with a certain shock, Johnson realized that the U.S. was itself an empire and, with its mirror-image-enemy gone, risked turning on itself and becoming its own nemesis.

The U.S., it turned out, hadn’t just contained the Soviets; they had contained us, too.  Once their empire collapsed, our leaders imbibed the old dream of Woodrow Wilson, even if in a newly militarized fashion: to remake the world in one’s own image (if need be at the point of a sword).

Since the early 1990s, largely unconstrained by peer rivals, America’s leaders have acted as if there were nothing to stop them from doing as they pleased on the planet, which, as it turned out, meant there was nothing to stop them from their own folly.  We witness the results today.  Prolonged and disastrous wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.  Interventions throughout the Greater Middle East (Libya, Syria, Yemen, and beyond) that spread chaos and destruction.  Attacks against terrorism that have given new impetus to jihadists everywhere.  And recently calls to arm Ukraine against Russia.  All of this is consistent with a hubristic strategic vision that, in these years, has spoken in an all-encompassing fashion and without irony of global reach, global power, and full-spectrum dominance.

In this context, it’s worth reminding ourselves of the full scope of America’s military power.  All the world is a stage -- or a staging area -- for U.S. troops.  There are still approximately 800 U.S. military bases in foreign lands.  America’s commandos deploy to more than 130 countries yearly.  And even the world is not enough for the Pentagon as it seeks to dominate not just land, sea, and air but outer space, cyberspace, and even inner space, if you count efforts to achieve “total information awareness” through 17 intelligence agencies dedicated -- at a cost of $80 billion a year -- to sweeping up all data on Planet Earth.

In short, America’s troops are out everywhere and winning nowhere, a problem America’s “winningest” president, Donald Trump, is only exacerbating.  Surrounded by “his” generals, Trump has -- against his own instincts, he claimed recently -- recommitted American troops and prestige to the Afghan War.  He's also significantly expanded U.S. drone strikes and bombing throughout the Greater Middle East, and threatened to bring fire and fury to North Korea, while pushing a program to boost military spending.

At a Pentagon awash in money, with promises of more to come, missions are rarely downsized.  Meanwhile, what passes for original thinking in the Trump White House is the suggestion of Erik Prince, the founder of Blackwater, to privatize America’s war in Afghanistan (and possibly elsewhere).  Mercenaries are the answer to Washington’s military problems, suggests Prince.  And mercs, of course, have the added benefit of not being constrained by the rules of engagement that apply to America’s uniformed service members.

Indeed, Prince’s idea, though opposed by Trump’s generals, is compelling in one sense: If you accept the notion that America’s wars in these years have been fought largely for the corporate agendas of the military-industrial complex, why not turn warfighting itself over to the warrior corporations that now regularly accompany the military into battle, cutting out the middleman, that very military? 

Hammering a Cloud of Gnats

Erik Prince’s mercenaries will, however, have to bide their time as the military high command continues to launch kinetic strikes against elusive foes around the globe.  By its own admission, the force recent U.S. presidents have touted as the “finest” in history faces remarkably “asymmetrical” and protean enemies, including the roughly 20 terrorist organizations in the Afghanistan-Pakistan theater of operations.  In striking at such relatively puny foes, the U.S. reminds me of the mighty Thor of superhero fame swinging his hammer violently against a cloud of gnats. In the process, some of those gnats will naturally die, but the result will still be an exhausted superhero and ever more gnats attracted by the heat and commotion of battle.

I first came across the phrase “using a sledgehammer to kill gnats” while looking at the history of U.S. airpower during the Vietnam War.  B-52 “Arc Light” raids dropped record tons of bombs on parts of South Vietnam and Laos in largely failed efforts to kill dispersed guerrillas and interdict supply routes from North Vietnam.  Half a century later, with its laser- and GPS-guided bombs, the Air Force regularly touts the far greater precision of American airpower.  Yet in one country after another, using just that weaponry, the U.S. has engaged in serial acts of overkill.  In Afghanistan, it was the recent use of MOAB, the “mother of all bombs,” the largest non-nuclear weapon the U.S. has ever used in combat, against a small concentration of ISIS fighters.  In similar fashion, the U.S. air war in Syria has outpaced the Russians and even the Assad regime in its murderous effects on civilians, especially around Raqqa, the “capital” of the Islamic State.  Such overkill is evident on the ground as well where special ops raids have, this year, left civilians dead from Yemen to Somalia.  In other words, across the Greater Middle East, Washington’s profligate killing machine is also creating a desire for vengeance among civilian populations, staggering numbers of whom, when not killed, have been displaced or sent fleeing across borders as refugees in these wars. It has played a significant role in unsettling whole regions, creating failed states, and providing yet more recruits for terror groups.

Leaving aside technological advances, little has changed since Vietnam. The U.S. military is still relying on enormous firepower to kill elusive enemies as a way of limiting (American) casualties.  As an instrument of victory, it didn’t work in Vietnam, nor has it worked in Iraq or Afghanistan.

But never mind the history lessons.  President Trump asserts that his “new” Afghan strategy -- the details of which, according to a military spokesman, are “not there yet” -- will lead to more terrorists (that is, gnats) being killed.

Since 9/11, America’s leaders, Trump included, have rarely sought ways to avoid those gnats, while efforts to “drain the swamp” in which the gnats thrive have served mainly to enlarge their breeding grounds.  At the same time, efforts to enlist indigenous “gnats” -- local proxy armies -- to take over the fight have gone poorly indeed.  As in Vietnam, the main U.S. focus has invariably been on developing better, more technologically advanced (which means more expensive) sledgehammers, while continuing to whale away at that cloud of gnats -- a process as hopeless as it is counterproductive.

The Greatest Self-Defeating Force in History?

Incessant warfare represents the end of democracy.  I didn’t say that, James Madison did.

I firmly believe, though, in words borrowed from President Dwight D. Eisenhower, that “only Americans can hurt America."  So how can we lessen the hurt?  By beginning to rein in the military.  A standing military exists -- or rather should exist -- to support and defend the Constitution and our country against immediate threats to our survival.  Endless attacks against inchoate foes in the backlands of the planet hardly promote that mission.  Indeed, the more such attacks wear on the military, the more they imperil national security. 

A friend of mine, a captain in the Air Force, once quipped to me: you study long, you study wrong.  It’s a sentiment that’s especially cutting when applied to war: you wage war long, you wage it wrong.  Yet as debilitating as they may be to militaries, long wars are even more devastating to democracies.  The longer our military wages war, the more our country is militarized, shedding its democratic values and ideals.

Back in the Cold War era, the regions in which the U.S. military is now slogging it out were once largely considered “the shadows” where John le Carré-style secret agents from the two superpowers matched wits in a set of shadowy conflicts.  Post-9/11, “taking the gloves off” and seeking knockout blows, the U.S. military entered those same shadows in a big way and there, not surprisingly, it often couldn’t sort friend from foe.

A new strategy for America should involve getting out of those shadowy regions of no-win war.  Instead, an expanding U.S. military establishment continues to compound the strategic mistakes of the last 16 years.  Seeking to dominate everywhere but winning decisively nowhere, it may yet go down as the greatest self-defeating force in history.



A TomDispatch regular, William Astore is a retired lieutenant colonel (USAF) and history professor.  His personal blog is Bracing Views.

Follow TomDispatch on Twitter and join us on Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Book, Alfred McCoy's In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power as well as John Dower's The Violent American Century: War and Terror Since World War II, John Feffer's dystopian novel Splinterlands, Nick Turse’s Next Time They’ll Come to Count the Dead, and Tom Engelhardt's Shadow Government: Surveillance, Secret Wars, and a Global Security State in a Single-Superpower World.

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This Ethnic Cleansing in Asia Is the Most Brutal the World Has Seen in Years Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=24357"><span class="small">The Washington Post | Editorial</span></a>   
Sunday, 17 September 2017 13:31

Excerpt: "In just three weeks, the long-simmering conflict between the Burmese government and the persecuted Rohingya minority has exploded into the most massive and brutal episode of ethnic cleansing the world has seen in years."

Rohingya refugees wait for food and clothing in Tankhali, Bangladesh, on Friday. (photo: Paula Bronstein/Getty Images)
Rohingya refugees wait for food and clothing in Tankhali, Bangladesh, on Friday. (photo: Paula Bronstein/Getty Images)


This Ethnic Cleansing in Asia Is the Most Brutal the World Has Seen in Years

By The Washington Post | Editorial

17 September 17

 

N JUST three weeks, the long-simmering conflict between the Burmese government and the persecuted Rohingya minority has exploded into the most massive and brutal episode of ethnic cleansing the world has seen in years. Since a militant attack on Aug. 25 provided a pretext, Burmese troops have driven hundreds of thousands of Rohingya across the border to Bangladesh by systematically burning scores of villages and terrorizing their residents. Last week, more than 380,000 people were reported to have crossed the frontier; on Friday, U.N. officials said many thousands were still waiting to pass. An estimated 240,000 of the refugees are children, according to UNICEF.

What U.N. Secretary General António Guterres rightly called “a textbook example of ethnic cleansing” is the culmination of years of discrimination by Burma’s government and Buddhist majority against the Rohingya, Muslims who have been denied citizenship even though many have lived in the country for generations. On Aug. 25, a small militant group claiming to represent the Rohingya attacked a handful of police posts and army camps, killing about a dozen people. The government’s scorched-earth response has, by its own account, left 176 out of 471 Rohingya villages in the northern region of Rakhine state completely abandoned.

Evidence collected by human rights groups, including satellite photos, shows scores of villages burned to the ground. In a report released Friday, Human Rights Watch said it counted 62 villages targeted by arson attacks and 35 with extensive destruction. Journalists on the Bangladesh border Friday reported smoke still billowing up from Burmese territory. More detailed reporting, as well as relief efforts, has been impossible because of the authorities’ refusal to allow in most journalists, aid workers and diplomats — including the senior State Department official who arrived in the country Friday.

The international response to this crime, which rivals the cleansing campaigns in Darfur, Sudan, in the early 2000s and Kosovo in the 1990s, has been shockingly weak. After meeting behind closed doors on Wednesday, the U.N. Security Council used its lowest-order form of statement to express concern about “excessive violence during security operations.” The State Department has been equally cautious.

Too much attention has been focused on Burma’s de facto civilian leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, who has been woefully silent about the atrocities but also lacks the ability to control the military. What’s needed instead is more direct pressure on the Burmese army. The Obama administration lifted U.S. sanctions on the generals and the businesses they control in an attempt to promote a democratic transition; these now ought to be reimposed by the Treasury and State departments. Some officials express concern that tough measures might cause the army to turn on Aung San Suu Kyi and her civilian government. In fact, international censure could provide the Nobel laureate leverage — if she is willing to use it.

At the United Nations, Burma is shielded by China, which is untroubled by its atrocities and may even welcome them for their potential to ruin the country’s relations with the West. The United States should nevertheless seek to force a public Security Council debate on the cleansing. The more the crimes against the Rohingya are exposed to the world — and their authors made to pay a price — the more likely they are to stop.


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