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BRIT BASHES USA ON B-DAY: 'THE ROGUE STATE: MOURN ON THE FOURTH OF JULY'
The mirror ^ | 07/04/02 | JOHN PILGER

Posted on 07/04/2002 12:36:43 PM PDT by tricky_k_1972

FOR 101 days, Royal Marines have been engaged in a farcical operation as mercenaries of the United States whose lawlessness now qualifies it as the world's leading rogue state.

Shooting at shadows, and the occasional tribesman, blowing up mounds of dirt and displaying "captured" arms for the media, all have been part of the Marines' humiliating role in Afghanistan - a role foisted upon them by the Blair government, whose deference to and collusion with the Bush gang has become a parody of the imperial courtier.

Gang is not an exaggeration. The word, in my dictionary, means "a group of people working together for criminal, disreputable ends". That describes accurately George W Bush and those who write his speeches and make his decisions and who, since their rise to power, have undermined the very basis of international law.

In Afghanistan, their record is beyond question. The killing on Monday of some 40 guests at a wedding was not a "blunder" but the direct result of a policy of shoot and bomb first and find out later, as announced by George W Bush in the weeks following September 11.

The capacity of the American military machine to smash impoverished countries was never in dispute - conditional, that is, on the absence of American ground troops and their substitution by "allied" forces, like the Royal Marines. (During the heyday of the British Empire, Indian and other colonial troops were used in a similar role, although the British, unlike the Americans, were also prepared to sacrifice their own soldiers).

Since last October, Afghan leaders have reported American aircraft destroying villages "too small to be marked on any map" with "more than 300 people killed" in one night. In a family of 40, only a small boy and his grandmother survived, reported Richard Lloyd Parry of the Independent.

Out of sight of the television cameras "at least 3,767 civilians were killed by US bombs between October 7 and December 10...an average of 62 innocent deaths a day", according to a study carried out at the University of New Hampshire in the US. This is now estimated to have passed 5,000 civilian deaths: almost double the number killed on September 11.

There is no evidence that a single leader of al-Qaeda has been captured or, to anyone's knowledge, killed. Neither has the leader of the Taliban. The change in Afghanistan is minimal compared with the murderous feudalism that ruled during the 1990s, and before the Taliban came to power.

FOR all the cosmetic changes in Kabul, the capital, women still dare not go unveiled. "The Taliban used to hang the victim's body in public for four days," quipped the new American-installed regime's Minister of Justice. "We will only hang the body for a short time, say fifteen minutes, after a public execution."

Describing this as a "triumph of good over evil", as Bush has said, with an echo from Blair, is like lauding the superiority of the German war machine in 1940 as a vindication of Nazism.

Not only the Marines but the British public ought to feel duped. Both Washington and Whitehall knew long ago al-Qaeda was finished in Afghanistan. Apart from the element of revenge, for home gratification, the Americans have set out to reassert the control of their favourite warlords: people responsible for thousands of deaths in their stricken country.

In October, the US planned to install a regime dominated by members of the Pashtun tribe, who, they predicted, would desert the Taliban. But the split in the Taliban never happened and the Americans have since changed tack and tried to put together a "coalition" of Tajik and Uzbek warlords. The current "interim president", Hamid Karzai, although a Pashtun, has neither a tribal nor military powerbase. He is simply America's man.

The presence of the Royal Marines, leading the so-called "International Security Assistance Force", is for reasons straight out of the nineteenth century. At the Americans' bidding, the Marines were meant to keep the favoured warlords from each other's throats until the region could be "stabilised" for American oil and other strategic interests.

Potential vast energy sources in Central Asia have become critical for the deeply troubled US economy, and for the Bush administration, which is dominated by oil industry interests, notably the Bush family itself. An investigation by the Hong Kong-based Asia Times in January found that the US was frantically developing "a network of multiple Caspian pipelines".

THE disgraced Enron Corporation, one of Bush's biggest campaign backers, conducted a feasibility study for a $2.5billion oil pipeline being built across the Caspian Sea. Top current and former American officials, including Vice President Cheney, "have all closed major deals directly and indirectly on behalf of the oil companies", says the Asia Times.

If there was a map of American military bases established in the region to fight "the war on terrorism" what would be immediately striking is that it would follow almost exactly the route of the projected oil pipeline to the Indian Ocean.

Blair and the voluble Geoffrey Hoon have, of course, offered none of this vital information to the British people, let alone to the British soldiers sent to play America's imperial game. Fortunately, the troops suffered only gastric flu. The Afghan people have not been as lucky.

Any doubt about the systematic murderous way the US military has operated in Afghanistan is dispelled by a report in the American press in May of children gunned down in wheat fields and as they slept. For four hours, American helicopter gunships saturated the fields and a village with bullets and rockets before landing to disgorge US troops who shot survivors and detained other "suspects".

In fact, the area was renowned for its opposition to the Taliban and the governor of Oruzgan province confirmed that those murdered "were ordinary people. There were no al-Qaeda or Taliban here."

In recent months, the American rogue state has torn up the Kyoto treaty, which would decrease global warming and the probability of environmental disaster. It has threatened to use nuclear weapons in "pre-emptive strikes" (a threat echoed by Hoon). It has tried to sabotage the setting up of an international criminal court, understandably, because its generals and leading politicians might be summoned as defendants.

It has further undermined the authority of the United Nations by allowing Israel to block a UN committee's investigation of the Israeli assault on the Palestinian refugee camp at Jenin; and it has ordered the Palestinians to get rid of their elected leader in favour of an American stooge.

It ignored the World Food Summit in Italy; and at summit conferences in Canada and Indonesia it has blocked genuine aid, such as clean water and electricity, to the most deprived people on earth. Proposals to increase American food subsidies by 80 per cent are designed to secure American domination of the world foodgrains market.

("When we get up from the breakfast table every morning," said the chief executive of the Cargill corporation, the world's biggest food company, "much of what we have eaten - cereals, bread, coffee, sugar and so on - has passed through the lands of my company." Cargill's goal is to double in size every five to seven years).

There is a desperate edge to most of America's rogue actions. The Christian "free market" fundamentalists running Washington are worried. The US current account deficit is running at a record $34billion. Foreign purchases of the huge US debt are falling rapidly. The US stockmarket is heavily over-valued, and the dollar is uncertain.

As one commentator has put it, the "Bush doctrine" looks like "one last attempt to order the world entirely around the requirements of US monopoly capital, before it can long hope to do so".

IN other words this may well be the last throw of the dice before the US economy goes into serious decline - as yesterday's dramatic fall in the stock markets indicated.

This means controlling the oil and fossil fuel riches in Central Asia. It means attacking Iraq, installing a replacement Saddam Hussein and taking over the world's second-largest source of oil. It means surrounding a new economic challenger, China, with bases, and intimidating the leaders of its principal economic rival, Europe, by undermining NATO, and setting off a trade war.

I have just visited the United States, and it is clear many people there are worried. And many dare not say so. Their views are seldom reported in the American mainstream media, which is self-censored and controlled, perhaps as never before.

Instead, the air is thick with the views of the likes of Charles Krauthammer, of the Washington Post. "Unilateralism is the key to our success," he wrote, in describing the world of the next fifty years: a world without protection from nuclear attack or environmental damage for the citizens of any country except the United States; a world where "democracy" means nothing if its benefits are at odds with American "interests"; a world in which to express dissent against these "interests" brands one a terrorist and justifies surveillance and repression.

There is only one way such rogue power can be resisted. It is by speaking out and urgently. If our government won't, we must.

*John Pilger's new book, The New Rulers of the World, is published by Verso.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: british
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To: tricky_k_1972
ordinary people. There were no al-Qaeda or Taliban here."

Cong bik, Cong bik, No VC here!

41 posted on 07/04/2002 4:30:25 PM PDT by tet68
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Comment #42 Removed by Moderator

To: swampfox98
vermin

1. Various small animals or insects, such as rats or cockroaches, that are destructive, annoying, or injurious to health.

2. Animals that prey on game, such as foxes or weasels.

3.a. A person considered loathsome or highly offensive. b. Such people considered as a group.

You have chosen an appropriate name Swampfox.

43 posted on 07/04/2002 4:57:13 PM PDT by spitz
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To: spitz
Did you hear about the cattle mutilation in Argentina? Now the government there is saying a small mouse called a red vampire mouse is responsible for the animals tongues and anuses being severed.

Gosh, can't we blame it on the Americans instead?

swampfox alias Francis Marrion, fought the bloody British in the swamps of America, and drove them back home to England where they belong. I am proud to do the same, if ever called upon. Git

44 posted on 07/04/2002 5:15:54 PM PDT by swampfox98
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To: swampfox98
Your little insecure hatefest is aimed at the British, when it should be aimed at Pilger. You denigrate a nation when, in truth, the British don’t hate Americans or America. Only SOME Americans.

You do your Nation a disservice by promoting your personal stupidity. Twat.

And. what’s cattle mutilation in Argentina got to do with anything? Get a grip.

45 posted on 07/04/2002 6:36:47 PM PDT by spitz
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To: tricky_k_1972
Actually, given what the lamentable Mr. Pilger appears to be for, we're doing pretty well. But I'd remind him that his statement The capacity of the American military machine to smash impoverished countries was never in dispute is entirely false; that he and his were delighted to see the U.S. embroiled in a war we couldn't possibly win, the graveyard of the Soviet Union, etc, etc, blah blah blah - what is notable about Mr. Pilger is his regret that this did not take place and his intense sour-grapes criticism of activities that prevented it. He is, in essence, declaring victory and getting out of it.

But it won't wash. The fact of the matter is that a particularly nasty state-supported terrorist organisation has been smashed and the state that supported it overturned in favor of a government considerably more conducive to all that Mr. Pilger says that he stands for, except, of course, for the fact that its predecessor, vile, oppressive, and disgusting, was fighting the United States. That seems to redeem it somehow in Mr. Pilger's eyes. Let us not forget whose side that puts him on.

46 posted on 07/04/2002 7:53:56 PM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: tricky_k_1972
I have so much to say to this a$$hole, but it would be a waste of band width!
47 posted on 07/04/2002 10:22:53 PM PDT by timydnuc
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To: David Hunter
Your ignorance is showing. The USA officially entered WW2 on December 8, 1941, the day after Pearl Harbor, after unofficially fighting the German Navy for 2 years. The Bismarck was found by a US reconnisance plane. You're off by 2 years.
48 posted on 07/04/2002 11:00:18 PM PDT by ozzymandus
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To: spitz
So do you agree with Pigler or not?
49 posted on 07/04/2002 11:04:23 PM PDT by ozzymandus
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To: tricky_k_1972
A stupid Brit ranting.

July 4th.

Am I the only one who sees the irony here?

Thanks for reminding us all why we declared independence!

50 posted on 07/04/2002 11:07:20 PM PDT by Psycho_Bunny
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Comment #51 Removed by Moderator

To: All
Allow me to play devil's advocate for a moment :

I'd say Pilger's got it about right. And he doesn't even mention the
four Canadians killed by some part-time idiot who wanted to drop a bomb
on someone, anyone.

Did you really read Pilger's article? Gallipoli and Dieppe are prime
examples of what he's saying about the old British Empire: our uncles
and fathers were those colonial troops.

The reason the U.S. doesn't sustain casualties is because it doesn't
commit ground troops unless it can put them there in overwhelming force.
This is the Powell doctrine, and it works wonderfully when you have an
enemy like Iraq in the Gulf War that is stupid enough to think it can
stand and fight.

Britain has always tried to play the U.S. off against Europe to avoid
domination by either. It's a tight-rope act that, when it works, makes
Britain a go-between that both sides can utilize. A ham-fisted and
essentially stupid administration in Washington now, however, is driving
Britain closer to Europe all the time. What Tony Blair really wants,
don't forget, is to take Britain into the Euro.

A little bit of history: America lost exponentially fewer men in World
War I than any other nation that was fighting. It lost (I'm guessing
here) about 50,000, roughly the same as in Vietnam. Britain and Italy
lost hundreds of thousands, and the French, Russians, Germans and
Austro-Hungarians millions. By staying out of the war until it was
almost over, by concentrating on business while its European rivals were
tearing each other apart, and by filling the vacuums they left after the
war, it gained far more from the Versailles Treaty than any of the other
major combatants.

They tried to pull the same stunt in World War II, but the Japanese
interfered and when the U.S. declared war on Japan, Hitler declared war
on the U.S.

American losses in World War II, while a lot larger than in World War I,
still don't come anywhere near the other combatants.

But...the U.S. between 1945 and the rise of McCarthy wrote one of the
greatest chapters in its history. It sponsored the establishment of the
U.N. (which the present administration is trying to pretend never
happened), and the Marshall Plan saw it devote as much as three per cent
of its GDP (GNP in those days) to a version of what we now call foreign
aid...now it spends about 0.1 per cent. It also sponsored the Bretton
Woods talks, an attempt to set up a world-wide financial system to avoid
the problems of the 1930s that brought on world-wide depression...a
system which only failed when it was revised into a provider of seed
money for big business seeking to move into third-world markets.
Essentially the idea was that we would all cooperate and we would all
get rich (which is the basic tenet of Socialism, by the way). Now it has
become 'we all cooperate and America gets rich.'

I agree that the Charge of the Light Brigade isn't a particularly good
example of military strategy; nor is Custer's Last Stand, for that
matter. Jutland was inconclusive, but the German navy never came out to
contest control of the seas again. It would have been nice if the
Bismarck had been sunk without the loss of the Hood, but the Bismarck
was sunk. The U.S. lost half its carrier force winning the Battle of
Midway. In the Falklands the British used what we now call the Powell
doctrine; they went in with overwhelming force and took their islands
back. And in doing so ended the military dictatorship that had seen
30,000 Argentinians 'disappeared'.

'Idiot pinko' is name-calling, which is what idiot nazis start doing
when they have no argument. I would avoid it. It's like an Arsenal
scarf; it tells other Arsenal fans that you are one of them. It says
nothing about whether Arsenal is really a better team than West Ham.

52 posted on 07/05/2002 3:26:06 AM PDT by sushiman
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To: sushiman
"They tried to pull the same stunt in WWII, but the Japanese interfered..."

The incisiveness of your historical insight is matched only by your tact.

53 posted on 07/05/2002 8:14:38 AM PDT by headsonpikes
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To: ozzymandus
No I don’t believe in the crud Pilger writes. And, a lot of Brits would like to express their disgust at his ranting, but when some posters turn the issue into an anti-British diatribe we are left with no choice but to go on the defensive.
54 posted on 07/05/2002 1:08:33 PM PDT by spitz
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To: tricky_k_1972
The Brit who wrote this was like the Brits that fought Geo. Washington, does not know anything about war.
55 posted on 07/05/2002 1:22:21 PM PDT by Texbob
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To: ozzymandus
Your ignorance is showing. The USA officially entered WW2 on December 8, 1941...

The 3 was a typo, sorry chum! Odd that only you noticed it.

However, the fact remains that the USA didn't enter the war until after Pearl Harbor was attacked, even though FDR wanted to join it earlier.

56 posted on 07/05/2002 4:11:55 PM PDT by David Hunter
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To: spitz
Some people are too stupid to even bother with. I put you in that catagory.
57 posted on 07/05/2002 4:22:40 PM PDT by swampfox98
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To: swampfox98
One tries not to indulge in abusive posts, but when I used the word stupidity I meant what I said.

You obviously have no argument, so I’ll let your mediocrity and arrogance exhaust itself.

58 posted on 07/06/2002 3:57:28 AM PDT by spitz
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To: Suffolkman
My pleasure.
59 posted on 07/06/2002 4:00:33 AM PDT by spitz
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To: ozzymandus
a US reconnisance plane.

A RAF Catalina located and tracked the German battleship Bismark in May 1941.Although a U.S. Navy Lt(jg)"Tuck" Smith was it's copilot it hardly could be referred to as a US plane.

60 posted on 07/06/2002 4:48:14 AM PDT by Snowyman
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