Which country is the rogue nation? Iraq? Iran? Or the United
States? Syndicated columnist Charley Reese asks this question in a recently
published article.
Reese notes
that it is the US that routinely commits “acts of aggression around the globe.” The US government has no
qualms about dropping bombs on civilians whether they be in Serbia, the Middle
East, or Africa. It is all in a good cause -- our cause.
This slaughtering of foreigners doesn’t seem to bother the
American public. Americans take it for granted that Americans are superior and
that American purposes, whatever they be, take precedence over the rights of
other people to life and to a political existence independent of American
hegemony.
The Bush regime has come up with a preemption doctrine that
justifies attacking a country in order to prevent the country from possibly
becoming a future threat to the US. “Threat”
is broadly defined. It appears to mean the ability to withstand the imposition
of US hegemony. This insane doctrine justifies attacking China and Russia, a
direction in which the Republican presidential candidate John McCain seems to
lean.
The callousness of Americans toward the lives of other
peoples is stunning. How many Christian churches ask God’s forgiveness for
having been rushed into an error that has killed, maimed, and displaced a
quarter of the Iraqi population?
How many Christian churches ask God to give better guidance
to our government so that it does not repeat the error and crime by attacking
Iran?
The indifference of Americans to others flows from “American
Exceptionalism“, the belief that Americans are graced with a special
mission to impose their virtue on the rest of the world. Like the French
revolutionaries, Americans don’t seem to care how many people they kill in the
process of spreading their exceptionalism.
American Exceptionalism has swelled Americans’ heads,
filling them with hubris and self-righteousness and making Americans believe
that they are the salt of the earth.
Three recent books are good antidotes for this unjustified
self-esteem. One is Patrick J. Buchanan’s Churchill, Hitler, and
the Unnecessary War. Another is After
the Reich: The Brutal History of the Allied Occupation
by Giles MacDonogh, and a third is John
Pilger’s Freedom
Next Time
.
Buchanan’s latest book is by far his best. It is spellbinding
from his opening sentence: “All about
us we can see clearly now that the West is passing away.” As the pages
turn, the comfortable myths, produced by history written by the victors, are
swept aside. The veil is lifted to reveal the true faces of British and
American Exceptionalism: stupidity and deceit.
Buchanan’s strength is that he lets the story be told by
Britain’s greatest 20th century historians and the memoirs of the participants
in the events that destroyed the West’s dominance and moral character. Buchanan’s
contribution is to assemble the collective judgment of a hundred historians.
As I read the tale, it is a story of hubris destroying
judgment and substituting in its place blunder and miscalculation. Both World
Wars began when England, for no sound or sensible reason, declared war on
Germany. Winston Churchill was a prime instigator of both wars. He seems to
have been a person who needed a war stage in order to be a “great man.”
American President Woodrow Wilson shares responsibility with Britain
and France for the Versailles Treaty, which dismembered Germany, stripping
her of territory and putting millions of Germans under foreign rule, and
imposed reparations that Britain’s greatest economist, John Maynard Keynes,
correctly predicted to be unrealistic. All of this was done in violation of
assurances given to Germany that there would be no reparations or boundary
changes. Once Germany surrendered, the assurances were withdrawn, and a
starvation blockade forced German submission to the new harsh terms.
Hitler’s program was to put Germany back together. He was
succeeding without war until Churchill provoked Chamberlain into an insane act.
Danzig was 95 percent German. It had been given to Poland by the Versailles
Treaty. Hitler was negotiating its return and offered in exchange a guarantee
of Poland’s frontiers. The Polish colonels, assessing the relative strengths of
Poland and Germany, understood that a deal was better than a war. But suddenly,
the British Prime Minister issued Poland a guarantee of its existing territory,
including Danzig, whose inhabitants wished to return to Germany.
Buchanan produces one historian after another to testify
that British miscalculations and blunders, culminating in Chamberlain’s
worthless and provocative “guarantee”
to Poland, brought the West into a war that Hitler did not want, a war that
destroyed the British Empire and left Britain a dependency of America, a war
that delivered Poland, a chunk of Germany, all of Eastern Europe, and the Baltic
states to Joseph Stalin, a war that left the Western allies with a 45-year Cold
War against the nuclear-armed Soviet Union.
People resist the shattering of their illusions, and many
are angry with Buchanan for assembling the facts of the case that distinguished
historians have provided.
Churchill admirers are outraged that their hero is revealed
as the first war criminal of World War II. It was Churchill who initiated the
policy of terror bombing civilians in non-combatant areas. Buchanan quotes B.H.
Liddell Hart: “When Mr. Churchill came
into power, one of the first decisions of his government was to extend bombing
to the non-combatant area.”
In holding Churchill to account, Buchanan makes no apologies
for Hitler, but the ease with which Churchill set aside moral considerations is
discomforting.
Buchanan documents that Churchill’s plan was to destroy 50
percent% of German homes. Churchill also had plans for using chemical and
biological warfare against German civilians. In 2001, the Glasgow Sunday Herald
reported
Churchill’s plan to drop 5 million anthrax cakes onto German pastures in
order to poison the cattle and through them the people. Churchill instructed
the RAF to consider drenching “the
cities of the Ruhr and many other cities in Germany” with poison gas “in such a way that most of the population
would be requiring constant medical attention.”
“It is absurd to
consider morality on this topic,” the great man declared.
Paul Johnson, a favorite historian of conservatives, notes
that Churchill’s policy of terror bombing civilians was “approved in cabinet, endorsed by parliament and, so far as can be
judged, enthusiastically backed by the bulk of the British people.” Thus,
the terror bombing of civilians, which “marked
a critical stage in the moral declension of humanity in our times,”
fulfilled “all the conditions of the
process of consent in a democracy under law.”
British historian F.J.P. Veale concluded that Churchill’s
policy of indiscriminate bombing of civilians caused an unprecedented “reversion to primary and total warfare”
associated with “Sennacherib, Genghis
Khan, and Tamerlane.”
The Americans were quick to follow Churchill’s lead. General
Curtis LeMay boasted of his raid on Tokyo: “We scorched and boiled and baked to death more people in Tokyo that
night of March 9-10 than went up in vapor in Hiroshima and Nagasaki combined.”
MacDonogh’s book, After the Reich, dispels the comfortable myth of generous allied treatment of
defeated Germany. Having discarded all moral scruples, the allies fell upon the
vanquished country with brutal occupation. Hundreds of thousands of women
raped; hundreds of thousands of Germans died in deportations; a million German
prisoners of war died in captivity.
MacDonogh calculates that 2.5 million Germans died between
the liberation of Vienna and the Berlin airlift.
Nigel Jones wrote
in the conservative London Sunday Telegraph (April 18 2007): “MacDonogh has told a very inconvenient
truth,” a story long “cloaked in
silence since telling it suited no one.”
The hypocrisy of the Nuremberg trials is that the victors
were also guilty of crimes for which the vanquished were punished. The purpose
of the trials was to demonize the defeated in order to divert attention from
the allies’ own war crimes. The trials had little to do with justice.
In Freedom Next Time, Pilger shows the complete self-absorption of American, British and
Israeli governments whose policies are unimpeded by any moral principle.
Pilger documents the demise of the inhabitants of Diego
Garcia. The Americans wanted Diego Garcia for an air base, so the British
packed up the 2,000 residents, people with British passports under British
protection, and deported them to Mauritius, one thousand miles away.
To cover up its crime against humanity, the British Foreign
and Commonwealth Office created the fiction that the inhabitants, which had
been living in the archipelago for two or three centuries, were “a floating population.” This fiction,
wrote a legal adviser, bolsters “our
arguments that the territory has no indigenous or settled population.”
Prime Minister Harold Wilson and Foreign Secretary Michael
Stewart conspired to mislead the UN about the deported islanders by, in
Stewart’s words, “presenting any move
as a change of employment for contract workers -- rather than as a population
resettlement.”
Pilger interviewed some of the displaced persons, but
emotional blocs will shield patriotic Americans and British from the
uncomfortable facts. Rational skeptics can find a second documented account of
the Anglo-American rape of Diego Garcia online here.
An entire people were swept away.
Two thousand people were in the way of an American purpose
-- an air base -- so we had our British dependency deport them.
Several million Palestinians are in Israel’s way. Pilger’s
documented account of Israel’s crushing of the Palestinians shows that our “democratic ally” in the Middle East
is capable of any evil and has no remorse or mercy. Israel is an apt student of
the British and American empires’ attitudes toward lesser beings. They simply
don’t count.
Those who are the salt of the earth take precedence over
everything.
Paul
Craig Roberts [email him] was
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury during President Reagan’s first term. He
was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal. He has held numerous academic
appointments, including the William E. Simon Chair, Center for Strategic
and International Studies, Georgetown University, and Senior Research Fellow, Hoover
Institution, Stanford University. He was awarded the Legion of Honor by French
President Francois Mitterrand. He is the author of Supply-Side
Revolution : An Insider’s Account of Policymaking in Washington; Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and Meltdown:
Inside the Soviet Economy, and is the co-author with Lawrence M. Stratton
of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are Trampling the
Constitution in the Name of Justice. Click here for Peter
Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the recent epidemic of
prosecutorial misconduct.