Each year I take several sabbatical retreats into wilderness
country to find the calmness and serenity that the thin veneer of civilized
life cannot provide. The wilderness may be wild and completely without
Disneyesque happy endings, but it is not so savage as the atrocities that
humanity visits upon itself in the name of various fine sounding philosophies
and moralities.
Foolishly, after having spent a week without electronic
input of any kind, a series of days of playing within the natural background
that should be everyone�s heritage, I return to this civilization expecting it
to somehow miraculously be better than when I turned away from it.
My most recent return encountered Canada�s self-appointed
guru of militarism, General Rick Hillier, pretty much demanding of Canada�s
government that a doubling of forces would be necessary to hold even in
Kandahar. Canada itself does not have the additional forces available (unless,
I think sarcastically, the MPs themselves sign up with their sons and daughters
for this noble mission that burdens the white men) and the European NATO
members are playing cute with Canada, suggesting that Canada �be patient� while
they pretend to fight within the safe zones of Kabul.
On top of that, recent Angus Reid polls indicate that
�Canadians are increasingly identifying the country�s military presence in
Afghanistan as a war mission rather than a peace-building effort,� with an
increase of 10 percent in this position within one month. As of February 11, 63
percent believe that Canada should not extend the mission beyond 2009 (its
current mandate) and only 16 percent support extending the mission.
The minister of National Defence, Peter MacKay, says,
�"Simply put, reality seems to have escaped these two parties [NDP and
Bloc Quebecois -- the two who actually see the reality]. We believe we should
stay and finish the job. We do not want to abandon the Afghan people or turn
our back on the international community. Staying in Afghanistan is not the easy
thing to do, but staying there is the right thing to do."
This reflects Prime Minister Harper�s view that they will
not follow polls, but will �do what is right.� What is �right� has two parameters:
the lack of democracy at home to reflect the wishes of the people, and the
ongoing support of the NATO/American imperial drive to contain and control the
Middle East.
I am certain that if the international community truly had a
democratic vote on Afghanistan, the majority of the world would tell NATO to
get out of Afghanistan. MacKay�s international community consists of
corporations and other power politicians, not the democratic people of the
world. All the fine rhetoric about democracy and freedom, the civilizing effect
of our white men�s burden, has obviously not been accepted by the people of
Canada.
If Canada were as strong on democracy as it believes it is,
it would follow democracy at home as well, and with the will of the people as a
majority, would exit Afghanistan. Harper�s comment about not listening to the
polls but �doing what is right� demonstrates only the arrogance of power and
not the benefits of democracy. Any countries elected representatives need to
remember that they are just that, representatives first, and within that
representation there is a leader, but one who should represent his
constituents, not ignore their opinions. This applies globally as well as here
in Canada.
Nuclear NATO
That global perspective arrives with a second idea that
brought me back to the reality of human civilization after my wilderness
sojourn, that of the NATO ministers agreeing with the American imperial idea
that NATO should use nuclear weapons preemptively in order to prevent the use
of nuclear weapons. How stupid can you get? I dislike using the word stupid,
because the clear majority of people are not -- ignorant perhaps, uneducated
perhaps, or simply unaware, but seldom stupid once properly informed -- however
there seems to be a negative synergy within politics and the military to seek
the most obvious contradictions and advertise them as a significant policy to
proceed with.
The nuclear �terror� that I have lived with has mainly been
American. Certainly the Russians tried to maintain a nuclear equilibrium, but
with American aggressive actions around the globe, their idiocy in trying to
defeat communism vis a vis the domino effect in Vietnam, their many Latin
American incursions, the Reaganesque delusions of �Star Wars,� the �Peacemaker�
ICBM, the labelling of the Soviets as an �evil� empire, and the beginnings of
the idea of winning a nuclear war, my main source of �terror� focused on the
Americans and their nuclear arsenal. Throughout my life, the main correlation I
have had with American foreign policy is that wherever it leads, death and
destruction seem to follow. There is nothing in today�s current events to
change that idea.
It continues today, with the American mercenary arm, NATO,
now advocating the same position. I wonder how many Europeans think of
themselves as mercenaries of the U.S. empire? Like it or not, that is the way
Europe has acted and is acting (just as Canada has fully accepted that role
within the political/business realm in Ottawa), regardless of how the majority
of citizens might feel. NATO now inhabits Afghanistan, areas of the former
Yugoslavia, is encroaching into Pakistan, and, in another ludicrous idea that
fully supports the idea of their role as American mercenaries, has been
suggested as replacement for the IDF in Palestine.
Enter Palestine
The idea of NATO in Palestine is being �explored� by the
Israelis and the Americans. As NATO is headed by two American four-star
generals, I suppose there is little need to ask the European countries if they
want to embroil themselves within Israeli politics as the Palestinians' prison
guards. I may be wrong, but I do not think that the Palestinians would accept
surrogate IDF forces, particularly ones linked so strongly to American designs
on the Middle East, to be their new gatekeepers. Being of the military mind,
NATO troops could carry as much racism and hostility towards the Palestinians
as the IDF, seeing them as terrorists (which seems to be the whole Palestinian
population for many Western media outlets).
Perhaps NATO should just ask Israel to become a part of it,
and then it would be firmly established in the Middle East with a ready made
and reliable military and nuclear arsenal ready to serve in Afghanistan, or
Pakistan, or Iran, wherever NATO might be next on America�s quest for global
supremacy.
War on terror
The war on terror will not be won by attacking
countries who �harbour� terrorists, by supporting non-democratic governments
that support torture, or by destroying democratic governments duly elected by
the people because they do no agree with U.S. objectives.
It can be won on a different level than the simplistic,
arrogant, and ignorant black and white �for us or against us,� good and evil
duality. First when the major originators of terror, those with the most
nuclear weapons, those with their own troops and their mercenary compadres,
withdraw from occupied territories, then the supply of terrorists will decrease
significantly. Secondly, for the already alienated and fully militant remaining
terrorists, effective police actions, acceptance of international standards of
law and justice, rejection of torture and internationally illegal modes of
containment, will reduce their numbers significantly and demonstrate that the
rhetoric of democracy and justice matches reality.
Thirdly, yes other countries may want our assistance, yet on
the other hand they may not want it. We should ask first, providing we are not
asking a puppet government run by American sycophants, but asking a truly
democratically elected government. Further, different forms of democracy, of
governments willingly chosen by their people, should not be denied existence,
as the Americans and British tend to do with any government that denies the
�rights� of corporate exploitation (at the same time supporting non-democratic
governments that allow the same exploitation).
Unfortunately, the �war on terror� when deconstructed to its
root causes is more about the acquisition of power, wealth, and control by a
few countries who have for centuries practiced the art of conquest, coercion,
and intimidation to harvest the world�s wealth. That the indigenous peoples of
the world reject that is not surprising, and when they actually rebel against
the wishes of the dominant group, they are no longer labelled �insurgents� or
�freedom fighters� but �terrorists,� and become the �other,� become �evil� and
are then open targets for further military incursions.
Therefore, the idealistic solution presented above runs into
the attempts to hide and dissimulate the imperial imperative of America under
the guise of a war on terror. Until it is recognized more appropriately at the
level of national governments that continue to play mercenary sycophants to the
American imperial drive, no lasting benefit of trying to assist other
governments will truly take place.
Canada will only leave behind a bitter legacy of unfulfilled
expectations and promises if it remains allied to the American war on terror, a legacy that will linger both at home
as Canada becomes more and more a militarized state, and abroad as its
�reputation� becomes more and more identified with the American mindset.
Jim
Miles is a Canadian educator and a regular contributor/columnist of opinion
pieces and book reviews for The Palestine Chronicle. His interest in this topic
stems originally from an environmental perspective, which encompasses the
militarization and economic subjugation of the global community and its
commodification by corporate governance and by the American government. Miles�
work is also presented globally through other alternative websites and news
publications.