What's in a name? A lot
.
We are, by now, quite used to the practice of pinning our
various overseas interventions with some tag line, some felicitous phrase that seems to sum up the official rationale for war.
The "new war" as the networks have unimaginatively dubbed it is no
exception, but I'm afraid the process seems to have hit a
few bumps in the road.
DEPARTMENT OF UNINTENTIONAL HUMOR
Deep in the recesses of the Pentagon
is some sub-department charged with coining these monikers, and, naturally, they have the
aid of a specially-designed computer program: the Code Word, Nickname and Exercise Term
System. "Basically what happens," according to a Pentagon source, "is that
each of the commanders is given a database of words. A name is randomly selected
normally a word that is pertinent to that region like desert in Desert Storm
and Desert Shield. The commanders are then presented with a new database of words. They
choose another word they like and pair it with the first. They are given some leeway, but
they are instructed about which two letters to use first. In 1983, for instance, when the
United States invaded Grenada, the Atlantic Command was asked to come up with a name whose
first two letters were U and R, for complex reasons of cyber-military protocol. The
result: Urgent Fury."
ON THE CULTURE FRONT
Who knows what mysteries of
"cyber-military protocol" dictated the creation of "Operation Infinite
Justice"? In any case, they had to ditch that one pretty fast because it's offensive
to Muslims. According to a
report in the Daily Mail, secretary of defense Donald Rumsfeld was informed at a press
conference that several Islamic scholars objected to the name on the grounds that
"only God, or Allah, can mete out infinite justice." That our own theologians
didn't catch this, or raise any objections, and left it to the ayatollahs to point out the
obvious, underscores our cultural as well as military vulnerability to the terrorist
threat.
IN THE NAME OF GOD
Okay, so they've nixed
"Operation Infinite Justice," and I guess they're up for suggestions. My first
choice is "Operation Infinite Arrogance," with first runner up "Operation
Infinite Hubris." On reading the following news item, however, "Operation
Unlimited Chutzpah" also comes to mind. Today [September 24] we had the US State
Department pulling back from yesterday's announcement that evidence of Osama bin
Laden's culpability would soon be forthcoming. That information, we were told, is
"classified," and disclosing it would "make the war more difficult to
win." But why even bother with evidence? Surely an entity capable of dispensing
"infinite justice" needn't bother with such trivial amenities. For such power is
truly godlike, and God doesn't need evidence: He knows all, sees all, and His knowledge,
like His sense of justice, is infinite.
'EVERY CITIZEN A COMBATANT'
After what Senator Joe Lieberman had to say on Jim Lehrer's News Hour on PBS last night
[September 23], I have a fourth choice: "Operation Dump-the-Constitution."
Lieberman struck an Orwellian note as he intoned:
"I do think there's a new role for
the individual citizen in America though in this new era of our history. In some ways the
terrorists have made every citizen a combatant, including civilians. I think now it's the
opportunity and responsibility of individual citizens to act that way. When they see
things that bother them, that look suspicious, to call up their local police department or
the FBI or hit the Internet for the appropriate web site to convey that information and be
alert and be prepared."
NEW, NEW, NEW
Oh yes, everything's
"different" now: America, they tell us, will never be the same. It's a "new
era," a "new war," and we'll just have to ditch such anachronistic ideas as
the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. A comprehensive "anti-terrorism
package" has been delivered to the Congress, and it is a ticking time-bomb designed
to blow up the remnants of our old Republic. They'll be monitoring our email, our
snail-mail, our web-surfing, and other extracurricular activities, all in the name of the
"war effort." Anyone who opposes such measures will, of course, be singled out
as a traitor, and perhaps even prosecuted. Dissenters have always been labeled "fifth
columnists" in wartime America, and this war is certainly going to be no exception.
Every citizen a combatant, every American a soldier and a soldier follows orders,
or else
.
FLYING THE UNFRIENDLY SKIES
Since Senator Lieberman is
recommending that we report anything "suspicious" to the proper authorities,
what about the recent spate of incidents involving Americans of Arab descent and certain
airlines? When four of them tried to board a recent Northwest Airlines flight, they were told that a vote had been taken among the passengers and
they would have to find other accommodations. Northwest defended its atrocious behavior on
the dubious grounds that arcane FAA regulations somehow require them to eject those who,
for any reason, makes other passengers "uncomfortable." In two other separate
incidents, it was the pilots who refused to take off until all those damn rag-heads were
out of there. And here's some news: a typically deranged American went out and shot a
Sikh, whose turban had him convinced that the wearer was an Arab.
BOYCOTT NORTHWEST AIRLINES
Oh, it's getting ugly.
Antiwar.com recently ran a story reporting that a third of all New Yorkers believe internment camps
have to be set up for Arabs and other "subversive" elements. The President, much
to his credit, has made a point of condemning in advance the wave of anti-Arab hatred
and, violence we all knew was coming. But that has not, apparently, been
enough: what the perpetrators of this hate cry out for is some real punishment,
starting with a boycott, of Northwest Airlines by decent people everywhere. Hit the haters
where it really hurts in the pocketbook.
THE C-WORD
I note two aspects of the President's [September 20] speech that struck a rather
ominous note. The first is that, in listing the ideological scourges of our times, he
mentioned "fascism, Nazism and totalitarianism" but not communism. This
is due to the possibility that the US can woo China into supporting our anti-terrorist
campaign, at least to the extent of neutralizing a potential veto in the United Nations
Security Council when the time comes for military action.
THE BUSH DOCTRINE
Secondly, Bush's proclamation that
"from this day forward, any nation that continues to harbor or support terrorism will
be regarded by the United States as a hostile regime" and, presumably, subject
to attack. This means that virtually all the nations of the Middle East are on the
list of potential targets. Echoing Lenin's famous dictum, "those who are not with us
are against us," the President put these nations on notice submit or live in
fear of invasion.
TEL AVIV TARGETS IRAQ
First on the list is Afghanistan, but
Israel's amen-corner in the US is frantically trying to finger Iraq as the real
power behind Osama bin Laden. (Never mind the bin Laden and his sympathizers volunteered
to fight on behalf of Kuwait when Saddam tried to reclaim Iraq's "nineteenth
province.")
KRISTOL TARGETS EVERYONE
Others take a more expansive view of
the problem. The dust had not yet cleared from the battered Manhattan skyline when Bill
Kristol and his "Project for a New American Century" sponsored a full-page
newspaper ad in the form of a
letter to the President, demanding that Bush invade not only Iraq, but also Syria and
Iran if they don't comply with all our demands. The letter is signed by every
neoco,nservative known to man. But at least they are consistent: they always opt
for war, the bigger the better, a view embraced by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld
and his deputy, Paul Wolfowitz, who are arguing , for a broad assault on the Arab world.
DOUBLE GAME
On the other hand, the Bush
administration and its British ally are playing a very strange double game. The arrival of British foreign secretary Jack Straw in Teheran
illuminated, with awful clarity, what the "allies" are up to in the Middle East.
The West has been tilting toward Iran for years, with great store being put in the Iranian
"moderates" led by Iranian President Khatami. The Taliban is anathema to the
Iranians, whose position as the epicenter of Islamic radicalism has been challenged by the
mullahs in Kabul. At this point, Iran is more than happy to let Uncle Sam take up the
cause of the Northern Alliance, as Teheran has been footing the bill lo
these many years and with not much to show for it.
HEARTS AND MINDS
Our new allies in the anti-Taliban
"Northern Alliance" are a motley crew of ethnic separatists and Iranian-trained
Shi'ite fundamentalists whose only quarrel with the Taliban is that each claims its own
version of Islam is purer, fiercer than the other. The disparate elements of this alliance
were in power before the Taliban seized control, and their fall can be traced to the
inability to keep any kind of order. Post-Soviet Afghanistan bore a distinct resemblance
to post-Communist Albania, with the country essentially descending into anarchy a
condition that seems natural to the Afghanis, who have successfully resisted the rule of
law, or any sort of order, for most of their turbulent history. The Taliban, at least,
stopped the brigands from taking over, a respite for which ordinary Afghans were no doubt
grateful, albeit temporarily. Now the US, the great champion of "democracy" and
international goodness, wants to restore these same warlords to power. Could a more addled
strategy, one practically designed for defeat, be imagined?
A CIVIL WAR
No, we aren't declaring a war on
Islam, or on terrorism: we are inte,rfering in a civil war between rival Muslim
factions. The US has backed the fiercely secular Turks, who have taken up with the
Israelis, but the rule of Turkey's generals is perpetually in doubt and their control of
the country is tenuous. Likewi,se, the US is naturally intent on propping up the House of
Saud in order to ensure that all those oil profits flow freely to US companies, but their
rule is even more brittle. It was Bill Clinton who first struck out in a new direction,
engineering a rapprochement with Iranian "moderates" and setting up an alliance
with Balkan Muslims: Bush is backing their progeny in Macedonia. But an alliance with Iran
the taker of American hostages, the nation identified by the State Department's
"Patterns of Global Terrorism" as "the most active sponsor of terrorism in
2000," a country whose legislators openly list appropriations for the overseas
"jihad" in the national budget is a different story altogether. The State
Department goes on to report:
"Iran has long provided Lebanese
Hezbollah and the Palestinian rejectionist groups notably Hamas, the Palestinian
Islamic Jihad, and Ahmed Jibril's PFLP-GC with varying amounts of funding, safe
haven, training, and weapons. . . . Iran also provided a lower level of support
including funding, training, and logistics assistance to extremist groups in the
Gulf, Africa, Turkey and Central Asia. Hezbollah has been credibly linked to the bombing
of U.S. military barracks at the Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia."
STRANGE ALLIANCES
The Iranians have eagerly signed on
to Bush's "war on terrorism," a move of such breathtaking hypocrisy that it
boggles the mind. But none of this bothers the War Street Journal, which admits the
above but muses vaguely that "Iran will have to decide which side it's on. At this
stage in the war on terror, it can't hurt the US to give it a chance to make the right
choice." I realize everybody over at the Journal is in shock right now, but
clearly the horrific events of September 11 have unbalanced at least one editorialist. For
all we know, Iran could be the real perpetrator and/or sponsor of the Twin Towers
atrocity a possibility made more prominent by the American unwillingness to release
the alleged evidence against bin Laden & Co. Oh, but war, the Journal assures
us, "makes for some strange alliances." Any war against terrorism that numbers
Iran among the good , guys is far too strange for my taste, and, I suspect, for the
average American.
SINISTER ANOMALY
Senator Lieberman was insistent tha,t
we report anything "suspicious": it is necessary, he intoned, to keep up a high
level of "vigilance" against anything out of the ordinary. Well, certainly it is
unusual that a so-called war on terrorism should have us working hand-in-glove with
some of the principal terrorists in the world. If anything excites the suspicion of the
American people, then surely it must be this sinister anomaly one that gives the
lie to the assertion by our leaders that this is a war for "justice" or even for
something so ordinary and human as vengeance.
SPOOKY WOOKY
When George W. Bush won the White
House, narrowly averting a Democratic party coup, I warned:
"Desert Storm II, here we come!" Now, I averred, was the time to really
start worrying, and in retrospect the following has an eerie ring to it:
"Here, at last, is something
Republicans and Democrats can agree on: the necessity of going to war for the profits of
Big Oil. For President Bush, it would be a diversion away from political divisions at home
that could give him much-needed legitimacy. He didn't quite win it at the polls: perhaps
he can win it on the battlefield. In this way, a new precedent will be set, and the
analogy with the old Roman Empire will be complete. On account of his conquests, Dubya,
like Caesar, could win the crown and the accolades of the people. Few would notice what
had been lost."
THE FRANKENSTEIN SYNDROME
The complete failure of our
government to protect us against terrorism is underscored by George Bush's alliance with
one of the biggest terrorist centers on earth. If this is World War III, then the
Anglo-American-Iranian alliance brings to mind Roosevelt's rapprochement with Soviet
Russia against the Nazis a strategy that led to another fifty years of
"cold" war and the death of millions. In both cases, the US built up its own
enemies, creating a Frankenstein monster that could only have gotten out of control. The
history of Osama bin Laden as a CIA-sponsored "freedom fighter" in Afghanistan, where he fought the Soviets,
underscores how this Frankenstein Syndrome operates. We support a "lesser evil"
against a purportedly greater evil, and, before you know it, two airliners packed wi,th
American citizens are being rammed into the twin towers of the World Trade Center
and our whole world comes crashing down
_____________________________________
Justin
Raimondo is the editorial director of Antiwar.com. He is also the author of Reclaiming the American
Right: The Lost Legacy of the Conservative Movement The views of
this writer do not necessarily reflect the views of the iviews.com editorial staf