Well, well. 'Sovereign is he who decides on the exception,' Carl Schmitt wrote  in different times almost a century ago, when European empires and  armies dominated most continents and the United States was basking  underneath an isolationist sun. What the conservative theorist meant by  'exception' was a state of emergency, necessitated by serious economic  or political cataclysms, that required a suspension of the Constitution,  internal repression and war abroad. A decade after the attentats of  9/11, the United States and  its European allies are trapped in a quagmire. The events of that year  were simply used as a pretext to remake the world and to punish those  states that did not comply. And today while the majority of  Euro-American citizens flounder in a moral desert, now unhappy with the  wars, now resigned, now propagandized into differentiating what is, in  effect, an overarching imperial strategy into good/bad wars, the US  General Petraeus (currently commanding  the CIA) tells us: "You have to  recognize also that I don't think you win this war. I think you keep  fighting. It's a little bit like Iraq, actually . . ..  Yes, there has been enormous progress in Iraq. But there are still  horrific attacks in Iraq, and you have to stay vigilant. You have to  stay after it. This is the kind of fight we're in for the rest of our  lives and probably our kids' lives." Thus speaks the voice of a  sovereign power, determining in this case that the exception is the  rule. Even though I did not agree with his own answer, the German  philosopher, Jurgen Habermas posed an important question: 'Does the  claim to universality that we connect with human rights merely conceal a  particularly subtle and deceitful instrument of Western domination?'  'Subtle' could be deleted. The experiences in the occupied lands speak  for themselves. Ten years on the war in Afghanistan continues, a bloody  and brutal stalemate with a corrupt puppet regime whose President and  family fill their pockets with ill-gotten gains and a US/NATO military  incapable of defeating the insurgents. The latter now strike at will,  assassinating Karzai's corrupt sibling, knocking off his leading  collaborators and targeting key NATO intelligence personnel via suicide  terrorism or helicopter-downing missiles. Meanwhile, sets of protracted  behind-the-scenes negotiations between the US and the neo-Taliban have  been taking place for several years. The aim reveals the desperation.  NATO and Karzai are desperate to recruit the Taliban to a new national  government. Euro-American liberal and conservative politicians who form the  backbone of the governing elites and claim to believe in moderation and  tolerance and fighting wars to impose the same values on the  re-colonized states are still blinded by their situation and fail to see  the writing on the wall. Their pious renunciations of terrorist  violence notwithstanding, they have no problems in defending torture,  renditions, targeting and assassination of individuals, post-legal  states of exception at home so that they can imprison anybody without  trial indefinitely.  Meanwhile the good citizens of Euro-America who  opposed the wars being waged by their governments avert their gaze from  the dead, wounded and orphaned citizens of Iraq and Afghanistan, Libya  and Pakistan…the list continues to grow. War—jus belli– is now a legitimate instrument as long as it  is used with US approval or preferably by the US itself. These days it  is presented as a 'humanitarian' necessity: one side is busy engaged in  committing crimes, the self-styled morally superior side is simply  administering necessary punishment and the state to be defeated is  denied its sovereignty. Its replacement is carefully policed both with  military bases and with a combination of No's and money. This 21st  Century colonization or dominance is aided by the global media networks,  an essential pillar to conduct political and military operations. Let's start with homeland security in the United States. Contrary to  what many liberals imagined in November 2008, the debasement of American  political culture continues apace. Instead of reversing the trend, the  lawyer-President and his team have deliberately accelerated the process.  There have been more deportations of immigrants than under Bush; fewer  prisoners held without trial have been released from Gitmo, an  institution that the lawyer-President had promised to close down; the  Patriot Act with its defining premises of what constitutes friends and  enemies has been renewed, a new war begun in Libya without the approval  of Congress on the flimsy basis that the bombing of a sovereign state  should not be construed as a hostile act; whistleblowers are being  vigorously prosecuted and so on—the list growing longer by the day. Politics and power override all else. Liberals who still believe that  the Bush administration transcended the law while the Democrats are  exemplars of a normative approach are blinded by political tribalism.  Apart from Obama's windy rhetoric, little now divides this  administration from its predecessor. Ignore, for a moment, the power of  politicians and propagandists to enforce their taboos and prejudices on  American society as a whole, a power often used ruthlessly and  vindictively to silence opposition from all quarters—Bradley Manning,  Thomas Drake (released after a huge outcry in the liberal media), Julian  Assange, Stephen Kim, currently being treated as criminals and public  enemies, know this better than most. Nothing illustrates this debasement so well as the assassination of  Osama Bin Laden in Abbotabad. He could have been captured and put on  trial, but that was never the intention. The liberal mood was reflected  by the chants heard in New York on that day:  U-S-A. U-S-A. Obama  got Osama. Obama Got Osama. You can't beat us  (clap-clap-clap-clap-clap-clap) You can't beat us. Fuck bin La-den. Fuck  bin La-den. These were echoed in more diplomatic language by the leaders of  Europe, junior partners in the imperial family of nations, incapable of  self-determination.  Cant and hypocrisy have become the coinage of  political culture. Take Libya, the latest case of 'humanitarian intervention'. The  US-NATO intervention in Libya, with United Nations security council  cover, is part of an orchestrated response to show support for the  movement against one dictator in particular and by so doing to bring the  Arab rebellions to an end by asserting western control, confiscating  their impetus and spontaneity and trying to restore the status quo ante.  As is now obvious the British and French are boasting of success and  that they will control Libyan oil reserves as payment for the six month  bombing campaign. Meanwhile, Obama's allies in the Arab world were hard at work promoting democracy. The Saudis entered Bahrain where the population is being tyrannised  and large-scale arrests are taking place. Not much of this is being  reported on al-Jazeera. I wonder why? The station seems to have been  curbed somewhat and brought into line with the politics of its funders.  All this with active US support. The despot in Yemen, loathed by a  majority of his people continues to kill them every day by remote  control from his Saudi base.   Not even an arms embargo, let alone a  "no-fly zone" have been imposed on him. Libya is yet another case of  selective vigilantism by the US and its attack dogs in the west. That  the German Greens, amongst the most ardent European defenders of  neo-liberalism and war, wanted to be part of this posse reveals more  about their own evolution than the intrinsic merits or demerits of  intervention. The frontiers of the squalid protectorate that the west is going to  create are being decided in Washington. Even those Libyans who, out of  desperation, backed NATO's bomber jets, might – like their Iraqi  equivalents – live to regret their choice. All this might trigger a third phase at some stage: a growing  nationalist anger that spills over into Saudi Arabia and here, have no  doubt, Washington will do everything necessary to keep the Saudi royal  family in power. Lose Saudi Arabia and they will lose the Gulf States.  The assault on Libya, greatly helped by Gaddafi's imbecility on every  front, was designed to wrest the initiative back from the streets by  appearing as the defenders of civil rights. The Bahrainis, Egyptians,  Tunisians, Saudi Arabians, Yemenis will not be convinced, and even in  Euro-America more are opposed to this latest adventure than support it.  The struggles are by no means over. The 19th century German poet Theodor Däubler wrote that: "The enemy is our own question embodied The problem with this view today is that the category of enemy,  determined by US policy needs, changes far too frequently. Yesterday  Saddam and Ghaddafi were friends and regularly helped by western  intelligence agencies to deal with their own enemies. The latter became  friends when the former became enemies. And so the planetary disorder  continues. The assassination of Osama Bin Laden was greeted by European  leaders as something that would make the world safer. Tell that to the  fairies. TARIQ ALI's latest book "The Obama Syndrome: Surrender at Home, War Abroad' is published by Verso.
I said the US regards the world as it's backyard to be maintained as it sees fit, and Europe is a junior partner in this activity.
Tariq Ali says: "...the leaders of  Europe [are] junior partners in the imperial family of nations, incapable of  self-determination."
I said regime change in Libya isn't an advance in the Arab Spring, it's a defeat.
Tariq Ali says: "The  US-NATO intervention in Libya, with United Nations security council  cover, is part of an orchestrated response to show support for the  movement against one dictator in particular and by so doing to bring the  Arab rebellions to an end by asserting western control, confiscating  their impetus and spontaneity and trying to restore the status quo ante."
I said al-Jazeera is promoting a US/Qatar agenda.
Tariq Ali says: "The Saudis entered Bahrain where the population is being tyrannised  and large-scale arrests are taking place. Not much of this is being  reported on al-Jazeera. I wonder why? The station seems to have been  curbed somewhat and brought into line with the politics of its funders.  All this with active US support."
Remember, in the Institutional Theory world, there doesn't have to be a meeting in some backroom somewhere to work out some quid pro quo. When a foreign power has a large military base in your country, and that same country has a huge market you want to expand into (to highlight just a couple of salient issues here) nobody needs to spell out what you need to so. It's pretty easy to figure it out.
 
If I'm wrong, Tariq Ali is wrong, and I can't think of anybody I'd rather be wrong with.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tariq_AliPerpetual War
 							  	
 And he will hound us, and we will hound him to the same end."
 
 
I've finally achieved consistency in my life. Any person of average or above intelligence can predict what I will say next with unerring accuracy. And what I say will always be wrong.
Wednesday, September 07, 2011
[ItsAllAboutMeMan] Perpetual War
 September 7, 2011
  			 		"Grand Strategy" after 9/11
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