New Face, Same Imperialism
By Tariq Ali
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article26533.htm
http://www.theage.com.au/opinion/politics/new-face-same-imperialism-20101005-16612.html
October 06, 2010 "The
Age" --
After all the hope and hype, Obama's foreign policy
mirrors the ugliness of the Bush years.
The election to the presidency of a mixed-race Democrat, vowing to heal
America's wounds at home and restore its reputation abroad, was greeted with a
wave of ideological euphoria not seen since the days of Kennedy. The shameful
interlude of Republican swagger and criminality was over. George Bush and Dick
Cheney had broken the continuity of a multilateral American leadership that had
served the country well throughout the Cold War and after. Barack Obama would
now restore it.
Rarely has self-interested mythology - or well-meaning gullibility - been more
quickly exposed. There was no fundamental break in foreign policy between the
Bush and Obama regimes. The strategic goals and imperatives of the US imperium
remain the same, as do its principal theatres and means of operation.
Obama's line towards Israel would be manifest even before he took office. On
December 27, 2008, the Israeli Defence Forces launched an all-out air and ground
assault on the population of Gaza. Bombing, burning, killing continued without
interruption for 22 days, during which time the president-elect uttered not a
syllable of reproof. By pre-arrangement, Tel Aviv called off its blitz a few
hours before his inauguration on January 20, 2009, not to spoil the party.
Once installed, Obama called, like every US president, for peace between the two
suffering peoples of the Holy Land, and again, like every predecessor, for
Palestinians to recognise Israel and for Israel to stop its settlements in the
territories it seized in 1967. Within a week of the President's speech in Cairo
pledging opposition to further settlements, the governing Netanyahu coalition
was extending Jewish properties in East Jerusalem with impunity.
However, war-zones further east have the first call on imperial attention. In
2002, on his way up the political ladder as a low-profile state senator in
Illinois, Obama opposed the attack on Iraq; it was politically inexpensive to do
so. By the time he was elected President, his first act was to maintain Bush's
Defence Secretary, Robert Gates, long-time CIA functionary and veteran of the
Iran-Contra affair, in the Pentagon. A cruder and more demonstrative signal of
political continuity could hardly have been conceived.
Before his election, Obama promised a withdrawal of all US ''combat'' troops
from Iraq within 16 months of his taking office, that is, by May 2010 - with a
safety clause that the pledge could be ''refined'' in the light of events. It
promptly was.
There persists the uneasy thought that the Iraqi resistance, capable of
inflicting such damage on the US military machine only yesterday, might just be
biding its time after its heavy losses and the defection of an important
segment, and could still visit havoc on the collaborators tomorrow, should the
US pull out altogether. To ensure against any such danger, Washington has put
down markers in the modern equivalents - vastly larger and more hideous - of the
Crusader fortresses of old.
As for Iran, schemes for a grand reconciliation between the two states had to be
set aside. The calculation was upset by political polarisation in Iran itself.
For Obama, the opportunity for ideological posturing was too great to resist. In
a peerless display of sanctimony, he lamented with moist-eyed grief the death of
a demonstrator killed in Tehran on the same day his drones wiped out 60
villagers, most of them women and children, in Pakistan.
The Democratic administration has now reverted to the line of its predecessor,
attempting to corral Russia and China - European acquiescence can be taken for
granted - into an economic blockade of Iran, in the hope of so strangling the
country that the Supreme Leader will either be overthrown or obliged to come to
terms.
From Palestine through Iraq to Iran, Obama has acted as just another steward of
the US empire, pursuing the same aims as his predecessors, with the same means
but with a more emollient rhetoric. In Afghanistan, he has gone further,
widening the front of imperial aggression with a major escalation of violence,
both technological and territorial.
When he took office, Afghanistan had already been occupied by US and satellite
forces for more than seven years. During his election campaign, Obama -
determined to outdo Bush in prosecuting a ''just war'' - pledged more troops and
fire-power to crush the Afghan resistance, and more ground intrusions and drone
attacks in Pakistan to burn out support for it across the border. This is one
promise he has kept.
In what The New York Times delicately described as a ''statistic that the White
House has not advertised'', it has informed its readers that ''since Mr Obama
came to office, the Central Intelligence Agency has mounted more Predator drone
strikes into Pakistan than during Mr Bush's eight years in office''.
Desperate to claim victory in a self-chosen ''just war'', Obama has dispatched a
still larger expeditionary force, expanding the war to a neighbouring country
where the enemy is suspected of finding succour. It was announced that Pakistan
and Afghanistan would henceforward be treated as an integrated war-zone: ''Afpak''.
If a textbook illustration were needed of the continuity of American foreign
policy across administrations, and the futility of so many softheaded attempts
to treat the Bush-Cheney years as exceptional rather than essentially
conventional, Obama's conduct has provided it. From one end of the Middle East
to the other, the only significant material change he has brought is a further
escalation of the War on Terror - or ''Evil'', as he prefers to call it - with
Yemen now being seen as the next target.
Still, it would be a mistake to think that nothing has changed. No
administration is exactly like any other, and each president leaves a stamp on
his own. Substantively, vanishingly little of US imperial dominion has altered
under Obama. But propagandistically, there has been a significant upgrade. In
Cairo, at West Point, at Oslo, the world has been treated to one uplifting
homily after another, to describe America's glowing mission in the world, and
modest avowal of awe and sense of responsibility in carrying it forward.
Cant still goes a long way to satisfy those who yearn for it.
Tariq Ali is a London-based historian, writer and political campaigner who is in
Australia to deliver the 2010 Edward Said Memorial Lecture at Adelaide
University. He will be speaking in Melbourne tonight at the Melbourne City
Conference Centre.
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