The best way for America to become more secure may
well be to dismantle its vast security apparatus. This means eliminating the
Department of Homeland Security, closing down our 800 military bases on foreign
soil, and slashing armaments spending by the War Department, the one euphemistically
called the Department of Defense but which is, in fact, the spearhead of
today’s naked American aggression in six countries.
Real security begins with creating a policy of peace, meaning non-intervention, in the affairs of other states. It means when theU.S.
sends its sons and daughters abroad on official business, it sends the Peace
Corps to help and not the Pentagon to obliterate. It means returning to the
lost arts of diplomacy, restoring the State Department to its original
relevance; it means scrapping the posture of arrogance that is known as
American exceptionalism and not acting as the self-appointed policeman of the
world; and it means settling disputes with other nations in the World Court,
not on the battlefield; and lastly, and not the least, it means having the
courage to put some trust in the organization to keep the peace in whose
creation America played so large a role in founding, the United Nations.
Real security begins with creating a policy of peace, meaning non-intervention, in the affairs of other states. It means when the
“We are not the policeman of mankind,” syndicated columnist
Walter Lippmann once remarked. “We are not able to run the world and we
shouldn’t pretend that we can. Let us tend to our own business, which is great
enough as it is.” This complemented the words of founder Thomas Paine, who
wrote in “The American Crisis”, “Not a place on earth might be so happy
as America .
Her situation is remote from all the wrangling world, and she has nothing to do
but to trade with them.”
In the last century, no less an authority on international
affairs than George Kennan urged, “the first (concept) to go should be
self-idealization and the search for absolutes in world affairs: for absolute
security, absolute amity, absolute harmony.” In today’s America , the
search for absolute security has assumed hysterical proportions, with DHS
officials everywhere checking up on everybody, “probable cause” be damned, at
airports and bus terminals and train stations. It has made every citizen the
object of Federal suspicion and denied to 100,000 the right to board an
airplane. Communist Russia’s Nikolai Lenin would have cheered this invasion of
individual privacy, as he once said, “It is true that liberty is precious---so
precious that it must be rationed.” Under Communism, the rights of the
individual were ever subordinated to the State, and that is increasingly true of
America
today.
In today’s America ,
the Pentagon, which consumes 54 cents of every tax dollar, reigns supreme,
making a mockery of President Truman’s words, “If there is one basic element in
our Constitution, it is civilian control of the military.” Truman’s staff
feared that concentrating all military offices under one roof might create an
ogre and that nightmare has become reality. As James Carroll remarks in his “House
of War”(Houghton Mifflin): “Secretary of War Henry Stimson, saw the new
danger at once and warned of it, to no avail. After Stimson, dozens of others
would sound alarms as the Pentagon usurped controls over the levers of the
American economy and culture, over science, academia, and politics.” Or as the
poet Robert Browning wrote, “A man in armor is his armor’s slave.”
Truman remains the tragic example of how the quest for
military supremacy actually undermines a nation’s security, rather than
strengthens it. By creating at Hiroshima
an horrific precedent to use atomic warfare (to cut the Pacific war short by a
few months) he triggered a nuclear arms race spanning more than a half century
that has spread around the world so that all humanity now lives in the shadow
of the nuclear terror. “We have grasped the mystery of the atom and rejected
the Sermon on the Mount,” reflected America ’s prescient World War Two
General Omar Bradley. Truman’s decision to A-bomb Hiroshima haunts Americans
who fear the nuclear weapon may now be used against their own cities.
This is the same fear that haunts the populations ofPakistan
and India
and other peoples who see local disputes escalating into nuclear infernos. And
the senseless manufacture of these weapons by the tens of thousands, weapons
that are rotting uselessly in U.S. arsenals around the world, weapons whose
very testing has poisoned the atmosphere, has cost American taxpayers many
trillions of dollars that could have been far better spent in energizing the
civilian economy. In the last analysis, America ’s Soviet Cold War enemy was
brought down not by the Pentagon but by a visionary Pope and a humble Polish
labor leader.
This is the same fear that haunts the populations of
The agonies endured by foreign peoples by the establishment
of U.S. military bases on
their soil, (287 in Germany
alone) has rarely touched the conscience of the American people. How much
better off would the world be today if the U.S.
in 1946 had not evicted the residents of Bikini atoll in the Marshall Islands
to test 20 nuclear bombs, making that island paradise uninhabitable and
poisoning the world’s atmosphere? Okinawans are furious that the U.S. is using
its best real estate for military bases and by overwhelming majorities tell
pollsters they want an end to it. And what tragedy is greater than the fate of
the Chagossian inhabitants of Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean who in 1971 were
summarily evicted from their island paradise for the establishment of an air
base from which the Pentagon could attack the Middle East
and whose dogs were taken from them and gassed before their eyes? In nearby
Puerto Rico, the U.S. Navy used the island
of Vieques as a bombing
range and quit in 2003 only after non-violent protests hampered naval maneuvers
and public opinion shamed the admirals. The utter absence of any regard for
these and other innocent peoples is reason enough to change the name of Washington,
D.C., to one that will not disgrace the memory of our nation’s first president.
After all, it was Washington who said, “Observe good faith and justice toward
all nations. Cultivate peace and harmony with all.”
At the root of America ’s
insecurity is Washington ’s aggressive foreign
policy to control the oil resources of the the Middle East
and the world. Measured in the profit margins of the great oil companies, this
policy has been a triumph, even if American motorists suffer at the pump. Also,
control of the Middle East was instrumental, in another of President Truman’s
historic blunders, in helping create the state of Israel on the soil of a
people who had done the world Jewish community no injury, as had the Germans
under Hitler, and who have since been degraded into second-class citizens in
their own land, and worse, in Gaza today into the sort of ghettoized population
reminiscent of Polish Jewry in Warsaw in the early stages of the Nazi
occupation. The rise of Middle Eastern terrorism had nothing to do, as claimed
by President Bush, with their jealousy of our freedoms but with our meddling in
their region, including the overthrow of the elected government of Iran in 1953
by the CIA and the subsequent arrest, torture, and murder there of thousands of
innocent Iranians. It is this policy of banal greed to feed the coffers of the
major oil companies and the Pentagon’s “defense” contractors that is making America a
target of violence and that needs to be ended.
Some constructive steps would be the termination of the
world’s largest and best funded crime syndicate, the Central Intelligence
Agency; the closure of all U.S. foreign bases; the elimination of our nuclear
and germ warfare arsenals; the immediate withdrawal of U.S. forces now fighting
in Iraq, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Yemen, Somalia and Libya; an end to the
training by the Pentagon of foreign police forces; an end to its roles as the
world’s No. 1 arms peddler and the world's No. 1 jailer; a massive reduction of
military spending by about 90 percent for starters and a hefty increase in
Peace Corps spending as well as for humanitarian rescue operations in Africa
and elsewhere. The U.S.
must also have the courage to give up its veto in the Security Council and to
recall the words of President Kennedy who said the UN is “the only true
alternative to war.” As President Truman pointed out in one of his finer
moments upon taking office, “The responsibility of the great states is to serve
and not to dominate the world.” If you think that the foregoing suggestions are
naive, ask yourself where the “realists” have gotten America today. #
(Sherwood Ross is a Miami-based public relations consultant
for “good causes” who also writes on political and military topics. Reach him
at sherwoodross10@gmail.com).
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